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The Hurricane VOLUME XXX , CORAL GABLES, FLA., JANUARY 7. 1955 No. 11 Rembrandt, iautret Works featured Med School Slates Art Show Story On Page 2 * + * * * * * * * Site Restriction Cancels Sports Car Races Story On Page 2 -The Inside Story What They Are Saying ... | "They are quite naturally disappointed," Burt Levey, stu­ dent body president, said about the students who were work­ ing on the sports car races when they were cancelled this week. See Story on Page 2. "I was only going 20 miles an hour when I almost took the plunge," Carl Johnson, senior engineering student, explained after his car just missed going in the canal while attempting to park. See Story on Page 3. "The major disadvantages facing a Pan-American federa­ tion include the basic religious differences of the United States and Latin-America," Arrigo Righi, managing director of Pan- American Airways for the Venezuelan area, told history and government professors Monday. See Story on Page 4. "If you can't say something nice about someone, don't say anything," writes George Smith. Tempo editor, in a guest column. See Debris on Page 7. "When I study I like to have my pipe in my mouth—it atomizes my room," Brooky Himmel, freshman, says about the latest campus fad for coeds. See Feature on Page 8. "Participants must plan to devote 55 hours a week to group activity plus individual preparation," Dr. Sydney J. Head. chairman of the Radio-TV Film Department, said about the three-week training institute scheduled for UM in July. See Story on Page 11. "There is no dividing line between the Box and Ring thea­ ters except that the Ring aims at perfection and the Box is where the novice learns show business from the ground up," Fred Koch Jr., chairman of the Drama Department, explained in an interview about the functions of the lesser known thea­ ter. See Story on Page 13. Photo by Bixler CAR HUDDLING CANAL shore, located by arrow, and car almost went for a swim Wednesday after­ "The major obstacle in the way of big-time basketball is the was supposed to be parked in space east of Student noon. Witnessing the near-dunking is Roger Henry, Club, across from Lowe Art Gallery. But owner a student at Ponce De Leon Junior High School, lack of a fieldhouse," Bruce Hale, cage coach, said in reference Carl Johnson's brakes didn't hold and both student who was peddling by on his bicycle. to the UM team. See Feature on Page 15.

STARTING OFF 1955's parade of Hurricane cuties is Doris Bruner,

9$-v.- ./^rrrrje^^- Honey No. II. A 19-year-old Home Ec major, Doris is a member of Photo by Cohen the "" and Zeta Tau Alpha sorority. She stands 5 THESE IBIS BEAUTIES have to wait until May their pictures in the beauty section. They are Char­ feet 6 inches tall and tips the scales at 120 pounds. If brown-haired, with the rest of the student body to find out the lene Heritage, Jean Patten, Louise Roberts, Diane blue-eyed Doris will be in the Hurricane offlce at 3:30 this afternoon, yearbook queen's identity. All seven coeds will have Sena. Ellen O'Donnel, Ann Duffy and Jackie Hart. Marvin Randell, business manager, will pin her with an orchid. JANUARY 7, 1955 PACE TWO THE MIAMI UUKKICAME Rare Medical Masterpieces New Gallery Wing To House Famous To Start Exhibition Monday A collection of rare paintings depicting the practice of medi­ Kress Treasures cine over the centuries will be on display Monday through Fri­ Work will begin next fall on a day at the Medical School, 1100, Anastasia Ave., Coral Gables. new wing for the Lowe Art Gallery to house a portion of the Kress Col­ — Lease Conflict The display, including works by lection. Toulouse-Lautrec, is owned by the Thirty to 40 paintings and sculp­ Philadelphia Museum of Art. tures from the famed Italian Ren­ Car Races Smith, Kline & French Labora­ aissance collection of Samuel H. tories, a Philadelphia pharmaceuti­ Kress will be given to the gallery, cal under whose grant the collection but the items have not yet been Called Off was assembled, is conducting a cross selected. Cancellation of the sports car races country tour of the works at medi­ The Kress Foundation has named, scheduled for Feb. 13 at the Uni­ cal schools and hospitals. according to regional location, 20 versity's South Campus was an­ Entitled "Ars Medica" or "The American museums to receive a col­ nounced yesterday by Burt Levey, Healing Arts," the collection is com­ lection. student body president. posed of 85 pieces, extending from NEW LOWE WING will be located to the left of the gallery entrance. Three other Southern cities chosen A possible conflict with the lease medical illustrations designed for Consisting of three sections, it will house a portion of the famed Kress along with Miami are Columbia, under which the University oper­ teaching purposes to portrayals and Collection of paintings and sculptures. But the new addition won't be S.C, New Orleans and Atlanta. ates the former Richmond Naval Air completely finished for two years, according to Allan McNab, gallery critiques of medical procedures of Negotiations to bring the Kress Base was assigned as the reason for the past. director. calling off the races. items to the Lowe Gallery began two "Ars Medica," the first collec­ years ago through a recommendation "Students have worked hard on tion of its kind, was assembled At Leadership Confab by Guy Emerson, vice director of clearing the field and organizing the by Carl Zigrossner, curator of the foundation. event," Levey said. "They are quite prints at the Philadelphia Museum. naturally disappointed. Studies will Frosh Meet Student Leaders The collection will be the most Fifteen mobile units are carrying be made to see whether another site valuable ever in this area. the collection. Freshmen interested in student ry, associate editor of Ibis; Greg can be obtained." Government and publications were Melikov, Hurricane managing edi­ Allan McNab, director of Lowe The South Campus races were Included among the outstanding interviewed by student leaders at the tor; Marvin Randell, Hurricane bus­ Gallery, announced that architect planned on behalf of the Paul Yarck prints in the collection are Rem­ second Leadership Training Program iness manager; George Smith, Tem­ Robert H. Little has already com­ Memorial Fund, in honor of the late brandt's "Portraits of Dr. Ephraim last night in the Student Club upper po editor; and Al Goodman, Tempo pleted the design for the new wing, assistant dean of men. Money from Bonus"; Bellini's "Visit to the lounge. business manager. which will consist of three sections. the fund is used to extend student Plague Patient"; and Eakins' origi­ Students were assigned to groups Weekly seminars with guest He added, however, that it may facilities. nal engraving of "The Gross Clin­ in which they were interested and speakers are planned to supplement be more than two years before the ic." will serve apprenticeships in the the students' apprenticeships. The addition is completed, the collection Others are Winslow Homer's Civ­ field of government or publications seminars will begin next semester. installed, catalogued and ready for il War portrayal of the "Surgeon at which they chose. The program's purpose is to sup­ the public. Scholarship Posts Work During an Engagement"; Hog­ Student Body Government cabi­ ply a reserve of qualified and ex­ arth's "The Company of Under­ net members and publications edi­ perienced students to fill jobs va­ Available On Cane takers"; and Toulouse-Lautrec's lith­ tors headed the discussion sessions. cated by graduating seniors. Education Honorary ograph of the sick Frenchman Car- Norman Whitten, assistant direc­ At the first meeting, held Dec. 14, Annlications are now being accept­ To Initiate Sunday not. tor of student activities, addressed freshmen filled out information forms Kappa Delta Pi, national educa­ ed for scholarship positions on next the group. concerning their interests. The pro­ semester's Hurricane. gram is by invitation only. tion honorary, will hold initiation Cabinet representatives were Ar­ Letters of application should be ceremonies Sunday at 4 p.m. in the 300 Pints Donated nie Glantz, secretary-at-large; Jer­ submitted no later than 4 p.m. Thur*- upper lounge of the Student Club. ry Dangler, secretary of social wel­ day, Jan. 13, to Norman D. Chris­ In Anemic Blood Drive FBI Agent To Speak Initiates are Muriel August, Julia fare; Jerry Kogan, administrative as­ tensen, director of student publica­ Falling way short of the 1000 pint Delta Sigma Pi, national commerce Crabbe, Helen Decker, Barbara Em­ sistant; Avrum Fine, publicity; Gret­ tions, Room 5 of the Student Club. goal, Alpha Phi Omega, national fraternity, will have Special Agent erson, Rhoda Feldman, Shelia Green' men's service fraternity, collected chen Stanton, secretariat; an J Charles Vincent K. Antle of the Federal Bu­ Editorial positions available are blatt, Eugene Harris, Jerry Heller, only 300 pints during its five-day Liebman, Student Association. reau of Investigation as guest speak­ editor, managing editor, sports ed­ Barbara Landau, Barbara Levy, blood drive Dec. 6-10. Bill Nichols, SBG vice president, er at a meeting Wednesday in the itor, news editor, copy editor, fea­ George Manning, Janet Hendrick- was master of ceremonies, and chair­ upper lounge of the Student Club. tures editor and photo editor. The winner of the fraternity tro­ son, Jimmy Ruth Fonges, Herman phy has not yet been determined, man of the program. Irene Vulgan The meeting will commence at 6 Vonk, Donald Sheldon, Reva Moore, Applications should include class, but Army ROTC, with a contribu­ is co-chairman. p.m. with a dinner in the University Gladys Ann Bailey and Mary Mort­ major, journalism experience and po­ tion of 113 pints, will receive the Publications leaders present were Cafeteria and will adjourn to the up­ imer. sition desired. Positions are open to ROTC trophy. Allan Herbert, Ibis editor; Bob Ber- per lounge at 6:45 p.m. Antle will The society stresses outstanding all regularly enrolled students of the The 187 pints of blood contribu­ speak on the FBI as a career. work in the education field. University. ted by both ROTC units will be Dinner Slated Sunday "Applicants need not be journa­ credited to the Veterans' Hospital. The UM Harvard Club is spon­ lism majors," Christensen said, "but Thirty-seven pints went into indi­ soring a dinner for Robert G. Albion, they should have some journalism vidual sorority and fraternity ac­ Harvard professor of Oceanic his­ experience." counts, while the UM received 76 tory, Sunday at 6 p.m. in the faculty All applications will be screened pints. dining room. next week by the Board of Publi­ cations and all new appointments HURRICANE THEATER SECTION will be announced in the first issue of The Hurricane next semester. 25 Navigation Posts Open In Air Reserve Immediate openings for 25 naviga­ tors are available in the Air Force Reserve, 435 Troop Carrier Wing, "Flamingo Wing," at Miami International Airport. UM students who are veteran re­ serve officers may obtain payment as second lieutenants or captains in the new squadron. Information may be obtained at office headquarters, 23 Salzedo, Cor­ al Gables or by calling Highland 4-2739. Just Arrived! Chicago College of BRAND NEW! HIGH STYLED OPTOMETRY (Fully Accrtdslmd) FLORIDA STATE THEATRES An outstanding college serving a splendid profession. CAPEZIOS Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students enter­ ing with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts % Price courses. REGISTRATION FEB. 8 Students are granted profes­ sional recognition by the US. SAMPLE SHOE STORE Department of Defense and Selective Service. Excellent clinical facilities. 'Home of the I «»,„„N jfafc Athletic and recreational activi­ il'H ties. Dormitories on the campus. CHICAGO COLLEGE OK 2302 PONCE DE LEON BLVD. OPTOMETRY PHONE 3241-C South Michigan Ave. OPEN MONDAY Chicago 16, Illinois 48-5500 TIL 9 P.M. J AM'tut 7. (955 PAGE THREE Administrative Problems Aired 7 Selected For Ibis Beauty Section; At Southern Convention Here Queen's Identity Secret Until May Problems of university personnel administrators are under The 1955 Ibis has chosen its Queen and a court of six prin­ discussion at the southern regional convention of the National i cesses to comprise the yearbook's beauty section. The seven Association of Student Personnel Administrators which ends j coeds who will be prominently featured in this year's Ibis are here tomorrow. Ann Duffy, Jackie Hart, Charlene* ~ ~~ The UM is host to 40 representa- j Heritage, Jean Patten, Ellen O'Don- | man, is a Delta Gamma who has tives from Southern colleges and nell, Diane Sena and Louise Rob- I been a Hurricane Honey and was universities for the three-day ses­ erts. ; chosen 1954 State Demolay Sweet­ sions which began yesterday. They were selected from the more heart. Foster E. Alter, dean of men, is than 120 contestants. One of these j Her brown hair and blue eyes chairman of tlie planning committee girls is the Ibis Queen but her iden- ] mark her as one of the two Ibis for the seminar. Members of his tity will remain secret until the book lii'.uities who are brunettes. A psy­ committee are Hayes K. McClelland, is distributed to students in tjie j chology major, she wants to be a acting assistant dean of men at the middle of May. clinical psychologist and work with University of Florida, and James E. Blonde Ann Brockway Duffy is the children. Foy, director of student affairs at third married woman to be featured Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Diane Sena is the other brunette in an Ibis beauty section. A 19- year- in the beauty section. A Coral Ga­ Dr. Jay F. W. Pearson, UM old sophomore, she is majoring in bles resident, she is an 18-year-old president, will welcome the dele­ Dr. James A. Barnes elementary education and is a mem­ freshman and a member of Delta gates at 4 p.m. today in Beaumont . . . joins economics staff ber of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority. Zeta. A drama major, Diane was l/i'i'tiiri' Hall. Their program in­ Tempo chose her as its queen mime.. Junior Chamber of Com­ cludes a tour of the campus and a last year and the AROTC followed merce Queen of Coral Gables and slimving of the U.M documentary Noted Author by naming her their Military Ball Miss Personality of Coral Gables. liir.i "Books Alive." Queen. Loui;e Roberts is another drama A tea is planned for the wives of Added To StaH Jackie Hart was pictured earlier major. She is an amateur golf cham­ tin delegates at 4 p.m. in Julian S. Dr. James A. Barnes, noted author this year as a Hurricane Honey. The pion and came to the UM from High­ Eaton Residence Hall. and economist, will join the UM 19-year-old freshman from Kanka­ land Park, 111. The blonde freshman Dr. Robert Johns, director, United kee, 111., is a member of Delta Gam­ is a member of Delta Gamma soror­ Dean Foster E. Alter Economics Department as visiting Suites Armed Forces Institute, will professor next semester. ma. She is blonde and blue-eyed and ity and does modeling in her spare . . . heads committee be guest speaker at a banquet to­ Author of two books, "John C. wants to model after she graduates. time. She is 18 years old. night at the McAllister Hotel wh'-h Carlisle—Financial Statesman," and Last year Jackie was chosen "Miss 1-. headquarters for the group. Wil­ "The Wealth of the American Peo­ Illini Marine." Senior Parks—But liam Tate, dean of men at the Uni­ ple—A History of Their Economic Already a Hurricane Honey and I Lone Honors Assembly versity of Georgia, will also apeak. Life," as well as articles and reviews, Tempo Girl-of-the-Month, Charlene Discussions today and tomorrow Dr. Barnes is on leave of absence Heritage is another member of the New University Policy Car Doesn't Stop will include problems facing college from Temple University. Ibis Beauties. Only one major honors assembly and university personnel adminis­ She is a member of the Hurrican­ One student at the University will Dr. Barnes will teach American is scheduled for the 1954-55 school trators, which were selected from ettes and Delta Zeta. Her hometown be more particular in the future and European economic history. He year, according to the student acti­ those presented at a seminar at Har­ is Miami and she is a graduate of about where he parks his car. has taught at the Universities of vities office. vard University last year. Miami Senior High School. Charlene Carl Johnson, senior engineering Wisconsin, South Dakota, Kentucky, is a radio-TV major. Iti previous years an honors student, found that out Wednesday After a final session at 9 a.m. to­ Texas, North Carolina and Pennsyl­ morrow, the group will be guests at vania. Cheerleader Jean Patten is a 21- assembly has been held each sem­ afternoon when he attempted to park ester. This year the assembly will along the row of gravel spaces which a swim party at the Roney Plaza A member of the Southern, Amer­ year-old senior who also reigns as Hotel Cabana Club. ican Mississippi Valley and Pennsyl­ Miss Fishing Queen of Fort Lauder­ be part of the Sun Carnival week­ extend east of the Student Club, end in May. across from the Lowe Art Gallery. Dr. H. Franklin Williams, vice vania historical societies as well as dale. A member of Delta Delta Del­ Johnson pulled into a vacant spot president and dean of students, he American Academy of Political ta, Jean is majoring in marketing The UM is following the policy and applied his brakes—but the car greeted the delegates at their first ind Social Sciences, Dr. Barnes al­ and studying piano. She is blonde of having one major assembly a didn't stop. It kept on moving until session yesterday. so was research fellow at the Brook­ and does some professional model­ year as part of a regular school the raised shore of the canal and ings Institute, Washington, D. C. ing. weekend for a more effective turn­ out, according to the activities office. heavy foliage called a halt to the Calypso Band To Play Ellen O'Donnell, 17-year-old fresh short journey. .v ..vc-piuce calypso band from Hillel Loves Mambo It was a lucky thing too, as Jamacia will play at 12:30 p.m. to­ -..ie nrsi in a series of weekly Johnson pointed out afterwards, day in the Student Club patio. Mambo lessons will be offered Tues­ MEET THE GANG AT because "both of us would have The group, whose appearance is day at 7:30 p.m. to members of the been in for an untimely dunking." sponsored by Student Body Govern­ Hillel Foundation, 1100 Miller Drive. 7 The only other witness to the in­ ment, is from the cruise ship, S.S. Newcomers may secure Hillel ^ fated ^euaunaat cident was Roger Henry, a student Evangeline. membership at this time. at Ponce De Leon High School. He f = FOR AFTER THE GAME LATE SNACKS was riding by on his bicycle and saw the whole thing happen. Speetallztng In Before a tow truck crew arrived Coeds to pull the car out of the deep in­ HOT CORNED lll'IF A\l> cline, Henry was on his way home. Notice-20% Discount PASTRAMI SWmVH III.S A Coral Gables squad car arrived on ON ALL PERMANENT WAVES the scene later, but police couldn't SERVING THE FINEST IN FOUNTAIN DELICACIES ALL OTHER BEAUTY SERVICES 10% do anything but watch the towing. BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER "I was only going 20 miles an hour," Johnson explained, "when I Hair Stylist MANAGED BY STANLEY GOLDSTEIN-CLASS OF '51 almost took the plunge. I guess I'll have to have my brakes checked." ^af* OPEN UNTIL ONE A.M. AIR CONDITIONED 4612 LE JEUNE ROAD YWCA Slates Meeting Curly Haircut $1.50 A YWCA meeting will be held Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. in the Wo- [ "Fall and Winter hair fashions are Short Hair, men's Lounge, Room 541. Mrs. Lloyd j More Waves and Fewer Curls" Rees, director of the Baptist Stu­ dent Union, is the guest speaker, j Hugo's—1561 Sunset Drive "The Religious Life on the College Campus" is her topic. FREE PARKING AIR CONDITIONED PHONE MO 7-2213

Marksmen Meet Monday 'lhe riurricane Ritle and Pistol Record and Club will meet Monday at 6 p.m. in the Armory Building. SPEC'S TV Camera Store 1566 S. DIXIE HIG: !WAY AT RED ROAD PH. MO 1-3451 first-choice (?

FRIDAY, JAN. 7—N«!ion«l A-socution ol ARGUS REVERE narrow as an arrow S tide t Pc-Minn. 1 Administrators. Visit to University, Faculty Dining Room, 4:45 p. KEYSTONE TCD our smooth-textured m. lV.lta I'hi Kpsilon I'ledEr-Activc Func tion. lota Alpha Hi Pledge Active Function. wool gabardine shaft Alpha Epsilon Pi Plrdue-Activc Function KODAK ZEISS Reserve Olficers Association Social, King­ ston Hotel and Yacht Club Phi Sigma Delta Camera** - Projwlor* - SIHTIIS done with a cluster Winter Formal, Delido Hotel. SAT., JAN. 8—Delta Phi Epsilon Pledges on pleat and narrow self belt. Parade. EYERYBOBY COMES TO SUN., JAN. » Kappa Delta Pi Initiation, up­ Sizes 10-16. Wide choice per lounge. Student Cluh, 3:00 p.m. Har­ vard Club Dinn.-r, Faculty Din ng Room. Record and of colors. Phi Delta Phi Laa' Fraternity Meeting, up­ per lou ge, 7-10 p.m. Camera Store MON., JAN. 10—Greek Symposium Meeting. SPEC'S TV upper lounge, 7:30 p.m. 2 BtOCKS SOUTH OF UM tASESAU FIELD WED., JAN. 12-AROTC reception, upper 250 MIRACLE MILE - CORAL GABLES lounge. 4-6:10 p.m. Pre-Dental Association "We Sell The Best — We El.x Th*» Rest" meeting, 7.-45 p.m. PACE FOUB THE MIAMI HURRICANE JANUARY 7, 1955 Sketchbook Rehearsals Begin Differing Religious Beliefs Hinder Jan 27; Meeting Set Tomorrow Pan-Am Union, Airways Chief Says Sketchbook, with a cast of 13 character actors and 29 chorus By MARSHALL SHAPO members, goes into rehearsal on Thursday, Jan. 27. A prelim­ Hurrican. Staff Wriiw inary meeting of the entire cast is scheduled for tomorrow at The managing director of Pan-American Airways for the 1 p.m.. iin Beaumont Lecture Hall. • Venezuelan area, Arrigo Righi, told history and government This year's show is a musical professors Monday that though he would like to see a Pan- satire on Miami entitled "There Senior Represents UM American federation develop, he+ Ought to Be a Law." doesn't think it can at present. to Tierra del Fuego (southernmost Written by Joe Mascolo and Ste­ As Gator Bowl Princess point in South America) can be He believes that the major dis­ brought to a dynamic level of con­ phanie Winkler, with music and Eugenia Adams represented the advantage and barriers facing such sumption." lyrics by Al Foster, the production UM at the Gator Bowl in Jackson­ • union include the basic religious The Pan-Am director also thinks will be presented in Dade County ville by serving as a princess in the differences of the U.S. and Latin that Canada could come into such a Auditorium on Mar. 25 and 26. queen's court. America, and the long-time colonial union and says he's in favor of "a Named for character parts are Eugenia, with nine other girls from status of many Latin nations which tariff wall all the way from Baffin's Craig Karr, Stanton Bass, Howie Mississippi, Georgia, Texas and Al­ has conditioned their thinking. Bay in Canada to Tierra del Fuego." Solomon, Jack Miller, Van Seplow, abama, took part in all New Year He also points out that there On the mutual agreement side, Dawn Collier, Jo Ann Hosbach, festivities from Dec. 27 to Jan. 2. would be difficulty because of dis­ Righi says that U.S. pop tunes catch Melvin Feller, Natalie Frederick, The Gator Bowl queen was chosen proportionate representation in the on well in Latin countries. Peter Padakis, Dave Shapiro, from the 10 girls in three rounds of Arrigo Righi bicameral system he would propose Penny Kanitsky and Sylvia Mil- judging. Eugenia was named win­ . west! Pan-Am federation for such a union. He says that the "They're terribly American" in gram. ner in the first round but was un­ United States would be to a small some ways, he stated, pointing out Mascolo has been named director able to compete in the other two be­ FTA To Hear Talk Latin nation like New York is to that blue jeans are now a fad with of Sketchbook by the governing cause of illness in her family. Nevada. girls in Caracas. board made up of Dr. Thurston A meeting of the Future Teachers Adams, director of student activities; For serving as a princess, she re­ of America will be held Wednesday Righi, who calls himself a "con­ Fred McCall, bandmaster; Burt ceived a trophy. at 4 p.m. in Memorial Building N- servative capitalist," pointed out 2 Lectures Slated Today Levey, student body president; and The pretty senior is a member of 201. that Latin America is a natural The Physics Journal Club is spon­ Jerry Dangler, secretary of social Delta Zeta sorority, Gamma Theta Mrs. Grace White, a Dade County place to handle the expanding cap­ soring two lectures today at 4 p.m welfare. Upsilon, geography honorary, and primary teacher and author of sev­ italistic system of the U. S. in the Physics Building. Richard Nu Kappa Tau, highest campus wo­ eral articles on reading, is the guest "I beliege," he said, "that the 240, Bourret, UM student, and Sam Ber- Sketchbook committee heads are men's honorary. speaker. 000,000 people from the Rio Grande man, graduate student, will speak. Sy Honig, business manager; Joe Segor, Al Freehling and Larry Ross, publicity; Stanley Colin, program; and Leslie Greenfield, tickets. Committees for the production Wish 'em luck... by TELEGRAM! itself include Seda Khoyan, Peggy Woodard and Peppi Montez, chore­ There's nothing like a telegram to give ography; Fred Albert, sets; Harley wL now eta UAHO the team a big boost just before a tough Joseph, sound and lights; Bill Hig­ game away from home. gins and Ronny White, props; Sandy Just descend on Western Union. Make Calig, Doris Myerson and Joan your message as witty ... as crazy aa Bar en, wardrobe; Lois Granite, you like. The boys will know you're makeup and Mary Lee Rawland, steam, en, } behind them, even though you can't stage manager. be there rooting them on. As a matter of fact, telegrams are •Ma, ArtHteCfr perfect for any occasion . . . birthdays, Chest Drive Nears Goal anniversaries or making a date. Just Latest figures in the UM Com­ call Western Union. munity Chest drive show a total of $8,951, $49 short of the goal of $9,000. A total of 809 donors out of a possible 1170 from University pers­ onnel have contributed to date. Ap­ proximately 70 per cent of the UM's over 300 departments solicited have to W donated to the drive. * UNION Forty-seven departments have WESTERN UNION AGENCY contributed 100 per cent. BooknoK, Mmick B14g., UnivMtity Driv., Conl Gablx. 11.. T.I. MO 1 2561

When a roommate gets you a blind date with and she turns out to M-m-man, his younger sister... be a real doll... •Kat's PURE PLEASURE!

For more pure pleasure... No other cigarette is so rich-tasting P.S. No other brand has ever been able to match the pure pleasure in Camel's exclusive yet so mild ! blend of costly tobaccos I That's why Camels are America's most popular cigarette I *• J. lUroeldi Tobueo Co.. Wlaitoa-Safaa, W. a J VMiARl 7, i*)55 THE MIAMI HURRICANE PAGE FIVI El Salvador Citizens Go Wild Over Band, Hurricanettes Citizens of El Salvador went wild over the Univer­ sity's band and majorettes. UM's good-will represen­ tatives recently joined 38 of the country's bands to perform a musical extravaganza in celebration of the nation's "Day of Revolution." As guests of the El Salvador government, the UM aggregation marched in the big anniversary parade before 200,000 wide-eyed spectators. The "Band of the Hour" and the other bands presented a musical show to a record crowd of 50,000 in the National Stadium. It was six years ago Dec. 13 that the South American country overthrew the bonds of dictatorship. And they have been celebrating their freedom ever since. During their stay, the band and majorettes were treated like kings and queens. They were constantly followed around by people. Sometimes the local citi­ zens were over-affectionate, but they were friendly all the time. UM drummers and Hurricanettes gave exhibi­ tions and instructed El Salvador students in the art of drumming and baton twirling. In return, the group was entertained again and again. They visited the Ilzalco, a volcano which erupts on the average of every eight minutes. They were hon­ ored at a reception given by Robert C. Hill, U. S. ambassador. Dr. Jay F. W. Pearson, University president, received a gift from the government, a miniature man riding in a cart pulled by a pair of oxen. He proudly showed it off aboard the plane .during the return trip. Accom­ panying the band members were Dr. Pearson and his wife, Sidney Maynard, UM treasurer, and Bandmas­ ter Fred McCall.

(Photos hy Boh Gelberg) Leading the "Band of the Hour" down the San Salvador parade route is Joe Henjum, drum major.

Military personnel hold back the over-affectionate crowd. Emily Smith and Althea Jones examine barriers for parade.

Two women peek through lobby window at Henry Barrow and Ralph Reinhart. Dr. and Mrs. Pearson, Sidney Maynard aboard plane. JANUARY 7, 1955 PACE SIX THE MIAMI HURRICANE The Miami Hurricane "esolv. or Dissolve imuiummtsssm by Dick Bibler All-American 1947-54 Most New Year's resolutions have been made bv now and probably almost as many _Publishod Weekly at th* University ol Miami, Corel Gebles, I lurid* Member ot Associated Collegiate Preaa and Florida lntercolle*utt have been broken or forgotten. But it's not Preaa Aaaociation. Repreaamad tor National Advartiaing by National Mvwiuini Service, Inc., 420 Madiaoa Ave., N. Y., N Y. Sti too late for a lew additional ones which might tion nrier—#1.50 per etmeeiar. . have been overlooked by skeptical students. Here are a few timely suggestions to in­ Goodwill Ambassadors corporate in your list, if you have one, which Inter-American relationships were further may come in handy for brightening up dull cemented when the UM Band of the Hour conversations. paid its third visit to the republic of El Sal­ Resolve to . . . refrain from scheduling any vador. The thousands of cheering spectators classes with professors who are consistently crowding the parade route showed that Fred tardy or absent or both . . . Spend one hour McCall's band and his Hurricanettes had 'a day in the library, not necessarily studying, made a strong bond of friendship on their pre­ but rather getting acquainted with the setup vious visits. in case you ever wish to take out a book for The enthusiasm displayed by these people kicks . . . is convincing evidence that a great bond ex­ Laugh at your instructor's jokes at least ists with our good neighbors from the south. once a week to humor him, but not too often This was not just another band trip. This for you may encourage him to go overboard was a mission—a mission to strengthen the . . . Don't fall into heavy slumbers while the ties between the United States and Central prof is lecturing because it gives him the idea America and also to represent the U.S. at the that you are bored . . . annual El Salvadorian "Day of Revolution" See your adviser before you graduate, pref­ celebration. erably the day before, so he can tell you what The band was first invited in 1952 to par­ required courses you still have to take . . . ticipate in El Salvador's anniversary of the Have a dozen or more copies of your ID pic­ Day of Revolution—the 1948 overthrow of the ture made and pass them around to your dictatorship—and since then they have re­ friends so they can remember your face and turned each year. name . . . The request of the El Salvadorian govern­ Either wear glasses or avoid blind dates ment for return visits is honest proof of the . . . Quit loaning out term papers to fellow goodwill created by the Band of the Hour and students who end up with a better grade than ^ctteM, % 7^e ScUton, the confidence in the University of Miami. you . . . All niters to Ihe editor mast be Maybe it would be a good idea to invite If you are one of those who doesn't believe Unfair Campusing signed; names will be withheld on some bands from friendly Latin-American in making resolutions, that's fine. But if you Editor: request Letters do not necessarily nations to play during a half-time show in are loyal to tradition, go right ahead. You Once upon a time a coed living reflect the policy of the paper or the next fall. It's worth consid­ have nothing to lose. in the residence hall of a certain the opinions of the editor. Letter* well-known college received an in­ should be limited to 200 words. ering. And you can always resolve never to make vitation to play the piano at a What better way to have people understand the women's residence halls, in anymore. Well, not until next year. Christmas party of one of the in­ whose integrity and fairness wc each other and to become good neighbors stitution's language clubs. In her students trust, would willingly in­ than to have them work and play together. kindness she accepted. flict unjust penalties. If we are to better understand our neighbors, ROTC Turned Down The program was to end well Ernst Buchtenkirch and conversely, help them to become better ahead of the curfew imposed upon You don't say no to Uncle Sam, so the mili­ the girls who live in college dorm­ acquainted with us, we must continue to fos­ tary department was rather nonplussed when itories. Quite unfortunately, it last­ ter every means of goodwill and to be willing Slop Shop Loafers a prospective freshman declined its offer of ed longer. ambassadors of friendship. Editor: compulsory military training at Louisiana When the deadline hour drew near, therefore, the coed ap­ Why is it that every time I want State University. proached the professor in charge to walk through the slop shop I Standardize Stylo In reply to an information form explaining of affairs, and informed him that have to elbow my way through a that two years of basic military training are she had to leave. bunch of characters that have no­ Inconsistent style standards for research thing better to do than clutter up required at LSU of all physically fit male "Well, you know, we still need the stairway and the door? and term papers are wasting time and energy. you," replied the professor reas­ students between 14 and 23, one freshman These characters seem to be in At the UM, with no standard style, it is up suringly. "If we had a telephone wrote: here we'd call your dorm to tell the greatest number when I try to to the individual instructor to outline the "Thank you for your generous offer to let them you will come in a little later. get through balancing a tray in one form he wants. Invariably, however, the But we have no phone. So I will hand and books in the other. When me join the ROTC at LSU. I assure you that I take you home myself and explain I finally run the gamut and reach styles are never the same and mistakes are would deem it the greatest honor ever to costly. your lateness to the registration a table on the breezeway, there is come to me. After giving the matter deep office." usually more coffee slopping An attempt at standardization has been around the tray than is in the cup. concentration, I have decided that it would The professor kept his promise made by some departments which hand out be best if I decline your offer." and our story should end at this Why can't something be done to printed instructions for term papers. point. keep a little clearer passage? It's The freshman refused the offer "because of understandable that the kids will Lo and behold, it does not, for However, to eliminate the problem entirely the advantage that it would give me over the' congregate in the slop shop on a although this may be hard to be­ would merely require a University-wide girls on the campus." rainy day, but in fair weather? adoption of one style. Copies of the standards lieve, the coed got campused a The red-faced military department plans whole weekend as punishment for Frustrated Student could be handed out during orientation. no action in the case because the he turned her "inexcusable offense" of being This procedure would work at the UM as it out to be a she. forty-eight minutes late. Let it be Thanks For Mismatch mentioned that the events de­ does in many other colleges and universities. Editor: —LSU Daily Revelivee scribed took place at our school. Congratulations to the Orange •' * * ry\ • .'."•• nf,} • • • Any reasonable student under­ stands the need for law-enforce­ Bowl Committee on their fine New ment and discipline. What he does Years Day mismatch and their new not understand is bureaucratic three year contract with the fur­ pedanVy at a progressive univer­ nishers of the same contest. It just sity. proves that you can't match a champion with a third rate team Presumably the case was not and have a decent game. And here given sufficient attention due to the UM is with one of the nations best pre-Christmas rush with its in­ teams with a great future outlook creased work load for all admin­ forced to sit on the sidelines in the istrative officials, because it is in­ Orange Bowl. conceivable that the supervisors of B. S.

Staff John Softness Editor Marvin Randell Biisini'ss Manager Greg Melikov Managing Editor Brian Sheehan Sports Editor Martin Cohen -.... Copy Editor Florence Margolis News Editor Alice Bixler Photo Editor Joan Mallion Features Editor Joe Segor Circulation Manager Marvin Siegel Advertising Manager Assistants: Carol Nelson, RM Dei-burs, newt- f_v.lv,, •w.,. • . .duor; Bob L—C VL ^^trZa^^^ZT^t^J^ Kd-°" dtan: v*—m. Photo by Bubr STUDENT LIVES are in daily jeopardy as drivers and it is the obligation of the driver to observe this IWnblun., Stu Mion, Hli. matkmma L.nn'v B r-S'.:'"~- RicM Normoyl,, M«. •5 D« .n, Al.„ Sch__.id.rm." tW GI?™ lT?x?" N|W">n' M

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PHONE 48 2084 flilVIVERSITY W MEWS SHOP 2828 PONCE DE LEON BIVD. CORAL GABLeS, FLA. STUDEXT « IIAIM.K ACCOUNTS INVITED JANUARY 7, 1955 PACE EIGHT THK MIAMI HURRICANE Tobacco-Minded Coeds Find New Fad In Pipe Smoking

Photo* by Bixlrr Faye Siegel Ellen Walsey Brooky Himmel Pat Banner . . . they taste perfumed . . . stealing show from boys . . . it atomizes my room . . . everybody smokes them By EVELYN SAVAGE ferred a pipe to a cigarette be­ girl is just as rare as unicorns," OrgM-Zat-Oru t tlit.ir cause pipes are cleaner—no nico­ boys complain. . tine on the fingers. "Pipes are a UM coeds have a decisive ad­ "Heap big smoke, but no fire," boon to longevity of life," she re­ vantage over girls from northern describes UM coeds with the latest marks, "because they are relaxing. schools. They can raise tobacco in For The Finest Dry Cleaning campus fad—pipes. You inhale a cigarette but you back of their dorms and then The new ladies' accessories come puff a pipe." change the name of their street in a variety of shapes and sizes, But pipes also have their draw­ to "Tobacco Road." ranging from the carved or paint­ backs. Then again, if the girls survive ed "day" pipe to the jeweled "eve­ "It's murder breaking it in," ad­ CAMPUS CLEANERS the ordeal of their first pipe they ning" pipe. mits another young lady. "You might make BPOC—Big Puff On "If Joe College smokes a pipe need a good carbon coating inside Campus. Finished Laundry Service why can't Miss Jane College?" say the bowl and it takes three days staunch supporters of the move­ of hard smoking to get the de­ Fluff Dry Service ment. sired effect. Your tongue gets However, a long-time male fuzzy," she complained. Student Club To Gain Tailoring & Alterations smoker confided he thought it was Corn cob pipes have been pop­ Greater Miami Map a passing fancy with girls because ular for many years with women a pipe soon acquires a strong to­ Lost students and tourists will VOW-.; Locations of the mountainous regions of soon find a map of Greater Miami bacco odor and "smells up the Kentucky, North Carolina and house." in front of the Student Club instead To Serve You Tennessee. In Holland women of a St. Bernard. Ellen Walsey, sophomore educa­ smoke big black cigars. The Chambers of Commerce of tion major, received her pipe as 3750 1415 2620 a present from up North. "They A 15-cent can of tobacco goes Greater Miami, which are placing think we arc stealing the show further than a 20-cent package of maps of Miami in strategic areas, BIRD ROAD SUNSET DRIVE PONCE DE LEON cigarettes, is the general opinion. from them," was her comment on will erect the illuminated directory MIAMI SO. MIAMI CORAL GABLES boys' reactions. One senior boy said his tobacco this week. lasted him all through college. He The map is an experiment. Faye Siegel, senior business ma­ doesn't smoke much, though. jor, says although pipe tobacco usually smells masculine, her Spe­ Rumor has it that next on cam- cial Ladies' Blend has a distinct pas will be jeweled cigars, snuff feminine odor. "Pipes taste per­ and chewing tobacco for ladies. fumed," Faye stated. Susan Hayward surprised movie­ Brooky Himmel and Pat Ban­ goers recently when she smoked irm ner, freshmen, use the 79 mixture a pipe as Rachael Jackson, wife because of its sweet and delic­ of Andrew Jackson, in "The Pres­ ious aromatic flavor. When I ident's Lady." Was this the be­ study I like to have my pipe in my ginning? Engineering mouth—it atomizes my room," says Tempo's rebellion against the Brooky. current trend toward long-haired representatives of Pat claims everybody in her home­ guys and short-haired dolls dem­ town, Conway, S. C, smokes pipes. onstrated the seriousness of a One girl smoker said she pre­ campus fad. "The old-fashioned PRATT & WHITNEY I»IIIYI<:-I\ CLEAKERS and AIRCRAFT LEBON LAUNDRY will be on the campus 2 SLOCKS WIST 6220 SUNSET DRIVE Of CITY HAU Friday, January 7 AUL WORK DONE WIS ©UR <>%% \ PLAN lemtmrlng Ifm.tlllu Ytnrk One Oafi Service an Hequeat to interview Veemch Org I learning AU Worh Preapotted IWIUHH 4 TORY SPECiAL ££« AERONAUTICAL METALLURGICAL ELECTRICAL MECHANICAL D-Mimfullv ClMiwd CHEMICAL PHYSICISTS PANTS •nd PTMM<1 3 lor 1.00 ENGINEERING GRADUATES

(Plain Cotton) Beautifully Laundered SHIRTS Minimum Two Shirti 15 c ea. Please See Your WASHED, DRIED COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICER FLUFF DRY AND FOLDED calb. 6 LB. MIN. 10 • or an appointment on Cleaners and Laundry LEBON Phone 2-5214 Friday, January 7 MAIN OFFICE AND PUNT 26 N. W. 5th STREET JANUARY 7, 1955 THE MIAMI HURRICANE PACE NINE The Radio-TV log Hew Red Tide' Station Opened 3 Plays Slated A new field station for Red Tide of discoloration or dead fish. 'Seasoned' Review, Scarlatti Works i irch has been opened at Fort Research carried on by Dr. Er­ At Box Theater DeSoto Park on Mullet Key by the nest Reynolds, research associate, UM Marine Laboratory. has included experiments on bac­ Scheduled For 'Books, Music' Show Three student written and acted According to Dr. F. G. Walton teria which have been cultured in plays will be presented at the Box A review of Dorothy Canfield's novel, "Seasoned Timber," Smith, director of the Marine Labo­ the laboratory. Theater on North Campus Jan. 14 ratory, this field station completes a and selections by Scarlatti wil be featured tomorrow on and 15 at 8:30 p.m. chain of stations important to the "Books and Music" over WVCG at 11 a.m. The plays for the first 1955 pro­ research. Tryouts Set Tuesday duction are "This is College" by Dawn Collier, radio-TV student,'* An offer by the Pinellas County For First TV Drama Mary Bew; "Home is a Mountain" .•ill read the review and Henry BAff €___»•••___» ___> Park Board on the use of a cabin Tryouts for the first dramatic tele­ by Johnnie White; and "The Travel­ Gregor, pianist, will play. "Vl% ~C cruiser, biological equipment and vision program are scheduled for er in the Peachtree" by Emery News events on campus and ex­ laboratory space at the museum Tuesday from 2:30-5 p.m. in Room Chambers. cerpts from a speech to the dele­ To Be Honored operated by the Board made pos­ 394—North Campus. The cast for "This is College," di­ gates to the National Association of Army ROTC graduating seniors sible the opening of the field sta­ Paul Nagel Jr., instructor in radio rected by Sheila Taylor, includes Student Personnel Administrators will be honored 2 p.m Wednesday tion. and television, who is in charge of Gerry Carter, Judy Gelford, Jean conference will be aired on "This at a review on the drill field. A re­ Recent study at the Marine Lab­ the audition, points out that students Lamusta, Peggy Brunson, Beverly Week at UM." ception will follow from 4-6:30 p.m. oratory has included a strain of bac­ need not be radio, television or film Brenner, Pat Powers and Sid Piatt. The speech, by Dr. Robert Johns, in the upper lounge of the Student teria isolated from waters of the majors or minors to try out. director of the United States Arm­ Club for faculty, family and friends. Andy Prine, Patsy Clark, Tony Red Tide areas. The bacteria came The script is an original play by ed Forces Institute, will be given U.S. Congressman William Lantaff Pahon, Bob Berry and Mary Lee from Red Tide waters and from oth­ student Haline Urban and will be tonight at the NASPA dinner at will speak at the review and award Rawland were selected for "Home er sea water that contained no traces presented on the "UM in Review". the McAllister Hotel in Miami. the Military Order of World Wars is a Mountain." Eleanor Baskin to one graduate. will direct. Advertisement "This Week at UM" may be heard tomorrow at 4:45 p.m. over WGBS. Thirteen cadets will formally re­ Rounding out the bill is "The ceive their commissions Jan. 25. Traveler in the Peachtree" directed Another program whose guests by Ellen Burke. Judy Bates, Nelson with will be members attending thc Receiving commissions are George M. Berdy, Daniel Miller, Allan Pat­ Case, Grady Puett and Ben Myer NASPA seminar is the "UM in Re­ will perform. On Campus MaxShuJman view" on WTVJ at 1:30 Sunday. terson and Nicholas L. Roch, arm­ ored; and Robert J. Lehauplein, Although admission is free, tic­ (Author of "flnrefuot Boy With Chttk," ale.) Visiting deans and Foster E. Alter, chemical. kets must be picked up at the Ring UM dean of men, will take part in box office prior to the performances. a round table discussion. Whitten King, Richard Keller, Harry E. Vaughn and James D. Zif- "Is South Florida Producing the CLOTHES MAKE THE BMOC fron," artillery; Herbert Beranawski, Best Architecture for this Area?" is Grad Earns Airline Post John E. Smith, Millard Stein and A tew weeks ago 1 discussed fashions for coeds. 1 pointed out then the University of Miami Round Ta­ Marvin C. Jerow, signal. Harold Williams, UM graduate, ble question for Monday at 10 p.m. has been appointed Pan American that any girl who really wanted to go places on campus had to be bold and ingenious WMB.it came to clothes. This is no less true over WGBS. World Airways station manager in for the male student. Panelists will include James E. Ticket Committee Meets Guatemala City. Believe me, men, you'll never get anywhere if you keep skulking Branch, UM professor of architec­ A Sketchbook ticket committee A native of Bainbridge, Ga., Wil­ around in those old plus-fours. What you need is some dash, some tural engineering; Samuel Kruse, meeting will be held today at 3:30 liams is married and has a son. He verve, some inventiveness in your apparel. Don't be imprisoned by president of the South Florida p.m. in the upper lounge of the Stu­ has been with the company since the traditional conservatism of men's clothing. Brighten up your dent Club. 1941. appearance with a single earring, or a cavulry sabre, or a gold derby. chapter of the American Institute However, guard against gaudiness. If, for instance, you are wear­ of Architects; and Herbert Savage, ing a gold derby, do not also wear a cavalry sabre. This is too much. president of tbe Miami Junior Wear a dagger instead, or, for informal occasions, a Bowie knife. Chamber of Commerce. (Speaking of Howie knives, I wonder how many of you know what a great debt this country — indeed, thc whole world — owes The miracle of flight and a dem­ to the West Point class of 18H6? You all know, of course, that Colonel onstration of nature's engineering in Janus Bowie of the Class of 1836 invented the Bowie knife, but do the construction of a bird's wing is you know of the many other important contributions to cutlery the "Science Snapshots" offering on that were made by classmates of Colonel Bowie's? Are you aware, Thursday at 6 p.m. on WTVJ. for example, that Colonel Harry Clasp invented the Clasp knife? Or that Colonel Harry Jack invented the Jack knife? Or that Colonel To tell "What's in a Bird's Wing" Hairy Putty invented the Putty knife? Or that Colonel Harry will be Oscar Owre, curator of UM Cannon invented the towel? zoology museum, who will be inter­ By a curious coincidence, every member of the graduating class viewed by Oliver Griswold, program at the U. S. Military Academy in 181)6 was named Harry, save for coordinator. Colonel James Bowie. This coincidence is believed unique in the history of American education, though, of course, quite common in Europe.) ,

Profs Named To Council Uut 1 digress. We were talking about men's campus fashions. Let us tarn now to a persistent rumor that a garment called the "suit" Of Florida Science Group is on the verge of making a comeback. Some of you older students may remember the "suit." It was an ensemble consisting of a jacket Two UM professors were recently and trousers, both of which — this'll kill you — both of which were named to thc Council of the Florida made out of the same material! Academy of Sciences. The lust "suit" ever seen on an American campus was in 1941 — Dr. Harry S. Robertson, chairman and I ought to know, because I was wearing it. Ah, 1941! Well do I remember that melancholy year. I was an undergraduate then and of the Physics Department, has been in love—hopelessly in love, caught in the riptide of a reckless romance elected chairman of the physical sci­ with a beauteous statistics major named Harry Sigafoos. (She is one ences section which carries with it of the two girls I have ever known named Harry. The other one membership on the executive coun­ is her sister.) • cil. I loved Harry though she was far too expensive a girl for me. Named to the council as counselor- She liked to cat at fancy restaurants and dance at costly ballrooms and ride in high priced cars. But worst of all, she was mad for at-large was Dr. J. P. Lesperance, wishing wells. It was not unusual for her to drop coins into a director of UM's time and motion wishing well for two or three hours on end. My coins. study laboratory. Bit by bit I sold off my belongings to pursue this insane courtship — UM will be host to the group for first my liooks, then my clothes, until finally I was left with nothing its meeting next year. to wear hut I "suit." One night I came calling for her in this garment. "What is lhat!" she gasped, her lip curling in horror. "That is a 'suit' " I mumbled, averting my eyes. ''Well, I can't be seen around campus with you in that," said she. "Please, Harry," I begged. "It's all I've got." "I'm sorry," she said firmly and slammed the door.

Good Food 1 slunk home and lit a Philip Morris and sat down to think. I always light a Philip Morris when I sit down to think, for their mild vintage tobacco is a great aid to cerebration. I always light Philip Morrises when I don't sit down to think too, because Philip Morris is my favorite cigarette, and I know it will be yours SHORTY'S There are two important reasons why the Martin too once you try that crazy vintage tobacco. Star is rising...and why your career can rise along Well sir, smoking and thinking thus, my eye happened to fall on with it: an ad In the campus newspaper. "WIN A COMPLETE WARD- BAR-B-Q ROUE" said the ad. "Touhy's Toggery, the campus's leading men's ...The finest aircraft plant, engineering, electronic, store, announces a contest to pick the best dressed man on campus. nuclear physics and research facilities on the eastern The winner of the contest will receive, absolutely free, a blue hound's RANCH tooth jacket, a yellow button-down shirt, a black knit tic, a tattersall Ka board. vest, gray flannel trousers, argyle socks, and white buck shoes with ...An entirely new management concept in Ad­ two inch crepe soles." RIBS . . . 1.35 vanced Design and weapons systems development, My mouth watered at the thought of such a splendid wardrobe, Served with Slaw, Bread and but how could anybody possibly pick me as the best dressed man on French Fries embracing creative engineering ranging upward campus-me in my "suit"? Suddenly an inspiration struck me. I from nuclear powered aircraft to anti-gravity re­ seized pen in hand and wrote a letter to the editor of the campus newspaper: CHICKEN . . 1.50 search and tomorrow's satellite vehicle. "Dear Sir, I see by the paper that Touhy's Toggery is going to There are exceptional opportunities for dynamic give a complete wardrobe to the student picked as the best dressed Served with Slaw, Bread and man on campus. What a ridiculous idea! French Fries young engineering talent at the Glenn L. Martin "Obviously, to be thc best dressed man on campus, you must first Company in Baltimore, Maryland. have a lot of clothes. And if you have a lot of clothes, what do you need with another wardrjha? CORN-ON-COB .20 See the Martin representative visiting this campus "Touhy's Toggery shoU^Bive a new wardrobe to the worst dressed January 13 & 14 Contact your placement office foi man on campus. Me, for :jfl_E_ncc. I am an eyesore. There isn't a crow in town that will come near me. Three times this month the Salvation BEEF or PORK . .50 appointment and further details. Army salvage truck has picked me up. Esquire has cancelled my subscription. Big. Mt am Sandwiches "I submit that a vote for me is a vote for reason, a vote for equity, with French Fries in short, a vote for the American way." With a flourish, I signed the letter and sent it off, somehow feeling certain that very soon I would be wearing a complete new wardrobe. And I was right — because two weeks later I was drafted. ®M«t Shulmtn. 19,11 2 MIIES SOUTH Of UNIVMSITY BALTIMORE • MARYLAND ON DIXIE HI-WAY This column is brought to you by the makers of PHILIP MORRIS i who think you would enjoy their cigarette. ' THE MIAMI HURRICANE JANU/YRV 7. 1955 Fall Semester Exam Schedule

Exam will be If Your Clasa Exam will be given: Meets On: Th-irs., Jan. 20 Wed.. Jan. 19 12:-0-2:20 g|00-9:50 Wed.. Jan. 19 Monday, Jan. 24 8:00-9:50 8:00-9:50 Friday, Jan. 21 Friday, Jan. Jl 12:10-2:20 8:00-9:50 Monday, Jan. thurs., Jan. 20 !2:W-2:20 10:00-11:50 Monday, Jan. 24 MWF Wed., Jan. 19 12:10 10:0011:50 10:00-11:50 12:00 or Tues., Jan. 25 Thurs., Jan. 20 MWF 8:00-9:50 1:00 or 1:10 12:30-2:20 tues., Jan. 25 MWF l-rid*. , Jan. 21 TTh 1:10 or 4:00 12:10-2:20 2:00 or 2:90 10:00-11:50 Tue.., Jan. 25 10:0011:50 Examinations will take place in the rooms in which the individual class­ es have been meeting. If a student finds a conflict in his exam schedule, he should consult the instructors whose courses are in conflict. They will elim­ inate the conflict by arranging an alternate time or times. The above sched­ ule is to be followed in all cases except group examinations or conflicts. The examination schedule for Evening Division classes (those meeting after 4:30 p.m.) will be announced by the Evening Division Office. •GROUP EXAMINATIONS — Instructors will announce rooms Newest completed fraternity house on campus belongs to Sigma Chi brothers. All Air Science 101 and 201 sections, Monday, Jan. 24, 2:30-4:20. All Business Law 212 sections, Saturday, Jan. 22, 8:00-9:50 a.m. The Organizations Story All Business Statistics 221 sections, Friday, Jan. 21, 2:30-4:20. Debaters Take 2nd All Chemistry 103. 111, 112, 212, 216 sections, Thurs., Jan. 20, 4:30-6:20. AU Economics 201 and 202 sections, Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2:30-4:20. In Florida Tournament All Education 101 sections, Friday, Jan. 21, 2:30-4:20. 'Pledges On Parade' To Highlight All Education 260 sections, Thurs., Jan. 20, 2:30-4:20. Jerry Kogan and Bart Udell re­ All French 101 sections, Monday, Jan. 24, 4:30-6:20. cently led the UM's varsity debaters All Government 141 sections, Thurs., Jan. 20, 2:30-4:20. First '55 Week-Long Social Whirl to a second-place rating at the Uni­ All Government 142 sections, Saturday, Jan. 22, 10:00-11:50. versity of Florida's fourth annual All History 101 sections, Wednesday, Jan. 19, 4:30-6:20. The eighth annual "Plages on the DeLido Hotel, Miami Beach. 12-team tournament. All History 102, 201, and 202 sections, Friday, Jan. 21, 4:30-6:20 Parade," three pledge-active func­ The Tau Delta Phi pledge-active The Gators won the tournament All Spanish 101 sections, Saturday, Jan. 22, 1:00-2:50. tions and two other socials, head the function will consist of a semi-for­ with eleven victories followed by the •DO NOT INCLUDE E SECTIONS 1955 calendar of campus activities. mal dance tomorrow at 9 p.m. in the UM with nine and Dartmouth with ALL FINAL GRADES ARE DUE IN REGISTRAR'S OFFICE Delta Phi Epsilon is presenting its Monte Carlo Hotel. eight. THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 1&55 POP affair tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in the Roney Plaza Hotel gardens. John Stone will introduce pledges from all 12 UM sororities. Rl Swanko and his orchestra will provide music until midnight. POP chairman is Davida Corr of DPhiE. There is no admission charge for the affair and the public is in­ vited. The DPhiE pledge-active func­ tion will be held tonight in the Colony Restaurant, Coral Way, Sorority awards and new officers will he announced by the actives and a show will be presented by the pledges. Iota Alpha Pi is sponsoring a din­ ner-dance tonight at 8:30 p.m. in the Latin Quarter on Palm Island. New officers of the sorority are Rita Paparo, president; Natalie Zel- eznik, vice president; Marlene Sol- lar, treasurer; Marcy Raffel, corres­ ponding secretary; and Bernice Suss­ man, recording secretary. A social is scheduled for the Re­ serve Officers Association tonight at 8 p.m. at the Kingston Hotel and Yacht Club. An aquatic show, a dance and weiner roast are on the agenda for the evening. Phi Sigma Delta will hold its win­ ter formal also at 8 p.m. tonight in ! p* 7\ Interviews for January IMS-The first Boeing plant, Seattle 1964— Boeing's Seattle plant at it appears today. New Engineering Building is mhaaan la ler^reuit* These companies will have a rep­ resentative at the Placement Ser­ vice, building 82, Main Campus on the dates indicated. Those who wish Is career stability important to you? to be interviewed should sign up at once for a specific time assignment. All 1955 graduating seniors should immediately complete their senior Then lhe chart below will Ix.' ol interest, tnd I! S2 n't IMHHIHTS. as well as work physicists and mathematicians with ad­ folders at the Placement Service. It shows that 46% of Boeing's engineers on pilotlesi aircraft, supersonic (light vanced degrees. Jan. 7—Pratt H Whitney Aircraft Corp., East have heen with this company lor live and research in nuclear powered aircraft. Careers at Boeing afford a wide vari­ Hartford, Conn. or more years; 25% have lx.cn here ll) Onr nl tml worlds large.t mfus., .111.ull Still another reason is t Ii is: Boeing ety of experience in research, design and i nKinccn, I.lt-ctrical and Mechanical engineers. or more years, and 6% lor IS yens. always has put dominant emphasis on production, as well as work with new National Lead Co. (Titanium Division) South Amhoy, N. J. engineering development. Pioneering in materials and technioaes, and contacts All I'hyairal science majors, Chemists, in- Isaa nt n\ tn 40*. Ml this field has meant that Boeing con uilh a truss section ol industry through ifnetn. ?!• am Jan. 10—U. S. Bureau of Ships, Waahinfton, stanilv has increased its engineering stall Boeing's last subcontracting program. D. C. 15 • Electrical. Mechanical. Industrial, Civil, in relation to total employees. Fifteen Boeing promotes from within and I'hysics, ts> Math. Jan. 12—Shell Oil Co., New York, N. Y. S* years ago, one out ol 16 employees was holds regular merit reviews to assure in­ Chiin: [• lor Refinery and Research in HI., in engineering, hive years ago the pro dividual recognition. Engineers are en- Tesas, and Calif. Jan. 1)—Glenn L. Merlin Co., New York, One reason for this stability is tli.n portion i'i engineers had been raised ...mnigcd to take graduate studies while N.Y. Boeing has gmwn steadilv for 48 years, to one in ten and today it lias climbed working and are reimbursed for all tui- All types of Engineers. Physics, Msth ma­ jors. providing plenty of room for adv ante to one in seen. lion expense. Jen. la]—Eriipee-Pioneer Division — Bendix ment. Another reason is the highly in Boeing 1*S rewarding openings for Aviation Ceorp., Tctee-boro, New Jersey. For lurirttr Boeing career ,nlo,motion Manufacturer of products for the pteeision teresting type of work at Boeing, such engineers of EVERY category—clectri zonuilt your PLACEHttNT OFFICE, ot .rltm indtifltrics Electrical snd Mechanical engineers. as designing and building America's first cal, civil, mechanical, aeronautical and Bendix Products Division, Bendix Aviation I0HN C. SANDERS, Stafl EnBineer - PerutMl Corp., South Bend, Indiana. jet transport and the revolutionary B-47 related fields, as well as for applied Boeing Airplane Company, Seattle 14, Walk. Automobile, Aviation, Marine and Indus­ trial products. Electrical and Mechanical en* pincers. Jan. 17—Auditor General Dept. of the Air Force, Fort Worth, Texaa. Accounting majors—Johs sre nation wide. Group meeting at the Placement Service at 9:00 a.m. Individual interviews beginning at 10:00 a.m. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON WICHITA, KANSAS JANUARY 7, 1955 THE MIAMI HURRICANE PACE ELEVEN 3-Week Intensive Training Promised Honors Lote Proff Lowe Slates Technique Exhibit Fund Is Set Up To answer the many inquiries by The other section contains defin­ For New Summer TV, Film Institute students, teachers and the local pub­ itive explanations of the techniques A three-week television and film training institute will be To Buy Books lic, the Lowe Art Gallery opens of painting. tomorrow with an informative ex­ held in July by the UM Radio-TV Film department. Members of the English Depart­ The show, which will end Janu­ hibition entitled "Techniques and ary 23. has an exhibition in the back Intensive courses in live television and film production are ment and the Administration have Care of Paintings". established a Memorial Fund to hon­ gallery of paintings from "The Max­ planned in cooperation with TV sta-* — and the Reela FiIm or the late Dr. Millet Henshaw, for­ One section is devoted to proper im Karolik Collection." tion WTVJ and Reela Films of Mi-, laboratories, home care of paintings, complete, ami. The session, to be held from | Planning conferences, screenings and mer English professor who died This collection of nineteenth cen­ dry-run sessions will take place at July 17. with remedies for the most common tury American paintings is being July 11-31, will be taught by key painting ills. members of the University, WTVJ the University. The Memorial Fund will commem­ circulated by the Smithsonian Insti­ orate Dr. Henshaw's service to the tution to nine participating museums and Reela Films staffs. Dr. Head said that institute par­ In this section is included paint­ University and his many contribu­ ings with their X-rays and explan- [ in an effort to bring attention to Advanced undergraduates may ticipants must plan to devote 55 tions toward the betterment of un­ ations of why certain paintings this much neglected period in earn five credits from the courses hours a week to group activity derstanding in education. shown are fakes. American Art. which are designed primarily for plus individual preparation. Pro­ professionals in public communica­ grams of recreational and social All money contributed toward the tion who want to understand basic activities. fund will be used to purchase books and other suitable memorials. Con­ problems of TV and motion picture Enrollment is by advanced appli­ presentation. tributions should be sent to Mrs. cation only. Tuition is $12. Apart­ Irene Morrow, assistant to the UM Beautiful Orchids Participants are expected to be ments are available on campus for treasurer, clearly marked, "For Hen­ mainly educators, public relations registrants and their families. Those shaw Memorial Fund." TO MEET YOUR BUDGET and advertising personnel, church living on campus may obtain meals Books suitable for inclusion in a and civic leaders and radio station for $52.50 and room for $18 for the proposed memorial collection are al­ personnel preparing to transfer to three weeks. so being accepted. These books television, according to Dr. Syd­ Complete details and answers to should be sent to the English De­ Corsages $1.50 & up ney W. Head, chairman of the specific questions may be obtained partment, attention of John Appel, Radio-TV-Film Department. from Dr. Sydney Head, Chairman, instructor in English, who is in Radio-TV-Film Department. An opportunity to gain some ex­ charge of the fund. Flowers By Wire Anywhere perience in all the functions making up the process of planning and pre­ senting programs will be given each Fisher To Speak Monday Accounting Editor To Talk participant, said Dr. Head. Either Dr. Granville C. Fisher, chairman H. A. Finney, accounting editor of the live TV or film section may be of the Department of Psychology, Prentice-Hall Publishing Co., will Coral Way Flower Shop chosen for emphasis. will talk on "The Temple of Aphro­ speak to the Accounting Society All phases of television produc­ dites lies in ruins" Monday at 7:30 Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the Candle­ 241 MIRACLE MILE p.m. in the upper lounge of the Stu­ light Inn, Coconut Grove. His topic tion, including program planning, OPPOSITE MIRACLE THEATRE PH. 4-6196 writing, studio operations, control dent Club. The Greek Symposium is will be the current controversies and room operations, performance skills, sponsoring the appearance. trends in accounting. set construction and graphics will _>e included in the TV section. In the film section participants will study processing, sound record­ ing, editing, lenses, camera opera­ tion, lighting, animation, film buying for TV and other phases. Sites for most of the production activity will be the WTVJ studios Official Notices To Students: Our records indicate that many students who have availed them­ selves of our deferred tuition pay­ ment plan have allowed their ac­ counts to become delinquent. If you are one of these students, please re­ port to Mrs. Foster in the Business Office immediately. S. B. Maynard Treasurer

To All Foreign Student-.: Please call at the office of the Hispanic American Institute, Mer­ rick 323, for official immigration reg­ istration cards which must be filled out and turned in'to the United States Post Office before January 31, 1955. Dr. R. S. Boggs, Director Hispanic American Institute

To Graduating Seniors: Students expecting to receive the bachelor's degree on 31 January 1955, and wishing to enter the Graduate School thereafter, should apply now for admission to the Graduate School. Application blanks are avail­ able in office of the Graduate School, second floor of the old Administra­ tion Building. J. Riis Owre Dean of Graduate School

To Occupants of Men's and Women's Residence Halls: Reservations for the next semester are now being taken at the Resi­ dence Halls office, 1300 Dickinson Drive. It is necessary to make a res­ ervation so that you may be assured -fy iaste. ***** of your room for next semester space in the dormitories. A $10 deposit is STUDENTS ARE ECSTATIC about Luckies. That's the word, required when making the reserva­ straight from the latest, largest college survey ever. Again, tion if you are presently living on campus. the No. 1 reason Luckies lead in colleges over all other If your plans should change after brands, coast to coast — border to border: Luckies taste paying the deposit, you have the better. They taste better, first of all, because Lucky Strike privilege of cancelling the reserva­ tion up to Jan. 10, 1955 and receiving means fine tobacco. Then, that tobacco is toasted to taste I refund of the deposit. better. This famous Lucky Strike process tones up Luckies' William F. Fisher light, good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even better. Director of Housing So be smart, like the student in the Droodle above, titled: IX-SHUIFF'S tAOOl ROMAN FIGUBI SKATIB Norris Edgerton Michael Scales Lucky smoker swinging in hammock. Swing to Luckies your­ To February 1955 graduates: Virginia Polytechnic Institute U.C.L.A. self. Enjoy the better-tasting cigarette . . . Lucky Strike. Those students expecting to grad­ uate in February 1955 must pay their diploma fees in the business office as soon as possible. The deadline date is December 18, 1954. BeteitasteLuci.^ UICKIES TASTE BEnER...CUten(feU(^oofJt^! Dr. II. Franklin Williams 5-V.1 Co PRODUCT or I /nti Jrmttttjetzn o>WKace£>-C

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BOOKS NOT BEING USED WILL BE TRY THE PARKER "50" AND "21" PEN. BOUGHT AT THE CURRENT AVAILABLE WITH MATCHING PENCILS. USED MARKET PRICE. UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE JANUARY 7, 1955 THE MIAMI HURRICANE PACE THIRTEEN Students Cultivate Talents 8 European Nations, Cuba Offer Fellowships Summer Stock Training Offered Nine countries are offering fel­ ages of 20 and 35, should be un­ ment includes round trip fare, lowships to United States citizens married. Deadline is March 1. maintenance and travel in Spain. for graduate study in 1955-56. The Sweden-American Founda­ Deadline is May 1. In Short Box Theater Productions Main qualifications for candi­ tion has three fellowships to stu­ Students interested in study in By NANCIANNE BRADD There are 12 short one-act per­ dates are graduation in high stand­ dents under 35, covering room and Denmark may apply for three gov­ Hurricane Stall Writer formances produced yearly by the ing from a college or university, board. Tuition will be waived. ernment scholarships due April 1. Summer stock brings to mind old Box. The plays originate from the and an adequate knowledge of Students must apply before April A master's degree or an equiv­ barns, homemade props, starving ac­ Drama Department's playwriting the language of the country in 1. alent in professional training is re­ tors, high hopes and low salaries. classes. Selections for the first bill which they intend to study. The Netherlands government of­ quired for six $970 scholarships However, the UM offers an ama­ of the season are picked from the Application forms may be ob­ fers three fellowships beginning offered by the Italian government. teur type summer stock in the Box prizewinners entered in the Bow­ tained from the United States Stu­ Sept. 1 to July 1, 1956. Study may Candidates must outline their pro­ Theater on North Campus, where man F. Ashe contest. dent Department of the Institute include Dutch law, history and in­ grams for advanced study or re­ students partake of the talents and The Box is a lab, not limited to of International Education, 1 East ternational law. A knowledge of search. Applications must be filed advice of drama professors and at drama students only, but open to j 67 Street, New York, N. Y. Dutch is not a prerequisite but by April 1. same time utilize this information anyone who would like to exercise Four Woolley scholarships for students are expected to attain un­ The Cuban American Cultural in practical application. his Shakespearean or Barrymore art and music study in Paris are derstanding in the language dur­ Institute has one scholarship for talents. The Box is a theatrical experiment offered for an eight months period ing tbeir stay. March 1 is applica­ the academic year beginning in created several years ago at the After amateur runs at the Box, beginning October 15, 1955. An al­ tion deadline. September for study at the Uni­ University of North Carolina by many student actors go on to the lotment of $1,000 will be awarded. Advance study or research at versity of Havana. Fred Koch Sr. It was brought to UM Bing. Candidates must be under 35 and any Spanish university is offered Further information is available in 1939 by his son, who is present "There is no dividing line between • must apply before Feb. 1. in a $2,000 scholarship. The allot­ by writing the Institute. director of the Ring Theater and the Box and Ring," Koch explained, Switzerland offers scholarships Drama Department. "except that the Ring, which is well- ! at six of its universities wilh nom­ inal tuition charges paid. Applica­ It is here the students are afforded known throughout the country aims tion must be made by March 1. an opportunity to cultivate their in­ for perfection while in the little- terests and talents in every phase of known Box, the novice really learns Twenty-seven awards in engi- | the theater. They participate in all show business from the ground up! neering, education and theology Santacroce's RESTAURANT stages of production from the initial We strive for the professional touch." are offered by Germany ranging "Opposite the Dorms on Dixie" first-draft to the actual production. As there is no charge for admis­ from six to ten months in length. sion to view the plays, the lab is Applicants should be between the "One of the things that makes it financed by fees paid by the parti­ so appealing to the public is the cipating students. forum conducted after the play," "Both teachers and students of 5 Scholarships Offered Koch said. "The student playwrights, Five scholarships of $1,000 each designers, directors, actors and tech­ drama feel that these experimental productions are the most exciting will be awarded by the Auxiliary to nicians engage in an open discussion, the American Osteopathic Associa­ receiving comments and criticisms and valuable phase of drama train­ ing," Koch said. tion for entering collegiate classes from the audience." in the fall, 1955. Although the plays are predomin­ Information and application forms antly student productions, instruct­ Box Tryouts Scheduled may be obtained from the Scholar­ ors do appoint the technicians and Tryouts for Christopher Fry's ship Chairman, Auxiliary to the behind-the-scenes men. Actors, how­ comedy, "The Lady's Not for Burn­ American Osteopathic Association, ever, have regular tryouts for their ing," will be held in the Box The­ 212 E. Ohio St., Chicago 11, 111. Dead­ parts. atre, North Campus, today at 3:30 line forforms is May 1. Winners will and 8 p.m. be announced after May 15. Ad Honoraries -•rn* ..•4,000,000 answers later Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi, national advertising hon­ oraries, will have a joint initiation and dinner Sunday at 6:30 p.m. in the Dixie Belle Inn. Awards for professional achieve­ A few figures tell the story. ment in the advertising field and service for the fraternity will be ... 7 years of painstaking analysis, research and design given to Dr. Victor W. Bennett, chairman of the marketing depart­ by engineers from nearly every field of technology. ment, and Charles Schwartz, Holsum Bakery advertising manager. Guest speaker for the occasion is . . . 14,200 hours of experimental engine Arthur Schofield, national adver­ tising and promotion manager of the operation in test cells and in flight test Storer Broadcasting Co., owners of WGBS, eight other radio stations and . . . 4,000,000 individual, complex mathematical two TV stations. New members of the advertising problems solved by electronic computers. fraternity are Marvin Siegel, Rich­ s* ard Brandt, Larry Friedman, Dick Alter, Jay Kerness, John Conlan, and Frank Thomas. As a result, America now has the world's GAX initiates are Joan Cain, Ma­ ry Conway, Lucia Dobler, Gayle most powerful production aircraft engine Eldredge, Jean Fresh, Jean Fried­ man, Heather Woodard, Nancy Has- — the J-57 turbojet. Careful engineering tetler, Ann Price, Pat Ulrich, Char- mel Vetter, Joan Wagner, Barbara development like this has made Whitney and Janet Wood. Pratt & Whitney Aircraft the CLASSIFIED world's foremost designer and builder of aircraft engines. WANTED TO BUY TOP PRICE FOR MENS SLACKS, SHOES, lusj-ase, lii-hing tackle, T. V.'a, radio,, toola. Saa-'a Swap Shop, 30 N.W. 5th St. Ph. 2 22S0. PRATT & WHITNEY PERSONALS AIRCRAFT UNWANTED HAIR REMOVED Sate • Quick - Permanent DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORP. 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PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER, NOTARY, Mimeographing Theaea. Margaret Waaki, 2343 Ponce de Leon Boulevard. Phone 48-3778. Reaidence MO 1-7874. FOR SALE 10 FT. AUXILIARY SLOOP. Beat buy in town. Good party boat. Phona 48-1608 or 82-1626. PHOTOGRAPHERS CAMERAS AND PROJECTORS exchanged, repaired, bought and sold. Kodaka and ama­ teur auppliea. Faahion Foto Studio and Camera Shop. 7279 Red Road. MO 7-9945. FACE FOURTEEN THE MIAMI HURRICANE JANUARY 7, 1955 —Sidelines On Sports PiKA Closes Gap Basketball Nears Completion; Harding, Gustafson On Leading AEPi Championship Playoffs Begin Intramural basketball will conclude its schedule next week In Murals Battle with final games slated in four leagues and several makeup Attend NCAA Parley games in the B leagues. • Point totals for the first five intra­ est win. Playoffs in the championship tour­ mural sports were released this week In a tight rare in the Gulf By BRIAN SHEEHAN nament will begin on Friday with by J M. Kelsey, intramurals direc- league, Kappa Alpha has logged the top two teams in each league seven wins without a defeat to stay playing the single elimination tour­ ahead of the Ramblers, Phi Kappa Pi Kappa Alpha, with their tri­ ney. HERE MUST HAVE BEEN some red faces and embarrassed people Tau and Phi Delta Theta who have this week in New York City when UM Athletic Director Jack umph in boxing good for 175 points, T closed the gap between them and With two games left to play, Al­ one loss. Harding and Coach Andy Gustafson walked into the New Yorker Hotel first place Alpha Epsilon Pi to 18 pha Epsilon Pi is the top team in Sigma Nu and Tau Epsilon Pi are for the NCAA's annual convention. points. the National league, sporting an deadlocked in the Southern league, 8-0 record. Their latest win was Miami is still smarting from the setback the NCAA dealed the Hur­ each team having a perfect 6-0 rec­ AEPi. with a total of 484. picked over Phi Epsilon Pi, 65-15. SAE, ord. Pi Lambda Phi is runnerup ricanes earlier this year by forbidding them from accepting any post­ up KS points in boxing to keep on because of a number of postpone­ with a 6-1 mark. season bowl invitation because of a rules infraction involving the UM top over the Pikes, who have 466. ments, has a chance to catch AEPi In the B-l league, which was com­ for paying transportation costs for ball players to go home on holidays. The Pikes also added 45 points in with their 4-0 record. pleted yesterday, Sigma Nu was the In light of recent controversies over the poor quality of teams playing riflery to displace Si-rma Alpha Ep­ The Satans, a team added to the silon for thc second spot. leader at press time with a perfect in nation-wide New Year's classics, Miami doesn't look like football's National league after the season be­ 7-0 record with AEPi and Lambda bad boy it was accused of being. SAE managed to win 35 points in gan, also has a 4-0 mark with five Chi each having five wins. boxing, but were shutout in riflery games left to play. The Monarchs SAE's B team is the leader in the Thc annual convention is preceded by a coaches meeting which as they slipped to third place with have a 6-1 record with two games opened Jan. 5. It serves as a valuable meeting place for coaches B-2 league, although posting only a 343 points. The first three organiza­ to go. 4-0 season, but will play their other and athletic directors alike, in planning future football schedules. tions are the only ones over the 300 San Sebastian in the American games for the possible championship. point mark. with five wins and one loss each. UM Should Drive Hard Bargains league have posted eight consecutive Picking up 115 points with their wins to take the lead over ZBT and Mural basketball playoffs for the After the Canes' brilliant football record this year, Coach Gustafson hampionship in riflery Kappa Al­ Sigma Chi with 6-2. San Sab beat single elimination tourney are sched­ and Harding should be able to drive hard bargains with big-time foot­ pha came within two points of tak­ Delta Sigma Phi, 42-21, in their lat­ uled next week. ball powers. More deals are probably cinched in bars after convention ing over fourth place from San Sab, hours than a year's correspondence could ever hope to accomplish. who have a total of 286. San Sab gained 80 points in riflery. It was only a few years ago that Jack Harding left for a similar NCAA In sixth place is Sigma Nu with Confidentially: parley, and came home carrying the contract with Notre Dame for the 269. They received 35 points in ri­ 1955 season signed, sealed and tucked neatly in his pocket. flery and five in boxing. Phi Sigma The Finest Restaurant in What Harding and Gustafson bring back in contracts for future grid­ Delta, fourth place team after the first three sports, fell to seventh with iron seasons should be interesting—the UM already has an impressive , South Miami is list of football opponents for the next two seasons. 46, managing only 25 points in ri­ flery. When other major universities sec teams like , Notre Dame and Oklahoma on the UM's schedule, they're going to have Tau Epsilon Pi earned 65 points SMITTY'S in boxing and riflery to jump from a hard time turning down the chance to take a road trip to Miami. ninth to eighth with a total of 229. 5952 SOUTH DIXIE HIGHWAY Special meetings of the rules infractions committee of the NCAA are Sigma VD slipped into tjjc ninth spot with 200 points. Rounding nut planned, and Harding and Gus should have special interest in attending For Your Dining Pleasure Try after the roof fell in this season on the Canes' grid hopes. the first ten is Kappa Sigma, also with 200. According to reports from New York this week, the rules committee Our Air-Conditioned Dining Room. is working primarily on revision of current substitution rules. Many The second ten, in order of points: coaches would like to have the rule relaxed so more specialists might ZBT, 198; Monarchs, 178; Sigma Chi, 170; Ramblers, 163; Warriors, 148; BOOTHS-COUNTER CURB SERVICE be used. Phi Epsilon Pi, 146; Alpha Sigma Coaches at the convention are polled by NCAA officials, and re­ Phi, 130; Lambda Chi, 130; BSU, 125; IT'S A GOODY! commendations are passed on to the NCAA rules committee. nnd Tau Delta Phi, 124. I'oint of interest to Miami fans, and most controversial issue be­ fore thc NCAA, is the problem of televising football games. Many Intramural Speaking plans are up for consideration, including national-regional control Planned For Tuesday St

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TUESDAY IS BOXING BOUTS AND 'SNACK-NITE" ALL SPORTS EVENTS FILL UP ON Open Irom 7 lo 10:30 P.M. THE HOUSE ON U.H.F.-V.H.F. T.V. Just a Stnnr's Throw Irom the 255 MINORCA AVE. CORAL GABLES Univenity ol Miami OPEN SUNDAY OPFN 11 AM TO 12 MIDNIGHT 80 MIRACLE MILE PH. 83-2635 JANUABT 7, 1955 THE MIAMI HURRICANE PACE FIFTEEN Hate Predicts Rise Of UM QuintetNichol s Paces Pikes Victory By SEYMOUR BEUBIS In Intramural Boxing Tourney Hu-Tiauie Sports Writer Pi Kappa Alpha, led by returning Norman Sidner, independent, 125; Bruce Hale, Miami's basketball champion Billy Nichols, won the in- I Ell Emanuel, PiKA, 130; Tony Cec- mentor, predicted today that within tramural boxing tournament, gaininij* chini, PiKT, 136; Bill Nichols, PiKA, 175 points towards tbe President's two or three years Miami will have 142; Ben Hodge, TKE, 148; Joe Rein- Cup for their victory. a basketball team that will be cap­ lleb, Sigma VD; 156; Ralph Smith, able of holding their own against any Alpha Epsilon Pi was second with PiKA, 165; Whitey Rouviere, PiKT, team in the nation. 65 points, although they did not have 175; and Chuck Allen, Sigma VD, a single champion in either A or B heavyweight. "The major obstacle in the way of division. A total of 17 men were big-time basketball is the lack of a Winners in the B division were: entered by the winnink Pikes. fieldhouse, and plans are now under Carl Kanopny. TEP, 130; Artie Flaks, Nichols in 142-pound class and way to construct a 10,000 seat gym­ TEP, 136; Bill Wallendorf, Sigma heavyweight Chuck Allen were the nasium," said Hale. VD, 142; Dick Mattews, PiKA, Cliff only returning winners. Hullender, PiKA, 156; Don Radbill, Hale believes that in the next two Champions in the A division were: 165; and Lou Capley, SAE, 175. years he can acquire enough talent to compare favorably with most bas­ —. ketball powers. At the conclusion of basketball EXTRA CHARGE season Coach Hale will take a trip to the east and midwest in search for players who he hopes will SAME DAY eventually make Miami a basket­ ball power. Dry Cleaning .Eastern ballplayers are Hale's fav­ orite back-court men, while he leans SERVICE toward the midwest for his front- BRING 'EM IN THE WEAR EM AT court men. MORNING 10% NIGHT "You'll find Eastern players are usually the best ball handlers, with CASH DISCOUNT ON DRY CLEANING ONLY good outside shots, while the mid- WITH STUDENT I.D. CARD westerners are big, fast-moving players," said Hale. Miami's genial coach hopes to start an Orange Bowl basketball Coach Hale in action as professional player. SHIRTS tournament similar to many holiday . . . named on All-lVorld learn in '45 basketball festivals. "Many rival • lit nu tii II 11 II Laundered coaches have expressed a great de­ sire to appear in such a tournament, Kappa Alpha Defeats • Starehed as you Beslre and we could have many name bas­ Mural Track • Buttons Replaeed ketball teams appearing here if we San Sab In Rifle Meet could work out arrangements," said Begins Monday Super Special Hale. Kappa Alpha won its second con­ Entries for the intramural track secutive riflery tournament outshoot- Before coming to Miami to be­ neet, with preliminaries Monday, ng San Sebastian in the finals, 796 Limit Three *« come the Canes first full-time bas­ re due today in Room 3 of the Stu­ to 715. f With LathSI.OO ketball coach, Hale was engaged dent Club. The KA team composed of Vic *• Bry Cleaning in the magazine publishing busi­ Preliminaries will be held on the Johnson, Artie Hess, Sidney Gulli- W pockaged ness. UM track for all eight events. A kin, Todd Davis and Ted Sproat won Without Bry Cleaning 20c In Bo»« Prior to his sojourn to the journ­ iroup must enter at least five men five straight matches without defeat alism field, the All-America from to receive points for entrance. to take the tournament. Santa Clara played ten years of pro­ Events include: high jump, broad KA beat Pi Kappa Alpha, 789 to fessional basketball. tump, shot put, 100-yard dash, 220- 732, to reach the finals, while San UPER He was selected to the All-World yard dash, 440-yard dash, 880-yard Sab won over Lambda Chi, 741 to Professional Team in 1945, and was run, and the 880-yard relay. 655. Other teams in the top eight a member of the Chicago American Current National Collegiate Ath­ were: ZBT. Sigma Nu, Sigma Chi, Gear team that won the world cham­ letic Association rules will govern and Theta Chi, ERVICE pionship in 1946. Later, Hale coach­ competition unless otherwise spec­ In the B division, Kappa Alpha ed the Indianapolis team of the Na­ s CLEANERS ified by Intramural Director J. M. again were the winners, beating out tional Basketball Association. Kelsey. Pi Kappa Alpha, 671 to 522. C. L 3890 BIRD ROAD (AT PONCE DE LEON BLVD.) Since coming to Miami Hale has Contestants will be limited to two Pearson was intramural riflery di­ (DRIVE-IN PARKING) displayed his flair for organiza­ events and a relay in the meet. rector. tion by being one of the key men Championship in track gives the in bringing about Ihe Florida In­ winning team 50 additional points in tercollegiate Basketball Confer­ the President's Cup race. ence. Mural records were set in 1949 Hale views the newly-formed con­ I through 1952, the latest being the ference as a step in the rieht direc­ shot put record of 48-feet 10-inches, tion for UM basketball hopes. j established by Burt Grossman. HURRICANE RESTAURAN ROFFLER'S AIR CONDITIONED JIMMY'S 17. of M's Original Collegiate Barber Shop

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NEW SPRING FABRICS, COLORS, f D [ f Take This Ad to Jimmy's Hurricane and Get C D E E AND STYLES-JUST ARRIVED- If C C A Cup of Delicious Coffee or A Large Coke • It E E PACE SIXTEEN THE MIAMI HURRICANE DECEMBER 10, 1954 UM Mermen Open Season Against Gators *•• ••• *•• Rebounding Cagemen Battle Rollins College Tomorrow League Game Pits Miami Seeks Tars With Young, First Victory Erratic Hurricanes By SEYMOUR BEUBIS In Home Meet Hurricane Sport* Writer Bv ALAN S< IIM ll.l KM AN Miami's inexperienced cagers will Mu,, I. .in.- Sport* Writer try to return to the win column to­ Miami's defending Southern AAU morrow night when they meet Rol­ swimming champions make their lins College at the Coral Gables High season debut tomorrow afternoon at School Gym. 2 p.m. when they meet the Florida Leading the Tars will be Dick Gators at Biltmore Pool. Bezzemer, a 6-foot 5-inch freshman, The Hurricane merman are under­ who has been averaging close to 20 dogs to the powerful Gators who points per game. Bezzemer was one have several returning lettermen, of the key men in Rollins upset vic­ including many AAU record holders. tory over New York University. Gordon Sellick, Gay Rosser and The game is a Florida Collegiate Boh Kang will carry the brunt of Conference tilt. Miami's record in the Hurricane attack. Rosser is a conference play is one victory former Olympic star representing against one defeat. A victory in the the UM. clash will make the Hurricanes one of the leading contenders for the Bob Buckley, Ted Keller, Bob Ei- league's honors. sen, Ralph Johnson, Freddy Liepei- zer and Jack Stritt round out the Following the Rollins game the rest of the swimming squad. Canes meet Miami of Ohio Monday According to Coach Bennett, "Flor­ night at Miami Beach Auditorium. ida has a very strong squad and are The Ohioians are one of the top going to give us a good battle." Bob ranked teams in the nation. Duganne and their medly relay team Coach Hale has been working his are especially going to be stiff com­ team hard this week in attempt to petition for us," he said. Duganne is improve team weak spots. Defensive Southeastern Conference backstroke play has been extensively stressed. champion and the Florida relay team Hale plans to start Rod Arterburn Pfaotot by Bixler is also Southeastern Conference and Dick Miani at the guards; Ken FIGHTING FOR THE BALL is UM forward Ed Guard Dick Miani paced the Canes with 24 points champion. Ryskamp at center, and Gene Hoban Klima in basketball action against Furman Univer­ and Ken Ryskamp dumped in 17 points for Miami. and Ed Klima at forwards. sity last week at Miami Beach Auditorium. Furman Miami meets Rollins College tomorrow night for Coach Bennett remained pessi­ outclassed the scrappy Hurricane quintet 91-74. their second home game this week. mistic about the Hurricanes' Good news was received when it chances. Miami received a severe was learned Ernie Prieto, reserve blow to their point-making poten­ Cane center, is once again ready for Small Crowd Watches tial this week when sprint swim­ action. Prieto has been hobbled with Arterburn Top Scorer; mer Hal Michner cut his eye In an ankle injury for two weeks. practice. However, Bennett expects Coach Hale has been pleased Furman Romps Miami, 91-74; Forwards Fall Behind Michner to be ready for the meet tomorrow. with the play of Ken Ryskamp. Guard Harold Arterburn is the "Ken has come along rapidly and Hurricanes Fade In 2nd Half leading UM scorer after the first Gay Rosser will enter the 220 and should continue to improve," said seven games with a total of 99 points 440 races for the Canes. Gordon Sel­ the mild-mannered Hale. By BOB SCHUMACHER and a 14.1 average. lick will compete in the 50 and 100 A__._jti._r Sporta Editor Jimmy Carson has also been im­ Arterburn has hit for 30 field goals meter free-style distances while Bob­ pressive in recent games, and is Furman University trounced the Hurricane basketball team and 39 free throws for a 15 point by Kang swims the 220-yard back­ slated for plenty of action. 91-74 Monday night before a handful of 619 fans in the Miami lead over teammate Dick Miani, also stroke event. Coach Hale believes the Hurri­ Beach Auditorium. • ;———: 7— a guard, who has 84 points in seven After their opening meet against canes poor seasonal record is due games. Florida, the Cane splashers meet the son over the City league squad University of Georgia. North Caro­ to the team's lack of confidence in The South Carolina team was Burdette, Morris, and Ed Steiner Ed Klima is the leading forward lina University, national swimming themselves. "We're as good as some paced by sharp-shooting forward all drew word of praise from fresh­ with 54 points. Ken Ryskamp, who of the teams that have beaten us Darrell Floyd. Floyd hit from every­ champions, follow Georgia against man coach Tony Ferrara. Burdette became a starter in the Furman Miami at the Biltmore pool. this year. Our greatest fault is fall­ where on the court with two-handed is the leading scorer for the frosh, game, has 51 points and a 8.5 aver­ ing apart after we make a few mis­ jump shots. while Morris paces the team in re­ age for six games. Bob Kichefski has takes," said Hale. Floyd scored 20 points in the first bounds. 50 points. The Hurricanes are looking with half and came back in the last half Cane Netmen anticipation to the completion of to score 19 for a total of 39. the armory basketball floor. A tradition started at Furman by Enter Tourney "That will be a great step toward All-America Frank Selvy of crew Miami's tennis team will attempt better basketball. It will mean that cuts and peroxide hair for luck is to continue their winning ways when we can have our own court to prac­ still carried on by the Furman play­ they compete in the West Coast tice on whenever we want it," said ers. tennis tournament next week. Hale. The new basketball court is Miami's fast breaking attack func­ Cane netmen won all major titles expected to be ready within the next tioned well in the first 15 minutes of in the Orange Bowl meet last week. three weeks. play as the lead changed hands four Alan Quay won the junior division times and the score was tied on four championship by beating Jean Grin- occasions. da, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 7-5. Trackmen Set Furman took the lead in the game Tennis Coach Bill Lufler called as Bob Thomas, Fred Fraley and Quay's performance the most out­ For First Meet Bob Gaines all scored widening the standing he ever turned in. "If he score gap to 35-27. can continue to play that kind of Coach Lloyd Bennett's track team tennis he will be a valuable asset to stepped up conditioning drills this By half-time the Furman squad our team," said Lufler. week in preparation for their season led the tired Miami team 51-43. Johann Kuperberger beat team­ opener early next month on the UM Four straight scores by Floyd cinderpath. mate Larry Schaeffer to win the early in the second half gave Fur­ intercollegiate title. The two men According to the Miami coach, man a 67-47 lead with only seven then teamed to win the doubles Jerry Utter, Dick Ellis and Ed Don­ minutes gene. It was only a matter championship. aldson promise to be high scorers for of time from then on. the Hurricane cinderpather team this Miami girls also copped two tennis year. The Hurricanes succeeded in hit­ titles. Sue Herr and Marilyn Stock ting on only 12 of 41 field goal at­ won the college girls' and junior Utter and Ellis will compete in the tempts compared to 18 for 51 in the one and two mile distances while girls' titles. Both beat opponents opening half. Despite a 94-point from Hamtramck, Mich. Donaldson and Phil Clark will run average in six starts, this marked the hurdles. only their third win. They scored on Lufler, who has been coaching 17 of 35 field goals in each half. Marilyn Stock, called her victory Other events will be manned by "the most satisfactory of them all." eight thinclads. Ronnie Ferrara Guard Dick Miani with 24 points The Cane coach also had words of will run the 220 and 440-yard dis­ and center Ken Ryskamp with 17 praise for George Nachwalter. Nach­ tances and Gene Hoban will enter were able to provide a scoring walter lost in the second round to the 440 and 880. Jack Losch and punch for the Hurricanes. the number one foreign player, but Bob O'Brien will be the team's before bowing out he displayed a sprinters. The UM freshmen defeated Tur­ ners Sports Shop, 55-46, in the pre­ fine game. In field events, Dick Thomaa will liminary game. Eddie Morris and Photo by Bbilor Lufler has been working on the compete in the pole vault event. The Marty Burdette led the Baby Canes MIAMI'S SWIMMING TEAM opens its season tomorrow afternoon at tennis schedule this week and he shot put division will be strong with with 13 each. 2 p.m. when they meet the invading University of Florida Gators. hopes to have the schedule com­ returning lettermen Burt Grossman The victory was the second for the Swimming team members in front row from left to right are Ralph pleted by next week. An eastern and Don Lichenstein carrying the frosh over the Turner team, having Johnson, Bob Buckley and Jack Stritt. In back row are Gordon Sellick, tour in the spring is Lufler's main Canes hopes. taken a 70-67 win earlier in the sea- Bob Kang, Gay Rosser and Ted Keller objective for hit players.