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\}M Rathskellar Is Closer To Reality LARK BERMAN W News Editor ^^^ |nce of students of the uni- ^instruction of a UM rsity through providing a C \ ,fr is apparently as :ility, program and atmo- ^'feainy today as it iere which encourages free |change and exploration of Je°r been since it was ;Jd two years ago. 2as. J© To provide the site for leek a tentative bud- |e legal consumption of beer «330,000 was approved urrtra campus for those legally ititled to consume. h? two-story structure Vol. 46, No. 1 Chitects for the project Tuesday, September 15, 1970 284-4401 # To enable students to ordered to move ahead participate responsibly in a different area of student rele­ preparation of dimen- King Stanford, provided that tablished to finalize plans for construction costs over a 10- university lake on the west multi-purpose structure capa­ vance and competence by es­ odels. legal, financial and opera­ quor laws and only students m the building and work out its year period. side of the Student Union, ble of accomodating about 21 years or older will be tablishing a Rathskellar tional specifications were operational procedures. which will be ultimately fi­ next step in the devel- met. Additional non-operating extending into a small por­ 550 students. served beer. f of the Rathskellar revenue will come from tion of the parking lot. nanced by students, designed P the final approval of Since then, the board has Rathskellar membership pay­ It will have a central meet­ A Rathskellar statement of with the help of students and In May, 1969, the develop­ been working out details and ments from graduate stu­ Currently the University ing room surrounded by a operated largely by the stu­ •Hcles of Incorporation ment of the Rathskellar was purpose, issued in October, * Rathskellar Advisory is currently meeting to ap­ dents, part-time students and Board of trustees is working mezzanine. The central room 1969, states that the Raths­ dents for the university com­ entrusted to the Union Board prove the Rathskellar's Arti­ employees of the university as a liaison with the City of will have a bar and seating munity. 'and the admimstra- of Governors with the charge kellar will serve UM stu­ cles of Incorporation. who do not pay a student ac­ Coral Gables in order to help area, set up like a night club dents in five major ways: Members of the Rathskel­ of solving its legal, financial tivity fee. the RAB secure building and The mezzanine will also have lar Advisory Board include: •iathskellar, a Ger­ and operational problems. Financing for the project tie beer parlor, w.as liquor licenses. seating and will have a stage 0 To provide a new, dif­ students Steven Burger, Mur­ has been secured by UM Vice The Rathskellar Advisory ferent and complementary roposed in 1969 on the From the Union Board, a equipped with a projection ray Cohen, Karl Keller, John President for Financial Af­ Board (RAB), under the lead­ University staff architect site for student extracurricu­ ' Conscience during Rathskellar Planning and De­ screen. McDermott, Tom Rebel, f fairs Eugene Cohen. ership of Tom Rebel, will Charles Cotterman is now lar life. chairman, and Gary Rein- el Abram's Undergrad- velopment Committee and a strive for completion this ac­ consulting with the architec­ Rathskellar Governance There will also be several • To create conditions for hart, Assistant to the Vice tudent Government ad- It is estimated that the ademic year if construction tural firm of Ferguson-Glas­ meeting rooms within the Committee were formed. improved communications President of Financial Affairs ration. Rathskellar will operate on begins on schedule. gow of Coral Gables to final­ building. among the various elements William Muff, Law School an income of about $34,000 ize design plans. of the university community. professor Dr. Richard Lee I proposal was ap- In May, 1970, a Rathskel­ per year in activity fee pay­ The Rathskellar will be lo­ The Rathskellar will oper­ and Director of Student Ac­ by President Henry lar Advisory Board was es­ # To contribute positively ( ments which will be used for cated on the north side of the The Rathskellar will be a ate under state Li­ to the total educational expe- tivities William Sheeder. ipline 4 rehire Stanford: BGS tovated „ZABETH OSTROFF Offers Students assistant News Editor Efctudent disciplinary B code is official Ifective September 1, new code includes Greater Choice' student-oriented I including the right By ELIZABETH OSTROFF El, a three-member Assistant News Editor hearing panel con- The Bachelor of General jf a student, a ten- Studies degree enabling stu­ ilty member, and a dents to graduate without a IOI faculty member. formal major or minor was :hanges made in re- unanimously approved by the [cs provide that sus- UM Board of Trustees last students will have week. Densions dated from The general studies degree of their offense program was introduced to in the date of their UM last October by former students eligible to -Photos by MIKE GRAHAM USG President Jim Yasser jTthe panel be seniors who learned of a similar pro­ standing" (2.0 mini- Registration Checkout Lines Seemed Short gram at the University of at a student can .. only at 8:30 Monday morning Michigan. ;brd his trial, and that iarents of a student Under the new degree re­ charged with a quirements in the College of use will be notified For Fall 1970 Arts and Sciences students rges. must complete the normal interesting to note 120 credit hours, 24 of which is the first disciplin- must reflect the general edu­ in UM's history that cation requirement, and 60 of almost completely Here's Registration Facts which must come from courses numbered 300 or Bill of Rights," USG above. i Mark Krasnow Here are some important be restricted in the courses In addition students may facts that all students should which he may take for "cred­ take up to 30- hours outside V important changes know about registration. it only" by the School or Col­ the College of Arts and Sci­ (ode mean that guilty A Late Registration Fee of lege in which he is a candi­ ences, but they will not be al­ can be referred for $10 is assessed to all stu­ date for an undergraduate lowed to declare a major or Ing to either Presi- dents who fail to complete degree or through which he minor. lanford OR the stu- expects to receive certifica­ their registration prior to the "My academic advisors in­ 'ersonnel Dean, and first day of classes in a regu­ tion. Therefore, students who are involved in should check with Academic form me that it is not a less lar semester. demanding program but rath­ offenses will be tried Advisors prior to registration Registration is complete er a more demanding pro- iividuals — although before they elect to take a when a tuition receipt has course for "credit only." g r a m due to the larger Jay be tried simulta- been issued. Any student amount of courses at a high­ NOW who has a financial problem At the time of registration er level," UM President can't mass prosecute with the payment of fees a student may specify that he Henry King Stanford said. is enrolling in a course "for this system," Krasnow should go to the University N... Bursar, Credit Only." After the late "I don't think it will en­ For the Fall Semester, registration period is over, courage students in high Bow has also suggest- Saturday, September 19, ECTI0N ministrators that UM 1970, students must pay or school to come to UM but I make arrangements to pay 12:00 noon, NO changes may feel once the student has ar­ is year with a clean be made in the "for credit Florida &ry slate. their fees by Wednesday, rived it would present him September 16, 5:00 p.m. or only" designation. with an opportunity to exer­ 5RANDS Je's a question as to pay a late registration fee of To avoid any error, please cise more choice in the selec­ Kractivity of the docu- $10. look very carefully at the tion of courses," Stanford I Krasnow said. "In course coupon you are issued said. EPPY." Students will also be re­ |ords, whether it will at registration to see that it quired to supply facts for the Yasser is not entirely satis­ ed shoes offenses committed is correct. Credit Only cou­ fied with the BGS program 1970 Civil Rights Compliance this summer (Ashe pons have a double strip however, as he feels that it is report. All institutions of s of the g sit-in)." across the card. unfair to prevent students —Photo by BUZZ HAROUTOUNIAN higher education which re­ from declaring a major or are valid argu- Students can pick-up their Students, Suitcases and Trunks y do we ceive, are applicants for, or minor, even though they may both directions, but enrollment slips (copy of expect to be applicants for have fulfilled the qualifica­ . . . add to airport congestion courses) at the registration variety? that really the only Federal Financial Assistance tions for one. lag for the university as defined in the DHEW reg­ Building, S 100 on or after • this gray area is for September 21. Check this en­ ;ialize in ulation implementing Title VI "It's been done to discour­ |ges for all offenses rollment slip for errors in of the Civil Rights Act of age as many people as possi­ SHOES led prior to the effec- 1964, must file a compliance Dept., prefix, Course No., UM Frats Rush Section No., Section No., ble from taking the BGS pro­ of the document (9- report with the Department gram," Yasser said. "Their ONLY. dropped and the uni- of Health, Education and Credits and "Credit Only" designation. If there is an argument is that the spirit of begin with a clean Welfare. the BGS program precludes a The manner of collecting error the student must notify Toward The Times the registration office no major, but that's a lot of non­ of the complete the information is left to the sense." Ifciplinary code will be discretion of the institution, later than Friday, September By MARK BERMAN modernization, the rush pro- 25. News Editor led to all students provided the system estab­ But Yasser feels that the cedures have been altered. listration. lished results in reasonably Go Directly to Pricing UM fraternity rush kicked Mid-term grade reports . . . do not collect $200 60 hour requirement at the ition USG will hold accurate statistical data. will be sent to the student at 300 or above level makes the off Saturday with several The first measure taken by meeting to discuss UM has selected to use the his local address only, if he program worthwhile. major procedural changes. IFC to get new students in­ 'lain the new disci- permit to register to collect receives a grade of D or E in dent is under 21 years of age If there are any questions "If we could eliminate the terested in fraternities was a code at 3:00 p.m. the necessary data. Therefore any course by the 8th week and unmarried and the par­ concerning Registration, restrictions on having a Inter-fraternity council massive mail out this sum­ " Sept. 17 in S245 of the lower left portion of of class. ent requests a copy of the please feel free to come to major or minor, I can see the President Ron Stone said the mer of pamphlets, brochures lent Union. the Permit has a one posi­ The student's parents will mid-term report in writing to the Registration Office, Me­ BGS degree as becoming the UM fraternity system is and the Greek newspaper, tion box for listing your race. receive a copy of the mid­ the registration ofice before morial Classroom Building, real thing at UM within the changing with the times and Greek Tymes, explaining the The race abbreviations are term report only if the stu- October 15, 1970. Room S-100. next 10 years," he said. as a preliminary step toward Greek way of life at UM. listed on the Permit's reverse side. Included in the mail out In regard to Credit Only for the first time was a re- Courses, any full-time under­ turn mail interest card, graduate student may elect which enabled IFC to find "t Tues. one course per semester to Damages Add $'s to Housing Deficit out new students' interest in be counted only as ungraded the fraternity system. By LINDA ORMES the facility, not room-checks. In these checks a resident Stawarz, Hurricane credit, not to be included in Of The Hurricane Staff the computation of the Quali­ advisor will see what needs repair, and then he will de­ Another first in the rush Ve back picked by vir- UM housing facilities operated at approximately a termine the responsibility. the nation's sports- ty Point Average. proceedings was IFC's pre- $600,000 loss last year. "The damage costs are an area of visible concern, s a pre-season All- Grading standards in t h e arrangement of transporta­ One reason for this large deficit was the damages because every item of damage obviously results in a and Ray Bellamy, course will be the same as tion for prospective rushees t caused to building and furniture, Director of Housing cost Co the student," Rudy said. "The student pays indi­ •"s wide-out receiver, those for students who are from the airport to the uni­ James Grimm said. vidually or through student funds in the university." Tfcome UM students to taking the course under the versity. Stone said the pur­ regular grading system, but Damages in UM dorm and apartment areas cost the He said that students who cause damage are hurt­ pose of this was to have new pent meeting for the university $42,427 from September 1969 to May 1970. Pthers of Greater those who elect to enroll in a ing no one but themselves. students meet fraternity course for "CR only" will be Of these repair expenses, UM students were billed indi­ Some typical expenses for repair in 960 and 1968 brothers on a one-to-one 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, vidually $6,891, less than 15 per cent. j^T 22 in Room 226 of awarded a final grade of CR Dorms are as follows: rug burns, $5.00; lounge chairs, basis. flatten Memorial Stu- or NC ("credit" or "no cred­ According to Grimm there were not very many big $25.00; doors $10.00; closet doors $20 per panel; and it"). When a grade of CR is items, but "the nickel and dime items like split door door locks, $10.00. Stone said approximately awarded, the credit value of frames and reupholstering were our biggest problem." The biggest repair costs came out of the apart­ 200 people returned the in­ •le UM students are The bulk of the repair was often manpower expenses. j° attend the meeting, the course is counted as ments, and 960 Dorm and Mahoney Hall last year. terested card to IFC and 80- credits earned. Damages resulted from two causes — fair wear and The breakdown of total damage in the residence 100 new students requested 4 rothers provide a tear, for which no one was billed, and malicious dam­ A maximum of one course areas was as follows: transportation to campus. °f friendship and age, which was charged to the student. & •nship for boys from per semester or term, with a • Apartment Area $14,944 Judging by the results of ; Malicious damages included broken ceiling tiles, care­ s homes. total of 24 credits in 4 years, (including married student housing) the response to the mail out, lessness resulting in cigarette burns, defacing of prop­ frogram has been en- may be elected under this op­ • 960 dormitory 10,124 Stone expects a bigger rush tion. erty, such as tape on walls, and breaking of vending ma­ #MahoneyHall 7,817 enrollment than last year. b »y UM student body chines and elevators. f Mark Krasnow, Courses in which a grade • Eaton Hall 4,118 He said he also expects Joel Rudy To lessen the problem, Director of Resident Student • 1968 Dormitory 3,135 student leaders and of C or above must be rec­ m«e rushees this year he^ . . ^COI Development Joel Rudy plant to have physical checks of • Pearson Hall 2,285 5 and UM * President orded may not tfc taken "for :i IG ABLE ng Stanford. credit only." A student may Continued On Page 2 * THE HURRICANE Tues., Sept. 15, 1970 School Of Music DM Fraternities R^ Honors Late Dean Toward Modernize S Dedication ceremonies for 1926 until 1944 When shef re­ The Bertha Foster Memorial tired as dean emritus to* de­ , ne«ew studenstudent iis thathat hhe nonott Entft,. . Music Building in honor df vote her full time to the Mu­ Continued From Page 1 block fraternities out of his the late first Dean of the UM mind because of what they Ever sicians Club' of America, a overall change yoA rts School of Music will be helf home for retired musicians, nf the stood for 20 years ago, but to sund ?ofA at 3 p.m. Sunday. cause of tne «yc which she founded in 1931 in in UM fraternities, to meet look into them as they stand • w Coral. Gables. Ihe needs of the modern stu­ today and as they are chang­ R CCe the Taking part will be Presi- dent Unnion- _ ie of She had also served onfthe dent." ing at UM," he said. s dent Henry King Stanfordi~*mtttmT$0B&mmormgents If the H' members of the Board of fr0m 1926 to 1941. "The main purpose of the Here is the schedule for Trustees and university offi rush program is to get stu­ Hffilfr cials. The UM Symphonic The UM Board of Trustees the remainder of the fall se­ 1*1 Band, Fred McCall, conduc­ approved naming of the dents to look into fraternities mester's rush activities: tor, will present a musical building in 1968 and official as one of the important as­ program, including "North dedication was set upon com­ pects of college life and to t Wednesday, Sept. 16, 8-10 by Northwest," by John Kin- pletion of a second floor ad­ jage rf Lke the decision of whether p.m. . . • Fraternity Rush n yon, "Wapanekka" by dition. Smoker and Registration, >reig la Alfred Reed, "Dedicatory Ov­ or not they wish to partici­ Ises based With the addition, the UM International Lounge, Stu­ erture" by Clifton Williams, pate," Stone said. mleted- all of whom are UM music School of Music now has dent Union. All rushees £***" faculty members. eight of its ten projected Other changes in the rush are expected to attend. he tool will music buildings. The other program are the elimination ^ l97n 'years w two, awaiting funds for con­ Caching „Jk u Dr. Foster died February of rush fees and the organi­ # Thursday, Sept., 17, 7:30- nalang struction, are a three-story a nd 29, 1968. A signer of the zation of "open rush" for the 10 p.m. ... Pep Club Child Teac h tin:g f°"r original charter and one of studio-office building and a exarnmatlon^iiri i in 202. Rally and Talent Show. 10 the founders of the universi­ 1,200 seat concert hall. remainder of the semester. October n [{\ p.m.-12 a.m. . . . Fraterni­ fr ty, she served as dean from The Bertha Foster Memori­ A.M. «a*t th' e ' Mid l al Music Building, whose Changes within individual ty Open House parties. torium first floor was completed in fraternities are also being im­ Rushees encouraged to vard 499 S> 1961, now contains 65 prac­ plemented this year. visit a minimum of three tice rooms and teaching stu­ SOS Staff houses. dios, two electronic class he UM chapter of Pi piano teaching studios, two T tuition and J* Kappa Alpha has adopted t Friday, Sept. 18, 8-11 p.m. forida r^ pipe organ studios, a re­ , . . UM vs. William & To search center for the teach­ PKA's national policy of teach in Flor^ Help Mary at the Orange Bowl ship becomes, ing of the psychology of eliminating the conventional e music, two studios equipped . . . bus service from fra­ yent that tl for audio and visual record­ —Photo by BUZZ HAROUTOUNIAN pledge system. ternity area. 11:30 p.m.- Pans to teach i IRIS HOI Flonda f Freshman ing and playback, and a New UM Students Arrive at International Instead of having students 1:30 a.m. . . . Open House arenot The Hurric parties. music education instruction . . . received by Panhellenie and IFC delegates pledge the fraternity, they Students who [inning tl Weeks of planning for the and materials center. for the qUaiifyi; become associate members, 9 Saturday, Sept. 19, 8 p.m.- ! . English arrival of new students to tion, must reel, ting a ne Architects for the addition who differ from active 1 a.m. . . . Fraternity the the UM campus were culmi­ were Ferguson-Glasgow As­ : ^ ? 5 [toFresh members only in the fact that Open House Social Night. b nated this week as the new sociates of Coral Gables; f!!!°l lSepteni; "d in th Student Orientation Staff \ A Time For Us' Is Theme they have not received their ^ fcasEng general contractor was official pins. Associate mem­ (SOS) went to work. Avant Construction Co., Inc. bers of PKA become active w Members of the orientation Overall cost for planning, after eights weeks in the fra­ * 4 iman Eng staff will be located at stra­ For UM Sorority Girls ternity. * ory type tegic points throughout the construction and equipment hat stud university for the remainder was $455,000, of which $84,- the girls and the work behind By LINDA ORMES Building this weekend. The Stone said this innovation fee the of the week aiding freshmen 369 was a federal grant pro­ Of The Hurricane Staff first party will be held on this year's rush, I think that is typical of the trend that is MIAMI BEACH'S ROCKIN' NEW and sending them in the right vided by the Department of Situation Health, Education and Wel­ Sorority rush will begin Tuesday, September 22 from rush will go better," Miss moving the entire national DISCOTHEQUE... WHERE YOU DO- AND direction. Saturday at 12:30 p.m. when 4 to 8:25 p.m., and the sec­ WEAR-YOUR-OWN-THING ... presents fare's Office of Education Garrigan said. fraternity system toward under Title I of the Higher rushees will be able to meet ond party on Wednesday, modernization. SOS workers have been the 10 nationally affiliated September 23, from 5 to 8:55 manning help stations in uni­ Education Facilities Act of She said that posters will 1963. UM sororities in an open p.m. versity housing areas since house program. be distributed and tables will "The main reason for try­ new students began arriving Preferential Party will be be set up in the breezeways. ing these new ideas is to fit ua on campus, assisting with Remainder of the funds Carrying through the Sunday, September 27, from the needs of the contempo­ TOMMY STRAND SUPPER Hill ^ room check-ins, palcement came from faculty, staff, stu­ theme of "a time for us," so­ 2 to 4:50 p.m. Representatives from Pan­ rary college student, who re­ tests and academic advising. dents, alumni and friends. rority girls will be "adapting hellenie and Interfraternity fuses to put up with physical THE PEACPEACHH v.*' - t ^ Unlike resident advisors, "Bertha Foster was one of themselves to fit the times," Bids will be handed out Council are expected to be harassment just to join a so­ [Fa whose responsibilities extend the great women of Miami's this year, Panhellenie Presi­ Monday September 28, at 4 going to the dorms and talk­ cial club," Stone said. FREE throughout the year, SOS p.m. ing to the students individu­ SEIF.PAHKINQ music world," Dr. Stanford dent Maureen Garrigan said. /PATDJ workers are only on duty for said. "Her love of music and ally. ' He said the changes in the rush and pledging systems I The Hurric the first week of the semes­ of people combined to raise Changes have already Miss Garrigan said that ter. rush will be shorter this year Girls interested in signing would also do away with the mareo nd com] generations of musicians as begun in rush procedures. rds in th well as patrons of music." to make It easier on the girls up for rush may register hypocrisy involved in the Oceanlront al 192nd Street - Miami Beach "This is our first attempt Now there is no rush restric­ Jculty Ev "Because of her devotion since the beginning of the today and tomorrow in the "old fraternity system." at this type of program so tion, and for the first time Mark to music, to people, to the sorority girls will be able to year can be "a hectic time." Student union Breezeway there will probably be some "Because of the energy of from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. "The only thing I ask of a uate Stu community and the universi­ talk with rushees outside of sident wrinkles, however, we will ty, the have evaluation sessions for rush parties. Steal. E-Br in 1951 conferred on her the both students and SOS work­ "In this way we are put­ [new ev ers," UM Acting Dean of ting more trust in each other, WELCOME BACK GIRLS '8495 S.W. 132nd St.• vo sect Women, Louise Mills said. and we will be working clos­ pressors a: er with each other," Miss STOP IN FOR A GREAT NEW SELECTION "Avera According to Kay Whitten, Garrigan said. M and " Program Director of the DRESSES, JEANS, SWIMSUITS, LINGERIE ction wi Union, there have been a few This year there will be no its on changes in the orientation limitations as to what type of week schedule. refreshments will be served at the rush parties. FOOTBALL FANS it we're There will be a concert on .he fall is the patio tonight featuring The only ceiling will be a BUS-DINNER PLAN the Bethlehem Assylum. • it was $200 limit on cost and this Make reservations for dinner and we'll bin i says K will be done on an honor A film on the Monterrey dkttuiA> work w basis among sororities. ACROSS from the Dorms 1114 S. Dixie you to the Miami Dolphin and University Pop Festival will be shown Q4SU of Miami home games. Dinner served iron compile Rush will continue for one Squeezed Between Iministra on the patio tomorrow night Poppy's & Book Horizons 667-2324 4:30 P.M. Bus departs at 6:45 (Round Trip at 8 p.m. week beginning with open shortene houses in the Panhellenie Transportation, $1.50) Call Now for Resetvai Dion and Miles Davis will Bertha Foster 758-7616. Special Supper menus from $21 1 * a gre be seen in concert Saturday ... Late dean 14 OZ. COCKTAIL • FREE HORS D'OEtll *r, but night on the patio, and Men­ (AFTER THE GAME) ... $ 1.00 the sp del Rivers, Senator from South Carolina will be the honorary degree of Doctor of now ex first guest in the UM lecture Music. It seems appropriate ie last p series Monday night. that the building most used ere was by aspiring young musicians I both on should carry her name as an ALL THE m 'Id, whic inspiration for future genera­ WHO ARE YOU ? lot for Pep Club tions." * lieves DRAUGHT BEE to be Dr. Foster was native of so its Indianapolis, and was a grad­ YOU CAN DRIN with Lifts Spirit uate of the Cincinnati Col­ Int. lege of Music where she re­ e time t ceived the Springer Gold ;ignifican The Pep Club will sponsor Medal for excellence in ALL THE sinistra a car parade Thursday. Gas music. teachers will be provided. She founded the School of SALAD rt bs. Also during half-time of Musical Art in Jacksonville problerr Friday's football game with in 1909 and was its director rasnow William & Mary, a pyramid until 1921. At that time she YOU CAN MAB it, it's a 1 get rid i building contest open to any came to Miami where she Our huge Salad Board provid* interested group will be ini­ founded and directed the the greens and the dressing* w tiated. Miami Conservatory. 1 ugh the you to create your own mastefP w hopes The contest will be judged In 1925 she was invited to a much on the basis of the time the join a group which had as its >ice in th pyramid can be maintained. purpose the creating of a uni­ PLUS The base of the pyramid versity in Coral Gables. In oesn't e must be no more than 10 1926 she was appointed Dean action f; people. of the UM School of Music. A BONELESS memh There will be three tro­ come ui In 1959 the cities of ee, I do: phies awarded and the first Miami, Miami Beach and place winners will compete are Coral Gables joined in pro­ SIRLOIN STEM ,more." with Florida State Universi­ claiming "Dr. Bertha Foster see, we ty Music Week." The National $ toe ins. Only the first six appli­ Federation of Music Clubs elimin cants will be able to partici­ awarded her a citation as ALL FOE 4.5$ sets." pate. So applications should "Benefactress of Music" in new p< be made before 4 p.m. tomor­ 1965. KING SIZE 16 OZ. STEAK <$5'5 fe to si row. LOBSTER TAILS ($6.50) 'ay. It ca 5 5C 'ne drop STEAK & LOBSTER TAIL($ lall desk STUDENT SPECIAL BEEF BROCHETTE $3 7S her edit This is the astrological service for true believers and Find out what causes your moods. What are your t Half price for children under 12 !<1 to be skeptics. Find yourself in the privacy of your own home ture potentials? Why are you happy sometimes Wh'* (Junior portions) at all tim«s- >ver the and at your own convenience. The only effort you are you sad othertimes. This is a personalized co' t PU -Printed have to exert is to fill out the coupon below with the er study, a result of complex mathematical astro "" •— facts about your birthday and mail it today. cal, and astrological calculations. m'* COCKTiklL.BUFFfrr not**" RENT TV'S 1 CASUAL DRESS? OF COV& This is not to be confused with other mini versions selling for less. Astro Analysis New 11" and 19" brand name portables Open Mon-Sat: 4:30 P.M. to very late H is the most comprehensive and widely acclaimed computer horoscope service anv- te where at any cost. y" Sunday~3P,M.toveryl* $ 10 PER MONTH NAME

FREE DELIVERY ADDRESS SteahE-Bri BIRTHDATE $20 Gi*« you th. facts *at would cost mo„yt,m.s more elsewhere. AN ENGLISH EATING & DRINKS" month day year TIME OF BIRTH 1) 40 pages of personal forecasts A\Y„,..t FT. LAUDERDALB Wl COLOR TV — '25 PER MONTH AMOR .PM- 2) Personal month by month horoscope- VyZlTeuTI"^ u.«,u. r~ *»A DU-* .*• • . -i u, 3) A character life study i 3° 'ntellectu> *nv,ronmerit FAMOUSPUE 1,0** INSTITUTE OF ASTRO ANALYSIS 16461 W. Dixie Hiway FROM S1.0O ^ 8985 Biscayne Blvd., Miami Call PL 9-5794 N. Miami Beach, Florida 33160 Tues., Sept. 15, 1970 THE HURRICANE *4$ Announces Graduation Requirements

^Uffl RByv FRAN KLING Tf * 1„ A . e- _, . Of The Hurricane Staff ' ™iw f*Z ° • a foreign lan8«age equal to four semesters Mathematics except 100-101 and Philosophy 103, 105, 308, listed by the College of Arts and Sciences. The choice of U y 1S demon ption requirements for new students in the hi £,- ul ? strated by examination, a student and 523 adding up to six credits. major field must be made not later than the beginning of the rad n & Py th0Se credits t0ward both the junior year and must be approved by his major department. v sed g j sciences will become effective beginning ™.,£L S °. l language The candidate for the AB degree must complete courses requirement and the 120 credits required for graduation. The major subject may contribute to satisfying the graduation in two of the following areas: astronomy, biology, chemistry, requirements specified in any of the above required areas of Candidat geology, physical geography, physical science, or physics. ^aior changes in required courses of study am; es for this exemption should arrange for an ex­ study. f thC amination during registration through the Chairman, Depart­ Two courses with related laboratory (8 credits), two lec­ Jnio^ • ° fnrv requirement. Under the new curriculum Except for students majoring in American Civilization, hist ment of Foreign Languages. ture courses and one lecture course with related laboratory Jtbe "curses will satisfy the requirement of 6 Hispanic American Studies, and Medical Technology, all stu­ hist ec irements remain the same in (10 credits) or four lecture courses (12 credits) may satisfy «o °7 id Formerly all candidates for degrees were r * ?" the field of English 11 Every Student must this requirement. dents must select a minor field. Candidates for the BA may .jn that tie • i Western Civilization, Asian Pvi^f^u - acquire six credits unless choose from any department which lists a minor. Only candi­ offiiSI geqliences n exempted by scores on his placement examination. Candidates for the Bachelor of Science degree must pres­ • fVtak ore Americon y a History.,IJ«„ . bl cre dates for a BS may present a second science for his minor or, * djts in courses in Fine Arts must be presented for ent eight credits in mathematics either in calculus or from atio" graduation. Options are in the fields of architecture, art, field, and are limited in their selection to the fields of physics, language requirement of 12 credits in a sin- courses requiring at least one year of calculus as a prerequi­ chemistry, biology, geology, physical geography or mathemat­ drama, and music. site. Eight oredits of lab science in any one field other than , foreign id s jn effect but students who have com- ics. r uage i!Luage study in high school will be enrolled the major or minor may be substituated for the mathematics. iai The minor subject may also contribute to satisfying the [,reign * the number of years of study the student Every student must present 6 credits in literature but aj baseci may now select his courses in this area from literature in a Six hours of study in one of the following and 3 hours in graduation requirements described above. The choice of electives is not restricted except it must in­ (mPleted' ith one year or less of a foreign language in toreign language, drama literature, or various courses offered each of two others must be completed: anthropology, econom­ entS by the English Department. The new humanities requirement clude six hours of credit in courses numbered 300 or above. M u be enrolled in courses numbered 101, those ics, geography, government, psychology, social science or so­ ! S hat Six credits are re uir ciology. Under the former bulletin 6 credits in the introducto­ Courses completed at other colleges and accepted for ac­ ' ^MJ be in 102, and those with three years of Jn mf-i u l 'fur or more years of study in a language will be from one of those fields was required. fice of Admissions. Only if a student becomes a candidate for caching graduation honors do his transferred credits enter into the [in 202- Logic requirements may be satisifed by any course in All candidates must choose a major from among those computation of his quality point average. nw i°3 ;Hi ,the Mum 499 Bi5; CO 'Dirty Linen? All Washed Up ich k Dept °Hl and "events, ^ a1i Combined Efforts Expose Florida i :omes a' i ;hat the" 'Fraudulent' Laun teach in,, IRIS HOROWITZ upon the coupon they select, ire not i The Hurricane Staff students will either attend its who", ning this semester morning or afternoon ses­ By PAT DUARTE Saturday at the Soccer Field. legal charges," Tommer said. )in Of the Hurricane Staff The linen was also being dis­ "They are completely unau­ qualify^ English Department sions. Two evening sessions will also be offered. A possible effort by a tributed at a Gulf Station thorized in any action they ring a new credit-only "laundry ring" to defraud and a Burger King. take." the SclJ I Freshman English, The frequency and dura­ UM students has been foiled, Y Septe ited in the class sched- tion of attendance is entirely Tommer and Washington "We offer a perfectly ac­ at least temporarily, through said they were not UM stu­ 1 as English 101 and optional with the student ceptable, needed service, and the efforts of three major dents. the university is attempting who may attend the labora­ campus linen services. tory as many or as few hours Although there is no such to block it for no reason. Stu­ timan English will be a The "ring," known as the as he wishes. company listed in the state dents expecting to get servic­ ry type course. This Southeastern Central Linen [iat students will not of Florida, Southeastern Cen­ es offered by us are the ones The course itself will be Distributors, has received ce the usual class- tral Linen Distributors has that are suffering," he said. offered at four hour blocks about $26,000, which is on lituation. Depending from 8 a.m. to 11:55 a.m. and an attorney. Whether it's op­ Although the two men can­ deposit in a Valdosta, Ga. erating legally is another not be held on any charges, from 12 p.m. to 3:55 p.m. bank. This allows the student to matter to be solved by the they will be temporarily for­ progress at his own rate be­ "Somehow, someway, they university. bidden to distribute laundry if Poll cause of 20 available class (the ring) got h o 1 d of a list "At this time the universi­ in Coral Gables, until they hours each week. of freshmen," James Grimm, ty has no grounds for any can get a license. Director of Housing said. The "It should be pointed out "company" then sent out iluates however, that the fewer propaganda, offering its ser­ hours a student attends, the vices to incoming students. longer it will take for him to earn course credit," English "But actually, all they do professor Arthur Phillips is hand the linen to the stu­ Tough day at work? Faculty said. dents, and expect them to take care of it themselves," rPATDUARTE Instruction is planned on a Grimm said. Hurricane Staff tutorial basis. In other "In other words, all they id completeness are words, each student will do is give out two sheets, is in this fall's Stu- work with a designed in­ three towels, and a pillow­ Evaluation Poll, structor. case — which you and I can ferk Krasnow, Un­ Except for the minimum of —Photo by KEN RATKIEWICZ get in a store for $10—and ite Student Govern­ three 500 word themes which charge $30 for them!" ment. must be written, no time lim­ Incoming Students Flock To Mahoney Hall Grimm started smelling its are set as to when the . . . few places to live are still available the "dirty linen" when he got r evaluation in- student may receive credit as two long distance calls from o sections: one rat- long as they fulfill the re­ concerned parents, who jfessors as "Superior," quirements. hadn't seen Southeastern "Average," "Below Enrolled students who do 'Housing Shortages Expected Central Linen Distributors ' and "Poor," and a not fulfill the requirements mentioned anywhere in UM ction with students' by the end of the semester 1 literature. ts on their profes- will receive the grade of "in­ "They came on campus complete" and must continue To Improve * Says Grimm trying to find out where peo­ enrolling in the lab until a ple were living, and that's Have a drink on us! AN! it we're going to put satisfactory level of writing if students will make an effort to find when we found them out," When seated for early dinner (5 to 6:30 P.M. Mon. thru Fri.) is achieved. By IRIS HOROWITZ just ask your waitress for your COMPLIMENTARY DRINK. he fall isn't really our Of The Hurricane Staff them. Grimm said. "So they went IN • it was done helter- For those students who off campus." Then relax in comfortable surroundings of an olde English Pub. UM's housing shortage may not be "Some of the off campus housing i we'll bus ' says Krasnow, who prefer a more conventional And that's where Dick is not the best, but it will give the stu­ For late revelers [10.30 P.M. on] Jniversily work with the infor- course in English composi­ as bad as expected due to recent can­ Lancaster of Coral Gables "ONE ON THE HOUSE" with supper. Entrees from $2.15 srved from compiled by the last tion, the English Department cellations by students. dents a roof over their heads tempo­ Laundry, Ken LeDane of ound Trip ministration. has made English 105 and "We've started notifying students rarily," he said. Riverside Laundry, and Gor­ 106 available to a limited All of the planned dormitory im­ don McEachlin of Miami FOOTBALL FANS Reservafii shortened it, and we on our waiting lists because of the BUS-DINNER PLAN from 1 it a great deal," says number of students. provements, such as lighting and fur­ Laundry, came in. cancellations we've had in the past Make reservations for dinner and we'll bus you to S D'OEfllw. "but we didn't niture replacement, have been taken Following a tip from a stu- few weeks," Director of Housing d e n t informer, Lancaster Miami Dolphin and University of Miami home games. the spirit of any James Grimm, said. care of during the summer along with Bus departs at 7:15. (Round trip transportation is called the company's answer­ $1.50. Free Parking is provided.) n°w explains that Politicos: "The overall situation to date," numerous cleaning, waxing, painting, ing service, and gave his the original V lie last poll was being Grimm said, "is not quite as bad as and repairing projects. number. Immediately, one of 'ere was a chaotic sit- we had anticipated." Grimm said that due to the housing the company's representa­ both on campus and "We have taken in as many fe­ shortage UM has not accepted room tives called him and told him W, which "didn't do a Campaign where to pick up his linen. males as possible regardless of their reservations from anyone in Dade M & lot for the returns." Two of the distributors, Ira I RESTAURANT elieves the pamphlet category and we've gone through two County since April. Dade applications Tommer, 23, and Jim Wash­ ^N and tap room HE 3500 • fceservations:445-133 1 to be "institutional- or three of 13 pages of our male wait­ were only accepted if they were sub­ ington, 23 were apprehended A Growing World of Mood, Food and Excitement • Longchamps of Florida • Arthur Horowitz, President so its nature won't For Credit ing list," he said. mitted within the deadlines for hous­ UN with each student According to Grimm, off campus ing reservations. ment. By ALICE HENNE Of The Hurricane Staff housing for students is tight, but there This fall UM will house 2650 males he time being, the noil are places available in the community and 2052 females. significantly influence A one-credit government Huck Finn and his Ministration as to course, Practical Politics, is teachers should keep being offered to any student bs. interested in campaigning for beloved Becky Problem is tenure," a candidate of his choice in either state or local elections welcome all rasnow. "If a nrofes- AK1 P it's almost impos- this semester. HERE IT IS!! rovide' m rid of him before The course will involve working with the candidate Master Charge, their Lugs for u for a minimum of 8-10 hours BankAmericards Bterpi* §h the evaluation, w hopes to work to- per week as directed by the STUDENTS! Welcome friends a much stronger stu- candidate or his agent. !Jce in the granting of Prior to the election, the to a grand student will be asked to 0esn't expect any vio­ make a prediction of the School Year!! lation from offended number of votes he expects opening members: "Sure, his candidate to get and at come uo to me and the end, a report of the cam­ celebration Fe> I don't think mv paign and a seminar discuss­ Ml a>"e boring,' but ing the experiences will be $ more." required. Women Dr. Wood, head of the Men NOWH f see, we want to elim- 60 ine insulting aspects State and Local Government L5« Mhminating the hon- Department said, "students should go to the table at reg­ Semester Men& Women new Poll has istration on Practical Politics C($5 been Have Come on le to students since and Government and sign up 1.60) E- It can be found at for it." Separate Facilities «e drop points, resi- There are no prerequisites. '38 in to s 3.7 le The department will "pro­ sks, and the li­ vide for as many students as er 12 fe- edition of the poll, possible but is limited to the les. 3n improve about 100," Dr. Wood said. INCLUDES ALL THIS •overththfe current one' , Several members of the de­ ed in Ja comp lete.rtgti !221 nuary. partment will be instructing. SAUNA rjH-8 STEAM BATH ROOM unisex Brylat« HI STUDENTS COMPLETE ate CALISTHENICS MECHANICAL boutique ! MICKEY'S ICE CUSSES GYM CREAM SHOP AIR EXPERT Maie I CONDITIONED PERSONAL BY U.K. CORPORATION 01$ SUPERVISION 98 MIRACLE MILE PLUSH WELCOMES YOU TO U of M VISIT OUR NEWEST STORE COME TRY OUR CA1I Today HI 3-1631 COME EVERY DAY • 1514 So. Dixie Hiway Jg^« 067-eiQi (EXCEPT SUN.) m mi) 45 MIRACULOUS FLAVORS MIMII HEALTH CENTER • 521 Arthur Godfrey Rd. " 532-0033 DELICIOUS FOUNTAIN SPECIALITIES • 1H32H NM. 7th Ave. 625-5772 53rd Ave., S.W. 8th Street (ON THE TRAIL) 11 YEARS IN MIAMI WAFFLES & ICE CREAM Hours 9 AM. to 10 P.M. • HI 3-1631 ™ Linda Kleindienst

THE HURRICANE Tues., Sept. 15,1970 ®fo iltamlpiurriame The Establishment: ] An All-American Paper JERRY HART Gave A Lot Editor They five yf SCOTT BRESSLER CHUCK JONES Berkeley. Revolution. by a third, have more .inated Associate Editor Business Manager Columbia. than * •iksent. These words capital output. . ents for , Student d,sent ^ ^.^ ^ abolis Riot ere; Tjnive These remarkable through history's . *• grea( i^-trati Arming Security Many of these people^ ninis stu- W to be poor, what it is t0 b° dermicall : sght against v cold. And because of ^ rd's am Not The Solution mined that it would S,t bur yea you, that you would hav^ Despite the assurances of UM security chief, \ W have food to eat, milk to 1 Fred Doerner, the arming of the campus security has idem mins to nourish you, « tentir< caused an uneasy feeling among many at the universi­ Wa ty. better schools and great ng rf their ability to lead our wor preoc Doerner, has continually maintained that the ties to succeed than they J iadj of al adding of ten fully commissioned police officers to P-Ment of *%$?%££ in University, Eric A. >• . pie f al the ranks of his force was done to protect students g on "Because they were j, ar and not harass them. you will work fewer U| me P r^Tale^pState^ ;ademi more, have more leisure tJ'l Last year's force was not qualified to protect stu­ cation: , •exas h dents from theft, assault and vandalism, however we -These - your parents and grand- more distant places and h *' overt are not quite ready to concede the need for guns on • are the people who within a chance to follow y0ur ...j parents — are tne V*»m _ have •campus. just five decades-1919 iy tions. esearch The argument for having guns is that in the past, "You know, I'm not worried nearly so much about stay­ will fi by their f>* "Stely 50 per cent •These are also the = the vai security men would face situations of potential dan­ pectancy by approximateV £ d p& ger without the training to handle them or the means ing alive during the bunting season as I am about staying _ who, while cutting the working aay fought man's grisliest war/ proving to protect themselves. How many situations of poten­ alive until it begins." nd studi the people who defeated thej phythei tial danger may be created by having these men of Hitler, and who, when J armed? For instance, will campus demonstrators1 sud­ Jim Yasser nue to denly find the need to arm themselves as a safety over, had the compassion toL ndar? ' measure? lions of dollars to help tj yhen i enemies to rebuild their hoM riant oi As an alternative, UM should maintain a quali­ rmon < fied security force which could be maintained with­ Students, Beware Of The Knock; "They built thousands fairs v out the use of guns. England is the best example of how a police force can function without the use of schools, trained and hired firearms. thousands of better teachersi And for a partial solution, why not just provide the same time made their edi adequate lighting for the campus? This would surely It May Be The UM Gestapo very real possibility for decrease the number of thefts and assaults. youngsters — where once | In all fairness to Mr. Doernor. the newly commis­ i backroom secrecy this the dream of a wealthy boy,] 'S sioned officers have gone through 800 hours of train­ Really. I've seen a lot of changes trial date and that they face suspen­ summer, which allows for the suspen- ing which is four times the state requirement. But,' of come about at this place. You should sion. sion of the suspect student before he "They have had some They have not found an alte ar course, how these men will act in actual situations is have been around back in the days of Quite a compassionate greeting has had a trial. Amazing. from our friendly educator — key­ war, nor for racial hatred something we'll just have to wait and find out. 1967, when a resident student had his It appears that after 18 months of room inspected stone cop, especially considering the you, the members of this M With the present mood of college campuses being frustrated and pushed around by twice a week, girls complete lack of justification and class, will perfect the social] INVQL throughout the nation, we probably won't have to the conscience and power of the Stu­ had 11 o'clock abuse of authority. And that the repu­ nisms by which all men . plea of wait very long. dents' Rights Commission, with no curfews and peo­ tation of a dorm director and a confi­ their ambitions without the! xampus students being suspended or expelled ple got busted for dential counseling process had been force — so that the earth (t why? after a bust, the little toy bureaucrats drinking beer. blatantly and unethically violated by er need police to enforce the ["get in Pshaw. Nobody the vindictive Dean MacDonald. are smacking their oppressive lips.^ armies to prevent some men ;ops lor They are sure that the Students Student Pressure in the Ashe build­ SO FAR, THE ONLY purported ex­ passing against others. But idents, ing knew what Rights Commission is dead. They may those generations — made ate in planation from the Dean is a trite re­ be right. grass looked like. minder that the university always re­ ress by the sweat of their bn 5rams o Authority. Discipline. Rules. Regu­ But, looking serves the right to prosecute for up to in any previous era, and don't r releva lations. Don't try to use reason. Just Embarrassing UM? back can dull one full year from the date of the inci­ get it. And, if your genera§;erns one's sense of the stay on your toes and work to destroy i'long ha Student pressure is beginning to show on the dent. Sounds like something John make as much progress in present, until YAS™ their sick little Middle-Aged system of year i faces of UM administrators. After two major demon­ Mitchell would utter under his breath. areas as these two generate somebody YASSfcK anachronistic education policy and so­ you should be able to solve no diffe strations focused public attention on Dr. Henry King It also sounds like a lot of bullshit. smacks you in the face with a page cial conformity. many of the world's remainin§rpgram Stanford and his fellow Ashe Building inhabitants, This may bore you, but not if t from the old days. And when lighting up, be careful. •mid be some people began to realize that things can get done you've ever heard that knock on your Very careful. You may be the victim That gives us all a little Jie sare with a little shouting and threatening. FOR INSTANCE, LAST SPRING door. Particularly, when you hear a lit­ two undergraduate students, Steve tle about the new disciplinary system of a knock on the door. to remember, doesn't it? Idents a Although administrators acted with considerable Busa and Chris McMichael, came to pidly c discretion in keeping police activity during the dem­ my office and related what to them :olege c onstrations to a minimum, they are still trying to find will be a bad taste of the University of Ed Lang B when an effective means of retaliation for the protestors. Miami. They had just been aroused in e that This summer, the Dade State Attorney's office the night by the dormitory gestapo, ;o new summoned to court 17 students who participated in and been subjected to a most humiliat­ id pertir the Feb. 19 sit-in at the Financial Aid Building and ing and repulsive type of repression so ! has b( the May 7 demonstration at the Ashe Administration fashionable in Free America — a Difh fting" - Building. The investigation which led to the sum­ search and seizure of their room and the tej monses was initiated by the UM Board of Trustees. personal possessions. The searcher — b is an i By waiting for the summer to culminate the in­ a couple of really lame (but friendly) ds of 1 vestigation, the board avoided widespread student staff members. nAWS dissent. The demonstration was a red-hot issue 1968 Complex informed them that Selecting Union Assoc. Directoritical m among students in the spring and it would have been they had been suspected of smoking ten; a re cannabis in their room — that shock­ al matti a public relations bombshell to Dr. Stanford to call There have been three con for court action then. ingly evil weed which we all know Wanted: One Associate Director to have literally walked in off the street . to wo asking for a five figure salary job. set up to interview candidal hMRH But the legal bureaucracy has betrayed the ad­ leads directly to heroine addiction, not help run the Student Union. Prerequi­ Of the six candidates interviewed committee is composed of Zodiac ministration's attempt to keep the matter quiet. When to mention moral degeneration. sites: Must be black and have a very so far, one has a master's degree and Union administrators. One coi y, Sept the defendants went to court the first time during the (The real reason for the bust, read­ vague knowledge of what the duties of one is three credits short of one. The is staffed with black students enter tl summer, the judge scheduled to try their case was er, was that the two students had let Associate Director are. other four have only a bachelor's de­ committee has white students' ed dui campaigning for re-election and postponed the trial the R.A. know what they thought of Being on the committee to select a gree. Last week the adminisn* formati to a later date for his convenience. Now the retrial him — being taught in grammar replacement for Chester Byrd, former Some argue that a master's degree the black students narrow mts, loc date is set for Nov. 5 for the UBS defendants. school that honesty is the best policy.) Associate Director, I must admit that I have never seen such a slipshod job of is not important for this job, but I con­ choice down to one man. u publish That move could serve to revive the student ac­ THE SEARCH AND SEIZURE, trying to find a replacement. tend that it is valuable to have one if ly the white students were tivism which was beginning to perk at the end of last which reminds one of Nazi Germany's The higher administration has for no other reason than just to have agreement. Student Union al even year and has been absent during the summer. If we overly zealous gestapo in action, re­ done a poor job of telling the appli­ that extra two years of dealing with Bill Sheeder sent the conun jes are could again take up the chant and focus attention on sulted in the ransacking of their entire cants what the job entails. Men with people and situations on the college the candidate out to lunch ton lhowev( the trial, maybe some administrators would sooner room. You see the searcher conve­ icn little or no experience in this area level. ate their decision. P i< give in and listen to demands instead of risking their niently listed both students as sus­ Two hours later the * ut hour public image in a witch hunt. pects, enabling them to search the Daniel Santos came back no closer to a cH been, If students show up in court, hold rallies on cam­ whole room; and the confiscation of, when it went What the coflj^distn pus, and attract the news media to the scene, the at­ get this, one ashtray containing crimi­ ally wanted was someone «J will be tention may be too costly for the UM's image, and nally suspect ashes and possible mari­ namic personality, chana* .compi legal pressure could be eased. juana sediments. Lack Of Communication personality that put the ^ g.c Although the demonstrators violated county This totally inconclusive evidence, H laws, it was the UM that requested their prosecution. along with the harassed students, by himself. There has not W Jjjcies^ If administrators emerge red-faced from this bout, were then summoned before Jack Is Cause Of Dissent man interviewed. .,.|n icbevei Kantwell, Director of 1968 dormitory. We want a man who wii'^ ring y&( maybe next time, they'll let students handle the situa­ bla tion with their own disciplinary system. Kantwell, director of 1968 dormitory, Self-styled political scientists and I believe in a prompt military vic­ ating with students, , teI1f ries. There will be less public attention focused on to frequent charges of resident hall to­ the throng of amateur revolutionaries tory in Vietnam as the answer to our He must be able to handle i m CQmm mU that— which UM officials will like, and the trial will talitarianism, decided to counsel Steve that plague our campuses today have Indochinese problems. tions. Most of all, he Jj.g JCentral probably be fairer then, which everybody will like. and Chris, thus avoiding a meaning­ come up with the answer that points I believe that long hair in men is man who will make up ni• ( is-lQn Q Won't they? less and self-defeating trial. This, fel­ to the understand­ effeminate and unsanitary. It's also and who will not be affect ,. and low students, is all to infrequent an ing of all our ugly. sure from either administra tee example of how the educational proc­ problems; that is, I believe that the Women or Fe­ dents. ^ Comm ess should function, different than the "lack of commu­ minist Movement is just a political ex­ As one committee tf» with s MIAMI HURRICANE STAFF functioning of a police department. nication." cuse for lesbianism. stated, if Chester Byrn le Wo Published semi-weekly during the academic year Copyright 1968 by the University of Miami Mr. Kantwell, Steve and Chris dis­ According to I believe that the fingered peace plying for the job he wou'" feist to (Undergraduate Student Body) cussed in confidence the entire inci­ be at the top of the list a ra( Copyright 1970 by the University of Miami them, lack of signal is as useful as the open-handed dent, and after their meeting the c o m m u nication Nazi salute or the left communist fist. candidates. .„ Jg Wedn' P.O. BOX 8107 UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI, CORAL GABLES, FLORIDA 33124 "case" was "resolved" with the stu­ incites, prepares I believe that National Guard units I fear that the man ^ living dents being assured they would hear should be reprimanded for their ac­ not be as qualified as he s swell The HURRICANE is written and edited by the students of the University of Miami. Editorial and executes riots nothing else about it. like being thrown into tne Clousne viewsherein are not necessarily those of either the UM faculty or 0dm,n,strat,on. and other civil tions at Kent. It's shameful that after WHICH SHOULD SERVE as a disturbances. It firing so many shots they only killed the ocean with no boat or afternc „.,.,. ,- Conv Editor four. either sink or swim 'Chairec BiUbwmki Entertainment Editor happy ending and provide us with an has been found Jim F»hel photo Edilor optimistic sign that this university is that it is also the I believe that the only way that we KenRatk.en.es Executive Editor major cause for SANTOS will finish with anarchism in our coun­ > Sex I SharaPavlow... Executive Editor slowly moving into the Twentieth Cen­ aded ty Linda Meindienst Sports EdUor racial confrontations. If that were not try is to institute a "get tough policy." tury and away from the Ronald Ray- blishinj Ed Lang ...... News Editor all, lack of communication gets girls I believe that the Viet Cong and All letters to the Mark Berman. • • WWWWWAdvertising Manager Gun educational philosophy. cone n the North Vietnamese are ou should be typ*2p David Groelinger ° Then, like a blast of foul odor from pregnant and contributes to the per­ our ene- ss JJjprtioni petuation of unjust abortion laws. mies. So are they who would raise sized for printing, * s, the mouth of Spiro, each involved stu­ in an envelope ada tf hey pi{ their flag. : CLASSIFIED AND SUBSCRIPTION dent received a curt letter from the as­ ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR: Lew Ma- to The Editor, um^ aroum MANAGER: Roni Barone I don't think that I will ever under­ I believe that a university is a SALESMAN: Ernest Westbury sociate dean of men (the one in charge of Miami Hurricane, ^ Ejects ci STAFF WRITERS: Barbara Wooden, Richard Cooper of discipline) James MacDonald, stat­ stand how they arrived at that. Per­ place for study not for political war­ ten Student Unio* 0 'forms Elizabeth Ostroff SECRETARY: Judy Sullivon ART EDITOR: Mike Garrett ing in effect, that the university had haps my not understanding them is fare. The only confrontations useful to versity of Miami- 1 ^ this ( also caused by a lack of communica­ our institution are those on the debat­ policy to print only ^ C had after thoughts about being soft on letters that nave ill Bai: degenerate hippies and that they were tion. So, I think that it is only fair that ing stage. in i S3 signed. Senior Advisor — George Southward charging Steve and Chris with posses­ I should contribute to mutual under­ Finally, I believe that all my beliefs •n Law Printing & Graphics Advisor - Norman Koski Financial Advisor.W.lham Muff sion; that they would not be able to standing by making my position very are open for discussion and can be im­ fednesd register unless they came in to set a clear at the beginning of the year. proved upon. But, I'm right. llllllliiBillli* I Tues., Sept. 15,1970 THE HURRICANE itkjrf The Academic Calendar Won't Change

nv STU WEISS iffllilffllii «• • I WllHlilH! 1 1111111 ill IIIIIIIIII Mill BvSy iu *»~— """"" """""" "m™™ »i iiiyiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Unfortunately Dean Allen is not facing the 5 TS Hurricane Staff n ^r^runlersityofMichi. These Men Are Stifflinq Academic Maturity At UM fact that once Florida International University's ye graduate program develops he won't have any * n7v on-campus residency re- «* county school teachers to protect. ti^^vSr a women students, and cur 're thar tedr l ™ ,imrnftn students, and cur- mmmsmsm«mwmmmMm i...— —-•-. IIts f° l d even prior to that time. So !reabollS^itv of Miami is behind other The University is rightly concerned with am. It e Unive^^ rs or more in cer- the impact that an altered academic calendar P^sbytivey termed "delicate areas." will have upon the ability of the individual pro­ ?reat„ fessor to adequately teach his class. Hence, P!e kn m, for many years prior to Dr. there is justification for concern over the possi­ is ia bility that a change in the calendar might alter tobe, jte# i Miami was nothing more of arrlVa the number of teaching days. However this point thiv frd's niav2round which awarded di- ul W^\ we remain years behind other has been discussed time and again in committee d not and any number of solutions exist. d h fen must ^ of university life? ave a tons >n*y calendar — which we're told The University should be concerned with ^kt0 a „ •*(th>e enwi r and cftangefj an across the GROPP g COHEN ministrators is not to be expected or tolerated. grater v dominant area of change is the lthe "Tan "intersession" period and the null ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ lillilllill IIIIIIIIMIIlillllllM Rather, a complete cost analysis could have yhai plan, and he personally is very contented to been done already, if certain administrators Iffhe fall term by Christmas. es, he simply responded by reminding the calen­ have things remain the same. dar committee that any change should be close­ would have put their mind to it. were J" ,,-ticular item has become so pop- mat one P At the height of the calendar change contro­ ly examined and should not significantly alter 2we ^ ; mc circles that the Board of Re- Finally there is no solution to changing the r ho, a versy last year, Dr. Gropp was so "up tight" the financial inlays of the University. Thank constant inertia on the part of the old line col­ lsur has required all state institutions e tim, that he sent a confidential letter to the Presi­ you Mr. Cohen and the division of financial af­ lege administrators who oppose change because 5 •ftTexas ^ ^ system Dy first semester and hav dent's cabinet, of which he is a member, indicat­ fairs for a brilliant nine week report. it has been done one way and one way only. No f ing a very negative attitude towards any pro­ solution that is, except to remove them. Remove your ii chers have found that this semes- reSe r posed change. The Dean's Council, chaired by Robert Allen —- Dean of Continuing Educa­ them and replace them with young and vibrant n fulfill all the academic require- Dr. Gropp, actually impeded any action on a tion Supervisor of Summer Sessions college student. TP various institutions, while simulta- proposed change last year, when for close to > the Here is the one area of the University ad­ Don't expect to see a change in the academic p& oving successful with administrators, three months the council fumbled with two ministration that has gone on record opposed to calendar because this is not a very emotional or test war, Li students. questions sent to them for review. any change. Of course this division seems to controversial topic on our campus. Last year featedthi t *I then do administrators on our cam- Eugene Cohen — Vice President for Finan­ have a vested interest in protecting the Dade over 93% of the student body polled wanted to >» when ji to stymie the adaptation of this cial Affairs — Unfortunately Mr. Cohen did not County schoolteachers. Although they are—an see this calendar change implemented. The fac­ assion to Pf ? Tne answer is not too hard to see the importance of having his department extreme minority on our campus, Dean Allen ulty figures were lower, but significantly higher he closely examine the proposed change. Rather lp the 'when we analyze the objections of the has been adamantly protecting them by not al­ than 50% yet no action has been taken. Things heir Slant opponents of the switch. than doing a thorough cost analysis to see lowing any changes in the summer school calen­ look bright to see a change by the time the cur­ iXmon Gropp, Vice President for Aca- whether or not a change in the academic calen­ dar that might cause a slight inconvenience for rent freshment graduate — that is, freshmen in [f airs witnessed the ill-fated trimester dar would adversely effect the financial balanc- the county schoolteachers. hign school graduate from college. lousands nd hired r teachers Nancy Handler FRANKLY SPEAKING by Phil Frank 5 their edi Paul Domitor ty for mi *e once itfi thy boy, |S Is Changing New Party Wants Reform *d some 5 i an alterj Most of you remember only away from a real commitment to New Party is a national orga­ 1 hatred, Tea Party Image too well the horrors of last year: change. nization working toward peace, of this the murders' at Jackson State concerned with the shocking the social! rINVOLVED!! This is the lectures in various locations. Students throughout the (plea of every organiza- and Kent State, the unending country will have the opportuni­ condition of our environment, I men nn These committees are also plan­ concerned with the present rac­ hout the icampus during Orienta- ning smaller lectures and semi­ Southeast Asian conflict, the in­ ty to work for change this year. I why? Why should any There is an alternative to simply ist structure of our society, con­ earth wil nars to be located in the various difference of public officials to cerned with the squalor force the! •"get involved?" No one dorms. the human needs of this country, watching society destroy itself. The alternative is New Party in Which many Americans must •me menfltops long enough to ex- This is just a brief statement the violence that rocked the na­ Itudents, naturally, won't Students. The alternative is your live. The basic issue is survival, lers regarding the broad spectrum of tion's campuses, the mood that our future, yours and mine. New Jate in organizations if topics, committees, and pro­ personal commitment to mean­ made the future held little hope. Many ingful social change. A group of Party now has as its national f their b«rams offered aren't per- grams AWS will be offering. HAS DOME and doritfr relevant to their needs -me New ARlWALTURF of these things continue to haunt concerned students and faculty chairmen Dr. Benjaman Spock Pertinent and relevant, AWS is AWAY comemix WITH KNee INJURIES , and Gore Vidal, and a new politi­ perns. responding to the women's the American scene, and our have formed the New Party Stu­ ir general Birr rue GOT 6M6N ojr mm WG BUMS!' dents here at the UM. cal force has received endorse­ gress in i |ong have organizations needs. ^H public officials continue to turn year after year, and ments from prominent national generatioj figures, among them Dr. Paul Er- : to solvei no different, offering the rp,grams for students. lioh, Gene McCarthy, John Gard­ i remaininJulg d be fine if students ner and F. Lee Bailey. New a little Ajje same every year — Party is on the move throughout tir- udents are probably the scale of values for 1970 educa­ at it again. Three of my friends tlemen in the car got out and the nation, in the community rapidly changing variable Art Facilities tion and living. Nineteen Seven­ and myself were taking a late talked quietly with the police. and on campus. Here in Dade ftolege campus. Organiza- ty has brought about an aware­ night stroll in the Grove when at After that, the police car left, County, New Party is putting up lie when they become so ness of the pollution in our the corner of Grand Avenue and and the other car was about to several candidates at the local Rice Street we were approached and state-wide level. They need ble that they can't re- Are Appalling world environment, but ?what follow. about pollution of our immediate by Miami Police car No. 533. your support. p new students, liberal Right before the civilian pA pertinent issues, college environment? Are we too Officers Charles and Parkins At University blind or ignorant to see what Plymouth left, the man who New Party pledges itself to has been involved in a called us over to their car and building a campus community To the Editor: this neglect right on our campus after making us aware that they talked with the police said to us fng" — gone are the is doing? here at the University of Miami. y the tea-party image. In I should like to extend an invi­ could arrest us on loitering and- from the car window, "Please New Party calls for more black f is an AWS focusing on tation to Dr. Stanford, the Uni-. I feel certain that you, like all or vagrancy charges, told us that tell everybody that we're not informed and thinking persons students, faculty, and adminis­ Is of the women stu- versity of Miami Board of Trust­ they would forgive us this time narcs." Then they too drove trators. New Party calls for fair today, are concerned over the ef^ providing we furnished them Jp AWS aware of cultural ees, officials of Coral Gables, feet that pollution has on the away. The driver of this car was representation of untenured fac­ itical movements regard- and the news media of Miami to with information by filling out ulty in the Faculty Senate, to in­ body. Why are you not also con­ the three by five cards with about thirtyish, muscular, a trim fen; a relevant AWS. take a tour of the facilities of the cerned over its effect on the beard connected to his side- duce innovative and creative ^1 matters are a normal Art Building of the University of which they had been provided. ideas for the benefit of the uni­ three conf io spirit? If not actually harmful, burns7 and black slicked back nr>AiAM' womenIn. _conjunc„ J - Miami. I do not believe that any an environment of ugliness does The four of us had to give the versity community. New Party cand hair. osed J|MRHA, AWSisspon- of you have ventured to inspect nothing to foster the develop­ police our names, our nick­ calls for a unified University s. One cojpodia c 70 — beginning this anciet edifice recently or at ment of one's esthetic sensibili­ names, our addresses and phone His partner, who remained in community, bringing together ; students |y. September 26-Oct. 2. any time. Had you done so, you ties — surely the business of ed­ numbers, and whether or not we the car, appeared to have light faculty, black, white and brown student^ the events that are would have been moved by the ucation in general and of art in had any identifying scars or tat­ hair and was also about thirty­ students, peace groups, ecology during the week. appalling physical conditions particular. toos. As the police received this ish. The car had no vestiges of groups, all those concerned with narroffCr1?"011 regardinS sPe~ that exist and have done some­ We have a very capable fac­ information, their attitude being a police car except for the the decadence of our society. Our Tinto :nts> ^cations, and times thing about them. Not only has ulty now under the new depart­ changed from courtesy to one of future depends on it and there is an license plate. Everybody can " ^! Published and distribut- the University been guilty of ment head, Dr. Andrew Morgan, veiled threat, although their draw their own conclusions. no time to waste. nts were • segregation on this campus, but who will try desparately to keep speaking voices remained civil. What can you, the individual Unli fl events for the dorms ' the Art Department at its high­ Well, drug buffs are advised \e °TZ I5 are Planned ^ resi- also of obvious neglect of its Art When I asked Officer Charles to stay away from strange Plym- student, do? You can come to Department. est standards; however, with the whether this was legal he snick­ the patio on September 17 at 5 lunchto* however, in the past, meager ingredients provided, ouths, and people out in the The words of its dedicated ered (understandably) and de­ Grove for an evening constitu­ p.m. to hear "New Party's guber­ Picnics, coffee and this will be impossible. The Art natorial candidates, Lew Beller r the coi at hours, and beach par- teachers have gone unheeded. clared, "Before, the Supreme tional, may have their constitu­ Department has been degraded Court and the other courts were and Al Featherstone, speak. You • to a cM 5 been planned, Sockets hang from the ceilings, for so long that for it to ask for a tional rights violated. You may stupid, but now they have com­ find yourself in court arraigned can come to room S229 in the the comij »e distributed on Septem- broken air conditioners are not new building would be like Student Union on September 23 neone 1* will be poll AWS and repaired, termites enjoy a per­ mon sense and won't stop us on a charge of petty nightwalk- a reaching for the moon. Since the from doing our job." at 8 p.m. to find out what needs charisma compiled to determine petual banquet undisturbed, and latter has been accomplished, I ing. Don't worry though, if to be done. New Party is also the man" s responses to major ex- the entire building is in decay. am confident that a new building He claimed that the cards you're a first offender they prob­ sponsoring a Festival of life in ably won't amputate your legs. s not beet Blicies; such as men's vis- could be erected if some of you were only used in case stores in on September 20. xn Why have you closed your Robert Aaron women's residences, eyes to these conditions? From were dedicated to this cause. the area were robbed or looted, There will be art, crafts, music, /ho wiU*] l? leverages, guest visita- and went on to say, "If I had my ln§ the practical standpoint, consid­ Again, I wish to extend to an opportunity for you to partic­ black a" vacations, and co-ed er the effect on enrollment and any one or all of you an invita­ way, thieves would have their ipate and help the New Grove andlete*; Bes. ask yourselves what out-of-town tion to visit with us at our Art hands cut off and rapists would Competency Community establish badly .musthejp^rnmittees established college students would choose to Department be castorraided (sic)." needed services for the commu­ U\e OW^ntrantral l CounciCnnnnil l arofea th+v.e « enroll at our University with the Gertrude Freeman He gave us permission to nity. on the Status of present facilities? The answer is quote him, but refused to pro­ Needed At inistratof and a Sex Education none. The meager enrollment of New Party urges you to sign Jtee. ^^^ vide a pencil to facilitate our up for the 1 credit course in this department is comprised of Miami Police doing so. e rnem^ If Tmission will be in- students who are trapped in Registration practical politics being offered at Bvrd * k Sex discrimination Miami, Whereas many others Harass Kids After they were done with the University. This is your op­ Wo men us, a second car — '67, '68 or '69 To the Editor: portunity to stop talking and would l ^t k 's liberation. might be attracted-if we had im­ Registering is usually the f( Xlst to bring Ti-Grace At- proved facilities. More important cream colored Plymouth with li- start doing. New Party candi­ list 0 In Grove most traumatic experience the dates will need your support in ( a radical feminist, to than the practical aspect, how­ cense plate 1W171801 or k We student faces at UM. Piles of the November elections. The ,n wesel dnesday, Nov. 4. she ever, is that art and esthetics To the Editor: 1W171803 — pulled up to the glVln a ma cards are thrown at the student, community needs a responsible L shou" „ § Jor lecture at seems to be rated so low in your The forces of law 'n order are police car. One of the two gen- obscurely written information 1 aS artici a *9 voice in public office and you to%' ioT P P ting in sheets are shoveled out, and can help make that a reality by lifef ^^ess-raising session countless students are moved to at or arternoon. the Commis- enrolling in the practical politics the verge of hysteria. course. New Party will continue p^aired by Donna Gilber- With all the orientation pro­ working on organizing the grams, leaflets, and films, UM dorms and the community, in Sex Educat ion commit- bv Penn Hooz offers the student, why has the giving a voice to the people. the e°^|5lishinditoiK?;!Lg y » will most important aid to the stu­ itte'f booklet for dent been ignored . . . Why r ^™ concerninCUUI1g This is New Party and New ^< andP^lj3 n "r"" g contracep-- aren't competent advisors avail­ Party is you. We can make this a g' ss^K:rtlons» and venereal dis- aHdrea fte able to the student in the weeks meaningful year at the Universi­ Univer ,erj sitl y plan to distribute tl preceding registration? Wf"!f ground early December ty if we work together as New :anCi U eCts con Sure returning students had Party Students. Or we can sit nion, !!ilJ cerning abortion It is/Iporms ar +*?„~ „«^- the opportunity to be pre-ad­ back and watch society decay. ^^ t!^ Th, areP aagetting under- vised in the Spring and there are We can sit back and watch the only fBillS Conimittee Plans t0 a few advisors available prior to draft come down on our heads or iave I? ! °aird, a person instru- ln registration — but this is not we can work together for the Massachusetts enough — as any student knows. change. The choice is ours, yours MT] Law Reforms, to cam- e Veteran Student and mine. onesday, Dec. 9 for two THE HURRICANE Tues., Sept. 15,1970 i

•rote of bei 61. F> |3JC

iC^ f Other restaurants sity- •lis Uerti tients F rtant nev Icorir Its, different sou i ted have prohl ieutena force, e iploma ;wiss fechnol

From for each day of an ei loveri pas ass or the ion, E 19 tirbine ent, I vco the week. tBin., 1 Dr. :an o Miami I id, "P very concern was in menta the pre course subject. ;udenti respecte We have a Profe acuity 'IR0N1 we in ero P< Iso h< jrmal ampus roblerr •ork ai different restaurant,public a SI

5yEL o Studs >-. • ate i e stui univ iarai's n sig iring:

Grad jniors, Jligible credit I surv particif sis oi 1* The Bamboo Frog 4* Muther's Soul Food Stud* 'ograr 7. Sugar Shack ipartn Chinese and Polynesian food. She may not be able to spell it .ey v Sweet tooths, how could we Iconoi Like egg foo yong. Sweet and sour pork. but she can sure cook it. Barbecued ribs. itiona forget you? Come here to top off w ry Ei Chinese baby ribs. Barbecued beef. Barbecued chicken. you selected from the other six kitcb imini Great oriental food. And if you're Fried chicken too. It's done to a turn ,aM8! There's every dessert from pies to iudies hungry an hour later you can visit... with lovin' soul. ?artme parfaits. 5UMM' 2. The Horn & Tail 5. Wienerstadt ill tl Thick juicy steaks and broiled You don't have to be European You've never seen anything ints. This lobster. You can even get a hamburger, to like delicatessen. Knockwurst. the Yumbrella. It's seven different restaurants under one roof. Plus a but don't do it just because of time. Potato pancakes. Bagels, loxand p Super fast service is the specialty of cream cheese. ub o'Nations. all these individual restaurants. Find room on your tray to visit Everyone in the family can get 3. Casa Caliente this one. what he likes without a hassle. Some like it hot and here's 6. La Cosa Italiano And you're not limited to one where to get it. Everything but mandolins. restaurant. You can mix'em and maf Mexican/Spanish food for when Spaghetti, veal parmigiana, ravioli, em from all seven and eat your waf your taste buds are ready to try some­ lasagna, pizza. around the world. 1 thing with a bite. Tacos, enchiladas, A pasta palace for • The service is super quid and guacamole. Ole. paisans. It'sa good. with no tipping. Seven to one you' « "yum brdla J 6600 at U.S.

Weekdays 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.. 5 p.m. to 9 p.m./ Sundays 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m./ Friday s and Saturdays 11:30 a mto?nm e V mio^P-m..5p.m.to 12 p.m. Tues., Sept. 15,1970 THE HURRICANE (J0 Professor Found Dead On Cam

Frohlich- associate ;- Plllllllllllllllilllillllllllll! ^ If mechanical engi- :r sS r ^ ° at UM, died last ! fHe was 52 years old. 5 Appointed To Engineering School

cnr Frohlich, a na- Five appointments to the Louis F. Dell'Osso, assis­ NEERING AND SYSTEMS from Monash University, r'off Rase', Switzerland, f Ba faculty of the UM School of tant professor. He comes ANALYSIS Clayton, Victoria, Australia, live " n at the UM smce fid been 063 to 1969, he Engineering have been an­ here from Westinghouse where he taught thermody­ ^^appointment with nounced by Dr. Donald Electric Corporation, Re­ Dr. John Duncan, assistant namics, design and noise professor. He comes to the &aj01nt»e1 School of Ma- A. Sawyer, acting dean. search Laboratories, Pitts­ control from 1966. 0S burgh, where he was senior UM from the University of Il­ P* TAtmospheric Sci- By departments, they are: His research interests were % "trJerly the Institute bioengineer and conducted linois where he was assistant mainly in heat transfer, with • ELECTRICAL ENGI­ medical and biological re­ professor in the industrial financial support from the NEERING search from 1967. engineering department last lersity* Australian Atomic Energy Dr. George W. Zobrist, year. , studies of dynamic Dr. DelPOsso's experience Commission. chairman and professor. Dr. includes work as 'an electron­ From 1966 to 1968 he was HlS of deep-sea sedi- rtieS Zobrist comes to the UM ics engineer at Republic Avi­ assistant research engineer, Before that he lectured in 'Tproduced new and im- from the University of South ation, Inc., Farmingdale, Industrial Sciences Group, mechanical engineering in t* 'knowledge and sev- Florida, Tampa, where he Long Island, electronics engi­ the University of Michigan, the faculty of science, Uni­ rt neer at the Naval Medical L instruments related taught for the last year. and from 1965-66, research versity of Manchester, Eng­ !ring, deep-sea implant­ Research Institute, Bethesda associate in the Infrared and land, for eight years. Earlier Prior to that he was asso­ Naval Hospital, Bethesda, Optical System Lab there. he worked for ten years in ed other ocean bot- Md., and teaching electrical ciate professor of electrical private industry in aeronauti­ technology- engineering courses at the engineering and director, • MECHANICAL ENGI- cal engineering, aircraft 'lohlich served as a first University of Wyoming as a NEERING undergraduate studies, at the graduate student. stress, power plant installa­ j, enant in the Swiss Air University of Missouri, Co­ Dr. Arthur Williams, visit­ tion, design and develop­ *£ earned his engineering lumbia, Mo., 1961-1969 • INDUSTRIAL ENGI­ ing professor. He comes here ment. la in 1945 from the ^Federal Institute of Dr. Zobrist was selected oology in Z^ich. for American Men of Sci­ ence, National Science Foun­ dation Fellowship, summer From 1945-48, he worked Vn Engineer for the Brown 1962 and summer 1964, and S in 1967 was named Young 0Veri Corp- in Switzerland, ^assistant chief engineer Engineer of the Year by the f the Turbocharger Divi- Central Chapter of the Mis­ L Elliott Co., Jeannette, souri Society of Professional If' 1948-53, and chief of Engineers. rbine Design and Develop- Dr. James R. Story, assis­ lit Lycoming Division of Rosenstiel Medical Science School Building tant professor. He comes VCO Corp., Stratford, . . . has received grants for gynecology and obstetrics here from the electrical engi­ onn, 1953-61. neering department at Uni­ versity of Alabama where he Dr Donald A. Sawyer, was a graduate student-in­ kan of the University of Med School Gets Grant; structor liarni School of Engineering, lid, "Professor Frohlich had Among his honors were very inventive mind. His the NASA Traineeship jncern the last few months Award, 1966-69, Texaco in the field of environ- Law Institute Starts Tues. Scholarship, 1965, and NDEA as lental problems. He was in Fellowship, 1970. ,e process of preparing a The UM School of Medi­ existing facilities in the Med­ cerned with policy making, \ xirse for engineers on this cine has received an $831,750 ical School Jackson Memori­ advice or responsibility in • BIOMEDICAL ENGI- abject. He was well-liked by grant from The Ford Founda­ al Hospital medical center. labor-management relations. NEERING udents and faculty and well tion for a three-year, interde­ President Henry King spected in his field." partmental research and Stanford announced receipt training program in repro­ of the grant. Dr. William A. Professor Frohlich was a ductive biology. Little, professor and chair­ USG Cabinet, Committee iculty advisor to the EN- Under the grant, members man of the Department of IRONMENT! group and ac- of the Department of Obstet­ Obstetrics and Gynecology ve in the UM chapter of rics and Gynecology and of (Ob-Gyn), is principal inves­ ero Population Growth. He the Endrocrine Laboratory tigator, and Dr. Kenneth Sa- Positions Available so had organized an in- will coordinate interdiscipli­ vard, professor of biochemis­ irrnal lecture series on nary studies into human re­ try and medicine and direc­ Undergraduate Student dinator of the Student Rights impus on environmental productive metabolism, endo­ tor of the Endocrine Labora­ Government President Mark Commission; a chairman for •oblems. He did consulting crinology, immunology and tory, is co-principal investi­ Krasnow is seeking student the USG Bailbond Program ork and wrote for technical fertility control. The fund gator. volunteers for several USG and volunteers for a USG iblications. provides $70,000 to renovate cabinet and committee posi­ Parking Authority. The research will be con­ tions. There is also an opening ducted on clinical and basic for a USG chancellor, who levels. The program involves Openings are available for will serve as an assistant to SUMMON studies into reproductive me­ secretaries of Honorary Af­ the president. Project tabolism, endocrinology, im­ fairs, Residence Hall Affairs, munology and fertility con­ Union Affairs, International Eight positions are avail­ trol under the direction of Affairs, Inter-Collegiate Af­ able on a new Trustee Rela­ Is Seeking Volunteers faculty members located fairs, Academic Affairs, tions Council, which is being principally in the Depart­ Community Affairs, Alumni set up to allow representa­ ment of Biochemistry and Relations, Political Organiza­ tives of the undergraduate 5y ELIZABETH OSTROFF newspaper to many UM stu­ Obstetrics & Gynecology. tions, Transportation and En­ student body to meet on a Of The Hurricane Staff dents in an effort to intro­ The program reflects the vironment Affairs. one-to-one basis with trust­ Students wishing to partic- duce the program to those growing concern of scientists ees to strengthen trustee-stu­ ate in project SUMMON, who might have been un­ over the world's population Krasnow said USG is espe­ dent relationships. e student directed program aware of it. explosion and the need to cially in need of three ju­ .university involvement in know more about human re­ niors, three seniors and chief iami's disadvantaged areas, "The purpose of the news­ productive functions in order justice to serve on the Su­ n sign up for the program paper was to give a compre­ to avoid overpopulation, Dr. preme Court; an overall coor­ iring registration. hensive explanation of what Emanuel M. Papper, dean of SUMMON is to the students the medical school, pointed GOOD THING Graduate students, seniors, prior to registration." out. niors, and sophomores are "The University of Miami Coed Wanted AIMED RAHiu SHACK. tgible to receive academic DO GOME TRUE! SUMMON Director Nor­ School of Medicine has al­ DIVISION OF ANDY CORPORATION edit for their participation man Manasa said, "We hope ways been a leader in repro­ For Pen Pal | SUMMON. Freshmen may to build up an enthusiasm be­ ductive research," Dr. Papper UM girls who would like Brticipate on a non-credit said. "This is an extension of isis only. tween both the student body to correspond with a Viet­ and the faculty for the pro­ existing programs and we see nam veteran will find a will­ gram this semester." it as a step towards creating ing pen-pal in Richard E. Al­ ENJOY VIBRANT MUSIC FROM "MODULAIRE" AM/FM Students interested in the a Reproductive Center here." len. ogram should choose the "It took a year to work out The second annual Insti­ a program which would pro­ Allen wrote the Hurricane apartment through which tute on Labor-Management asking us to find girls "be­ vide an education for stu­ we ey wish to earn credit Relations will be presented tween 18 and 21 years of conomics, Sociology, Edu- dents and faculty, and to at UM on five consecutive age" to write to him. tl0nal provide competent assistance ">ff W Psychology, Elemen- Tuesday evenings beginning "As a matter of fact, I ary Education or Education: for the unfortunates of the tonight. hope that all young ladies ^ministration Curriculum community," he said. The Institute is sponsored who need something to do, c kitch ld Instruction, Speech, For further information by the UM Law Center and will write me and learn about anagement or American School of Business Adminis­ my side of the world," Allen sto •udies) and go to that de- write Norman Manasa, c-o Knt's re§istration desk, Wesley Foundation, Box tration. Registration fee is wrote. PMON representatives 8225, University of Miami, $30. The lectures will be Any coeds who would like 111 given from 7:30 to 9:30 P«m. to write Allen should address then interview appli call him at 284-3039, or go to tits. the SUMMON tables in The series is designed to their letters to: Richard Breezeway and Richter li­ be of practical and positive E. Allen, Drawer "A," Leav­ brary. value to those persons con­ enworth, Kansas, 66027.

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°<£~ Allman Bros. Recor, New LP At Criteria

By JIM FISHEL entertainment Editor People were running around every which way when I arrived at the record­ ing studio on a hazy summer afternoon. The group was sit­ Art ting out in the lobby while they were waiting for the studio to be readied for their recording session. The pro­ ducer, the affable and afflu­ ent , hadn't ar­ rived yet. Finally after another short delay, the time finally ar­ rived and Studio B, leased for one year by Atlantic Rec­ ords at Criteria Recording Studios, was really set for the many hours it takes in re­ cording. The recording of Miles Davis Will Kick Off This Year's Fantastic Concert Series the Allman Brothers newest . . . Davis and Dion appear Saturday night on the patio album was about to begin. Although the most under­ Allman Brothers Record At Criteria Studios rated group in the entire ... top gro up's album will be released thi. L Here's USG Concert Schedule country these musicians were in top form from start to fin­ By JIM FISHEL ble hours of strenuous work playing record album kB Shankar, Otis Redding, Simon and Garfunkel and Hugh Ma- ish. instrumental material. Later Hurricane Entertainment Editor sakela. All of these groups will appear in the Leacock-Penne- on, probably by now, the by both the band and produc- of this country's most til For the second straight year the USG Concert Series will ed rock bands" backer movie, MONTERREY POP. Time after time they group will go back into the er Dowd, I was totally worn present a showcase of entertainment that is second to none. The rest of the entertainment schedule is as follows: Sat­ would start over again if recording studio and put out. Still I couldn't help but By the way, this Tonight Bethlehem Assylum, Skin, and Sun Country will be urday night, Miles Davis and Dion; October 10, Leonard 31 t Tom Dowd felt that it was down the vocal exactly as be excited that I had witness­ will be released by Ati^.•, mim ™ presented on the Patio. These are three of the top local rock Cohen; October 17, Santana; and ; not up to the quality or par ed the recording of an hon- Records sometime"tertai W^-n [r[me' bands in Miami and Bethlehem Assylum have a recording. To­ they want them. November 20, Laura Nyro and December 4, It's A Beautiful of the group's true talent. est-to-goodness 33 1-3 long- month. •int of t morrow night the following bands will play at UM: Janis Jop- After watching uncounta- Day. Tentative dates are set for Ten Years After, November How many times I heard rs. It v lin with Big Brother and the Holding Company, Scott McKen- 15; and Neil Young and Crazy Horse on December 11. The each song played over I can­ that y< zie, The Mamas and Papas, The Jefferson Airplane, The Who, first concert of the second semester will feature the Greate- not really say, but I do know withou Jimi Hendrix, Canned Heat, Country Joe and the Fish, Ravi ful Dead on February 6. that many of the songs stuck LARGEST DOUBLE K| ith mac in my mind even after I had the cor left the premises. E SELECTION IN THE SOUTH I just S( Sex-Thing' For Everyone: Big Orgy New approaches were in­ ARWCWAK H°^f animosi troduced on almost every Inent fo: 'enforce By JIM FISHEL You're sure that it's his girl­ song and the group experi­ Hurricane Entertainment Editor mented freely with every­ friend who is the son's fian­ Continuous Sales WUnesi Have any movies totally thing from kettle drums to jjnpted m cee, but lo and behold the clavichords. The band is confused you and surprised 1 of the son turns around much to the complimented by the multi- you lately? Well, "Something Super Savings! ties. For Everyone" is one modest disapproval of the talented Duane Allman and JPlaces - screwed up example of this audience. during the recording it JTiefcgj^ played a very mixed bag cen­ •inner K type of entertainment. The Low, Low Prices On All l>y inde movie is enough to totally The ending of the movie is tering on the blues. Konrad, a good-looking way­ professional hooker. In the \rs. (th; wreck you without any help indeed "something for every­ faring stranger who performs course of the movie he makes A recording session may I Pacii from drugs. murder, sodomy, and inter­ one." A surprise is in store 1 it with everyone from the seem different to most peo­ (Peter, Michael York stars as for all those brave enough to Dress, Sportswear course with the ease of a ple, but it is in many ways World countess to her son to his fi­ be freaked-out by the ensu­ similar to a live concert. jeful De; ancee to the sister and if the ing consequences after the There seemed to be a new the Fis "traveling-wheelerdealer" ar­ movie hadn't ended when it girl in the studio every other And Drapery Fabrics p Band rived in this quiet German did, the family Great Danes minute, but that's the way i); and i town. Everyone thinks that Myra Really True? life is. The groupie scene BANK AMERICARD, CHARG-IT. AND MASTERCHARGE WELCOME! [roups 1 might have been the next in fate has helped to transform plays a large part in local at­ lie Man line. Konrad's life except for the By BRUCE BARHAM tractions. ie Have daughter who in turn crosses Of The Hurricane Staff Angela Lansbury as the Tina I him up at the end. • d=l:L',ll,'MT| When I entered the Riviera theater to see Myra Breckin­ countess is great. She lives The other members of the ridge, I entered with the underlying feeling that all I had the life of ease even though Allman Brothers Band are heard about the picture just couldn't be true. For one thing, she is widowed and the fami­ Although boring in certain Duane Allman, keyboards; isn't this the theater that in the past brought us such fine ly can't keep up the castle. spots, this movie is recom­ Berry Oakley, bass; Dickie family entertainment as Ben Hur, Patton, and as fast as they At the end of the movie she mended for all people who Betts, guitar; Butch Trucks, come out, wholesome Walt Disney stories? How low will the has changed into a skeptic of deem themselves capable of drums; and Jai Johnny Jo- manager go? Will he put the reputation of his theater on the this way of life and almost lasting through one bizarre hanson, drums. Each is a fine musician in his own ac­ line just to make a few bucks on a motion picture that every­ gets married to Konrad, who affair after another. "Some­ one has panned? has by now seduced her, or cord and is exceptionally thing For Everyone" is like And then consider the cast. How can oldtimers like John was it the other way around. versatile musically. a current of electricity, A.C. Huston, and Mae West be associated with a bad film? And , even if the film has no plot, was a victim of poor editing and The other characters in and D.C. Duane played some of the even if it was shot with a brownie camera, isn't it worth the this mass perversion include meanest bottleneck guitar admission price alone just to see America's Sweetheart, Ra- the sixteen-year-old daughter that I've heard in quite some time. Each time he and the quel Welch? who gorges herself with epi­ If you answered yes to these questions you will probably rest of the band launched n curean goodies until she gets nsa Wanted into another song, it seemed be of the opinion when you see this picture, that it is truly a to our protagonist; his girl piece of trash. Come to think of it if you answered no you still to propel along more power­ friend who he arranges to Anyone wanting to write will leave the theater feeling robbed. How can this be? No fully than the last. Each take 2 LOCATIONS marry the countess' son, who for the entertainment staff was recorded on 8 Track re­ matter what happens to be your race, creed, color, your politi­ this year should contact he in turn shows more of his cording equipment and un­ cal or religious convictions, or your educational background Jim Fishel in the Hurri­ der Dowd's watchful eye. Myra Breckinridge will insult you. great talent of being an ac­ cane Office. People are This scene went on for three When an accident occurs on a busy street corner, hun­ complished bi-sexual; and her needed to write movie re­ 6371 S.W. 80th St.- SO. MIAMI 6999 H.E. 2nd AVE. -MIAMI dreds of people show up to watch the pain and discomfort of parents who are so gauche straight days. S, views, record reviews, art (200 Feet East of U.S.1) (Just No. McArthur Dairy) others. The onlookers know that the aftermath of an accident that all of the visiting royalty reviews, book reviews, One thing that I neglected 666-4687 Is an unpleasant experience, one which will leave the audi­ become totally nauseated. concert reviews, inter­ to inform the reader is that 759-1686 ence feeling a bit ill. In spite of this people never fail to hit views, and features. MON.-SAT. 9:00-5-30 not one vocal track was re­ FRI- 9:00-9:00 MON.-SAT. 9:00-5: the streets at the sound of crunching metal and breaking One scene that really took corded during this time, only CLOSED SUNDAYS FRI. 9:00-9:00 glass. the crowd by surprise was The same psychology must hold true with Myra Breckin­ when Konrad comes into his ridge. It is not a good film and people know it, yet they rush bedroom to comfort one of JT to the theater and leave feeling foolish after wasting time his lovers, you see him con­ and money. sole the person and then kiss. ( Film Society Opens With 'Mayerling' TRIPLE HEADER

"Mayerling," the lush 1937 a non-profit organization, is accompanied by two excel­ film romance, opens the new which shows outstanding lent short subjects. season of films for The Film films for the entertainment Admission to The Film So­ Society. Telling the story of of its members. Crown Prince Rudolph of ciety programs is by season Austria and his ill-fated love Film showings are one subscription only. Member­ for Maria Vetsera, this film Sunday evening per month ship is $6.00 per person and established Frenchman from October through May at includes two guest admis­ Charles Boyer as the epitome 8 p.m. in room L-C-140. sions during the season. Send of the suave Continental Learning center, on the Uni­ $6.00 per membership to: The leading man. versity of Miami main cam­ Film Society, Post Office Box pus. "Mayerling" is the first 351, South Miami, Florida feature of The Film Society, Each Film Society feature 33143.

THERE ARE ROCK 1 GROUPS. THERE ARE *""'1JI !' ^mtmmmmmm WANTED JAZZ GROUPS. THERE ARE JAZZ-ROCK GROUPS. AND THERE IS SALESMAN IF FOR

FRESH FROM SAN FRAHSICO MIAMI HURRICANE FRESH...FROM WOODSTOCK i (WHERE ELSE) SALARY & COMMISSIONS Capitol, S221 STUDENT UNION Tues., Sept. 15,197t) THE HURRICANE Far East Art Exhibited At Lowe

One of the larger and more terns and the later three- emonial vessels, which it is Buddha which reveal the of art and a signed one, un­ significant portions of the color works; and rare pieces said represent craftsmanship Greek and Roman influence like the anonymous Chinese collection of the paper-thin, beautifully in casting that has never on Indian sculptors. who dedicated all their work — several hundred pieces decorated porcelain from the been equalled; small, early # Intricately ornate to the current emperor. spanning 3,000 years of Far Ching dynasty (1644-1911). Chinese gUt bronze pieces pipes, containers, incense Lowe Museum's new hours Eastern Art — will be on ex­ While walking on ancient and bronze mirrors, and sev­ burners, masculine jewelry, for the fall are 10 a.m. to 5 hibit Sept. 16-Oct. 4 at UM. rugs from these countries, eral Indian bronzes. inlays and mounts in gold, p.m. Monday through Satur­ visitors to the UM museum silver, bronze and enamel day plus 8 to 10 p.m. Wed­ Many works, including will also view: # Gandhara heads, the from feudal Japan. Each item nesday, and 2 to 5 p.m. Sun­ masterpieces of Chinese ce­ # Examples of bronze cer­ earliest representations of or trinket is a complete work day. ramics and Indian stonecarv- ing, have never been shown. Pieces on display will date >ri from the Bronze Age of China (1500 B.C.) to the 16th and 17th centuries A. D. in Japan, and also represent UNSOLICITED COMMENTS artist of Korea, Nepal, Persia and Siam. ia The major portion of the show is ceramics, from sever­ PETER FONDA says - "It's An EASY RIDE To - al nations and periods. In­ cluded will be several pieces from the time of the Sung BOOK HORIZONS dynasty (9,60-1279), usually considered to have produced the most beautiful of all pot­ tery; a complete spectrum MARTHA MITCHELL says - "We'd Be Out Of VIETNAM By Now from the Ming dynasty Art Lovers View Collection at UM Lowe Art Museum (1280-1643), both the best- . . . Far East Art will be shown Sept. 16-Oct. 4 known blue and white pat- If It Wasn't For - BOOK HORIZONS SPIRO says - "EFFETE SNOBS Shop At - BOOK HORIZONS JIM MORRISON says - 'I Received EXPOSURE To Culture At — BOOK HORIZONS JULIE & DAVID say - 'DADDY Says Buy Used Books And ' "V BARBARA J Save Money During Inflation At — >d thi Don't Let Local Cops Ruin Music Scene )rd album Ij BOOK HORIZONS try's most fa ds By JIM FISHEL Cotton, Pacific Gas and Electric, Chambers Brothers, and It's Entertainment Editor way, this A Beautiful Day (all these concerts for free. Yes, free!). a liami the city of sunshine and fun is also the hub of the ased by At The University presents a weekly program of local folk ftainment world. Still, the scene is slowly dwindling on singing acts and sometimes University students are show­ HU6TRT H says - Tm PROUD AS PUNCH To Shop At - sometime Sunt of the local police and money grubbing concert pro- cased. WVUM provides all of the progressive sounds of rock TK. It was getting so bad at the end of the last school music, by delving into everything from Jazz-to-Blues. BOOK HORIZONS I that you couldn't go to one concert in the surrounding One hangup with the entire local scene Is the conserva­ without the threat of either getting beaten up or messed tive colony that we are located within. Coral Gables has the rith mace. The police would usually instigate the trouble reputation of being the only city to ban the movie "Wood­ UBLEKNI1 the concert-goers and then blame it entirely on the lat- stock." They banned this music because the now-retired for­ riOH mer City Commissioner W. L. Philbrick banned the movie on BILL COSBY says 'FAT ALBERT And WEIRD HAROLD Shop At - [ just so happen to be one of those lucky people to feel account of it being a deterrent on the minds of the local OUTH animosity, for at the Led Zeppelin concert while on as- youth. Only problem is that Philbrick didn't even see the nent for this paper, I was attacked by some of the local movie and in truth hadn't attended a movie since he saw "The BOOK HORIZONS Enforcers" and came out on the tail end of the deal. King and I." For those interested in obtaining the latest records at the Witnessing this and other acts of cold-blooded malice, best prices the area features many good places to obtain jted me to try to do something to change the overall cli- them. If you can't find what you want at the University Book­ GEORGE WALLACE says - 'Era! Of This-Heah PUSSY-FOOTIN' AROUN'- 1 of the concerts. But like usual I was chided by the au­ store, go over to the Bookworm on the Miracle Mile. One of nties those two places is bound to have the record you are search­ •Places of interest in the Miami music scene include near- ing for. On Ovah To - BOOK HORIZONS linner Key Auditorium in Coconut Gove which is rented This year the University promises to provide the same By independent promoters for mostly one-night money- great music that they did last year. Many of the top groups in •rs. (this place has played host to Three Dog Night, The the last few years have come out of Miami (Fantasy, The K, Pacific Gas and Electric); Miami Beach Convention Blues Image), while there are still many groups that are •(Peter, Paul and Mary, Led Zeppelin, Johnny Cash), Pi- bound to make it in the next year (The Ewing Street Times,, I World in Dania, Florida, (Amboy Dukes, Taj Mahal, Bethlehem Assylum, Peace and Quiet). feul Dead, Chambers Brothers, Youngbloods, Country Joe Flash! A new plastic discotheque called State of Climax •the Fish, Canned Heat, Spirit, Allman Brothers, Steve has opened in Miami Beach. It's a far-out place to go if you're ir Band, Rotary Connection, Bob Segar System, and tripping and don't mind dress-up hippies and other trivia. Ev­ 1); and of course the University has presented the follow- eryone should make at least one trip to this disco. Rocky Wal­ SAVES! Iroups last year: Byrds, Jerry Jeff Walker, Vanilla Fudge, ters aptly interpreted his surroundings at this club, and said lie Mann, Youngbloods, Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, "they probably don't allow smoking here because the people •e Havens, Melanie, Brewer and Shipley, Sweetwater, Ike would melt." •Tina Turner, The Allman Brothers, Jethro Tull, James Well, on that note of solemn accord, Adios. Buy USED TEXTS At PIZZA Little Caesars TREAT BOOK HORIZONS 1514 S.Dixie Highway 4 BLOCKS SOUTH OF THE UNIVERSITY 1. We Carry NEW Texts For Those That Prefer Them. 2. We Carry Stationery Supplies, Review Books & Outlines. 3. We Carry All That You Need PLUS .. DELIVERY IN 30 /wlMUTCS ALL ORDERS R£A»Y IN 1? MINUTES SPECIAL NOTE: ALL BOOKS GUARANTEED CORRECT — Fully Returnable For One Full Week AFTER 666-5931 Classes Begin. Special Features — li fc 1. PERSONALIZED. INDIVIDUALIZED Service For Every Student. « Caesars 2. FREE U/M Book Covers And U/M Term Planners PIZZA TREAT WHERE?

Directly Across From U/M Main Entrance On South Dixie Hwy. Between HOURS: MONDAY thru THURSDAY BURGER KING and PAPPY'S PIZZA 4 P.M. io 1 A.M. SATURDAY 12 P.M. to 3 A.M. SUNDAY 12 P.M. to 12 A.M. ALL WE ARE SAYING IS GIVE 1514 S. Dixie 4 BLOCKS SOUTH OF THE BOOK HORIZONS UNIVERSITY A CHANCE THE HURRICANE Tues., Sept. 15, 1970 u jetbing u ing on P those nor Kniversi that ' und efl lersity oi Foreman Has The Ski\Miami' s i

cks°n the ,blem- To Be Miami's Best B^ fi Pf0bl ihat Ji"1 Syracuse, By LYNN MARSCHKE Hurricane Sports Writer Question: Which University of Miami running back was L Brown third team All-AmericaMi-American as aa lineman m high school. If you answerewered 6-2,196-2,1%9 tpoun d sopbcwKmChuckJFore ^e the pro m man's name to the above question give Y°^^* £ lecording Foreman was an offensive end and defensive lineman in ni prep days at Fredreck (Maryland) High. |t blacks [team an More recently, the talented physical educttUn.major has been taking handoffs from Kelly Cochrane, David^Teal and Lice bew John Hornibrook, UM's trio of quarterbacks. Having; g ivenup jgs which en: the line for a fullback spot, Foreman « already being tabbed •ehapP Scott Mundrick (41) Follows His Blockers In Six Yard Run as "the most exciting runner on the UM scene in a few Hie first . . . Coach Tate expressed disappointment in Friday's scrimmage (above) years." Recalling His credentials are impressive. As a freshman in the . that tl backfield last fall, Foreman set many new frosh records His f had call 44 points set an all-time freshman scoring record. He gainea 557 yards on the ground, which topped Bobby Bests previou* record by 24 yards. He scored more touchdowns than any first year man before him and he returned a punt ll yaras against Georgia Tech, another record. Expectations of Foreman are high. Everyone is saying may have found itself an O.J. Simpson. "He's just amazing," says Hornibrook, the ^ man who quarterbacked Foreman's freshman team last fall. "He can do everything. He can bllock, he is powerful, he can catch, I mean he's just what you want. Anything you want him to do, he U do it." Foreman is a man who will rely on speed when carrying the football this fall. "I'm basically a quick runner, I rely on Coach Tate Whispers my quickness, my speed," Chuck said. But Foreman also has something extra. "I have an advantage because I have a stride that is very 'he Whii Running Back Chuck Foreman ins it's si: deceiving. People don't think I'm moving fast, but really I'm . -will provide speed, quickness in bat j going all out," he admitted. ents are Gary Mick, one of the University's fine defensive backs, "He would have to take all his natural talents ding and confirmed this fact. "The way he runs, it is deceiving some­ bine them, however. My style is just inborn. I real ; to ^e ^ times," Mick said. "You'll think he is going half speed and will have to use my moves more to the outside.' jnsiderafc About '70 Hurricanes he's actually going all out." Like any of his teammates, Foreman was pfe sial housi In three days the Universi­ Chuck had several reasons for making Miami the college the newly installed polyturf which lies on the Orai lack Mai ry last year and adds a much floor these days. Suffering a bruised tendon early ty of Miami opens it's 1970 needed dimension to the of his choice. "I liked Tom Sullivan," he said. Student football season against Wil­ Tom Sullivan is the other half of UM's deadly backfield. day's scrimmage, Chuck did not see much action on team. surface. But what he saw, he liked & back, liam and Mary. The Tribe, as Sullivan racked up 319 yards and scored five touchdowns for tanes anc Wm. and Mary calls them­ The foursome of Mike the Hurricanes last year, So far this season Sullivan has im­ "The polyturf is great," he said following the ;ell as ma selves have not exactly set "Bad News" Barnes, Dick pressed everyone even more. "You can make tramendous cuts on it and gain t#I'm lool the football world ablaze in Trower, Bob Trocolor and "Tom Sullivan and I work very well as partners In the speed. I'm not sure how it will be when it rains, thoq ncottling recent years. Jack Chauvet will be the backfield," Foreman went on to say. "We are the same type tents," IV One good thing going for front four. Al Palewicz and of runners. We rely on power at times, we rely on speed and As far as William and Mary, Miami's Friday nig William and Mary is that Jack Hendricson will be the quickness whereas a lot of other guys rely on strength." nent, is concerned, Chuck has special feelings abom ling will they will have one game outside linebackers along test. 11 cents under their belts whereas with Dan Johnson or Wayne Chuck is looking for big things from Miami's offensive "I know a few guys on the team and I knowi! s an hou Miami will not. The Tribe Lawrence at middle lineback­ unit this fall. "Miami is going to be a well balanced team," the will get after you. They are really going to be up Tate Cochrane Sullivan use a tat played West Virginia's Stawarz er spot. running back said. "We are going to run the ball a lot, we are game because it is probably their big trip of the going to throw the ball a lot. We are going to have a potent have an Mountaineer's Saturday. David Teal who is in his the runners and protect the "I think we're going to said. "When we go into this game, we will have •""I"",. "V offense and we will be scoring a lot of points." sixth year as a Hurricane quarterback is new and has have a good season," Tate 175%." n H " Long time observers of the will also be backing Co­ not really been tested. As said. "The team has a great What does it take to become a good running back? Things look very good for the young fullback.'! *esides l UM noticed that head coach chrane up. There is talk that Tate said, "They won't be attitude and they're in fine "To be a good running back is all instinct," Foreman ex­ ing forward to a good year," Foreman said. "I'm looBPe leagui Charlie Tate was not shout­ Hornibrook will be red shirt- tested until that first game. shape. They came back in plained. "If a person wanted to be a running back he would ward to a winning season and to contributing to the ing to the highest mountain ed this year but Tate has I've been pleased with Wiley better shape this year than have to rely on his natural ability. want to put Miami back on the football map." about his team. As a matter made no decision as yet. Mathews at strong tackle last year. Football is a game of fact Tate was whispering The other running back and Tom Turchetta at cen­ where conditioning is impor­ about his potential this sea­ with Sullivan is Chuck Fore­ ter," he said. tant. A good physical condi­ son. man. Foreman, fresh off the tion means a good mental freshman squad is quick and The line still let the de­ condition." Rug Revolution Hits Miami's It took nine months for. has the moves. Sullivan and fense bust through and dump Tate and the team to admit Foreman backed up Bobby the quarterback in scrim­ One player who returned By LYNN MARSCHKE "From what I've heard from It seems Orange Bowl offi­ pleting their phas that there was an attitude Best and Steve Schaap will mage but hopefully Miami weighing 300 pounds and Hurricane Sports Writer or some of the guys, they don't cials have succeeded in com­ rug revolution. problem on the team last make Miami's running game won't have the problems it was cut disgusted the salty The rug revolution is on. like it that much because it year. Fortunately it appears more than just a one man had two years ago when coach. "If you have a donkey The rug revolution, began gives a lot," he said. "I think ^LEWIS I that the attitude on this sea­ show this year. David Olivo spent more time and a thoroughbred, it in the late 1960's, is the bat­ it is easier to punt on. You cane Assistai son is considerably better on his back than on his feet. doesn't matter how you train •th an tle between officials of col­ don't have to watch out for ACTORS ARE TRAINED-NOT BORN than last year's. The receiving corp has the donkey, he's not going to lege and municipal stadiums holes and it doesn't give as [ut expect Offensively the team has looked extremely good in Going back to receivers, be as good as the thorough­ over the installation of syn­ far up and down as grass ts starts exciting potential. Tom pre-season despite the losses Don Brennan, a quiet easy bred," Tate said. "That boy thetic playing surfaces, such would if it were muddy." 10-WEEK FALL ACTING GLASSES Both mei "Silky" Sullivan has looked of two key men last spring. going guy from Prairie Vil­ was just not fit to play ball. as Astroturf or Polyturf, John Hornibrook, a sopho­ intramural very impressive, at running Ray Bellamy who would have lage, Kansas, snares foot­ within major ballparks. more quarterback was im­ 'larger tur back. In pre-season scrim­ been a key receiver is out for balls like fly paper to flies. In There are no promises pressed with the Polyturf. mage, Kelly Cochrane has his the year recovering from an the scrimmage Friday, Bren­ from Tate this year. He real­ Last spring, the city of "You can move and cut a lit­ off and on days in scrim­ auto accident he suffered last nan scooped up a 42 yard izes that if his team doesn't Miami decided to "revolt" tle quicker and I think it has n's intra; mage but put him in a game Christmas. pass from David Teal to keep produce this year, he may and put spongy Polyturf on helped everybody," John said. DRAMA LAB and he's a different animal. a drive going that led to a not be around next year. "It the floor of the Orange Bowl. Kevin Griffith who would score for the first string team doesn't bother me a bit," Charlie Tate was also In the most recent scrim­ have been the starting tight which lost to the second Tate said about the situation. Last Friday, UM's gridders pleased with the new football mage in the Orange Bowl Fri­ end has dropped out of team 14-7. "I don't even think about it. got their first taste of the fi­ carpet. "It was fine, we PRACTICAL BASICS & TECHNIQUE day, Kelly had one of his off school and Tate is definitely Brennan is a flanker and My job is to put together a berglass grass when they didn't have anyone com­ days as John Hornibrook, a a bit shook about the loss. one the other side, Joe good football team and that's held a full scrimmage in their plain," the head coach said. SMALL CLASSES - LIMITED ENROLLMENT sophomore quarterback "It has hurt us not having Schmidt at wideout. Schmidt what I'm trying to do." newly carpeted home. Reac­ "The footing was good and I looked extremely impressive. Kevin this year." he said. is being tagged All America I'm sure Tate won't be in tions to the turf were good. didn't see anyone slip or Phone 446-6562 "We had a hard time keeping and like Brennan has amaz­ the unemployment line win "I like it," said Tony Sta­ slide. From all indications it Tate still is planning to use him in the classroom. We ing pass catching ability. or lose but there is always warz, UM's fine defensive is real good." Cochrane as the starting tried to use (Steve) Schaap at that thing called pride that back and prime contender for quarterback in the first tight end but he didn't work Defensively the word is every coach has. Whether All-America honors. "It's a game. "It's not what you do out. Right now John Watson improvement. Tony Stawarz Tate admits it or not I think lot better than the regular behind the school that counts and Steve Gaunt are fighting who is also tagged All Amer­ he will put just an ounce turf because you are not (scrimmages), it's what you it out." ican is back at his free safety more work and effort into planted at anyone time. You do in a ball game that The offensive line whose position. Stawarz seems fully this season because no man will give and this will cut counts." job it is to open the holes for recovered from his knee inju­ enjoys being fired. down on knee injuries."

Another defensive back, junior Gary Mick agrees. "You don't feel the turf com­ Bubble Inflated A sain ing out from underneath you," Mick says. "Grass will come out from underneath you and this won't. Another big plus is the fact that it is As Worries Are Disappearing spongier and there are no holes." By ED LANG The site of the "bubble" is The "bubble" is not dead Hurricane Sports Editor the old sewage treatment Pat Barrett, the nation's yet, who knows, it might still fourth leading punter, ex­ Optimism reigns again for plant, next to the baseball di­ be built before the end of the USG President Mark Kras­ amond. Parking at the site pressed mixed emotions con­ now in his quest to get the can only accommodate 200 year. The year 1980 that is. cerning the new surface. UM a "bubble" fieldhouse. people but Krasnow plans to Only two main roadblocks institute a tram where stu­ dents can be picked up from ONE HOUR CLEANING lay ahead for Krasnow to 2990 S.W. 27 Ave. Jefferson Super overcome. one end of campus to the 7283 Red Road (S.W. ST Ave.) (ADJACENT TO GARDNERS MKT. (corner) Store other. "This way we'll cut Bird and 27 Ave. 104 St. I S.Dixie First of all Krasnow is down on parking require­ seeking a performance bond ments," he said. from the builders of the DRESSES S£ (PLAIN) "bubble" for air conditioning. Maintenance cost for the "'All we have to do is have "bubble" will cost an extra the air conditioning to the SUITS $888: for %LP si-sow. $100,000 a year but again Limit 6 Pieces! temperature we want and let Krasnow Krasnow plans to collect the room? m taua t mxsa the Air Tech people cool it to revenue by having five con­ ADV MUST ACCOMPANY ORDERS 14W[HI-fffHl/J our specifications. We're man said would be apparent­ certs charging $2 per person waiting to hear from the per concert. President of Air-Tech to see ly were not. Only time will MENS PLAIN tell that. if they'll go along with it." It's been 10 months since Negotiations for the "bub­ Another barrier ahead for past USG President Jim Yas­ SHIRTS ble" has been taken out of Krasnow is that students will ser got the wheels started for architect Charles Cotter- have to vote themselves a Bf AUTlRJUY LAUNDCRf D the "bubble." "(Charles) Cot­ PACKAGED IN PLASTIC HANGERS ONLY LIMIT 5 SHIRTS man's hands and into the two dollar increase per se­ terman shot us down so hands of treasurer Eugene mester to pay for the pro­ 6<*« * GOOO AT AIL STOMS THROUGHOUT GMATU MIAMI many times that the project Cohen. According to Kras­ posed structure. That elec­ I A CIe3nin now, progress came to a tion is coming up in Novem­ came to a halt," he said. "I'd Professional Jjf/> /RfWI " * say that (Mark) Krasnow is Pr c standstill with Cotterman ber. Failure to approve this Dry Cleaning ?^CK$f£^ Pre-Spotted and Krasnow believes that might bring the "bubble" to a further along now than we PH. H d.Jili 9 M>A Plowil 4 OHtft - 15 J J.W. tth St. ••* som* of the barriers Cotter - screeching-halt. were." in Tues., Sept. 15,1970 THE HURRICANE 11 jm Brown Raps Syracuse Coach funny is "if this were 14 years K UP north at one I have never heard any of our coaches ago." r Northern liber- call the players boy ...1 have heard Mr. Brown call the blacks boy, and that seems to be all Out of the eight play­ right." — Kimball Lew Matusow U ers that walked off, four L will have a Asst. I ^effect on the were first stringers, with ^ of Miami. two players being touted y and nigger. This was the athletes more money for All-American honors. which I did. The secre­ The dispute about the l^i's ninth oppo- least of their worries. than the NCAA allows. Brown said that these black coach didn't phase fw cuse, seems to They're not mad be­ tary in the football office ^'^ A problem with The second problem two had a shot at playing told me "I told you yes­ Kimball. "The talk about w cause of this. They're professional ball. K the team. A big was that there was no terday that the coach has a two year contract is ri­ black coach which the mad because the blacks diculous," he said. None Icks on wi" supposedly are not get­ a full schedule and can't > ajlem. black ball players could Now that the black of the assistant coaches ting any of this money. side of the issue is given, be reached." L problem was so relate to. The blacks say get more than a yearly the other side will be So, to get the other rf Jim Brown, tire they were guaranteed a contract." Then why is m hat black coach on the var­ Brown, on a recent given a chance. Last side, I had to talk to he a freshman coach? # ,n\e, ex-Cleve- sity coaching staff, with talk show, admitted that Thursday I tried, to no Kimball. "He's got to learn the a two year contract. the money violations avail to reach coach system doesn't he?" Sfor try to help were happening when he Schwartzwalder. It Kimball seemed up­ When told that the Keproblem. played for Syracuse 14 seems that every other set when I asked him Well, they got the blacks accused the coach. He's Carlmon years ago and "I was reporter is also trying to about the name calling. Lording to Brown, lucky enough to receive school of giving more C Jones, a recent graduate reach him. "I have never heard any | acks walked of some of it." money than the NCAA b of Florida A&M. The of our coaches call the lam and boycotted I made arrangements players boy or any other allows, Kimball simply problem here is that he is stated, "We would wel­ X because of three a freshman coach, with a On the show Brown to talk to the coach name," he said. "But I fwhich supposedly called head football through the Sports Infor­ have heard Mr. Brown come an NCAA investi­ one year contract. gation." |happening. coach Ben Schwartz- mation Director Larry call the blacks boy, and L first thing was Now comes the more walder "a stubborn Kimball. On Friday I that seems to be all right. It seems something t calling- The blacks serious of the charges. man." Brown said that called at a pre-arranged Then it's all right when a funny is happening at t that the coaching The blacks claim that he could understand the time only to be told to black calls a black boy, Syracuse, but no one is Syracuse Coach Ben Schwartzwalder Syracuse is giving their but nobody else can." If had called them boy attitude of the coaches call back in two hours, laughing. ... plagued by racial strife on football team fhitten Bowling Lanes New Foreign Swimmer ave Various Activities Added To UM Roster

By ED LANG ty's finest tanker John Spire and make any predictions Hurricane Sports Editor from Ransom School. "John that I can't keep but I know Bill Diaz has in one month has been this area's best we'll do well. Coming in the lanned for Students job late has hurt us in re­ whipped together what ap­ swimmer for the past three years," Diaz said. cruiting and scheduling but and staff. "Check with the bowling pears to be the makings of we're getting the wheels Phe Whitten Union bowling lanes the best UM swim team in oreman ins it's sixth year of operation and desk for the league of your choice," started." years. "There were about 50 The largest catch for ess in hm ents are invited to use the facility. Maurer said. League nights are Mon­ Diaz's tank team is Jim Hil- Diaz plans to get his swim­ unanswered letters that I lencamp. Jim is from Jack­ vling and billiards are at a nominal day, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday mers feet wet the first week al talents quickly sent replies out to," sonville and stands a mam- r to the University community and and Sundays. > n. I real Diaz said. "Right now we mouth 6'7". As one observer of school. "I'll get them in side jnsiderably cheaper than the corn- Maurer will have features such as exclaimed. "He's half way the water just as soon as was plea; cial houses in the area. the red pins. The red pins are set up have 15 freshman and four lettermen returning." down the pool when he possible. That's the way to n the Ora lack Maurer, Assistant Director of every day from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Every jumps in the water." do it. You have to get into an early in Diaz's search for talent Student Union welcomes all stu- Saturday night from six to midnight swimming head first." action ts back. "We hope you come by couples can bowl three games for a has taken him from Califor­ Lettermen returning from anes and renew old acquaintances dollar. Twice a month Maurer will nia to Mexico just in the past last year are Doug Hartman, Diaz is a fresh new coach ell as make new friends," he said. have date nites on Sundays from six to month. One of the biggest Tony Baker, Lee Hunter. in an area that was previous­ nng the Hartman is a butterfly spe­ I'm looking forward to meeting midnight. The first date night Will be catches for the former Miami ly neglected by all facets of »d gain tre cialist while Baker and Hunt­ ains, thoiig|tocomjng freshmen and transfer the 20th of September. Springs coach is Tyrone er are breastrokers. the University. With the bud­ Friday ni| ents," Maurer said. "Prices for Tournaments will take place dur­ Tozer of South Africa. get now up to $25,000 for ling will remain 40 cents a game ing the year to determine who goes to The team opens it's regular scholarships, it is apparent ings about "I recruited my behind off 11 cents for shoes. Billiards is 80 season December 18 against that the UM will try to make the regional college unions tourna­ Eastern Michigan and will 1 I know sis an hour and between 1-4 people ment held in March. "Activities take to get him but he's quite a swimming the sport it should find," he said. "He swims the hold seven home meets under to be ise a table. Where else can some- place in table tennis, billiards, bowling the cool night skies of Miami. be in this warm weather cli­ 400 yard individual medley ip of the j have an hour of billiards fun for and chess for the intellectuals," Maur­ "All meets will begin at 7:30 mate. will have and the 400 yard freestyle nts an hour." er said. "I hope we have a good year —Photo by BUZZ BIRNBACH p.m. this year instead of the In the past, Eastern fesides individual bowling there and that of course depends on student not to mention that he's day meets like last year, Diaz fullback, Swimmers Dive Head First ranked 25 25th in the coun- said.". This way we hope to Michigan had a better team i "I'm loo! be leagues for all students, faculty support." ... into new season under Bill Diaz ,than Miami. That is mighty cry. increase student participa­ ing to tion in swimming. embarrassing to a school P." With the reputation Miami Helping Diaz out this year ''We're going to have a has, perhaps now swimming will be diving coach Tom fine season, I won't go out will be the UM's class sport. Gompf. Gompf has piled up •ouch Football Kicks Off The Season numerous and sundry awards as a collegiate and pro diver including a bronze medal in the 1964 Tokyo Olympic TV RENTALS leir phasf Games. Just recently he cap­ ition. or Miami's Intramural Department tured first place in the WEEK world's professional diving LEWIS MATUSOW off with one of it's most ex­ if they forefeit. If a team September 28. Although an entry date of September championships held in Mexi­ leane Assistant Sports Editor citing sports, touch football. wins the football champion­ these sports are considered 30. co. th an overwhelming ' SEMESTER BORN The entry deadline is Sep­ ship, they receive 100 points. "minor" sports, this is where ^t expected, UM intra- The women's calendar fin­ "We're going to have one tember 28, with play begin­ Second place teams receive the participants pick up valu­ 5 % DISCOUNT FOR STUDENTS B starts the 1970-71 ishes with bowling, golf, hell of a diving team," Diaz SES ning on October 5. Fifty 50 points, with the third able points. AS LOW AS Both men's and wom- swimming, pocket billiards, said. "Besides acquiring pitramurals are expect- points are awarded to a team place finishers getting 25. Gompf's services we have Swimming, horseshoes, and basketball. larger turnout than last entering football, with ten three divers that have great $175 Tennis, handball, and potential. Daniel Johnson points for a winning game. boxing, and basketball finish Something new has been t Iff WK. bowling all start October 5, out the first semester in added in intramural coverage from Burnsville, Minnesota, (MONTHLY BASIS) n s ' intramurals starts A team can lose 10 points with the entry deadline on men's intramurals. Both this year. Other than the Jim Poulous from Columbus li High in Miami, and Bob swimming and horseshoes usual coverage in the Hurri­ MASTER 584COLO0 SUNSERT DRIVTELEVISIOE N cane, intramurals will be Reyle from New Jersey." have a starting date of Octo­ SO. MIAMI. FLA. WILL covered on Miami's radio sta­ DEUVE ber 19, with an October 12 Other swimmers helping 666-5984 " tion, WVUM. the team out is Dade Coun­ entry date. Basketball starts Bill Rich will give reports on November 16, with train­ through the year on both ing for boxing starting on *••••*•••****••••••••* men's and women's sports. November 2. Rich's show will cover both The first session for wom­ individual and team basis. * Maxwell's * en's intramurals is also ex­ "We hope to give intra­ ceptionally active. murals the best coverage its * Welcomes You!.''!.'' * Volleyball leads off the ever had," said Rich. "We'll women's intramural calen­ have reports on the activities I I dar, starting on October 5. on the same or on the next <4c "" ...,,,,' " ^M!"!^^ -4t September 28 is the entry day. It'll be the fastest cover­ date. Tennis, one of the most age ever given to intramur­ * ¥ popular women's sports, has als." ¥ ¥ HELP YOURSELF GET BETTER ¥ ¥ GRADES ¥ TURN YOUR STOMACH ON AT ¥ You can insure your best grades by making sure your vision is correct. When glasses are needed make sure you like the frames. Come down to choose your favorites from our out of sight col­ ¥ ¥ lection. ¥ MAXWELL'S ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ •*•********•**•*••• ¥ C. C. KUHL, ¥ Featuring ¥ INC. • Fried Chicken • Fish & Chips • Cones ¥ 355 Miracle Mile ¥ • Hamburgers • Apple Pie • Hot Ham and Swiss Coral Cablet • Grilled Franks • Sundaea Sandwich ¥ 446-6874 ¥ • Roast Beef • Ice Cream • Fresh Garden Salad ¥ Intramural Volleyball Is Just One Sport ¥ . . . covered this year in the IM umbrella of activities ¥ ¥ ¥ ••*••****•**••***** ¥ Sun.-Thurs Fn & Sar ¥ 4500 Le JTeun e 11 A.M 11 A.M to to * ¥ 2 A.M i.'PM HAVING TROUBLE WITH MATHEMATICS? ^r *> blocks North of Dixie M Maxwell's offers you: M ¥ Quantity of Choice With Quality Of Taste M 446-4840 ¥ M ••••••••*••••••*•••••*• - THE HURRICANE Tues., Sept. 15, 1970 College Football Is Slippi^ 01 Mati Despite Attendance FigurJ 12.

the cigarette he was about to refreshens his fa,,. his goal-line fumble by claim­ puff when he hears his coach 6r ill] By DAVE SANDERS the marching band's crooked 8 ing £e lost the snap-from- coming. When the coach de- —The coach nf Hurricane Sports Writer lines during the halftime per­ f center in the sun. mands "What about the ciga­ midwestern CoL H Through the years, football formance. -Another

Representatives meet once a month for briefings which help them to keep their or­ ganizations running smooth­ ly. The first meeting this year will be September 28. ;445-5700 S MON.-FRI. 9:30-9:30 The first games are Octo­ > SAT. 9:30-7:00 ber 5, so teams have three HSUN. 1:00-6:00 weeks to practice. Gradua­ 77MIRACLE'MILE, £ by H.K. Corporation tions and resignations have * CORAL GABLES made the general outlook 78 Miracle MiTe, Coral Gables 444-6632 wide open this season.

I Melani V DO-IT-YOURSELF « The Hurrii CLASSIFIEDS

To order classifieds use the form below. Moil it with the remittance to: Classified Manager, MIAMI HURRICANE. P.O. Box 8132, University of IM Cagers Grapple For Ball Miami, Coral Gables, Florida 33124. OR bring to the HURRICANE . . . in quest for basketball crown Business Office, Room S221, Whitten Union.

CLASSIFICATION Where is your head? Join NEW Career Models International — Graduate Record Examination and PARTY STUDENT. Build a new UM Models needed for fashion photog­ Girl wanted to share 2b Miller Analogy Coaching. Call UM Radio Gives D Announcements D Miscellaneous community. NOW! raphy and TV commercials, age apt., furnished, air conditK D Automobiles • Personals 233-3351. 18-35, height no restrictions, weight Dadeland area. 585 pe' D For Rent D Services 3 • For Sale D Tutoring FOR RENT no restrictions. (CMI) is preparing to TYPING Call Emily or Denno 665-^ • Help Wanted D Typing represent a limited number of fe­ Studio apartments overlooking Bay D Lost & Found D Wanted males to the major motion picture, PAPERS, THESES, DISSERTATIONS, IRIS HO THE U N IVE RSITY 0F Of More Coverage — Grove, pool, dock, girls only The Hurri< television commercial producers RESUMES, ETC I.B.M. PROFES­ SCHOOL OF MEDICINE' 379-7622 and fashion photographers. Call SIONALLY TYPED 445-3683 - UM Boan "Expanded and more complete coverage." That's the OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEAR' DAYS TO RUN 12 3 4 5. 865-6926 for daily information on 661-7436 *ved a p: word from Sports Director Dave Sanders in regard to this HOUSES FURNISHED $510.00. OFFERS allowing ui casting calls Phone 24 hours Mrs. Gast is still typing"teTnTpap^T year's programming policies on WVUM Radio. $435.00, $335.00, MONTH, UPPER A unique opportunity'0 '"- be electe 865-9891 Will pick up and deliver same doy Sanders, now serving his second year as Sports Director 1:00 P.M. Tuesday for Friday Issue CLASSMEN YEAR LEASE: ALSO PRI- in an important develops late. 667-1319. DEADLINES VATE ENTRY. BATH $95 00 and his third with the station, has been very pleased with the 1:00 P.M. Friday for Tuesday Issue ication program in rese" ire progress of WVUM's sports staff in the past couple of years, MONTH, CLOSE U V 665-2089 NASTY Experienced academic and profes­ d facul antianxiety and antidef eir but is even more optimistic about this year's crew. EDWARDS. sional typist. Prompt. Reasonable next m Even a dirty mouth won't make drugs. _Mj^flewjttJ38:0460__ accept or Mark Krasnow another Jim Yasser Applicants, both male" I Proposal "We have a very strong nucleus returning from last WORDING FOR SALE Experienced secretary term pa- at least 21 years of age" year's staff, and I feel that this larger turn*out will almost as­ pers, etc. Pick up and delivery 75c a rience nervous tension •ding to sure us of expanding our coverage," explains Sanders. Car Jaquar XKE-British racing, PERSONALS _page_Mrs. Elliot. 271-2532 etitive thoughts, fea rs,* green 2+2 coupe, top condition, : chairman To Rocky Reborn: Thanks for keep­ T erm ob(' P°P«rs - TheseTTIx^eTi". fatigue, insomnia, 1" fcate, in th The comment sounds like a coach sizing up his team dur­ only 13,000 miles, all options, wire •••-•' h ing me in the race Love: Lorenz enced. Prompt. Electric typewriters culty in concentrating iculty ha> ing the exhibition season, but, actually, anyone affiliated with wheels, radio, air condition $4650 Bandini _MrsJ_Peel, 666-3561. nsidered- «ted, but group work should recognize the elements of teamwork and Rich Snider 822-0940. days loss will be co Experienced typist Reasonable tion in1 rights. 822-9857 after 6 p.m Your participa ; experienced personnel to get the ball rolling. The lady in row two, is back and tf Electrjc typewriter. Prompt work will be kept coniidenW fe ^^ ^ Among his top returnees are Lee Benedetti, Bill Rich, and well and has been seen with Rocky Mrs. Proulx, 221-8180. time requirement ^'' ^J^TrJ because HURRICANE Sports Editor Ed Lang. For Sale — Stereo with speakers. Term papers typed correctly _ IBM mately 15 minutes 0 $100. Reducer — Massage - Belt. 'individual Season tickets for Mind Blowing - Experienced - Prompt - Mrs four week period. Vol"" here will t Sanders points out that one of his main objectives is to $30. Portable typewriters $10 & Productions Fall Extravaganza Now Goodman — 444.1291 paid at the complete0. improve on local coverage, particularly campus intramurals $50. Call 445-9097 On Sale waw fror EXPERIENCED TYPIS73^~ and interviews of local personalities. You may moke apP ^ *ome arou Cornell and Miami U - masters Bauch & Lomb. professional Mono I W It you don't dig football - Phoning 350-6464 JJS ond doctorate theses - monu- According to the sport skipper, "Bill Rich will be in cular Microscope with accessories How about some "Passionate Like?" and 5 p.m. Monday senpts - |0W _ e,ectr|c typewri(er tenured charge of organizing intramural data for airing, and I intend and illuminator, excellent condition involved to place a couple of reporters basically under his authority." only $175.00 Sorry no phone Congratulations to Harry (the - walking distance - 661-8018 _ 4 Male part-time empo the UM f WVUM will provide live telephone reports direct from DETERMINE COST 1921 Bay Road, off the Venitian letch) Vishkoff and his new bride, Mrs. Alpha Temeles Levy 18 V, to 24. Hours, 6 J Causeway, near Alton Road. Apt Linda (the all-endur,ng) Johnson expert IBM 'typing -editing- 7 the Orange Bowl during all Miami home football games and, po 9 's a day _ Thursday, - in addition, the station plans to air the Hurricanes' home Count the words, omitting A, AN, & THf. Address and 4, M.B after 5:00 P M on week Vishkoff May they live happily ever pers - theses - many years expe- f People phone number tount as one word. Minimum charge is Call 661-7042 evening 1 baseball games for the third consecutive year. days after, despite Harry's loud neck-ties - Mrs Hart 448-0508. 51.00 for 10 words. For each additional word add 10c. Mul­ more Besvinic tiply the total by the number of days the ad is to run and Harry are you really going to fix me "Gsjorge Gallet and Wilbert Bach both have been very enclose a check or money order {or the total. Do not mail Electric typewriter (Adler), recondi­ Roomate and ap- don't 1 up with a nice Jewish boy? UNANSWERED tfl cash. ferredbut" kind to us down at Sports Publicity," says Sanders, "and that tioned, all new rubber parts — car­ QUESTIONS student pre.^- e size 0 can make an essential difference in whether our programming bon and cloth ribbons $175.00 - $90amontr,ab<> as yet of local events proves to be complete and satisfying or limited Call RaeOry #2863. 'We oper 666-8224 lrs and so and shallow." Motorcycle insurance - low cost H^Vtrio how was Peggy Debb|e, NAME FC Populati HELP WANTED - fast service. Peterson Insurance- Student # Phone.., peop Accordingly, the sports department has many other ideai Agency. 3200 Ponce De Leon Blvd. ToBuZZ"P|ainBrownWrapf he said. right now — some are quite concrete and await final approv­ Address Salesman wanted for new sensa­ Coral Gables 446-5558. al, while others are contingent or still on the drawing board. tional Peace & Friendship emblem, Haroutunian: Would you stick you faculty s linger in a dike? Classes under the g le Sanders concluded, "I only hope that with proposals from City State .Zip $2.95. Hottest campus seller, 50% Tired of girl hunting in the usual gislat fning staff members and other suggestions from the students, we profit 751-6367. spots? Confirmed bachelor reveals Swami Jyotirmoy"M| the U Date * and lecturer of I" 1 can follow through with our current plans in order to bring all the secret places. Plenty of girls „ „J urun / Hk;c better sports programming to the university and the commu­ Money cannot be returned H ad is cancelled. Photographer needs girls for figure and competition is nil. Send $1 to "Raja Yoga and e to bi ; 0 Hu nity." modeling, good pay. Jerry Bachelors Anonymous, Times Now, Student capable of'running a lath trationofMed'' ^ 'rricane and ine5 Slt Anyone interested in working with me WVUM sports 443-5359. Box 676, Coconut Grove. '""ling machine to work in re- monthly magaz ^i ' y mem team may contact Sanders at 3779, 4867, or 3330. Swami Lolitanandc V Besviri: