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inside “Godspeir Comes to Coconut Grove . . . See page 6. cÜÍíf ííliam arrtr r Vol 49, No. 4 Tuesday, September 25, 1973 sports Soccer Team loses to FILI... See page 10. Collective Bargaining Planned B XfiS 15 The scoreboard tells the »lory, in what might turn out to he the biggest upset in college football 1973, Sieve Marcantonio who caught five passes for the ’Canes gives the hook ’em horns symltol. See pages 10 and 11 for the full rundown on the Miami-Texas game. The Horns Got Hooked By HERB GREENBERG Ntvn Editor A platform on unionizing University of Miami faculty was presented last week at a workshop of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). A spokesman for UM’s AAUP chapter says they plan to file collective bargaining petitions within two weeks with the National Labor Relation’s Board (NLRB), followed by a faculty election on the issue “within this academic year.“ Dr. Nancy Clasby, vice president of UM’s AAUP, said the chapter will file to unionize main campus department chairmen and fulltime faculty. The collective bargaining goals for UM as described by AAUP are: • The retention of the concept of tenure as defined by the AAUP. • Strengthened and increased participation of the faculty in the award of promotion and tenure. • Opposition to any artifl-cal numerical quotas on tenure. • Elimination of non-tenure producing contracts for “Our plan is to get a look at the administrators’ books and cut back on administrative fat. If tee say we want a 10 per cent raise and they say they can’t afford it, they will have to demonstrate they can’t afford it.” —Dr. Nancy Clasby, AAUP vice president full-time faculty positions. • Retention of the faculty senate in its present form. • Genuine faculty participation in fringe benefit decisions; especially in matters of health insurance and sabbatical leaves. • Increases in faculty salary and retirement benefits to meet inflationary rises in the cost of living. • Full disclosure of the University budget. • Vigorous support and continuous action for any needed correction in faculty salary inequities. • Maintenance of at least “B” salary rating for the entire faculty by AAUP standards. • Vigorous and unrelenting support of any faculty member whose rights in the matter of promotion and tenure are violated. This is to be accomplished through an objective bargaining procedure in which the faculty member will have every opportunity to present his case fully. Assistance from AAUP will be developed. Dr. Carl B. McKenry, vice president for academic affairs said he couldn’t comment on the proposal “at this point" However, in a recent issue of Veritas, the faculty newspaper, UM President Henry King Stanford said, ”... I believe the faculty of this University will ultimately reject unionization when all of the factors and implications of such action have been fully considered and evaluated." Bike Rental Agency Initiated By USBG By ELVIA H. THOMPSON 01 TIM Hurricane Staff The Bicycle Loan Agency, an Undergraduate Student Body Government (USBG) proposal from which students could borrow bi-cyles will be instituted in the near future. Under the proposal, student* will be able to borrow bikes on campus at 23 cents per day. These bikes will be available from the Bike Loan Agency at Mahoney Hall initially and could possibly ex-pand to the 1968-960 complexes. HKS Approves Employe Organization By DAN PATTERSON Of Tlw Hurricana Staff A charter has been approved by University of Miami President, Dr. Henry King Stanford, that will allow the organizing of 2,500 UM employes. However, organizing spokeswoman, Jean iiiM—iiiii m—mw—i——a——a—rnffiirT"* “The charter gives us no collective bargaining rights. The purpose is to have the University recognise us as a collection of employes ... —Jean Darpini, spokesman mrr firnrni r -Timm--— Darpini, said the char- "The charter gives us ter’s purpose is not to no collective bargaining rights,” she said. "The unionize. purpose is to have the University recognize us as a collection of employes. “We feel through unity and through strength we can achieve without resorting to unionization.” The charter affects nurses, medical techni- Latin Creativity To Be Exhibited Game Installation Halted By Gables City Zoning Inw A pinball game room is being constructed in the Student Union’s bowling billiards hall. It will house 12 games. However, the games won’t be installed until Coral Gables grants the University a zoning variance. The games are part of a 14-month-old project, under the direction of Bill Sheeder, assistant vice president for Student Affairs. The proj-gram will place games in the Student Union and the Rathskeller. The games will offer students “a diversified program mix” in addition to bowling and billiards, Sheeder said. Games will include electronic paddleball and video-taped spaceflights. The money made by the games will go towards s Student Union funding. American Coin Machines has contracted with the Rathskeller to install the Rathskeller’s games and pay for their maintenance. However, games are presently prohibited in the Rathskeller because the Coral Gables City Commission wouldn’t grant the Rathskeller a game room license. An appeal before the commission has been set for OcL 9. Sheeder urges interested students to attend the commission meeting. A full schedule of art, drama, lectures and music is set for Cuban Culture Week at the University of Miami October 7-13. Theme of the week is “Mainstream of Cuban Culture.” Free and open to the public, the events are sponsored by the Federation of Cuban Students at the UM. Avelino Gonzalez, president, said: “This should be the best Cuban Culture Week ever held at the University. We have about 2,000 Cuban students on campus and we welcome both Cuban and American students at Miami-area colleges and universities, and Cuban and American residents of Miami to our celebration.” The schedule; Sun., OcL 7 — Art exhibit — paintings and sculptures by Cuban artists, with a special exhibit of “wooden scenes” depicting Cuba in the 1800’s. 8 p.m., International Lounge, Whitten Memorial Student Union, through Sat. OcL 13. Mon., OcL 8 — The three-act play, "El Baile” by Neville, presented by a cast from Las Mascaras, Miami Span-i s h -language theatre group. 7:30 p.m., Beaumont Lecture Hall, Dooly Memorial Classroom Building. Tue., Oct. 9 — Lecture on Afro-Cuban Culture by Sra. Mercedes Sandoval, professor of sociology and anthropology, Miami-Dade 'Community College. 8 p.m., Room 226, Whitten Memorial Student Union. Wed., Oct. 10 — A talk on “Grito de Yara,” patriotic celebration, by Srs. Mimi de Campos, professor at the University of Puerto Rico, at 8 p.m., followed by a “Night of Strings” featuring pianist Francisco Mueller, violinist Joaquin Diago, accompanied by his wife, Velia, on piano. 8 p.m., Beaumont Lecture Hall, Dooly Memorial Classroom Building. * Thurs., Oct. 11 —- Rosendo Rosell, Cuban entertainer, will lecture on the light side of Cuban life, 8 p.m., Baur Beaumont Lecture Hall, Dooly Memorial Classroom Building. Fri., Oct 12 — Event to be announced. Sat., Oct. 13 — Variety show. 8 p.m., Room 226, Whitten Memorial Student Union. clans, secretaries, janitors and carpenters at UM’s medical school, marine research center and those on main campus. Employes’ wages, hiring and firing policies, sick and vacation leave policies are some of the problems that will be reviewed by the organization. The high cost of living in the Dade County area has made the salary situation a serious problem, according to Ms. Darpini. She said: “The wages are atrocious. They are 15-35 per cent below the going rate in Dade County. I feel we are in trouble if we don’t consider the honest-to-good-n e s s worth of our employes. "We are losing employes. We have developed into a training area for fresh out of high schoolers and other unskilled workers. We train them and when they be-c o m e proficient they leave for higher paying places.” mmSÊOUSÊOaHÊIÊSKiaillltStHUÊa Medico Ratified The Undergraduate Student Body Government (USBG) Senate Monday ratified Phil Medico as USBG Vice President. The Senate’s vote was 18-0. Medico was appointed by USBG President Scott Anderson. Two weeks ago, Anderson's nomination of Kenny Gardner for vice president was defeated by the Senate. Students will have to submit their I.D. and sign a responsibility statement when taking out bikes. The agency will be open from 8-10 a.m. and 2-4 p.m., however, bikes will be accepted at the Mahoney Hall desk after 4 p.m. The loan would be on a daily basis, so a $5 fee will be imposed on bikes kept overnight. Disciplinary action will be taken if a bike is kept more than three days. The bicycles will be fully insured under the program. * A budget of $1,389.30 should be allocated with $960 going to the purchase of 20 three-speed bicycles, $368 to pay the work-study students who will run the agency, and $61.50 for contingency and repairs. The Bike Loan Agency was first proposed last year by USBG and the referendum concerning it and the 14 cents increase in the activity fee were passed in the spring. The main hold-up is that the Bike Loan Agency was to be funded by increasing the student activity fee 14 cents. That increase requires the approval of various administration officials and committees. Vice president for Student Affairs William Butler, in a memo to USBG dated June 27, said the 14 cent increase and the Bike Loan Agency could not be instituted until he received a formal request from them, in accordance with the new constitution. He said it could not be put into effect before September 1974 since the student activity fee had already been established and printed in various publications. USBG president, Scott Anderson, said USBG will resubmit the Bike Loan Agency “concept” to the administration for consideration this week. This time USBG will propose that funding come from a source other than the student activity fee. Anderson hopes that bypassing the student activity fee will en-a b I e the agency to be instituted before next September. The initial proposal was an effort by USBG to “give them (the students) a visible sign that we’re out there punching for them,” USBG Attorney General Mike Tog-nalli said. Tognalli said that the University finds many stray bikes each summer that students leave behind, an average of 10 bikes each year. He said that instead of giving them away to charity, they could be made a part of the Bike Loan Agency. fessors Dr. Stanford said faculty governance (the faculty senate) would be affected by unionizing because of the “unavoidable shift in emphasis in the relationship between the faculty member through elected senate representation and the administrative office of this University from one of shared authority to one containing externally introduced and legally required structural and procedural elements of a rigid and adversary nature. “This shift would, in my judgment, result in a corresponding deterioration of collegiality on our campus." At Friday’s AAUP workshop Dr. Richard Spec-tor, a collective bargaining specialist from AAUP’s national office, said unionization “seeks a strengthening role of the faculty senate ... In some instances the faculty senate not only continues and strengthens but is created.” He said collective bargaining would cost between $20,-000 “at an institution this size. It is supplemented by local contributions.” Dr. Ross Byler, a politics professor said he didn’t support collective bargaining five years ago. But now he says he’s switched. “Whenever power isn’t checked,” he said, “it goes sour." He cited UM’s economic matters. "In the last 10 years, while the dollar size of faculty budget has gone up 100 per cent, the dollar size of the administration's budget has gone up 340 per cent.” Through collective bargaining, AAUP hopes to increase faculty salaries. Dr. Spector said this would be done by “Restricting the administrative budget and making salaries fixed cost items instead of variable cost items.” Undergraduate Student , Body Government President Scott Anderson told the Hurricane a rise in faculty salaries would create a tuition hike. “If the faculty is going into collective bargaining to bargain for higher faculty salaries . . somehow it is going to come from tuitions," Anderson said. Dr. Spector said salary See page 2 Dr. Clasby , far ors union War Vet Picks Up Pieces By DANIEL PATTERSON Of The Humean® Staff Rowan Malphurs lives in apartment 42-H on campus. He’s a freshman accounting student. In his spare time, he likes to play handball, dabble in decoupage and discuss international politics. Rowan Malphurs did not come to the University of Miami, however, upon graduating from high school. He came via Vietnam. Rowan Maiphurs is not your typical, insecure, acne-prone 18 year old. He is 28, a retired Army captain who is attending school through the Veterans Administration. He has been to school before, he says, attending the University of Maine, a Vietnamese language school, and an aerial photography school. Malphurs always did well in school, so well in fact, that he was made a captain in the Army two years after his college ROTC course. In August 1969, Malphurs took his impressive credentials to Vietnam. He said he participated in special operations designed to capture North Vietnamese generals and to free American prisoners of war. Through the yean, he ac- cumulated two Silver Stars, three Bronze Stars and three Purple Hearts. Malphurs was eventually placed in charge of the highly classified project known as MENU, the military plan for the covert bombing of Cambodia. He determined the targets for American bombing runs. Rowan Malphurs is not the same idealistic individual who entered the war in 1969. He is disillusioned with the military, the government and the situation in Southeast Asia. The war has made him a lonely man. Rowan Malphurs is now picking up the pieces. He is starting in apartment 42-H. on the inside Check what’s happening at the U....................... page 2 A review on “Godspell”.................................page 6 Colleen Joyce makes her column debut...................page 7 rhia weeks television highlites........................page t Elliott and the win...................................page 10 Inside the Hurricanes’ locker room....................page 10 Berger on the game reaction...........................page 10 Pictorial account of the “upset"......................page 11 Women In the sports spotlight.........................page 12
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, September 25, 1973 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1973-09-25 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (12 pages) |
Language | eng |
Repository | University of Miami. Library. University Archives |
Collection Title | The Miami Hurricane |
Collection No. | ASU0053 |
Rights | This material is protected by copyright. Copyright is held by the University of Miami. For additional information, please visit: http://merrick.library.miami.edu/digitalprojects/copyright.html |
Standardized Rights Statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Object ID | MHC_19730925 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19730925 |
Digital ID | MHC_19730925_001 |
Full Text | inside “Godspeir Comes to Coconut Grove . . . See page 6. cÜÍíf ííliam arrtr r Vol 49, No. 4 Tuesday, September 25, 1973 sports Soccer Team loses to FILI... See page 10. Collective Bargaining Planned B XfiS 15 The scoreboard tells the »lory, in what might turn out to he the biggest upset in college football 1973, Sieve Marcantonio who caught five passes for the ’Canes gives the hook ’em horns symltol. See pages 10 and 11 for the full rundown on the Miami-Texas game. The Horns Got Hooked By HERB GREENBERG Ntvn Editor A platform on unionizing University of Miami faculty was presented last week at a workshop of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). A spokesman for UM’s AAUP chapter says they plan to file collective bargaining petitions within two weeks with the National Labor Relation’s Board (NLRB), followed by a faculty election on the issue “within this academic year.“ Dr. Nancy Clasby, vice president of UM’s AAUP, said the chapter will file to unionize main campus department chairmen and fulltime faculty. The collective bargaining goals for UM as described by AAUP are: • The retention of the concept of tenure as defined by the AAUP. • Strengthened and increased participation of the faculty in the award of promotion and tenure. • Opposition to any artifl-cal numerical quotas on tenure. • Elimination of non-tenure producing contracts for “Our plan is to get a look at the administrators’ books and cut back on administrative fat. If tee say we want a 10 per cent raise and they say they can’t afford it, they will have to demonstrate they can’t afford it.” —Dr. Nancy Clasby, AAUP vice president full-time faculty positions. • Retention of the faculty senate in its present form. • Genuine faculty participation in fringe benefit decisions; especially in matters of health insurance and sabbatical leaves. • Increases in faculty salary and retirement benefits to meet inflationary rises in the cost of living. • Full disclosure of the University budget. • Vigorous support and continuous action for any needed correction in faculty salary inequities. • Maintenance of at least “B” salary rating for the entire faculty by AAUP standards. • Vigorous and unrelenting support of any faculty member whose rights in the matter of promotion and tenure are violated. This is to be accomplished through an objective bargaining procedure in which the faculty member will have every opportunity to present his case fully. Assistance from AAUP will be developed. Dr. Carl B. McKenry, vice president for academic affairs said he couldn’t comment on the proposal “at this point" However, in a recent issue of Veritas, the faculty newspaper, UM President Henry King Stanford said, ”... I believe the faculty of this University will ultimately reject unionization when all of the factors and implications of such action have been fully considered and evaluated." Bike Rental Agency Initiated By USBG By ELVIA H. THOMPSON 01 TIM Hurricane Staff The Bicycle Loan Agency, an Undergraduate Student Body Government (USBG) proposal from which students could borrow bi-cyles will be instituted in the near future. Under the proposal, student* will be able to borrow bikes on campus at 23 cents per day. These bikes will be available from the Bike Loan Agency at Mahoney Hall initially and could possibly ex-pand to the 1968-960 complexes. HKS Approves Employe Organization By DAN PATTERSON Of Tlw Hurricana Staff A charter has been approved by University of Miami President, Dr. Henry King Stanford, that will allow the organizing of 2,500 UM employes. However, organizing spokeswoman, Jean iiiM—iiiii m—mw—i——a——a—rnffiirT"* “The charter gives us no collective bargaining rights. The purpose is to have the University recognise us as a collection of employes ... —Jean Darpini, spokesman mrr firnrni r -Timm--— Darpini, said the char- "The charter gives us ter’s purpose is not to no collective bargaining rights,” she said. "The unionize. purpose is to have the University recognize us as a collection of employes. “We feel through unity and through strength we can achieve without resorting to unionization.” The charter affects nurses, medical techni- Latin Creativity To Be Exhibited Game Installation Halted By Gables City Zoning Inw A pinball game room is being constructed in the Student Union’s bowling billiards hall. It will house 12 games. However, the games won’t be installed until Coral Gables grants the University a zoning variance. The games are part of a 14-month-old project, under the direction of Bill Sheeder, assistant vice president for Student Affairs. The proj-gram will place games in the Student Union and the Rathskeller. The games will offer students “a diversified program mix” in addition to bowling and billiards, Sheeder said. Games will include electronic paddleball and video-taped spaceflights. The money made by the games will go towards s Student Union funding. American Coin Machines has contracted with the Rathskeller to install the Rathskeller’s games and pay for their maintenance. However, games are presently prohibited in the Rathskeller because the Coral Gables City Commission wouldn’t grant the Rathskeller a game room license. An appeal before the commission has been set for OcL 9. Sheeder urges interested students to attend the commission meeting. A full schedule of art, drama, lectures and music is set for Cuban Culture Week at the University of Miami October 7-13. Theme of the week is “Mainstream of Cuban Culture.” Free and open to the public, the events are sponsored by the Federation of Cuban Students at the UM. Avelino Gonzalez, president, said: “This should be the best Cuban Culture Week ever held at the University. We have about 2,000 Cuban students on campus and we welcome both Cuban and American students at Miami-area colleges and universities, and Cuban and American residents of Miami to our celebration.” The schedule; Sun., OcL 7 — Art exhibit — paintings and sculptures by Cuban artists, with a special exhibit of “wooden scenes” depicting Cuba in the 1800’s. 8 p.m., International Lounge, Whitten Memorial Student Union, through Sat. OcL 13. Mon., OcL 8 — The three-act play, "El Baile” by Neville, presented by a cast from Las Mascaras, Miami Span-i s h -language theatre group. 7:30 p.m., Beaumont Lecture Hall, Dooly Memorial Classroom Building. Tue., Oct. 9 — Lecture on Afro-Cuban Culture by Sra. Mercedes Sandoval, professor of sociology and anthropology, Miami-Dade 'Community College. 8 p.m., Room 226, Whitten Memorial Student Union. Wed., Oct. 10 — A talk on “Grito de Yara,” patriotic celebration, by Srs. Mimi de Campos, professor at the University of Puerto Rico, at 8 p.m., followed by a “Night of Strings” featuring pianist Francisco Mueller, violinist Joaquin Diago, accompanied by his wife, Velia, on piano. 8 p.m., Beaumont Lecture Hall, Dooly Memorial Classroom Building. * Thurs., Oct. 11 —- Rosendo Rosell, Cuban entertainer, will lecture on the light side of Cuban life, 8 p.m., Baur Beaumont Lecture Hall, Dooly Memorial Classroom Building. Fri., Oct 12 — Event to be announced. Sat., Oct. 13 — Variety show. 8 p.m., Room 226, Whitten Memorial Student Union. clans, secretaries, janitors and carpenters at UM’s medical school, marine research center and those on main campus. Employes’ wages, hiring and firing policies, sick and vacation leave policies are some of the problems that will be reviewed by the organization. The high cost of living in the Dade County area has made the salary situation a serious problem, according to Ms. Darpini. She said: “The wages are atrocious. They are 15-35 per cent below the going rate in Dade County. I feel we are in trouble if we don’t consider the honest-to-good-n e s s worth of our employes. "We are losing employes. We have developed into a training area for fresh out of high schoolers and other unskilled workers. We train them and when they be-c o m e proficient they leave for higher paying places.” mmSÊOUSÊOaHÊIÊSKiaillltStHUÊa Medico Ratified The Undergraduate Student Body Government (USBG) Senate Monday ratified Phil Medico as USBG Vice President. The Senate’s vote was 18-0. Medico was appointed by USBG President Scott Anderson. Two weeks ago, Anderson's nomination of Kenny Gardner for vice president was defeated by the Senate. Students will have to submit their I.D. and sign a responsibility statement when taking out bikes. The agency will be open from 8-10 a.m. and 2-4 p.m., however, bikes will be accepted at the Mahoney Hall desk after 4 p.m. The loan would be on a daily basis, so a $5 fee will be imposed on bikes kept overnight. Disciplinary action will be taken if a bike is kept more than three days. The bicycles will be fully insured under the program. * A budget of $1,389.30 should be allocated with $960 going to the purchase of 20 three-speed bicycles, $368 to pay the work-study students who will run the agency, and $61.50 for contingency and repairs. The Bike Loan Agency was first proposed last year by USBG and the referendum concerning it and the 14 cents increase in the activity fee were passed in the spring. The main hold-up is that the Bike Loan Agency was to be funded by increasing the student activity fee 14 cents. That increase requires the approval of various administration officials and committees. Vice president for Student Affairs William Butler, in a memo to USBG dated June 27, said the 14 cent increase and the Bike Loan Agency could not be instituted until he received a formal request from them, in accordance with the new constitution. He said it could not be put into effect before September 1974 since the student activity fee had already been established and printed in various publications. USBG president, Scott Anderson, said USBG will resubmit the Bike Loan Agency “concept” to the administration for consideration this week. This time USBG will propose that funding come from a source other than the student activity fee. Anderson hopes that bypassing the student activity fee will en-a b I e the agency to be instituted before next September. The initial proposal was an effort by USBG to “give them (the students) a visible sign that we’re out there punching for them,” USBG Attorney General Mike Tog-nalli said. Tognalli said that the University finds many stray bikes each summer that students leave behind, an average of 10 bikes each year. He said that instead of giving them away to charity, they could be made a part of the Bike Loan Agency. fessors Dr. Stanford said faculty governance (the faculty senate) would be affected by unionizing because of the “unavoidable shift in emphasis in the relationship between the faculty member through elected senate representation and the administrative office of this University from one of shared authority to one containing externally introduced and legally required structural and procedural elements of a rigid and adversary nature. “This shift would, in my judgment, result in a corresponding deterioration of collegiality on our campus." At Friday’s AAUP workshop Dr. Richard Spec-tor, a collective bargaining specialist from AAUP’s national office, said unionization “seeks a strengthening role of the faculty senate ... In some instances the faculty senate not only continues and strengthens but is created.” He said collective bargaining would cost between $20,-000 “at an institution this size. It is supplemented by local contributions.” Dr. Ross Byler, a politics professor said he didn’t support collective bargaining five years ago. But now he says he’s switched. “Whenever power isn’t checked,” he said, “it goes sour." He cited UM’s economic matters. "In the last 10 years, while the dollar size of faculty budget has gone up 100 per cent, the dollar size of the administration's budget has gone up 340 per cent.” Through collective bargaining, AAUP hopes to increase faculty salaries. Dr. Spector said this would be done by “Restricting the administrative budget and making salaries fixed cost items instead of variable cost items.” Undergraduate Student , Body Government President Scott Anderson told the Hurricane a rise in faculty salaries would create a tuition hike. “If the faculty is going into collective bargaining to bargain for higher faculty salaries . . somehow it is going to come from tuitions," Anderson said. Dr. Spector said salary See page 2 Dr. Clasby , far ors union War Vet Picks Up Pieces By DANIEL PATTERSON Of The Humean® Staff Rowan Malphurs lives in apartment 42-H on campus. He’s a freshman accounting student. In his spare time, he likes to play handball, dabble in decoupage and discuss international politics. Rowan Malphurs did not come to the University of Miami, however, upon graduating from high school. He came via Vietnam. Rowan Maiphurs is not your typical, insecure, acne-prone 18 year old. He is 28, a retired Army captain who is attending school through the Veterans Administration. He has been to school before, he says, attending the University of Maine, a Vietnamese language school, and an aerial photography school. Malphurs always did well in school, so well in fact, that he was made a captain in the Army two years after his college ROTC course. In August 1969, Malphurs took his impressive credentials to Vietnam. He said he participated in special operations designed to capture North Vietnamese generals and to free American prisoners of war. Through the yean, he ac- cumulated two Silver Stars, three Bronze Stars and three Purple Hearts. Malphurs was eventually placed in charge of the highly classified project known as MENU, the military plan for the covert bombing of Cambodia. He determined the targets for American bombing runs. Rowan Malphurs is not the same idealistic individual who entered the war in 1969. He is disillusioned with the military, the government and the situation in Southeast Asia. The war has made him a lonely man. Rowan Malphurs is now picking up the pieces. He is starting in apartment 42-H. on the inside Check what’s happening at the U....................... page 2 A review on “Godspell”.................................page 6 Colleen Joyce makes her column debut...................page 7 rhia weeks television highlites........................page t Elliott and the win...................................page 10 Inside the Hurricanes’ locker room....................page 10 Berger on the game reaction...........................page 10 Pictorial account of the “upset"......................page 11 Women In the sports spotlight.........................page 12 |
Archive | MHC_19730925_001.tif |
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