USBG Vice President Madrigal R Esigns by LOURDES FERRER According to Cheskin, Madrigal's Nation Letter

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USBG Vice President Madrigal R Esigns by LOURDES FERRER According to Cheskin, Madrigal's Nation Letter SHOW DOW® 83 - SEE SPECIAL SECTION Volume 60 Number 2 3!ji> tamt lurrirattp Friday, September 2, 1983 USBG Vice President Madrigal R esigns By LOURDES FERRER According to Cheskin, Madrigal's nation letter. events on campus HurruilT V'eeeeee/e Ne'.es Editor resignation letter was submitted to All Madrigal would comment on president has to do." s.ud Cheskin. "I'm ecstatic." Graham said. "She knows her stuff." him on Aug. 26. was that she resigned her position "This li a good opportunity for me Undergraduate Student Body However, Madrigal said she sub­ "lor personal reasons'at home Cheskin sees Graham as the Government President Mark Ches­ to be even more involved in student "'mechanism to gel students in­ mitted her resignation letter "about After hours of consideration by government." kin Wednesday announced the res­ a month ago" to Cheskin USBG Treasurer Angie Vazquez, volved in the university " ignation of Vice President Marilu Said Cheskin: "Suzanne has prov­ As vice presidenl. Graham'S re- "This vice presidency came in a Senate Speaker Sue J-an and Ches­ en herself in student government. Madrigal and the nomination of Su­ very hard time in her |Madrigal's] kin, Graham was chosen over­ sponsibilitv Will be to chair all Cab­ zanne Graham to lake her place. She is extra-reliable, no one dislikes inet meetings and till in for and life," explained Cheskin in his an­ whelmingly as the nominee. her and the is respected by the ad­ However, exactly when Madrigal nouncement during a USBG Senate "We didn't have an active vice help Cheskin. made her decision known to Ches­ ministration. " "I'm confident she'll do a good workshop. president |Madrigal| during the On Wednesday, Graham will ap­ kin is unclear. "I have tried very hard to ar­ summer," Cheskin said. "Marilu job," said Vazquez "She's a hard Cheskin said that shortly after pear before the USBG Senate for worker." range my life to be able to handle was not in the office enough." ratification of confirmation of her USBG elections last April, Madrigal the great responsibilities of the vice Graham, who is president of Cir­ told him she was thinking of resign­ During the summer, Graham su­ nomination. A wine-and-cheiise so­ president of USBG ... I am very pervised the USBG Cabinet — the cle K. said her responsibilities with ing. cial will follow the meeting. that organization __ ill not interfere sorry that under the present cir­ vice president's most important job Although a two-thirds ratifica­ Cheskin suggested she give her cumstances I cannot do what I feel — and took part in USBG pro­ with her new duties as vice presi­ decision careful consideration dur­ tion is needed by the Senate, Ches­ dent. would be a good job as vice presi­ grams. The Cabinet is the USBG kin said he sees no obstacles. ing the .limine dent," wrote Madrigal in her resig­ committee which plans most of the Graham. 19, is a junior majoring su/anne knows what a vice in chemistry: she plans to attend medical school. Originally from Ja­ maica, she is the' director of the USBG Universitv Information Serv­ ice, which publishes the USBG En­ counter newsletter, She has already published two Encounters, one for the New Stu­ dent Summer Orientation Program Su/anne (.raham (NSSOP) and another for the' begin­ The petition period runs tor two ning of the fall semester. weeks starting la^i Wednesday Graham is also a member of the until Sept. II Honors Student Association, the Those interested must he a full- Student Union Program Council, time' student, have al least a 2.0 Student Orientation Service and the gpa. he' involved with thi'ir constit­ Organization lor Jamaican Unity. uency and show leadership quali­ Also discussed at the workshops ties were the 15 open Senate seats. The following seats are by ap­ The School of Music. Senior at pointment only: 9fi0 Residence. M.< Large, Sophomore at Large and honey/Pearson Residence Halle North Residence seats are open lor Eaton Hall Residenci '.Fraternity petition — SO signatures or eight Row Residence, Central Residence. percent of constituency (whichever South Residence. International is lower) is needed before a student Council, United Black Students and is reviewed. Federation of Cuban Studenu UM bans individual selling class notes By RONNIE RAMOS Schroth went on to say he had llurriciiil. I'.dllejr in Chief obtained Associate Biology Profes­ sor Charles Mallery's approval and A former University of Miami Sandler's go-ahead, student who claimed to have the "He )Sandler| said I had no real Bookstore's and Dean William San- reason to get the professors' ap- dler's approval has been denied per- proval." Schroth said, "because he mission to sell class notes on cam- didn't see any recourse they would Miami Hurricane/BILL SCHERER pus. have it they disagreed." Martin Schroth, a former biology Repeated attempts to reach San- graduate assistant and current sci- dler for comment failed. * Sorority Rush ence teacher at Miami Killian High Mallery said he never gave These girls participate in one of the many rushes held during the week of registration. Most fraternities and School, had set up a table outside Schroth permission for selling the sororities had similiar activities. the UM Bookstore during registra- notes. "He asked if a student could tion last week and was soliciting come in and take notes, and I said subscribers. fine," Mallery said. "He was one of In Schroth's business, students our former students. What am J who are enrolled in five selected going to say?" classes would be paid $100 to take Mallery said he didn't know Professor's rights were violated, notes for the semester. These notes -Schroth intended to sell the notes, would then be sold through the Associate Dean Richard Pfau of Bookstore and by mail subscription the College of Arts and Sciences for $1.25 per every week's worth of said no one in the College gave notes. Schroth permission. "The faculty However, Schroth was ordered members in the College of Arts and concludes philosophical group to fold up his table last Thursday Sciences prefer that this not take because of failure to acquire a per- place," he said mit of solicitation. He was asked to Pfau went on: "Taking notes is a By LOURDES FERNANDEZ Another time he derided a UM in a reappointment case. memories reach." leave by Jerry Askew, assistant to very important part of the intellec- Hurricane \cws „_ire,r alumnus — Circuit Judge Ellen "The case ran through the nor­ It also stated that Provost Wil­ the vice president for Student Af- tual process. Also, purchased notes Gable — in a letter mailed to the mal procedures and appeal proce­ liam Lee and Foote "compounded fairs, and Jeff Zirulnick. assistant should not replace class notes." press concerning one of her deci­ dures," Brown said. "It went from the offense by further disregard for director of the Student Union. Scroth said he did not intend to "Another Koote screw-up." the department to the College |of Those are the words of Richard sions. informed and virtually unanimous Ironically, Zirulnick, a UM grad- have the notes replace class attend- In a letter to Foote, Gable re­ Arts and Sciences] to the provost to faculty opinion, by supression of uate, once studied in a biology lab ance. Sharvy, a former UM philosophy- the president's office." professor. According to a commit­ sponded: "What is important to me the report of a serious internal in­ in which Schroth was a graduate "It is not for students not to go to tee of the American Philosophy As­ as an alumnus of the University of He added that the case was "not vestigation of the matter, and by assistant. class." he said. "There are a lot of sociation, the UM administration Miami is that the university's name publicly discussed in the interest of furnishing Professor Sharvy with a Schroth said he had the approval foreign students, for example, who "grossly violated his |Sharvy's| pro­ is being used in this ridiculous man­ the individual." distorted and incomplete statement of UM Bookstore manager Chuck have problems taking notes." fessional rights" when it declined to ner." The matter also came up before of the reasons for his dismissal." Canfield. However, Canfield said he Schroth had placed two adverti- In frequent letters to the Hurri­ the Faculty Senate, which ultimate­ never gave that approval. semrents in the summer mailaway reappoint him for the 1983-84 aca­ Brown, however, said the APA demic year. cane, Sharvy has complained about ly recommended to rehire Sharvy, "I told him he had to get the uni- edition of the Miami Hurricane. One said Faculty Senate Chairman Rob­ report is "wrong." This — the conclusion of a six- a number of issues. In the Sept. 10, versity's approval, and he told me stated the notes would be available 1982, issue, he stated that the ert Zaller. "It's not justified," he said "The had talked to the provost's office," through the Bookstore. month APA investigation — could university has acted properly. cost UM several hundred thousand drop-date be changed to four weeks Canfield said. The other ad solicited students instead of the proposed eight. Zaller said he did not know on That's the facts of the matter." registered in the five classes — Bi­ dollars because philanthropic insti­ what basis the APA report was UM President Edward T. Foote II tutions and individuals will not give He added that in order for "Sun Canfield said he told Schroth he ology 111, Chemistry 111, History Tan U." to shed its image of a party done and therefore he could not said that the case was reviewed in a 131, Music Lit 131,"and Introduc­ gilts to a university on the APA's comment, but he said that if the re­ variety of ways and that independ­ had to get the instructors' approval blacklist, Sharvy speculates.
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