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\W U VTERIT AS The Weekly April 22, 1963 OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION VolHiftRSffT- DR. STANFORD GETS President StanforJ received his third honorary degree APiftj£y4 li)®3tor of DEGREE FROM JU Civil Law, from Jacksonville University where he gave the commencemen address for JUTs fifth graduating class of 133 seniors. ^|so|opic: ’’The Challenge of Academic Integrity.” Holder of four earned degrees the LL.D. from Emory in 1961, the LL.D. from the U of Denver in 1962. , Dr. Stanford recei ved SOFT COVER SERIES Three paperback releases by the UM Press, in cooperation with the English TO AID SCHOLARS Dept., will inaugurate a series of literary classics and criticism for small-budget scholars this' fall. More than 100 titles, containing reprints of significant works and critical commentary, are planned for the "’University of Miami Critical Studies” program. Distribution of the volumes is planned through inter-library exchange and the Association of University Bookstores. The inaugural trio: William Blake’s ’’Marriage of Heaven and Hell,” commentary by Dr. Clark M. Emery; ’’Pope’s Moral Essays,” commentary by Dr. James E. Wellington, the program’s chairman; selections from the plays of Henry Arthur Jones and Sir Arthur Wing Pinero, commentary by Carl M. Selle. FOUR GRAD PROGRAMS Four new graduate programs, two on the Doctoral and two on the Master’s START IN SEPTEMBER level, will begin in September. Dean J. Riis Owre announced additions of Ph.D. programs in math and physics and Master’s programs in industrial and mechanical engineering. A Master’s program in junior college teaching started in February. PURCHASING POST Edward J. Davis, now purchasing agent at the University of Pittsburgh, will TO PITT MAN assume that same post at UM, June 1. Davis, 32, replaces Matthew Borek, who became physical plant director last November. DEAN MYERS HEADS The UM Faculty Club recently elected Dean Clark E. Myers, School of Busi- FACULTY CLUB ness, its new president. He succeeds Dr. Archie McNeal, director of libraries. Other new officers are Dr. William B. Deichmann, pharmacology, vice president; Gary I. Salzman, business law, treasurer. THAT BEATEN PATH Men and machines turned the well-trod trail along Memorial Drive from the IS NOW PAVED Memorial Building to the Law School parking lot into asphalt reality last week. Resident engineer Hart Morris reports the $1,400 sidewalk has been budgeted for several years but was held up by the presence of construction bulldozers fatal to blacktop. FLETCHER, HUNTER Veteran actor Bramwell Fletcher and art authority Sam Hunter will both be LECTURE THIS WEEK at UM this week for separate lecture programs. Fletcher, sponsored by the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Foundation, will speak principally to ^classes of the University College’s humanities division. He will also present his one-man production, ’’Parnassus ’63” Thursday at 8:35 p.m. to students and faculty. Free tickets are available at University College offices; but the program is closed to the public. Hunter, director of the Brandeis University art museum, will lecture Wednesday in New Hall on ’’Hoffman and Abstract Expression.” On Thursday he will analyze ’’pop art” in the Aquinas Student Center. Both talks, last in the Winter Institute of Arts, begin at 8:30 p.m. COP OR CARPENTER Extension 2161 is the round-the-clock number for both physical plant and THE NUMBER’S 2161 campus police, reminds Sim Smith, methods engineer. Extension 2162 is dialed for estimates, work order and budget charges only. Use Ext. 2186 to talk with the physical plant director only. MUSIC HONORARY A UM chapter of Pi Kappa Lambda, national music honorary, will be installed COMES TO CAMPUS Saturday at the Riviera Country Club. Dr. George Howerton, Northwestern University’s music school dean, will present the charter to Dr. C. Doren Tharp. Charter members include seven students and two faculty tappees: Joseph Tarpley, associate dean of the School of Music and Dr. Thomas C. Collins, Five faculty members have transferred from other chapters: Miss Harriet Nordholm, Dr. Maxwell R. Lepper, Lucas Drew, Eugene Johnson and Jeffrey Stoll. MED STUDENTS Prizes totaling $600 plus summer stipends will be awarded to the top PRESENT PAPERS student research papers presented during the third annual Student Research Day at the School of Medicine Thursday. Dr. William Bean, chairman of the State University of Iowa Dept, of Medicine, is the program’s guest speaker. 54 LANDS SEND A foreign student population of 596--representing 54 countries--is currently STUDENTS HERE attending UM, Dr. Andrew Yarrow, foreign student advisor, reported this week. Largest delegation is 350 students from Cuba. Nations represented for the first time this year are: Bolivia, Kenya, Kuwait, Morocco, Nigeria and Sweden. The total is down 32 students from last spring, Dr. Yarrow’s census showed.
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Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | asu0134000103 |
Digital ID | asu01340001030001001 |
Full Text | \W U VTERIT AS The Weekly April 22, 1963 OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION VolHiftRSffT- DR. STANFORD GETS President StanforJ received his third honorary degree APiftj£y4 li)®3tor of DEGREE FROM JU Civil Law, from Jacksonville University where he gave the commencemen address for JUTs fifth graduating class of 133 seniors. ^|so|opic: ’’The Challenge of Academic Integrity.” Holder of four earned degrees the LL.D. from Emory in 1961, the LL.D. from the U of Denver in 1962. , Dr. Stanford recei ved SOFT COVER SERIES Three paperback releases by the UM Press, in cooperation with the English TO AID SCHOLARS Dept., will inaugurate a series of literary classics and criticism for small-budget scholars this' fall. More than 100 titles, containing reprints of significant works and critical commentary, are planned for the "’University of Miami Critical Studies” program. Distribution of the volumes is planned through inter-library exchange and the Association of University Bookstores. The inaugural trio: William Blake’s ’’Marriage of Heaven and Hell,” commentary by Dr. Clark M. Emery; ’’Pope’s Moral Essays,” commentary by Dr. James E. Wellington, the program’s chairman; selections from the plays of Henry Arthur Jones and Sir Arthur Wing Pinero, commentary by Carl M. Selle. FOUR GRAD PROGRAMS Four new graduate programs, two on the Doctoral and two on the Master’s START IN SEPTEMBER level, will begin in September. Dean J. Riis Owre announced additions of Ph.D. programs in math and physics and Master’s programs in industrial and mechanical engineering. A Master’s program in junior college teaching started in February. PURCHASING POST Edward J. Davis, now purchasing agent at the University of Pittsburgh, will TO PITT MAN assume that same post at UM, June 1. Davis, 32, replaces Matthew Borek, who became physical plant director last November. DEAN MYERS HEADS The UM Faculty Club recently elected Dean Clark E. Myers, School of Busi- FACULTY CLUB ness, its new president. He succeeds Dr. Archie McNeal, director of libraries. Other new officers are Dr. William B. Deichmann, pharmacology, vice president; Gary I. Salzman, business law, treasurer. THAT BEATEN PATH Men and machines turned the well-trod trail along Memorial Drive from the IS NOW PAVED Memorial Building to the Law School parking lot into asphalt reality last week. Resident engineer Hart Morris reports the $1,400 sidewalk has been budgeted for several years but was held up by the presence of construction bulldozers fatal to blacktop. FLETCHER, HUNTER Veteran actor Bramwell Fletcher and art authority Sam Hunter will both be LECTURE THIS WEEK at UM this week for separate lecture programs. Fletcher, sponsored by the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Foundation, will speak principally to ^classes of the University College’s humanities division. He will also present his one-man production, ’’Parnassus ’63” Thursday at 8:35 p.m. to students and faculty. Free tickets are available at University College offices; but the program is closed to the public. Hunter, director of the Brandeis University art museum, will lecture Wednesday in New Hall on ’’Hoffman and Abstract Expression.” On Thursday he will analyze ’’pop art” in the Aquinas Student Center. Both talks, last in the Winter Institute of Arts, begin at 8:30 p.m. COP OR CARPENTER Extension 2161 is the round-the-clock number for both physical plant and THE NUMBER’S 2161 campus police, reminds Sim Smith, methods engineer. Extension 2162 is dialed for estimates, work order and budget charges only. Use Ext. 2186 to talk with the physical plant director only. MUSIC HONORARY A UM chapter of Pi Kappa Lambda, national music honorary, will be installed COMES TO CAMPUS Saturday at the Riviera Country Club. Dr. George Howerton, Northwestern University’s music school dean, will present the charter to Dr. C. Doren Tharp. Charter members include seven students and two faculty tappees: Joseph Tarpley, associate dean of the School of Music and Dr. Thomas C. Collins, Five faculty members have transferred from other chapters: Miss Harriet Nordholm, Dr. Maxwell R. Lepper, Lucas Drew, Eugene Johnson and Jeffrey Stoll. MED STUDENTS Prizes totaling $600 plus summer stipends will be awarded to the top PRESENT PAPERS student research papers presented during the third annual Student Research Day at the School of Medicine Thursday. Dr. William Bean, chairman of the State University of Iowa Dept, of Medicine, is the program’s guest speaker. 54 LANDS SEND A foreign student population of 596--representing 54 countries--is currently STUDENTS HERE attending UM, Dr. Andrew Yarrow, foreign student advisor, reported this week. Largest delegation is 350 students from Cuba. Nations represented for the first time this year are: Bolivia, Kenya, Kuwait, Morocco, Nigeria and Sweden. The total is down 32 students from last spring, Dr. Yarrow’s census showed. |
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