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The Miami Hurricane Volume XXVI University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., October 13, 1950 No. 3 Purdues Rep At Stake 'Canes Tackle Giant Killers ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Story On Page 20 ★ ★ ★ Beaumont Bidding To End Photo by Rudoff GREETINGS TO TWO EXCHANGE STUDENTS were extended in a practical manner by the social welfare committee of the Student Aaaociation with a linen presentation in the upper lounge of the Student Club Tuesday. Presenting the gifts to Margo Lampe, second from left, and Renata Bed a, second from right, both from Germany, are Ed Dick, secretary, and Margot Benton, administrative assistant, far right, as Mrs. Lillian B. Slack, women’s residence counselor, looks on. Both coeds are studying under the auspices of the International Students Exchange, with headquarters in New York, and are enrolled as special students. Margo, 23, has a number of speech, English and Journalism courses on her program while Renata. 24, though concentrating on English, Is also taking French and typing. Photo by Rudoff THE ART GALLERY’S PUBLIC OPENING yesterday, marking the second year of its existence at the University, was highlighted by an international gallery of paintings by old and modem masters including Daumier, Goya. Whistler and Picasso. Duncan Allan McNab, newly-appointed director of the gallery, above, sets a mezzotint by Macbeth-Raebum in place, while his assistant Jo Youse itemizes the prints already in place. Director McNab, a top-ranking British artist in his own right, has a special exhibit of his own outstanding works on display in the gallery. Prior to taking over the directorship, McNab was art editor of “Life” magazine for five years, and was the guiding light behind the feature displays of “Art and Western Civilization” series featured by the pictorial magazine. Frat Rush Period m Story On Page 2 ★ ★ ★ Canes Bid For Glory Tomorrow The big day for Miami football has arrived. Tomorrow afternoon the Hurricanes tackle Purdue at Lafayette. Ind., in what has been forecast as a game that could lift the Canes into the realm of big time college football. Here's the situation in a nutshell. Notre Dame had gone unbeaten for four years and went into the Purdue game a three-touchdown favorite. Purdue toppled the Irish. 28-14. In a game that will rank among the all-time upsets. Tomorrow the Hurricanes meet Purdue and a victory for them—or even a tie—will bring the long-awaited national recognition Miami has been seeking since the first football team took the field back in 1926. Feature attraction of the day will be the passing battle between two of the smallest quarterbacks in the country. Directing the Hurricanes as usual will be "Mighty Mouse" Jack Hackett. at 5'8. 150 pounds, while on the Purdue side of the line Dale Samuels, who was the guiding force in last week's win over Notre Dame, will be throwing for the Boilermakers. He stands 5‘9. and outweighs Hackett some 20 pounds. But win. lose or draw, a parade featuring the U-M band and students will take the Hurricanes from International airport Sunday morning, back to the campus. If they should upset the Boilermakers, the parade will run through downtown Miami and then back to the Gables. For further details turn to the sports pages. Honey No. 3 BLONDE MARTHA BOSQUE, WEARING THE Hurricane Honey colon of the week, is a petite i'ZVi", 105 pounds of travelin’ señorita. A costume designing major, Martha was born in New York, raised in Havana, toured South America, trekked through the 48 states— and came to the “Suitshine State” via California. Sports, sewing and dancing are our Honey's hobbies. If you’ll traipse down to the Alec Gibson WTVJ show at 3:45 today, Honey, Ronald Levitt, Hurricane news editor, will pin you with an orchid.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, October 13, 1950 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1950-10-13 |
Coverage Temporal | 1950-1959 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (20 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_19501013 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19501013 |
Digital ID | MHC_19501013_001 |
Full Text | The Miami Hurricane Volume XXVI University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., October 13, 1950 No. 3 Purdues Rep At Stake 'Canes Tackle Giant Killers ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Story On Page 20 ★ ★ ★ Beaumont Bidding To End Photo by Rudoff GREETINGS TO TWO EXCHANGE STUDENTS were extended in a practical manner by the social welfare committee of the Student Aaaociation with a linen presentation in the upper lounge of the Student Club Tuesday. Presenting the gifts to Margo Lampe, second from left, and Renata Bed a, second from right, both from Germany, are Ed Dick, secretary, and Margot Benton, administrative assistant, far right, as Mrs. Lillian B. Slack, women’s residence counselor, looks on. Both coeds are studying under the auspices of the International Students Exchange, with headquarters in New York, and are enrolled as special students. Margo, 23, has a number of speech, English and Journalism courses on her program while Renata. 24, though concentrating on English, Is also taking French and typing. Photo by Rudoff THE ART GALLERY’S PUBLIC OPENING yesterday, marking the second year of its existence at the University, was highlighted by an international gallery of paintings by old and modem masters including Daumier, Goya. Whistler and Picasso. Duncan Allan McNab, newly-appointed director of the gallery, above, sets a mezzotint by Macbeth-Raebum in place, while his assistant Jo Youse itemizes the prints already in place. Director McNab, a top-ranking British artist in his own right, has a special exhibit of his own outstanding works on display in the gallery. Prior to taking over the directorship, McNab was art editor of “Life” magazine for five years, and was the guiding light behind the feature displays of “Art and Western Civilization” series featured by the pictorial magazine. Frat Rush Period m Story On Page 2 ★ ★ ★ Canes Bid For Glory Tomorrow The big day for Miami football has arrived. Tomorrow afternoon the Hurricanes tackle Purdue at Lafayette. Ind., in what has been forecast as a game that could lift the Canes into the realm of big time college football. Here's the situation in a nutshell. Notre Dame had gone unbeaten for four years and went into the Purdue game a three-touchdown favorite. Purdue toppled the Irish. 28-14. In a game that will rank among the all-time upsets. Tomorrow the Hurricanes meet Purdue and a victory for them—or even a tie—will bring the long-awaited national recognition Miami has been seeking since the first football team took the field back in 1926. Feature attraction of the day will be the passing battle between two of the smallest quarterbacks in the country. Directing the Hurricanes as usual will be "Mighty Mouse" Jack Hackett. at 5'8. 150 pounds, while on the Purdue side of the line Dale Samuels, who was the guiding force in last week's win over Notre Dame, will be throwing for the Boilermakers. He stands 5‘9. and outweighs Hackett some 20 pounds. But win. lose or draw, a parade featuring the U-M band and students will take the Hurricanes from International airport Sunday morning, back to the campus. If they should upset the Boilermakers, the parade will run through downtown Miami and then back to the Gables. For further details turn to the sports pages. Honey No. 3 BLONDE MARTHA BOSQUE, WEARING THE Hurricane Honey colon of the week, is a petite i'ZVi", 105 pounds of travelin’ señorita. A costume designing major, Martha was born in New York, raised in Havana, toured South America, trekked through the 48 states— and came to the “Suitshine State” via California. Sports, sewing and dancing are our Honey's hobbies. If you’ll traipse down to the Alec Gibson WTVJ show at 3:45 today, Honey, Ronald Levitt, Hurricane news editor, will pin you with an orchid. |
Archive | MHC_19501013_001.tif |
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