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Student Tickles ^The Hostage' In 'if |The Ivories Ticklish Situation e •QN,fc P<*g A7 "lie/ iia irric f •IMI $age B8 1964

39TH YEAR, NO. 21 UNIVERSITY OF , CORAL GABLES, , APRIL 10, 1964 Tiitttftfo MO 1 :511, Err. 2581 CONTINUING EDUCATION DIV. Allen Chosen Dean Library Judged By Cover Dr. M. Robert Allen, currently mer post of associate dean of The 's Otto G. Richter Library has been vice president of Connecticut's that division. named one of 16 college, public and school libraries in the well-known Famous Artists Dean Allen has had a long to receive architectural awards in the second Schools, has been appointed dean Library Buildings Award Program. of UM's division of continuing career in the field of education, education, effective May 1. The in both executive and consulta­ The TJM library received one ••— appointment was made this week tive positions, since receiving his of five Awards of Merit con­ libraries; Mr. Deutschman, rep­ by Dr. Werner A. Baum, vice doctorate from the TJniversity of ferred in the college /university resenting Watson, Deutschman & president for academic affairs and Virginia in 1946. category by the American In- Kruse, architects fbr the library; dean of the faculties. He has been executive director stitute of Architects, American and Bill Baggs, editor of the The of the National Home Study library Association and the Miami News who is chairman of Dr. Allen replaces Professor Council; exceutive secretary of National Book Committee. the Florida Citizens Committee E. M. McCracken, who has been fbr National Library Week, April the accrediting commission of the President Henry King Stanford acting dean since last summer NHSC; consultant to the Depart­ 12-18. and who wiU resume his fur- accepted the a ward /from Clinton ment of the Army (for education, Gamble, Ft. Lauderdale architect The panel which made the training, and educational TV); and director of the AIA, in cere­ award commented: "As intend­ correspondence education con­ monies Tuesday in the President's ed, this large library building, sultant to schools and colleges; office. day or night, becomes the focal and education director of the point of the campus. Centrally Army Quartermaster School. Mr. Gamble is currently a visiting professor at the Uni­ located, it successfully houses Dr. Allen also held academic versity of Miami. He is con­ and services undergraduate and posts concurrently with his -Wtti fey Pbati Carter ducting a lecture series for research library materials and service in the government. upperclassmen in the field of functions. Ample provision has Dr. Stanford and Mr. Deutschman Accept Award from Mr. Gamble been made for future expan- These have included lecture­ ... for outstanding design of the Richter Library architecture. Said Mr. Gamble: ships and visiting professorships "Architecture in South Florida in the areas of educational is becoming that of a sophisti­ philosophy and psychology. cated urban area. We have Built in 1961-62, at a cost of Income Tax Director come of age, architecturally." over $3.5 million, the library cur­ The department Dean Allen rently houses about 650,000 vol­ will be heading is concerned with Attending the ceremonies were umes. This is approximately two- adult education in evening, late- Dr. Archie McNeal, director of thirds its full capacity. afternoon, and Saturday classes Op•timisti c About Cut Dean M. Robert Allen during two semesters and two By JACK DORMER ... adult educator summer sessions. Hurricane News Editor Federal income tax regulations can be likened to an iceberg, Students Suspended Mortimer Caplin, Director of the Internal Revenue Depart­ Debaters Get Sympathy;ment , declared Wednesday in an address sponsored by the Bar and Gavel Law Fraternity> " For Quiz Doctoring "It's a plus and minus situa­ tion," he explained. "Everybody Greeks Ready The student administered Honor Council of the University of Investigation Still Soughtsee s the minus parts, the nega­ Miami recently suspended three University College students for tive ones that stick above the doctoring of already graded tests. water. But the beneficial aspects "Although we'sympathize with a technicality, according to Mayor are concealed beneath the surf­ For Big Week "The students, each in a different class, changed answers on an your case, we have an established Richard. ace." Approximately 2,000 Greeks, already graded test and claimed that their tests were incorrectly policy not to interfere with the Richard awaited the decision graded," said Honor Council chairman Mark Buchbinder. decisions of regional committees." Caplin was optimistic about from 30 sororities and fraternities of Barry and Neal as to the will participate in Greek Week, "What they didn't know was that University College tests are This is the answer the TJni­ riling of a suit against the na­ the new tax cut bill recently passed by Congress. which will begin with the light­ now processed in such a way that answers changed after the versity of Miami debate team tional tourney. test has been graded can be easily detected. These students com­ received from West Point in their ing of the Olympic Torch on The boys, who have been de­ "The economic philosophy be­ mitted an act of premeditated dishonesty." attempt, with the assistance of hind this consists of two factors," Monday evening, April 20, in the Miami Beach Mayor Melvin Rich­ bating since their freshman year at the university and have pre­ he stated. "These two factors are Eaton Pep Arena. Violations of the Honor Code are brought by the students, faculty ard, to enter the National Cham­ rates and how much money will and administration to the Honor Council, which is composed of pionship Tournament at the mili­ viously competed in the national be raised. This year we will Included in the six day pro­ contest, chose not to file a suit representatives of each of those three groups. tary academy. collect about $106 billion in tax gram will be a blood drive; fac­ which could only accomplish a revenue. However, even with the The UM team of Barry Richard negative purpose. A suit would ulty - administration - Greek din - The penalties which the Honor Coundl nay impose are: fail­ and Neal Sonnett had been re­ rate reduction just passed, the ure to receive course credit by means of a failing grade; discip­ either enjoin the Southern Re­ projected collections for next ners at fraternity houses; the fused entrance to the Southern gional teams from attending ihe annual Greek god and goddess linary probation for a period of time as determined by the year will run about $110 billion." Council; suspension for a definite period of time; expulsion from Regional Tournament because of national or enjoin West Point contest; tapping for Omega, fra­ from calling the competition the the university. He pointed out that most of ternity honorary; and the Inter- National Championship Tourna­ the savings due to the tax cut ment. will be spent—much for busi­ fraternity Ball. The three students were suspended until September, 1964. "I felt this would be a purely ness expansion, thus giving a vindictive action either way and boost to the economy. "We Road Trips I didn't want to db to other teams estimate that about 93% of the 5 what had been done to us" said tax cut will be spent. Some will Barry. be saved, but not much." New Union — Tiles Of Fun Nix Bally He made it clear, however, Caplin described one of the that a Federal investigation into principal missions of the Internal The cancellation of the the structure and rules of se­ Revenue Department as doing | annual Spring Sports Rally lection of teams for competition everything possible to get com­ during the Undergraduate in the regional tournament pliance from the taxpayers. He Student Government Elec­ would be sought. pointed out as a tribute to Amer­ tions Week was the result icans the fact that about 97% of of an unavoidable "mix- "Both Senators Pepper and taxes are paid voluntarily by the m>M according to election Holland have advised me they people. are looking into the feasibility of board chairman, Elliot "This is the only country in Bernstein. an investigation that would estab­ lish rules for the avoidance of the world that has achieved "The rally was not plan­ such a record," he said. ned as a political rally," similar problems," commented said Bernstein, "but as a Barry. Finally with a light smirk he Spring Sports rally. We had The main problem, he said, is noted that the department re­ merely secured time for that the national tournament has cently celebrated the 50th Anni­ each of the candidates to no team selection rules. "They versary of the 16th amendment introduce themselves, say simply ask the regional commit­ (the income tax law). the offices they were run- tee to send the top four teams to "It was a very low key cere­ [ ning for and a few words." the national contest, and the re­ mony; no birthday cake or joyous gional committee can pick the festivities," he sighed. The reason the rally was teams using any method they cancelled, according to want" Bernstein, was that too Barry hopes that the noise they many of the teams which made in effort to enter the re­ We Want You [ were to be introduced were gional and national will do some­ on the road. thing to improve the debate pro­ The editorships of the Hurri­ cane, Ibis, and Tempo are up for Bernstein admitted that, gram in all schools. As a result of the whole affair, grabs next semseter, as well as a "There is a definite need," majority of the other positions for a political rally during he expressed disappointment in on the student publications. the elections. The Election the coaches and administrators he Board has included in their and Neal knew, respected, and Letters of application must be recommendations for next could rely on if the occasion submitted to Wilson Hicks in the year, that a rally, inde­ arose. Publications Office, 250 Ashe, by pendent of the Spring Barry, who attends UM on a Thursday, April 16. To be eligible Sports rally, be planned debating scholarship, said, *T now fbr a paid position, a student for the week of USG consider myself officially retired must be taking a 12-credit mini­ « * i'i «_ . < • . . -«tto fcy Rick Miller elections. from four years of intercollegiate mum and have a 1.0 overall average. Gaping broken windows look out over the Student Lake. View is blocked by pile-driver debating." and partly embedded pile. The concrete posts will form the New Union's foundation. THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 Busy Bee On Guard Communication Arts Confab Slated Here To Protect Its Area Pioneers and present practitioners of visual communicatio among them Howard K. Smith and Edward P. Morgan, well-kno A type of bee which stakes a claim to a single area and TV news commentators will gather at the UM April 22-24 for 1 then guards it with^the ferocity of a gold-crazed '49er has eighth annual Miami Conference of Communication Arts. been discovered by a University of Miami botanist. Some 200 editors, writers, photographers, art directors ant At the same time, Dr. Calaway* television personnel are expected to attend the examination o H. Dodson has found an orchid to the fact that insects differ pictures in newspapers, magazines and on television. species which evolved to take ad­ basically from humans in their Sixteen speakers are scheduled on the formal program, includi* vantage of this peculiar insect observations of objects. photographers Gordon Parks, Alfred Eisenstadt, Arthur iyArazi possessiveness. Dr. Dodson, who joined the Pete Turner, and Marvin Koner; and both the first' and prese Dr. Dodson, who first observ­ UM faculty this year, has trav­ managing editors of Look magazine, Vernon Pope and Willi, ed the behavior in Ecuador, eled more than 25,000 miles Arthur, will participate. said the phenomena occurs in through much of Central and Newsmen Smith and Morgan will be featured speakers at only one type of bee (Centris) South America to investigate awards dinner concluding the conference. They are expectea in association with a single kind pollination relationships. to discuss their role as an ABC television news team at m of orchid (Oncidium). He believes these occurrences summer's presidential nominating conventions. "The bee will take up a posi­ only can be observed accurately Formal conference sessions will be held in the Brockway Lect tion on a stick near the blossom in nature, not in the laboratory. Hall of the Otto G. Richter Library on UM's main camp and drive away any other bee or The result is often two weeks or Discussion groups will convene at the conference headqua other insect that passes nearby," more of scientific sentry duty. the University Inn, across Dixie Highway from the campus. he explained. "And if the bee is The key to the exotic shapes of Conference co-directors are Wilson Hicks, director of univers —Photo by Brian Gaine removed to another location it many orchids, Dodson believes, publications at UM and Morris Gordon, director of photograp Fixing a car can be tire-ing work, but this week's HURRICANE will fly right back to its own is the vital pollination visits of at Western Electric Co., New York. HONEY doesn't seem to mind. She is Linda SchlernHzauer (ifs special territory." the particular type of insect it easier to look at her than pronounce her name) and she lives in This strange jealousness by the may attract. Cocoa, Fla. Brown-eyed Linda is 20 years-old, a Radio-T,V.- bee is apparently nature's way of If, for some reason, the orchid VISIT ALAN RESKIN'S Filtn major, and a> member of Delta, Delta, Delta Sorority. This pollinating the orchid, the UM pert sophomore prefers swimming to tire changing. colony's "type of insect" dies or botanist says. "When the wind leaves the area, the plants must ALLEGRO MUSIC HOUSE moves the blossoms the bee alter their shapes. This, he points seemingly mistakes the motion out, is evolution in the .best tra­ INSTRUMENTS • CLASSIC MUSIC LIBRARY • INSTRUCTION • REPAIRS for an intruding insect. So it flies dition of Darwin. Two Noted Lecturers violently into the blossom," Im­ The most complete stock of Musk and mediate investigation of the Using this working thesis, Accessories for the blossoms struck show they have Dodson has linked 130 different been freshly pollinated with the types of pollinators (primarily FOLKSINGER To Speak On Campus pollen carried by the bee. The bees) to specific types of or­ mistaken identity is probably due chids. • PP&M Dr. Juan J. Remos, author and "The Arts in an Age of Science • OSCAR BRAND former chairman of the Depart­ and Technology" will be the topic • PETE SEEGER ment of Hispanic literature at of an address by Dr. James Wat- the University of Havana, will MAKE YOUR SHOES LAST LONGER! • REPRINTS FROM "SING OUT" discuss "The Romantic Move­ rous, painter and art historian, to Shoes Remodeled • "SAVAREZ" STRINGS be presented in the Brockway ment in Cuban Letters" tonight Orthopedic Work • THE WEAVERS at 8 pan. in the Brockway Lec­ Lecture Hall of the library Tues­ Dye Work • KINGSTON TRIO ture Hall of the Otto G. Richter day April 14 at 8 p.m. library. ARE On Wednesday April 15, he will We also repair THE BEATLES HERE Dr. Remos' lecture will be lecture on "The Arts of Design • Golf Shoes AND WE HAVE THEIR MUSIC delivered in Spanish. * Hand Bags and a Humane Development." 292 ARAGON AVENUE HI 4-8181 A corresponding member of the Royal Academy of Spanish Watrous, head of the Uni­ 254 REBATE! FREE CUSTOMER PARKING language, he has been visiting versity of Wisconsin Depart­ Present this ad whan OPPOSITE CORAL GABLES BUS TERMINAL professor at the Royal University ment of Art History, has re­ work called tor. of Madrid and will lecture at the cently gained national promin­ University of Washington this ALL WORK GUARANTEED summer. A member of a number ence as a lecturer and writer in of ,academies in. Spain and Latin addition to wide recognition America, he has authored several as a mural painter. His many GEM SHOE REPAIR books, among them a "History of honors and awards include a 5721 S.W. 73rd ST. 9860 Bird Rd. Cuban Literature" which is used Corner Red Road Across from Ford Foundation grant for re­ as a standard reference book at Next to Judi Lesli Food Fair the University of Miami. search in the early mosaic techniques of Italy. He is the first speaker in a series of lectures planned by His book, The Craft of Old the newly formed Friends of Hispanic-America Culture, an Master's Drawing, was the result organization of UM graduate of personal experience, labora­ ami undergraduate students tory research and re-translation who speak either Spanish or of Renaissance manuscripts. Portuguese and have an aca­ demic average of 2.3 or better. Admission to the lectures is by n^rhbership card to Winter In­ The purpose of the organiza­ 'ALEY'S stitute members or individual tion is to promote understanding admissions of $1.00 for the gen­ and appreciation of the intellec­ Drive-In and Take-Home Restaurants tual value of Hispanic-American eral public and $.50 for college culture. and high school students. FEATURING COL HARIAND SANDERS' ORIGINAL RECIPE.

MARBORO K«ntn*ki| fried #kitftan % ^AU^>wv^4- BOOKS Ifs Finger-Lickin' Good! HAS SCATTERED AMONG ITS THOUSANDS ... and so convenient! OF INNOCUOUS BARGAINS ... and so economical! SOME HIGHLY UNUSUAL BOOKS FOR HIGHLY UNUSUAL TASTES INDIVIDUAL DINNER ANAIS NIN SEDUCTION OF THE 3 Pieces of Chicken MINITOUR and more Potatoes, Cote Slaw, 00 4 Hot Biscuits *1 WM. BURROUGHS THE YAGE LETTERS BUCKET 0'CHICKEN RIVIERA Serves 5-7 Hearty Appetites THE EGO AND 15 pieces of Chicken, 50 8.99 MAX STIRNER HIS OWN Gravy, Hot Biscuits *3 WHITE DALTON AND HOT FRESH-BAKED APPLE PIE! JOHNNY GOT HIS GUN TRUMBO (Whole Pie only 75$) V. I. 18 VOLUMES OF ULYANOV THE COLLECTED WORKS Nearest to Campus: UeSe 1 at Red Road (SW 57th Ave.) RUSH MADLY TO 86 MIRACLE MILE Phone: 665-6228 AND DEMAND SIZEABLE DISCOUNTS OTHER LOCATIONS: the ficctetif ON THESE AND SO MANY OTHER 2255 S. W. 32nd Ave. (1 Block South of Coral Way) LESS FORBIDDING TITLES 8791 Bird Road (S. W. 40th St.) 314 Miracle Mile p

THE MIAMI HUKRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 53 Honoraries Tap University of Miami leadership honoraries tapped a select group of new members during the recent Undergraduate for-a Student Government Week. • ^S^^ra Omicron Delta Kappa, the high­ high quality of scholarship, audi est national leadership honorary leadership and outstanding character. »on0(i for men at TJM, added 13 mem­ bers. Since its establishment at The fourteen new members of Miami in 1948, the TJniversity of NKT are Selena Berger, Hazel Iron Arrow Taps Miami Circle chapter has served Cohen, Linda Harvey, Valerie ... a place in the sun to recognize and instill the Mamches, Rosalynd Melion, Olga achievement of high character in Miyar, Sharon Patterson, Carole leadership and service. Tapped for Salmon, Rebekah Shelley, Ronda Aviation Law membership were Henry Bass- Waldinger, Carolyn White, Me- man, Stuart Odell, Donald Bier- linda Joymer, Rose Speranza, and Conference man, Martin Segal, Joseph Elin- Marilyn Seidner. off, Antonio Cao, Frederic Klein- berg, David Gozansky, Gary Cal­ Iron Arrow, which carries out To Be Held lahan, Richard Ault, Howard Da­ Its tapping ceremonies to the The first Inter-American avi­ vis, Arthur Rothenberg and Don­ solemn beat of tom-toms, was ation law conference ever held ald Klein. initiated by the late Dr. Bowman will draw some 55 airline and F. Ashe, the university's first government officials as well as Nti Kappa Tau, which is now president, and serves as a tribute aviation lawyers from the United in the process of petitioning to those men whose contributions States, Central America, and the recognition from the national to the campus have earned them Caribbean to the TJniversity of Mortar Board honorary, has recognition from both the uni­ Miami April 16-17. been one of the most respected versity and the community. Tap­ The meeting is aimed at bring­ of the high honoraries on UM's ped for membership were Corn­ ing a broader knowledge of this scene for the last twenty-seven ing Pearson, Jr., Charless Bob- specialized field to the partici­ years. Membership in the high­ bitt HI, Peter Klugman, Harvey pants through discussions on such est national honorary for wo­ Foster, Rick Barry, and Howard topics as international aviation men at UM is unique in its Bolner. organizations, key treaties and agreements, operation of inter­ national airports, and the role of the Civil Aviation Board. Featured speakers include Alan S. Boyd, chairman of the CAB, announced Acting Law School Dean M. Minnette Mas- sey, conference director. Sponsored by the TIM School of Law, the conference will be conducted with simultaneous Spanish-English and English- Spanish translation devices. Greater Miami aviation facilities will be visited during afternoon sessions. Fee for the three-day confab is $60. For further information, con­ tact the Law School. * » • The TJniversity of Miami School of Law will acquire two graduate research courses to its curriculum during the 1964-65 academic year. Law of the Caribbean (Fall semester) and Law Revolutions (Spring semester) are the addi­ tions to the law program at the university, according to Dr. Sto- jan A. Bayitch, chairman of grad­ uate studies for the law school. im SPORTS CAR CITY" THE HOME OF THE WORLD'S FINEST NEW AND USED IMPORTED SPORTS AND TOURING CARS Factory Franehised Sales and Service tor —

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THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 GAIN KNOWLEDGE AND INSIGHT The Mia rricane A Student Newspaper Reflecting The Vim Of The Student Body Of The University Of Miami. Publications Work Rewardin Copyright© University if Mian! (Undergraduate Student Body), 1964 LYNDA REIFMAN, Editor JOHN BIEDA, Business Mgr. By LYNDA REIFMAN ridiculous, considering the number of students we have. Hurricane Editor Getting staff on this campus for next semester's news Boyce Rensberger, Managing Editor Jack Dormer, News Editor The University of Miami student body is being cheated. paper, magazine, and yearbook is worse than pulling teeth. Gordon Freireich, Copy Editor Skip Flynn, Ass't. News Editor That's right, cheated, robbed, and rooked out of an import­ What would happen if the Ibis did not come out thi Jeffrey Joffe, Photo Editor Bob Golub, Sports Editor ant part of their college education. June because there was no one to put it together? Woul< WILSON NICKS SUPERVISOR OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS The most ironic thing is that you are cheating yourselves, anyone miss it? Three groups of students perhaps woul< some of you do it knowingly, while others are unaware of protest the loudest—seniors, fraternity men, and sororit* what you're missing. women. A large percentage of students spend four years at UM Yet, where are these people to work on the yearbook, without gaining the slightest insight into the university, its or the paper, or the magazine? They are too wrapped up Congested Corner problems, its strengths, and its future. in their own small worlds within the university to pay any Working on one of the three student publications offers attention to the total UM picture. opportunities to learn what makes the University of Mi­ This is wrong. The experience obtained through work oi Needs Regulating ami tick. a student publication is an invaluable supplement to class- Involvement with the Hurricane, Tempo, or Ibis creates work and the social life of a student. The sound of metal hitting metal is becoming a familiar a sense of loyalty to the university that no amount of cheer­ noise in the large university parking lot next to the Univer­ The Hurricane encourages those of you coming back nex ing at a football game could compete with. year not to miss this part of your education. The door 01 sity College building. Positions of top responsibility on all three publications every publication is open for those of you who want to look The Hurricane feels the administration should take prompt are open for the Faff semester. The lack of participation is around and the hardier souls who are looking for work. action on decreasing the number of automobile accidents at the corner of the lot and University Drive, by eliminating the direct causes of them — confusion, and laxity of constant Letters To The Editor and effective traffic control. Most of the accidents which have occurred were caused by a car racing across University Drive and bring hit Election Campaigns broadside by a car tuniing into the parking lot. There are stop signs at this corner, to be sure, but what effect does a stop sign have when you only have three min­ Show Lack Of Policy utes to park your car and run to class? To The Editor: We seriously suggest that the administration study the As I am a Senior, I have seen many elections on this possibility of having any one of the numerous police depart­ campus. This recent one was by far the greatest farce! I ask ments which patrol University Drive (Campus, Coral Gables, the following questions: Metro) take charge of this dangerous intersection at the WHY were the students denied a chance to hear theii heavily congested times when classes break. candidates? This was elaborated upon in last week's Hur­ The benefits of controlled traffic at this corner are obvious ricane. * —easy access to and from class; and no more repair bills; Why did much of the infor­ a getaway in their light blu< and of course the elimination of the possibility that someone mation on the Presidential and English Ford and the policemai might be injured. Vice-Presidential candidates pursued and stopped the Cor­ not appear until the second vette-lovers. day of elections? The fact that But get this: he supposedly only one of the four had at­ took their names and plat tended more than one USG number, but then he let then- Candidates, Students meeting seems quite relevant. go .. . "because they wer< Also I question how Mr. Clif­ dean"! Is that dumb? Does on< ford would explain his inability turn loose a murderer because Should Meet At Rallies to remain in good standing with he wasn't caught with the dea< f his fraternity, had the issue body on him? The Hurricane agrees with 1964 Election Board Chair­ been raised early enough to man Elliott Bernstein on the importance of a political rally enable it to be discussed. That policeman's duty in­ deed was to hold the culprits. if Undergraduate Student Government elections are to be Why was the polling place On top of that, he didn't even at all effective. the Merrick Breezeway and return to the scene of the' With a student body as scattered as ours, it is humanly only there, when many of the crime until again summoned. impossible, during the alloted campaign period for the can­ students, especially the com­ And then he had very little muters, are seldom in this to say. When the Corvette's didates to reach all the students without the aid of one or area? shocked but lucky owner re­ more scheduled rallies. turned to find his air filter Each candidate should have the same amount of time Why does the Hurricane inside his car and a jumper' question the effectiveness of wire attached to his battery- to present hiinseli and his platform. Following talks by USG? It seems to me that if he naturally inquired what the aspirants for office, there should be time for questions the elections are a sham, the could be done about it. "Not from the student body. If the rally were well planned and only result can be a sham gov­ much," was the policeman's ernment! reply. under efficient leadership, it would be beneficial to every­ We propose to have an effec­ one interested in the outcome of the elections. tive student government. Let How could anyone say "No The students would be able to make firsthand judgments us start- at the beginning: Let much"? Attempted robbery i: of the candidates, as well as compare each with his oppon­ us have meaningful elections, a crime punishable according ent. Those running for office would get a chance to see what By BOYCE RENSBERGER among UM's few really lasting with campaigns carried on in a to the law. Upon this repl; Hurricane Managing Editor traditions; one, in fact, that is reasonable manner. Let us have the owner and a witness pro­ kind of backing his opposition has and how he rates against It is encouraging to note that usually kept secret by the edi­ candidates with issues and ceeded to the Coral Gable: him. UM's Otto G. Richter Library tors of the university bulletin qualifications which we may Police Station and made ai The college student would also benefit from the exposure received the American Institute and held as a test in store for question and discuss. Let us official complaint. where i to the public arena of politics, for life after graduation is of Architecture's award for incoming freshmen. have not only speeches, but might do some good. overall excellence of design. also question-and-answer ses­ But let us more to other Three days later, two youth: entangled with politics. Unfortunately many other sions so that the students may were apprehended in Hialeal If the political rallies prove successful, an extra attraction unrecognized works of the know the candidates' minds. structures on campus were ne- architects' muse. Consider for stealing a Corvette. Coinci- might be added—the DEBATE. This portion of the political glected for North Campus — ah! those Let us have firm election policy dentally, they had a light blu< game brings out the best, or in some cases the worst, in the niggardly hollowed walls that every so that all these are carried out! English Ford. Comparing notes candidates. reason that chemistry, zoology, radio-tv- the officers happened to run mp only one or film, pre-med, pre - dent, Until these are accomplished, against the earlier complaint. it is possible that the first step toward effective student two of their who can question the students economics (RIP) major holds Getting in touch with the government is a sophistication of the campaigns. The rally characteristics dear to his olfactory sense. who find it more to their satis­ would definitely be an asset, and the election board for rated excel­ faction to protest by refusing campus policeman of our dis­ lent. to vote, rather than to dignify gust, they, and all of us here 1965 should decide in advance to have one or more rallies One of the building's little- concerned were shocked to during USG Week. The Hurri­ heralded features is its almost such a fraud! cane—in order James R. Staal discover that he, who "... got The lengthening of the campaign period would also lead continually operating display— their names and plate num­ to correct this "Plumbing of the 1920's." Also to better elections. With the present six days, there isn't oversight — Rensberger ber," * did not have their the building houses one of the names or plate number. enough time for the candidates to follow through a strong nominates several campus ar­ nation's finest collections of campaign program* chitectural triumphs for its wood-eating insects. Even Dr. How Valuable Hall of Halls of Learning. We cannot say what wil Morten Miller, dean of Arts come of all this. The thieve: and Sciences, takes pride in Near the top of anyone's UM's Police? will eventually get their re­ the well-trained collection. ward. But as for our police list are those buildings affec­ Boasts he: "The only reason the To the Editor: HURRICANE STAFFERS tionately called the "tempor­ And all those concerned with ask yourself: what would hap­ building stands is because the pen if something really bit KMSTEM J. STRUHL ... .STUFF WRITER TOM GOLDEN .. ASST BOSIHESS MfiR. aries." Finished in decorator termites interlock arms." the mysterious disappearance of colors — rotten olive, as-a- took place on campus (if autc emiS BILMORE .... CIRCULATION MCR. PETE SCHWEDOCK ASST. SPORTS ED. Corvettes: this letter is being TOM GALLAGHER .. CLASSIFIED AD MGR. LARRY FIGUR ASST SPORTS ED. ghost white, and natural Back on main campus, a written with the intention of theft is not big enough)? Departments wood — these delightful glance at the chemistry labs bringing out into the open one Let's face it: they're perfect­ Richard Mitsuto MMIC Boh Rudnick Entertainment bungalows offer all the com­ reveals the architect's love of example of the worthlessness ly content riding around anc forts of Nome In winter and the past. He has provided ex­ of campus police. giving parking tickets — the} Staff Reporters Rome in summer. ceptionally large containers to The attempted and almost don't want any trouble. Al News: David Greene, Paul Schrefber, Mfkey Knotts, Alice Schoenfelder, Gay Andrews, Jane Agid hold the various base metals. completed theft of a 1963 Cor­ right, no one does; but it was Sandy Rockwell, Sandra Urech, Maria Arguelles Their honesty of architecture Virtually all of the interior vette was witnessed one after­ for the purpose of taking can Feature: Wills Vee Young, Sylvia Springer, Leslie Coven, Bob Smith satisfies a definite need, provid­ surfaces of the labs are given noon last month at the old of trouble that they were hired Photographers: Bennett Stern, Daniel Bard. Don Wilkins, Rick Miller, Brian Gaine, Livingston ing an antidote to gold lace over to an exhibition of the Student Union parking lot. Kind of a false sense of secur­ Hinkley, Charles Powers, Warren Parrish, Steve Carew facades and little squares of effects of scores of chemicals Campus police were summoned ity, aren't they? Sports: Bob Golub, Brian Gaine, Ton Golden colored glass. on woods, metals, paints and and one shortly appeared on Cartoonist: Ralph ttnudsen Russell Schmid The temporary buildings are labels. the scene. The guilty made for James Lopp 53 KS

THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 Meteorology- Unlimited Horizons

The Florida Award, the high' Europe and in the United States. ence, it is particularly timely that The use of nuclear energy is st award conferred by the. g Between 1860 and 1875, rou­ a concerted effort be made now another example. If we are to florida Academy of Sciences, tine meteorological services de­ to observe and understand the enter the real atomic age, or the was recently presented to Dr. veloped in most countries. The atmospheric processes, to place age when atomic energy will be Werner A. Baum, vice presi­ programs that accompanied weather forecasting on a firmer used extensively for industrial dent for academic affairs and these developments were de­ scientific basis, and to explore the purposes, we shall need very dean of the faculties at UM. signed to meet operational possibilities of modifying man's precise knowledge of what the The citation was presented at rather than scientific needs. environment on a large scale. atmosphere does with the waste the Academy's 28th annual Gradually meteorology lost products, failure to develop such meeting, and as award recip­ Several practical problems, much of its scientific vigor. It knowledge may impose severe ient, Dr. Baum gave the ban­ with world-wide significance, became customary to identify limitations. quet address, "Past and Pres­ give added emphasis to the the science of the atmosphere ent Trends in Meteorology J* need for a major effort to ex­ The amount of solar energy with the services of meteorol­ tend our knowledge of atmos­ that reaches the earth's surface ogy. The result was that neither is so large that, under ideal con­ Man's progress in science has pheric processes and to im­ kept pace with the progress in ditions, our planet could support come from two related sources. prove the services of meteorol­ science and technology during a population many times the size In the first place, there is the ogy. the first half of this century. of the one now existing. How­ everlasting need to exploit the In concluding my remarks, I ever, certain terrestrial conditions environment. Secondly, there is The identification of the sci­ shall indicate some of the more are limiting, and the strictest of : to class.'! the non-material satisfaction of ence of the atmosphere with the important areas for such serv­ them all is the supply of fresh forcing the environment to yield services of meteorology has been ice. water. By the end of this century up some of nature's secrets. The b so widespread that, at times, it Real mastery of space depends the population of the United acknesti motivation in research has sprung has obscured the thinking in both essentially upon how well we are States is expected to double, and e door of I both from materialistic and ideal­ academic and administrative the water consumption to treble. at istic wells, and, undoubtedly, circles. It is now abundantly Before men, critical conditions to look] further progress will be spurred Work. 1 clear, however, that only those will have developed in several in the same manner. universities which have kept areas. high standards in scientific me­ The very embryo of scientific The toll in life and property teorology have contributed sub­ thought arose when man started taken by the elements is enor­ stantially to progress in the serv­ to divide his environment into mous. Through corrosion of The United States' Tiros Weather Satellite ices. Conversely, only those serv­ parts. You will recall that the materials, air pollution alone telling man more about the mysteries of nature ices have gone forward which Greek philosophers recognized drains away about five billion have maintained a strong re­ four such parts or elements, dollars a year. Wlldland, rural search effort and developed ca­ With the increasing world pop­ evident, therefore, that those namely: the air and sky above and urban fires add up to a reer and educational programs ulation and the rise in the stan­ (that is, Meteoros, or the lofty), 1.5 billion dollar leak in the sciences which deal effectively suitable to their needs. At the dards of living and human dignity : the earth b e n e a th, the oceans national economy. Hailstorms, with the environment of man and present time, the standard of that are now in progress through­ nearby, and the warmth of the with their damage to crops, the resources at his disposal will y achievement in meteorology var­ out the world, certain natural sun and fire. These four elements account for over 50 million play a rapidly increasing role in ies greatly from one country to dollars' worth of damage. Hur­ resources will approach marginal shaping the social structure of i on this I another. ricanes and tornadoes account conditions, and their uses will for another 100 million. In all, have to be planned. It seems the future. cell ask] In response to needs which damage due to inclement condi­ arose in connection with the Sec­ tions appears to amount to ear their ond World War, the educational about 250 million (dollars a programs became highly oriented k'sHnr- year and, in addition, an untold toward operational problems. At number of lives are lost. It is the same time, vast expansions difficult to estimate the losses light blue IJuH^'TJ&tMii- in nuclear physics and electron­ that would have resulted if policeman! ics led to a shift of emphasis there were no meteorological the Cor j away from classical physics, services. Large as the reduction which is the fountain from which of disaster losses may be, the meteorology and other geophysi­ greatest economical value of md plate) cal sciences have sprung. Both of Man Can Not Control Weather atmospheric research and ! let C these developments tended to . . . but he can take precautions meteorological services lies in hey were isolate meteorology, to weaken their contributions to normal Does one its roots in the fundamental sei- operations in everyday life. able to understand our own at­ T because! ences, and to make careers in The most spectacular examples Dr. Werner A. Baum mosphere and its response to l the dead meteorology less attractive. - are-meteorology and aviation, ...UM's award-winning scientist solar activity. - Also, our ability This trend recently began to and ionospheric research and to predict weather phenomena on ^«OTiww»Kwi3fe6^fe ~—•- reverse itself. Through the efforts radio communication; hi both duty in- earth depends ultimately upon were thought to account for of the National Academy of Sci­ areas the pay-off has been culprits, our reservoir of knowledge of enormous. everything related to man's en­ ences, the American Meteorologi­ in't even solar-terrestrial interactions. vironment and the resources at cal Society, and the National i of the his disposal; and meteorology, Science Foundation, policies and mmoned. with all its complexities was the programs for the .stimulation and ery little central science. support of research and educa­ torvette's America's largest Restaurant-Donut Chain tion have been developed, and traer re- Since the time of Aristotle, these hold out great promise. air filter and until long after Galileo, <(K( i jumper meteorology maintained a lead­ With support of the National i battery ing position in the hiearchy of Science Foundation, the Uni­ PANCAKES sciences. In fact, even as late versity Corporation for Atmos­ ed what a tempting "Panorama1 it ^ as 1800, meteorology was large­ pheric Research has established . of pancake flavors. [iceman's ly identified with science as a ttie National Center for Atmos­ whole. The atmosphere was the pheric Research in Boulder, also enjoy natural laboratory, and the Colorado. delicious sandwiches, hamburgers and other flavor- workers in it did not belong to Ours From say "*« Some of the leading universi­ some items from the grill... the lightest, fluffiest, obbery is! any particular. Yet, under these ties are reorienting their pro­ seemingly ideal conditions of tastiest donuts you ever ate . . . and the world's ad grams for graduate research and the past, the rate of production finest coffee. his replj'j education in the atmospheric and of new knowledge was exceed­ "[GUAAJ^ ness pto-| related sciences. The trend now Gables i ingly slow. lacking were tech­ is to return to classical physics nologies capable of providing made ^ | and to provide for vigorous in­ PAMCAKE VARIETIES observations from large por­ where m terdisciplinary activities, with [ItiXwiut&~ 7 NATURAL WIT SflWKI tions of the atmosphere. the aim of merging conventional ii Ji meteorology with related fields in w yo About the middle of the last .. . Naturally are a geophysics, solar physics and century, several marine disasters natural! Take our dotted ». Coinci-j planetary sciences. in Europe aroused public interest swiss cotton top with its fight M Progress in the atmospheric V,*w and posed the challenging ques­ sail cloth shell and match Students ing notes. sciences depends not only upon tion: Is it not possible to predict with dotted swiss or solid torunW major storms? At this time the the discovery of new physical white slacks. OR don't nplaint I electric telegraph had begun to principles, but also upon tech­ Luncheon spin its net of wires on both nological developments, and both match—mix 'em! Youll *** love it. Sizes 5 to 15. our dis- • sides of the Atlantic Ocean, and areas are now moving forward Specials QAf soon systems of "weather tele­ with extraordinary speed. *••••*» us here FROM #W%i graphy" came into existence in From the point of view of sci- eked H 1 Dotted Swiss A98 <^C "...go d Top 3 te»n*r| White A98 FULL COURSE DINNER POLICY re H Poets v >er- ORIGINAL JEWELRY $1.25 Dotted Swiss | I 98 /hat wiH Peats • • INCLUDES: SOUP OR JUICE, DESSERT AND BEVERAGE e thieve SERVED MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 3otfc in Red and Navy their fl mWKmmWsm BY LEO SPECIALS SERVED 11 A.M. TO 8 P.M. tiia bis UNUSUAL RINGS safly HOT TURKEY SANDWICH GIBLET GRAVY—MASHED POTATOES—VEGETABLE 7ifa«H THE jh)? 99c perfect' HOT ROAST BEEF SANDWICH VILLAGE GRAVY — MASHED POTATOES — VEGETABLE 99c itit#s| CORNER LIVER AND ONIONS MASHED POTATOES.— LETTUCE AND TOMATO ting c^ 1136 S. DDOI HWY. ROLLS —BUTTER re**? Coral Gables MO 1-7411 Casual Clothes for Her 99c across from 720 Dorm MANY MORE DINNER ITEMS Sch^l In the Dadeland Shopping Center CiOPP J 6 THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 Computer HKS To Be On Race Relations Pane University of Miami President Nicholas Katzenbach will be prin- of Atlanta and Dr. Clarenc Henry King Stanford will parti­ cipal speaker at the general ses­ Ferguson, dean of Howard Programs cipate • on a race relations pane] sion on "Administration and Race versity Law School. at the National Conference on Relations" in which Dr. Stanford Public Administration in New will participate as chairman of The discussion will be s Important York City, April 15-18. the panel discussion. Other panel­ sored by the American So U.S. Deputy Attorney General ists will be Ivan Allen, Jr., mayor for Public Administration. "Within the next 10 years we will require the entering engineering student to know as much about the basics of computer programming as we now expect him to know about the slide rule." This is the prediction of Elliot Sazer, TJM assistant professor, who teaches a junior-level com-, puter programming course which includes high school students among its participants. The experimental program, begun last fall, mixes carefully- fully-selected high school sen­ iors with the regular university classes. It is among the few such programs actually grant­ ing college credit for successful completion, according to Dr. C. M. Kromp, industrial engineer­ ing chairman* Thus far, 22 Dade County high school students have participated: all "highly motivated and at a level of mathematical maturity not even common in college stu­ dents." They were chosen on the basis of test scores, past grades Cole of California has designed this checkerboard two-piece suit and teacher recommendations. and middy knee-skimmer shift for Florida sand and surf. With AU of the 22 in the program liesure time being spent in the sun, this combination can't be beat thus far boasted high school for $15 each. averages of "B" or better, sev­ eral were straight "A" scholars. It is widely known that the best understanding of computer programming may be obtained by students who have progressed up to the calculus stage. This" would include, not only algebra, but trigonometry and analytic geometry. "Any student of average in­ telligence can learn the mechanics of programming," Sazer says. "But applications are something else again. The difference is like that between knowing how to dial a telephone and knowing what number to call." Interest in computer work is rising rapidly as the so-called "thinking machines" become more and more a part of every­ day life. As in other universi­ ties UM programming courses are perennially crowded, not only with prospective engineers but majors from the other sci­ ences and humanities. "The engineering student hard­ ly can take his first step before coming upon the computer," Kromp summarizes.

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Interviewing—BBA and from $100 to $2500. Rings enlarged to show ects, in this country and around the Liberal Arts men with sincere Some of the ideas come from themen world, demand a variety of talents: interest in retailing for manage­ beauty of detail ®Trade-mark registered. and women of General Electric who, engineering, finance, marketing, law, ment training. in effect, form a "Progress Corps." physics and many others. ' Special Services Section—U.S. In major cities, they're helping to If you'd like to join the "Progress Army, Nationwide and Foreign— m HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Women Only. Responsibility for develop balanced transportation Corps" after graduation, talk to your K built around rapid rail-transit sys­ placement director. He can help qual­ recreation and library program, •J^bose sert advanced equipment to power and at General Electric. being of Army personnel Over­ pobe Bride's Book. control the trains. They're also devel­ seas. Germany, Italy, France, Far oping a TV monitoring system that 7h>gress fs Our Most Important ftoduct East, Alaska, Hawaii, Panama. 2 enables a single engineer to control year contracts—Salary $4505 to $5000 plus quarters. Interviewing miles of auto traffic ... a jet engine GENERAL® ELECTRIC —Women experienced in library work or with Library courses, Recreation specialists, arts, crafts, physical education or dramatics VISITBENERALELECTBICPNOBmSLAND* A (&t/'CPfctff PRESENTATION'• Al'THBNEW'YOM'WORLD'S'FA/ff f£* ^ (AU Majors). Lfe£?sy*§^ i THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 Pop Music Sounds Like $& To UM'er By ALICE SCHOENFELDER Baby." This son, written in col­ Hurricane Staff Reporter laboration with Marilyn Fein- What began as a hobby for berg, also a TJM student, is being Michael Cowan, 20, of Miami recorded under the King label hi Beach, may develop into a re­an album by the Impacts. Leslie warding second business for him. Gore has shown an interest in Miami's foremost dealer specializing in the A sophomore marketing major at two of Mike's songs, "Buddy sale & service of the World's Finest Motorcycle TJM, he plans to go into a career Blue" and "Regretting" and he of market research, and a pastime hopes to play one of his new is all that Mike wants his pop­ songs for her. ular song writing to become. m*mwm Mike thinks that he could man­ Mike gets ideas for his songs age both the marketing and mu­ from various sources. He usu­ GRAND PRIX MOTORCYCLE CORP. ally chooses a current subject, sic. If his hobby does grow larg­ si 1220 S. W. 57th AVE. 667-7141 er than the several recorded perhaps something he has seen songs plus the 30 to 40 he has in the newspapers. had published he will have to. He is already contributing toward a good deal of his school expens­ es with the proceeds of what he calls a "fun thing that I've never taken seriously." IFS NICE TO THINK OF THE FOLKS He has played the piano for 12 years, toyed with the clar­ inet before getting "frustrated," and considered singing—giving SEND THEM A TASTE It up after losing patience with the first week of deep breathing methods. As a profession, music If OF FLORIDA is not a stable enough living Michael Cowan, 20-Year-Old Composer for Mike. Vi Bu. of Oranges & Grapefruit ... a hobby becomes a business For about three years during $ FULL PRICE high school, Mike headed a com­ 50 INSURED DELIVERY bo called The Beach Continentals 6 playing in various Miami Beach (CHECK OR MONEY ORDER} hotels. Later they entertained for a free ride on the S.S. Bahama A BIG GIFT THAT Humanities Given Boost Star to the Islands, getting there COSTS SO LITTLE only to "spend a fortune" and come back almost penniless for By New Research Fund the summer. A NICE WAY TO SAY When he was 15, Mike sat at "THINKING OF YOU" the piano in a spare moment The University of Miami established a $10,000 fund and wrote a song for bis amuse­ ecently for the support of research projects in the humanities, ment. Alan Shepherd had just FRUIT KING OF FLORIDA •ccording to Committee on Research Awards in Humanities made his first space flight, so "The Float," about a trip to the BOX 727 CORAL GABLES, FLORIDA ? Chairman, J. H. Curtiss. *• moon, was timely. It was re­ The fund will support four to Curtis, Ferre Building. corded by Hank Ballad and the six projects over a 14-month Proposals, which are due be­ Midnighters "with a lot of leriod beginning June 1, 1964. fore April 15, should include a sound effects" according to file academic areas covered by concise description of the re­ Mike. This first recording got he program include drama, fine search work to be performed; Mike off to a good start by trts, government, history, lan- present status of the work, if selling about 200,000 copies. [uage, literature, music, philos- it has been initiated; estimated Later he wrote "Yoo Hoo Spin" iphy and religion. budget; curriculum vitae and and "The Pretzel Ain't Nothing bibliography of the investi­ But a Twist*' in collaboration The grant will primarily be gator; and designation of the used to pay "summer salaries" with Max Freedman author of months for which support is "Rock Around the Clock." With for the investigators for at least requested. two months in either of the Max's urging, Mike joined The summers of 1964 or 1965. Further information can he American Society of Composers obtained from members of the and Publishers, a protective per­ (BRIGHTEST MUSIC ON CAMPUS) The salary payment per month Committee: Drs. John McCollum, formance agency. Mike is one rill be one-ninth of the research­ English; Morris Rockstein, physi­ of the few teen-agers in this es regular nine month academic ology; Tom Wood, government; society. tear salary, and a grant may Eugene Man, Coordinator of Re­ At the moment Mike is very originators nclude necessary auxiliary ex- search, ex officio; J. H. Curtiss, optimistic about his latest song, >enses during the summers and mathematics, chairman. a slow ballad, called "Don't Cry of icademic year, including such xpenses as travel, communica- •ions, clerical assistance and sup­ "Folk-Dixie"! plies. Headquarters for The Committee on Research Another H Wards in humanities is cur- sensational "ently accepting proposals, which SIR FOR HER I teuld be submitted to J. H. album! % WHAT'S LN 24090/BN Z6090 Stereo $$m* Come and see all I NEW the colors and fabrics we've got . . . I IN THE APRIL Skinniest slacks A3XANTIC? in town by I 'Must the Colleges Police Sax?": Sir for Her Win T. Rule, former Dean at M.I.T., Slacks shown: I !a provocative article, says "To deny I student the right to have a girl in his • red, white a fresh new jrofoil I Mm js to punish him for what he notiier ' 'toht do with her". or Royal duck I US.A. Revisited": John Dos Passos vocal group traffic >kes a new, kaleidoscopic view of 9.98 I w country — Its turnpikes, motels, I u8e publicity parties, and some of with a happy, prob- I 9 men who have formed the sinews j (our society. Tiered checked fop [e are tioebe-Lou Adams: "A Rough Map red, blue, black or distinctive sound! proj- (Greece": The first of a new series I * traveling in Greece alone by car. yellow with white nd* I tai caviar. 3.98 They're f ilents: .*rard Piel: "Abundance and the "tare of Man": American surpluses an taking campuses I be converted Into dynamic bene- I ts for India, for other develop - is nations In the free world, by storm! oyour ' M for the American I tonomy. LN 24087/BN «6087 Stereo I lie pursuit of excel- areers I "ice is the everyday I )b of The Atlantic's ^itors be It In fie* I (A or fact, poetry 366 MIRACLE MILE sAMIW^ r Prose. In ever- CORAL GABLES, FLA. Creasing numbers, OPEN LATE FRI. hose in pursuit of • RlC ^demic excellence 805 LINCOLN ROAD -sS3%7llYSSSa* lr,d in The Atlantic a MIAMI BEACH, FLA. 1 "allenging, enter- OPEN LATE MON. & FM, RECORDS "ning and enlight- ng I wi companion. DOORWAY TO ENTERTAINMENT eiPlC", Miret R«. TM. PRIKTE0 IN USA, | *t your copy today. at 8 THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 Organizations Announcements VETERAN TEAM MEMBERS Hurricane Eye Debaters At National Tourney

Spring cheerleading try-out:, morrow afternoon at 1 p.m. at Thursday, April 16, at 8 p.m. in Alan Dinsmore and Steve planned for the debate team 'It will be a roundtable t: will begin Monday, April 13, on the Sigma Chi fraternity house. the Brockway Lecture Hall of Mackauf, veteran members of the this month, Slepin declared discussion of the topic, wit the UM Intramural field, at 4 Proceeds from the event, which the Otto G. Richter Library. Dr. UM debate team, recently com­ this week. fellows upholding the idea ; p.m. Candidates, male and fe­ is open to UM students, faculty Harold Bixler will speak on the peted in the national Tau Kappa 2 opposing it," Slepin said. male, should report to either and administration members and education of the gifted child. On Saturday, April 11 at 12 Walt Lesbirel or Peggy Trace. Alpha-Delta Sigma Rho debate their wives, will go toward fur­ The top ranking Arts and Sci­ noon the team will appear on nishings in the SX house. tournament, and did "pretty Scheduled for Saturday, / ences student of UM and out­ WCKT-TV Channel 7 in a half 25 at the same time is an in standing Dade County high well," according to Steve Slepin; Undergraduate Student Gov­ hour discussion of the problem: school students will be honored acting director of debate. squad debate on the contro ernment UM Hostesses will hold Charles Werner will discuss during the meeting. Should the federal government sial Public Accommodations try-outs Tuesday, April 14, in the Ontological Argument of the "The team ended with a fair in these critical times guarantee now before the Congress: ^ the Great Lounge, from 3:30 to existence of God, Thursday, April record, but not good enough to an opportunity for higher, edu­ solved, that the Public Accom 5:30 pan. UM Hostesses must be 16, at the meeting of the UM University of Miami co - eds put them among the top teams," cation to all qualified high school at least second semester fresh­ Philosophy Club. The meeting, recently began preparing their dations title of the Civil Ri men, with a 1.0 overall average. Slepin explained. which will be held in S202, will slates of officers for the coming candidates? bill should be adopted. Applications are available at the begin at 4 p.m. floor mother's desks of Mahoney semester. There were 71 teams from 45 Hall and the 730 Buildings. The members of Delta Delta schools entered in the compe­ The Students' Chapter of the Delta sorority held their officers' tition. Wayne State of Detroit, Florida Council on Human Re­ installation Monday, April 6. Michigan, walked oft with top Radio Television Guile The annual Playboy Party of lations will meet this afternoon, Their new slate includes: Jackie honors. Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity will Friday, at 5:30 p.m. at the Can­ McLaughlin, president; Susan be held tomorrow evening, April terbury House. Tau Kappa Alpha and Delta Auditions Local Talen Lytle, vice-president and Pan­ 11, at the Everglades Hotel. One Sigma Rho (now merged)—the of the highlights of the Greek hellenic representative; Claire The University of Miami Radio Television Guild, which Eleven members of Gamma two national forensic fraterni­ social scene, the formal dance Bass, recording secretary; arid been entertaining South Florida television viewers for IS ye Omega Chapter of Pi Kappa Al­ ties—-sponsored this competition will begin at 8 p.m. to the music Nancy Tiz, social chairman. will hold auditions on Tuesday, April 14, in room 146 of of the Joe Giordana Quartet. pha fraternity recently attended which is one of the two big the district "Pike" convention in Linda Harvey, current presi­ Music School at 7 p.m. national debate championships— Gainesville. dent of the Town Girls, was re­ the other being at West Point. The Guild is composed of members of the radio-televis: Sigma Delta Pi, Spanish hon­ During their recent Founders cently elected president of the film department and students interested in the broadcas orary, will present the Spanish Day Banquet, the brothers were Associated Women Students. A pair of TV appearances are i presented with a memorial por­ industry. -i— film "Don Quixote," with English trait of the late Louis Carricarte, WTVJ personnel, students p subtitles, Thursday, April 16, in RTF studios are located at duce, direct, and take part former president of the Gamma North Campus and include fa­ UC 160. The film will begin at a variety of programs indud Omega Chapter, by members of cilities for AM-FM radio 8 pjn. and admission is 50 cents. UM Business Frat "UM In Review," "Stud< the Carricarte family. Carricarte, broadcasting and television * * * a graduate of the University of video taping. Press Conference," "The Bai Miami, was killed in South Viet of the Brains," and ot Dr. William K. Knopf, chair­ Nam in December. Wins Coveted Title TJM broadcasts every evening "specials" which are broadc man of the new Department of Monday through Friday from 5 on Sunday mornings. Marine Technology and chairman The honor of being the number one chapter in the country to 7 p.m. over WIOD-FM (97.3 Members of Delta Delta Delta of the Department of Electrical was recently conferred upon Delta Sigma Pi, Professional Busi­ mcs). The Radio-Television G and Alpha Delta Pi sororities and Engineering, was the main speak­ ness Fraternity, according to John Bieda, Chancellor of the The video taping of "UM will produce its annual televi Phi; Delta Theta fraternity will Roundtable" which is aired by variety show during May, an er at the recent meeting of the organization. • hold a car wash tomorrow, Sat­ WTVJ, is carried out at UM's currently in search of local Gulf Coast Chapter of the Flor­ faculty plus Dean Clark Myers Learning and Instructional Re­ ent for the program. Follov I urday, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., at The award is presented to the ida Engineering Society, in Clear­ are alumni of the organization. sources Center. Tuesday's audition three reh< the car rack on the south east chapter scoring the highest water, Fla. number of points in five cate­ One of the purposes of Delta sals will be held, prior to Miami television station * • * corner of the intramural field. gories: scholarship, administra­ Sigma Pi, according to Bieda, is final taping. Interested stud to foster better relationships and WTVJ provides use of their should contact Henry Bassr The University of Miami chap­ * * * tion of the organization, chap­ •"» ter attendance at their various contacts between students and facilities for RTF students each of the RTF department, Hi ter of Mothers of Sigma Chi will The Phi Beta Kappa Association functions, professional activity, businessmen of the community. week. Under the supervision of 0801. hold their annual card party to­ of Greater Miami-will meet and finance (this includes gen­ eral efficiency of financing their operations). Professional activity includes Dr. Standford To Speak the number and level of speakers who addressed the chapter, tours through various local businesses At MRHA Careers'Night and other types of contact be­ tween students and members of The Men's Residence Hall Association of the University of Miami the commercial world. will sponsor its second annual Careers' Night Monday, April 13, beginning at 7:15 in the Great Lounge of Mahoney Hall. The fraternity has about 55 active and pledge members TJM President Henry King Stanford will be the keynote * currently, and boasts that 27 speaker of the evening designed to give students an opportunity members of the Business School to learn more about those fields which are open to University of Miami graduates. Following Dr. Stanford's speech, students will be able to take part in the seminars, which will be held in Mahoney Hall. Seminar topics will include business administration, accounting, marketing, management, education, English, engineering, law, medicine, music, psychology, radio-television-film-drama, and zoology.

WOOLWORTH'S UNIVERSITY SHOPPING CENTER

FRED W. EVERETT, JR. CANNON I'M HERE TO ANSWER I BATH TOWELS QUESTIONS... Questions about saving for STRIPE AND SOLID COLORS the future, about creating an adequate estate for fu­ ture responsibilities, about money and life insurance f 2 for $1.00 and you. I'm Fred Everett, Connecticut Mutual Life's BOOK representative here on the ALL YOU CAN CARRY! University of Miami cam­ WASHCLOTHS pus. I hope I'll have a DISCONTIUNED TEXTS AND REFERENCE BOOKS- chance to answer your ALL USED questions soon. I 12 for $1.00 FRED W. EVERETT, JR. START YOUR LIBRARY NOW. 2525 S.W. Third Ave., Miami, Fla. representing UNIVERSITY OF Your Money's Worth More At Connecticut WOOLWORTH'S MIAMI MO 7-0717 Mutual Life BOOKSTORE HWY., ACROSS FROM UM DORMS TMSURAMOE rOMPA^'" On The Miami,Campus SPORTS AND SECTION B i The! iia urricane FEATURES UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI, CORAL GABLES, FLORIDA, APRIL 10, 1964 GRIDDERS LOOK GOOD said. 1

<*%v * Spring Practice Begins tons [I

By DON SMITH weakest side. For instance, if Dudley Schusterick, the third have acquired during earlier the play Is running to the op­ member of the trio, lives in Van practices. Bob Biletnikoff, one of three ponent's left weak side, then Nuys, California. Dudley is 18, fine candidates fbr the quarter­ UM head coach Charley Tate's Miami will switch Its strong and in University College with newly initiated siren system, sig­ back position on the Hurricanes linemen to their left side to try an education major. Being very 1964 team, appears hard pressed nals the start of practice at 3:30. to "beat them to the punch " agile and quick, Dudley holds Actual practice starts with 15 to keep the status quo of number and widen the hole for the down the number three position, one man. minutes devoted to stiff calis­ backs. with th constant threat to move thenics. After this "warm up" the Dudley Schusterick and Lee up at any given time. squad splits up into their respec­ Yarbourgh are making a clearcut Commenting on the new of­ fense, Biletinkoff said, "Coach Spring Practice tive spots on the practice field race for the QB spot in next fall's for specific work. Quarterbacks schedule. Tate has some terrific ideas and The life of a college football with a little luck and a lot of and ends work on passing drills, "Bullet" Bob, a freshman, is a player entails more than the av­ while the linemen "knock heads" coaching well really make the erage layman realizes. The long fast and capable runner, and a new offense click." on individual and team drills. strong-armed southpaw. tedious hours in preparation for This part of practice runs for a Lamarr "Lee" Yarbourgh, one the ten short weeks of actual solid 25 minutes. Biletinkoff and the rest of the of Head Coach Charlie Tate's competition are a year round job. The following 15 minutes are team are trying to adapt to a quarterback hopefuls, is a first Take for example the current devoted to "getting off on the new concept in offensive attack, semester sophomore in U.C. with Spring training and practices. ball" drills, in which team mem­ initiated by new TJM Coach a major in Business Administra­ bers work on carrying out their —Photo ky Charlie rowers, KAM Charlie Tate. The "Flip-Flop" tion. Yarbourgh spent four years The majority of the players specific assignments for any given A familiar figure leading pre-practice warmup offense as it is called is both a in the Air Force, the last two of report to the training room play, and team wind sprints. The . . . Assistant Coach Walt Kichefski running and passing attack in which were in Japan. While in between 2:45 and 3:10 in the backs then spend 20 minutes on which the best and strongest Japan, Lee played on the all-star afternoon for their daily ankle backfield blocking assignments side of Miami's team is always team and made a starting posi­ tapings and treatment for the and running patterns. played against the opposition's tion as all-Japan quarterback. cuts and bruises which they The next 45 minutes are Homestand Rough; spent on "fundamentals" per* taming to specific play and blocking assignments, and the usual hard hitting practice on Hurricanes Tested the part of the interior linemen. By PETE SCHWEDOCK State pitching. In the four games Coach Tate is putting less em­ Assistant Sports Editor he had eight hits. phasis on passing now that While the student body of the As the Easter vacation began George Mira is gone, and trying University of Miami was evacu­ on March 26, the baseball team to develop a sound running game. ating the campus for spring vaca­ was playing Wesleyan. The Hur­ The general consensus is that tion, the Hurricane baseball team ricanes took three out of four. he plans to throw between 16 and was getting ready to play 14 One game was called because of 20 times a game, to "keep them -games in as many days. darkness with the score 4-4. honest," and pick up valuable yardage. The rest of the time The first games were nothing Friday the Hurricanes opened but success as the baseballers they will try to launch a strong up the defense of their Florida running offensive attack, with impressively stopped the Black Intercollegiate Conference crown Knights of the United States Mil­ special emphasis on quarterback by taking three games from Jack­ options and laterals. Coach Tate itary Academy three straight sonville University. times. is looking more toward a "bal­ Miami,'helped by the hitting of anced" attack than the complete i The first of these was the Eich and Vinci, started with a 7-5 outstanding pitching perform­ dominance of the passing game ance of the year as Elmer Har­ win. of last year's fame. ris faced his "cousins"'* from Saturday the Hurricanes West Point. He won with a played a twin bill and swept four hitter, 2-0, striking out both ends, 5-1, 8-3. 18 on the way. All in all it was not a bad Rick Barry It was a different story against homestand, eight win, five losses Ohio State. The Big Ten team and one tie. The Hurricane rec­ took all four games. The bright­ ord is now 11-6-1. The remainder -Photo feyCharli e Powers, KAM est spot for Miami was Toby of the schedule will not be so Linemen hit with strength and sweat All-America Green's bombardment of Ohio rugged. . . . pushed by Coach Tate The Helms Foundation an­ nounced Tuesday that Rick Barry is on their ATI-America squad. Rick Barry Gets Cut Barry, who has already been Tennis Team Defeated named the outstanding opponent of such teams as Houston and m The longest collegiate winning Mandelstam and Hammill took set to be completed. LaSalle, thus adds another laurel streak in any sport went into the sweet revenge on Fitzgibbon and George Shuert and Richard From Olympic Tryout to his crown. final recording as highly touted Howell, to win the number one Bray were pitted against Keith As a junior last season Rick Princeton University stopped the doubles sets 6-2, 6-4. The spark Jennings and Lee Rawls. The All-American Rick Barry was | against the Armed Force Missile finished fifth in the nation in Miami tennis streak at 137 con­ started to catch life. Rubio and Hurricanes gave it all they had, cut from the United States Olym- Team and collected 5 rebounds scoring with a 323 average. secutive victories. Santrock played to a heated 6-4, but Jennings and Rawls proved pic team after playing in the in 9 minutes of play. He capped off the campaign • Herb Fitzgibbon, Princeton's 6-3 victory over Princeton's too powerful as they brought tryout tournament held in St. In the second tilt against the with 35 points and 20 rebounds •talented senior, ranked 20th in Lynch and Daane. This made the home all the bacon with a 6-4, Johns Alumni Hall. I NAIA All-Stars Rick hit for 6 against St. Josephs in the NIT. the nation, was pitted against match all even with one doubles 6-2 victory. Barry scored four points] points and 5 rebounds. Both were tournament highs. Miami's number one Rodney Mandelstam. A quick 6-1 first set victory by Fitzgibbon sent, a chill through the spectators as the realization of more losing sets might become apparent. Elmer Harris Star Hurler Mandelstam fought back in the second set to take a com­ If you saw Elmer Harris raphy, and hopes he is signed hassee later in the season manding 5-2 lead against the I walking along the campus you by a West Coast team so that looms as the team's big games talented Princeton player. Fitz­ I would never guess he was one he will be able to do graduate remaining. "But," said Harris, gibbon and Mandelstam fought I of the most effective pitchers work at a California school. "We are still playing them one shot for shot during the next 1 on the University of Miami Since the 22 year-old Is by one." five sets, bat in the end the | baseball team. from Cleveland it is only The games the team play­ lanky Fitzgibbon pulled out an The 5-10, 170 pound senior natural he chose Bob Feller ed against the rookie major 11-9 victory to win the set f is the all-time strikeout king as his pitching idol. "At first league teams are the best Miami's John Hammill posted I in Miami baseball history. I patterned my windup after practice for the season he a strong 6-1, 6-0 victory over Last year he set a season him," said Harris. believes. "It is a better cali­ Speed Howell. But then the bomb record of 74 strikeouts in 47 The best game ever pitched ber of ball than yon play in fell. Miami's Richard Bray lost to innings, including a record is the game against West Point college since the pros are Keith Jennings 6-3, 6-5. 20 against Army. last year when he struck out the best in the country." I Princeton's Ham McGill de­ 20. Harris feels that the sched­ This season he has already Harris said he came here ule favors the Hurricanes the feated John Santrock 7-5, 6-2 1 fanned 47 in just 28 innings, and Lee Rawls. defeated UM's because Miami is a good base­ rest of the season, since all I including 18 against the same ball school, "and because this they play at home are week­ Juan Rubio 6-4, 6-1. I Army team. I This left only George Shuert is the best weather to pitch end games, with no grind like Arm trouble limited the m*s the two weeks of solid base­ on the court between defeat even I amount of work that Harris before the doubles matches, as Elmer's ambition is to get ball the team went through I did last season. In spite of this to the NCAA playoffs. He and during Easter. the netters trailed 4-1. But Shu­ 1 he had a 2.08 earned run av- ert had other plans. Praying per­ the Hurricanes have just miss­ "We hope we can win 25 | erage with a three won two ed in the last two years, being games this season," Harris Charlie Powers, KAM fect control tennis fbr two and I lost record. one-half hours he beat Hugh nipped out by FSU. said, "If we do it would have Hurler Elmer Harris . . Lynch 3-6, 6-3, and 6-2, to leave Harris is majoring in geog­ The FSU series in Talla­ been a tremendous season." . . . player of the week a spark of hope left for the record. 2B THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 erair^ JCrQPd

r PETE scHwraiocrt^ f^otr- embarrass nunseliy he' em^ Pittman says .it is ironical h Ass't. Sports Editor barrassed Jacksonville. He pitched should make the team as Netters Start Anew 5% of no-hit, no-run, ball, al- pitcher, since he knew he triet His name did not appear-orr lowing one walk for the only out as a second baseman for thi By LARRY FIGUR In 1955. also during his stint the official baseball roster be- baserunner against him.— I baseball team.—••" • im Asst. Spirts Editor -J. at In^na. Lewis wa«ajs selected * inifeit\)f the season, but Coach LarTy features a no wiudup ;j Pittman. spendmms hi s free time Coach Dale Lev/is chalked ^V^eVjTbJln ami aadministe r Fraser is very much , ^J^^onvthe rjpad with the team his "worst" coaching season ever a national junior tennis pro- at the university. His soccer and aware ^pf Larry Pit g»*am for Burma, and toghelp in I {ieKitWttld.Series gainer-JfJ^i'" tennis teams lost one match! the] development of the Bflr- opho apiece*" "to jgrve. L^wig hi&f'fkst mese Davisj^dh Xoani. JHe #asfr taste ^0i-Pde?ea£ s^ce^h,* Be'^inf the! first American eoaeh ejjjier »xO. ca: coach mg iaftaJIM. JL j*%>' \-J *sem abroad tmuerrhe FtJftbrtfhi arv-tea4ei:m in Lewis is now in lus^seventh program. October as a d baseman, year of coaching here. Ever since versity of Indiana's Learner s a a 1 He had played at position, he»itook Qvemhi 1958, - Lewis'fiand n>any oth&jfways. In 1953 v he was ejected president;of the Big- Ten coB.ta=ibi^tgd JjQpsJv ^t^ihe/m%rriW" jSBasllnransls^n^cltebs^rdoa 3tbjajnec«m^g^s^w^e^:.]^^r^f:e- -loiisup od} IOI asisbiboBO snrt (^ach^fi'j^ssocietip^irJri 1954b;as s&fo c\yring the|jyj^ar||j.w imaiM m s ten^ a^^y^unrj^g^-^^r^rej^en- a-^-resuKijOf InglAana^foitbiKft'* suc­ >onpJ!? ^I^ftr te*n%ilto* ^RrYi -/Lest* year;"Lewis coached, the ^tne Hurwane£j. jday 14 gamersr ctousUL lflDQ& irY'Tiy'jTXjJJflf\lfjf cessive Big, rj^n^ championship, 3 s e i t7%8ojJynictf{iD&visv^Mera team that 1, J?^d5fW ^r^¥ sffrJ^ t(j Isi/roA Lrewi&^wa^.sek-cted-^y; rnjcj-west- won the* title.tn MexieobC*ty*Sand TWrrr£rr TO^/fl^i&^ put in as a pitcher. adm 9no -^%bir8ftigf frbin^l^^nrvVWrt^ 9$&r r spor ts^ rW^rjt e*£^ $£ ot^ef ;miriOT is presently president .online e of Indiana/' hii renown' as a sport coach^fej} &?/iX ?¥}G ^R^is, American College Tennis Coaches 9 Wis .^rervices- >mej{83 called.cfor -osqzfi frarti otnx qu £tuqa bsupa in 1956, was awarded the Uni- j*ifeoi*iattoflrf* n° SnitoemmoD JBotfoe, 1 Jack.soQV.Ule-, ga me * Jief-did •v >it©&cfeed tfiat teanvto* three Big

e^HeTr championships? '•with--two diool 9g9UO0 B to i^ffiiftr teahts con^rhjf fnf*secoAa;,/ s edt nerD oioaTstifiin IOI eHT .a9si and? another tnird. ?ns overalt. S«ct»AL CHINESE CflMfAPWAfiON PLATES FOftW ?%* rx noiisiBqaTci roinoJT »a benns-sno't coaching record ^iL Indiana n^as^ fuh>6 lo nsi ddt [wodiaY • 99i ^133 wins, and,^7plossotto^ sriT [6c bftuoi tiiaarfioa tl-afap nLos fibelia ttrls^rf sis rnasj [9T1V9 Odj 93lsT 197omof{A*a ^||4-l 11,3bsiis •qpr>noo vrea .adoitoBii r 3niiq2 aa9niau9^hx*ioTBTn ay ilsscO To botsHxi" rvH^tS^¥^ jfe*fiS-v8Taii¥ri?iaQTT^? tte^alq edi io ^Ihotam e/Q[L eriT .elaT sihaxf ooi ^nirtieiJ odt ot arfi .afMQ-g TIA arfi mL irilodji ai ti 33 seneno Alt ni 01:€ hoB^k^L saq bna -gnimton LeJupgiflTu.T&nmcXy, rftftrr^'-'wr ibuia /lifib tiedjTioT noom^rl PiBts-IiB arfJ noB be^Blq 99a .nfiasX i Isesno'na DOBi leaissd eaedtt daiririairiww u re -dt -ml ins-ffi*j&?%i&%fll Stieo$Offffc^WesbBrn(^ee Pqrking[twlB444n?l7*imBiWI lo eb« 5? iftt CTJZK ^i9 Sorlf ^Sr>*rf5H' that worff, Lewis jVrsiL&ven d^e great honor. or Deing made a gerftiini rt&ftu^clcy CoTOner.* He HEADQUARTERS wa* s*fewani!\? 'ffiaf (mstin8tio?f^6r rn^Sjritfrrni; #cf?l^?n^e"#<3oTimg FOR J&\or$kan¥J$H£$ffi£*fh ReVrtucKy u FORMAL WEAR dWir?£''(nV^i5ftfrrer dFW5dP * •f?9fnoniI loneifli edt io4~~iflq O0>- -me aael ^rtittuq si aJsT HofioD •f5&tibait.°»"S .oma§ §ninnut -briuoki9n9a a c-fotevs3 sHbT oi JsIJ mani q99a i mag B 89mit OS aMpnlsv qi/ *ya9nod T .9SBD1SY Sffrxta^Tfan t Iliw ^9dJ rftrw .^OBJJ ™T4Q jan i ctntri'

C^aVlie. ^^te^y^o% TefMiSn % ii$njoy deliriously^different'diningJ

spring campaigcLl-i aWnav r Most spring practices are closed AjkrSpc because of sorcallecL "spying by the opposition/^ Thia is ^eSpeci- ally^trueT-of-34lafcama uhJvflrslty NER JACKETS under Coach Bear Bryant. Bry­ TUX TROUSERS ant believes trie less; teople TUXEDO SUIlll airMitjd ^e\rfei^r|\ »\\ l\ aw*- So far this year the football COMPLETE practices * 1nave' ° Beelff1 * ^ctr a wffii g FORMAL lar^fe CrOwdS aTl^wjma^ifii^ Wnat RENTAL SERVICE .CORAL GiABLkTS AND SOUTM MIAI kinct o&a teaia.isi to,,)?© esneoted next year., bleachers ha\pe been QTNIVEnSITY xXFETii^^TB! set up fop^lthe lazy spectators, ' MEN'S SHOP 0 : AILY BUDGET SPECIALS bWrocW^oli ^r^8^n^na i8*T3err»* 2828 PONCE DE LEON, Coral Gables IIYlOb tiful if the bleachers, are packed. PHONE HI 5-3679 ; b*isrlai/l bns Jt9*7jrf5 Thursdoy *w*j n < ^CABBAGE I I -ismO e9tfit2 rjgjfnU sdr mo^iuo ,^&A x9& flB ii „9VB§! _ ttM, snlY.B'Iq T9Tiff,^^9j|'^^J bavo-iq BIWBH bns ig/ajg^fi (d frterl taemsrrtuot * ^07-1^^^.^j^^^^l .$& lull rn9lsi FriCIQyMH-i.nmuIA endol. MACKEREL.AND n- rsri 9H1 1P9 aJnioq TJJof b9iooa v«iifi9 TARTAR SAUCE a'imanM

T-BONE STEAK WITH Saturday — FRENCH FRIES ^|&98)9c^di^aSo-iffJ lA grflaol 9iom 10 noitssila^T I .JnQieqqs srnopod irfgirn td*gno!t majalobitBH"J Sunday ^»i09 B 9}IBT ot tea bfl099g sdi 39ms3 gid s*maeT exii as acnool ms9t fes'oO Jaow Nft teniasa bseI.£-3 ^itibnsas taiTtaH bifia -"^uS** .gninisrria 99(dB iffl .i9yalq notoanh^t botnohu *SSlfrjll«'%i&Ul^r p Monday ^mUiu 9w>vsAN D CANOISO YAWetilr.s:o is matalabnaM bns uoddig F tt.«rto yd ai Mo-tBoy SS 9iB| 9dt ~gnrmb )oda 10I ioea -^elq m&9i 9dt S9ms~g oriT. vino 2i ti b«Bl9vsO. moi5 9At OI fad ,2*98 9vft J 301 9 9 loicm eulooiJooti edt lefda^B 'ijREADED' viAi dufttV * l q noddi&stfii ^jlnal* Tuesday mo, BW ot yior^iv 6-XI 9IQ "xoi 99U?fitq' isxls qubniw ym b9l HB9 19TJ9d s adii JJI*] 4 .sevailsd. .ZHIBH hi 2Vz EXCITINGRWEEKS^K^ISING BAKEa:CK1CKBN> 9ttlJ A II r+'JlflPfi ilja .uawoH b9&48 P^^K^ipD OUTEI#ISBAND8 WM^tU.rs&iioo*** mmsWhni |nibsi*bfH ta*ghinni Mll-nQW AoiSl a^mfiiM ".yrtnuoo orft «i Jaod 9dJ too sloinJa. er! xisdw'xBgv: Jai yoriA iania*ga OS •'1&4 £-B asmnroT, HJisS AB0ARpmYOdr»>Wrfe>RIVlfeB -b9d92 grfj lsrfJ^al99t. airisH 9H noasoa airlT- rnnH a*nc^99hji1f 1 grij fie'ttsorrruH t3 'tzu'l ni VI* banns WrrJnfig ndoT, b^tesl Thta*co3Sl P^rtV -iftrtfr* eS&ertdd froi^C/Jn^ SStrTto lis "aonia hx>2B f II t II JT MK IVI till inwiM tBalab alwfifl - 99J • hae t 1 arnsa 9riJ ianisss 81 ^nio'ifjoni \ -jleew SIB amort Cslq ydHJ^eiiii" gauso^d bns^ JEobdqalla '"Bastille Dij-ys. • 5 h w to? erft' 9rlt bejimil, 9id- 2 Washable I O n e l^r *,o^je^fi^if|e^"^i^- t>ens^orafHon^|o a n d SL tL^ 9r»th cafeterias '/Oil 2msH: tad* iiow To_torornG 1 ^rorrt- Tamo**** ell ie)pf^^TtfnoSp^orSr* wSl moale4-*» nia ^9fl9,tj5rtl 29rdj ^lltri beer ^if«rss«we JU©i^r| SeHgose?i%.^ Coral GaMeMorner of laliano and ValqBcia sidi lo eJ©a n:It .no2B93_i2si-fj02B9 |bin ^ -, »,A « r_* k 5S .riiv/ risD 9 t r -VB fl A^k^-foF T^ycrycSl^oa^ FARAH ile^BSRr^efiSrTSSWI^ owi no**/ 99irft I rftiw 1 iiniBrT ",0025!Sout h MiamM9tfOeOQai ,rt"fi{°"rii "I .™lr 9.9idt B dfiw" ^sa" * !»> - , .vrr . *6el S e2 TOWN AlMO «OCA*WWW Br^wt^p^JfUFO'RNlA'v ;rf bll/ow H ob 9W 11 ,bisa .ITCT yd *riro bailf S ARAH MANU.B-A.S3-RliS.fNG &W jH?. fl PJS'FJ. *?¥»»>9ffl 0 iT • - *i v rrtatrH read an aiuon lIsrH

k 4^ iftlk^tfuRfc^^-glMf?^^^^ J* : SPORTS MSTM _JEHARp&S RESTAURANT $|fjMLTTITBSJ. " Q °V fay Bob Golub ^^^uffiBeffirdins, junior lerHV- Uni JEJl^re^our money stretches the farthest man from -Miami, paced' the -.golf Am herst, 18% to \%, and team, with ari opening found of 17% to 3%, respectively. FUttACOURSE .65,yn the Mj&rni ,ftnvjta,t J.O.na 1 April 2-4 saw Paul 0es jar dins Tournamenfrjt aft^ ended ti^ythe Lead tbe field, in the Florida Efts DINNERS winner "with aC*72 hole-score of ter.coliegiatel..and: Florida Inter­ collegiate j Invitational Tpurna- Include: Appetizer and Salad, She B&ami ihnksment won'* the nie^^qpJ^e^i-lKinMllaueouslir at £ntre^»T (Roast Stuffed Chicken ot^ fteam/3g$iV>^Mpst -pj^aMirig j Capjb Qpja]. -The Cane^j^on the Fried Chicken ;i|g patent from fforinwe&ern; AGcri- T4flr^%/Ipt^coJ|^aj^ia^jdace^ ( Veal CuHe$, jft*. <**£ ?- ^Bcteai/the tcimis tfeaig'^^^nning^efpat by$rirtceton | u j igan, Illinois State, and the Uni- ^ond;T^o9igo^tp.nJ0m^^qrn¥it. Pat>Roa$|J;^Ql I University, the netters got together to play^an^April fool' I versity of Florida. The"fteld of te^nai^^JSTO^nSgltest.^ Jay w\ n Roast Loin of Pork .'* joke on Coach Dale Lewis and Amherst, a joke they will | 141 golfers from 18 colleges and :Sgsgalft.irAoJfeQn§gcfiL i1i hole.p^.a, universities played pressure golf | ^^^ijje^th^aa^jn the .Jn~ Fried Sea ScaHopSv w^;>wJ Wveot fonget A many others) j^1 . throughout the tournament, but Vitational. *»urnfrA) PR oiaw TTie-hmT^sttfl^ioWteiweis^mt ^afey?butiI^li0Ugfetn#<^e£We^fmai Tonfio°i!he UMtes- Coach Heuson said, "Our boys to myself that maybe the netters were looking ahead to pulled victories by sweeping both played extremely well in our MPiCTf WEAKfW^TS ANr> INCHES Princeton, and^ealiyT3rJJn't £ar< the individual winner aari'-^eam tournament but too much golf cut, i|rwaw|^ into our ganie^St HSa^e Coral." a fs\ sjplsit^n Theq Hurricanes .tralveliBo.iOr- i^%n|el%aiQj J\jra^A pmt»^VTrorHra LandA.to j^ay Mo^da* gp)ithern; ^AROUND THE ^R^fRpM ^E^.^R^^F^Tita I fact that Rodney missed the shots\Jhat caused tercollegiate Invitational Rollins, auo! Stetson in the JFIC fOvti^^lLK - 8:30KiL n HOt-9«% concern, it was the way he missed them. Rodney cannot Tournament by defeating the TourharnenT April if. '- b I Ham* a—<**—.hbirtlQ—••'inid^ iij)q s'StT gig cqqj^ J— =c= B I^^m(f^e ^atfflesr| ffimiisJ player to hiCffiS ftBrt&L r s rr^M^ry^xs 9ParaiW ^a^ao^^Shmii^fSk -aeion ino lo noilqeoxe ixS riiiw ij 3 H * $gjh> h$? r}/fc —— -—— |.i-'fV"-j3 Compound this with the fact that Richard Bray, noted a* ^rtti.riiu.t mq-itsniq-itBn s aobuloru iaxii ; Shortly after Roy Heath became faculty advisor and friend to a for hiiujose line calling was returning shots from six group of Princeton University freshmen, he found his students developing inches outside the lines, something hadJoJbec:wrong. io Hqnt 0TI .I9dsin 9fnil bnooaa adJ sliam iliv/ Ji tquo as three psychological (°S»s: Non-comrUirtefrs (Xs), Hustlers (Ys); "ynd abnsd srii aavaol quo bo^evbo edi isual, any i»£j3$-pranks are thought up br-U^f'i nadlsaom.sviaodi gisnaiw 9rt*T Plungers^M-lTSe'jg^JUY^Vithin^ rri|«jnfcA dAiha«^neir 9riJ now av surgiS .ari99iO erfJ Ic 5 >ex one, RbcJn'eJ/ MandelstanwMandelstaV sdf M#P»nf^o¥98SSq deao bssl U .age, aiaey nsi i9vo qus college ye aTs,T)0T strtferalI froTn alr^raups achieved an ape>rof^devefop- Ar with all the >, players an^rjSftjyckd to "try lo toomV Uaiovo adJ oi 000S8 -•JeuH edi .noxJeoibni v,na zi iS9y ment. They were the "Reasonable Adventurers. [tosS^flie^first set/ aprilose they^ 1jfflKM^delstairj7iost ' sfMSr>ta LIN($<. *f. \ «i*rT..9mi*.dsjJfc*'Woi ni aia ai9J j - Dr. Heath writesof the Xs.-Ys. ^"iT^^JfJSjm^S^ VSJ^3^^^ .Y.rfqoit silalUA bsto |^,TtaH6-l, SfuefeJQjrf and SaraoUc 6H3. Jw d bns ,id4i^o} tog. zdooit Adventurer, ,6fld Trom his'76ur-year experiment with'ihent! proposes a B 8 *sqqsX'oJT3l!otarn griiwoid Lvfi!)23fp>^W hliS ^Tlliw Mfenn-jmfe ^fiT .zsnenimilsiq snT TOI ^t-was lap sight to ^ep^Jtoach Jjgw^Sstek as the UM sqsdieq at JasJuoo Y o^isA^fir -93 srfi lo risq nworiji-tead sda pssiD 9iii ni'quo 9di qaesl o: iKw^uirriS^ i [J bnfi ,cl CiqA i ,XS riorraM .^BbTuifiB .aaosi anhd .ebnfif m C v^ .zafdfiO IBTOO ni loo^ 3Tom)iiH arb JB bterf ad way to defeat. QAcnjjewis stated after the match jju -na a'lag'i aidt \o sin,b edi asw TJifi *aSQNABkEUDV£r4TUR£»7/J o^baliinildS rVubi^ljOO (PAPER) Indiana pulled the same thing on him but he admittecF IBTISI ii Xd now ,mn &K IhqA djfibBonboW/bfsri 3d Hiw that he .wa.s ^ncerne^B^eAerj^0iu^>jtj)e^{,^e^Q going 1 oF to throw the sets or the whole recorduhfiig J osriv/Jnew I urricane IO betutqso ahsiial d*gnodliA" .9oht ad bli fbWJs di ttsfcom snidJomoz 9d* oljt ftiw ^drii ,aooatq SOTHJ laift 9rit 9l^is 99il-.by 001 .oi.qO^ C^ && g^ti .aby 02 .m.q00:£ A new/type of football team ^^IfB^^^&r -ot atmoq n^r^^bTOP 1 ^3Unla ybfid by; Od .fltq 21:8 - J .BSr .p8. hna ,i>S .pS 3X .p3- :9u (serar >iae9*id ,3loBd) run. Constantly -the gridders are or*'the move. Tate r I Ja^ttt^b^oSr "J - m>iiOe:S OCXAWNN VWAMV j LoO ,9iB fe9auodT9Woq yjmA grfV glyia 991I .aby 001 .m.q 5I:fr has the practice down to a science. llVsu practices are (feripiJnovnoo)' asioija long'and hard, bat the players aren't: complaining^-at \AC\00'"^ -..r.^ . n oO bnc F vsigi .aby .00S ^....Cnin.q Ofcr At YOUR BOOKSTfeR^S leasf not outright. PRIVATE HQME, jomrHsadroom, two 9&-.J !OUJ y^IbsTrT^y TjcTZ...m.q 00:*| ^ItfyjFK lo6k is forecast, more riJi!rli^g/BTtd less pafemk beds, private -featL Cal) "CA 6^)289. 3 .oO .av -SS P ,JaB9id .itoed) ysla-i ^is\*iil undofel^dlyrbecome true,Nputidon't up.de r- (99l| ROOM FOR RENT. Ptejite hou*e, pri- 8S 9lyJe 99-1! .by OOt.Sm .by 02.,...iii.q 00:£ jsstimatel Uie thrawjng \mn of ypSg&Jw RjJ$tnIko$ vfcte bath. *8,455 SAv. >44rtfT Street. bv 00S.. . BHetm^^^s^^e artijpi and is^ifted-jgith ffleSSIity Nfear Bus. Call "CA"V6-6"289. Id by 02 .crt.q£X:8 0^.1...; mqO£:£ TOt: TJcrr^r^xatlljVisKf compareiT with George ^Mjrr*^ IFOR SALE (IfinoiJn9vnoo) 9sloTia d jam but give the kid ^oftM<ime. Let's hope the new OB* tsiitsd ..by 05 .i.-^fLq 0>:& doesn't run into jitters under the lights of the Orange PpKEft^tABLfeNfolding. 8 sides, ex- j9^o*ita ciller//sfiflft.\$20.-^75>0 S.W. 51st ^raWoue'Iea^^d^u^£ vbms-itemtth bib I (UeW |Jil WEC; ^tr- SPECIAJ,'SPECIAL ~ — VsspVespa -^\-[350 x 8 tires, $8.95. Garden Supply Center, 9507 CLASSIFIED Bird Roag. CAVT-6Q77V / r*A,^

GatoiS^bp ATTENTION STUDENTS 3d)UTHWE$T/DEALER/ Mev/>-^Used. HT 4G MOH CUSHMAN VESPA Scooters. TV Spe­ cial- No*~ money pown.1 $5.00 per FINANCIAL HELP." SENIOR AND GRAD­ week. Safes— Repairs—^PartS; Garden BUTT TraiykTeam UATE M£N'~*ttfdgntr~who need some Ripply Center, 9507 Bird Road.XA 1- financial help tn order to complete 6*77. their education, this year and. will 051=1 HDMUJ iasmss IlacMoa iuo-bsj The University of Miami track s 11 team wa% kept in shape the past then commence."work. Apply to STE­ TH Rft teV^ftK fe^je°t^Wifaoftl ^ ^boS VENS BR^IP^UNDATION, INC., a RVMMMM rnlhJ «^\d*^AS three Mveeks by participating ~in condSiort.-Reosonabte $. RecordihcJ'fcr non-RfoTTt educatioftj^Iftl. 610 Endi- the Blind Office, litrgry Building. MO n,sd B9D| riJ 9?ni a dual meet and two vlangulkr cott Bldg., WJ Pw^jM^m*^^ 6lo^2? * » 0°^^ see tor yourself Wflt^iiUi^ ^iti^^^J meets. on rlJiw .tlooiuov tot oconicud b HOUC pfectalfy riesigned with you in mind * lW Gators! K Gainesville came Hp/AEo\FOR9rBALiEimb3rge three bed- roprn, twp both, pool, on acre three- 1 zldt iel oa IIad}loa n out^on. top in the dual meet/for q|UarI iJ a >;ter;t , m i] e.: W e s_t. qf jga m py s^ M O^ 5 -JauH ,idO abdrnaJ tKf^p^st time iff^rouf ye-irsy' The ••mXJflS*r*m \MA MAE 09&d :97£ nozi se [ohm 3A17jil7,; after.^JV/fea6n6fn seise bns tftfieqH uaT .Bm^iS aqqaX ,a oi 2 score was 77 to 68. CAREER MINDED— [• J SVf FOR INSTA 1039 3"' *?54 FOf^ convertible-* One owner. J;M fi/naiS bns i H Outstanding performance»were A professionally prepared H a 9-6, 100 yard dash by Leach of resume produces greater response 55,000! miles.. p^cel I ent. cond itjcjn.. Ca IJ 445-W9V ' v ? KriL -•STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTS gdibtf^ and financial reward. For inse Florida, ami aHOftHL. two'ijSfflePrtW : l>y Miamf^ 'Bffl' Payne. career kit* write: - ~r 1^63' GHEVROIETJ- OneooWner;: ex^ S3TT3V5iOO HI OMIXIJAID3S2 RESUME RESULTS, INC. •- eel lent .condition. Air-.sond-iJioned, . . . But why not let any one of our fair damsels or officers discuss 1 400 S.E. 2nd St- March 28, the Hurricanes met power sleer\r\gt V:S.-^Sjjfyer b-lve, tol *** Fort Lauderdale, Flo^ldo £T11Q 'j $T OTTIA MIJTPIT ^ L/ii >P H A ST Williams and Roanoke Colleges whitewall tires, and undercoating. UN &v"tluo9xb a Wdiupa lo 4-2a01^B»30 A.Ab. - .4:30 P-M.b'uoY your finahcfcfJieeds'With you personaHyj- OUJ rlUOQVJ/1 in a triangular meet. Miami .amBTgdiq gainiaxf 9B0 ul 3 aw ?eriw •IO.IJ.UI came out with a smashing vie- .gftrJzsTOJfli Zi jiow 3fJT IUO TYPING 1C ! tory, losing only one first place bnA .o00.boos2 ?i veq -. Paramutuaf.SUB//LApINE^CESvin Pike the whole afternoon. The final rn nor8 Term Papers ftyped. 'Eicperfenced, Banking H*i^f* 3/11 t rave-In Teller Pool, reserved seat* ojJ^Mifwc ' l, u TJMIVERSITYfl tally showed Miami with 128, admined-jyAprj}f vi' litRKTYCM. PI promprompf t service. HI 4-1291. ,SJ Monday-Thursday r n Monday-Thursday rial' *j KAPPA *PrX(fll 9:30 AM to 4 PM. ^ .Williams 30, and Roanoke 19. J,, = Excellent Work — call Mrs. I 8 AM to 2 PM in qltmoo e bnfi Tybin< Friday 9:30 AM to 8 PM Elfert Mp.7-2052^ar MO 6-6731. NATIONAL m Friday 8 AM to 8 PM f Last Saturday St. Petersburg ROOMS —iftill banking service. Junior College and Miami-Dade EXPERT.TYPING.- Reasonable Rate. Junior College supplied the op­ Large triple exposure. Private bath. Close to campus"/ M© S-7&89VJ' Qpiet -neighborhood. Near U. of AA. ejUA 033^3 e position for the-.UM teamed n 0/ Coral Gables ™ifiwW eSW i6 *WteCP?fflftn^W Expert Typings Electric -Typewriter;" 20 2A3GA3H • lr10lt>|MM J3U=1 C^ THe"*!!^ ,fttt%v-<'£he teams met SfsTSt. years' experience. Ph.D. and Master 00 1 THeses_Mrs, JTemeles.. AAOAr8Q18—, 1190 SOUTH DIXIE HIGHWAY e DIRECTLY OPPOSITE WtQJNTVEftSrTY OF WIAMI Miami swamped ^Sj^tt ^; Jo ? prifi^WrS^fSivJS -fS l§Jsfi©3 9" se^ondHime they finislie'd number single -.separate .^garag^e roofrQ -Vyeli: LAI RE'S S;TENO.t Mimeo'^--Notary -i two ihltfie triangular meet"- wtth*K»^ jTile shower. Quiet neigh- Resum esr^^ep_oj:fs--TLqw Briefs!, The­ Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. : Member: Federal Reserve System 59 points, to the Hurricanes* 77.1 borhood, 5 minutes from campus. MO ses, A^anuscripts. "Electr'rc~'TyFring'. Rush St. Pete trailed with 19. 17-5864. SejYicft, HI ,1-5585 - 4B THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 Hustlers Lead Prexy Cup Race

With six sports uncompleted and half that many rapidly ap­ proaching termination, Hustlers have again amassed a command­ ing lead in the Intramural Presi­ dent's Cup race. With their near­ est competitor close to one hun­ dred points behind, the Hustlers look like odds-on favorites to cop top honors this semester. At the time, of publication, standings were as follows: —Phote by Jeff Joffe Cobra #17 Coming Around the Hair-pin Turn at Sebring After Losing a Wheel

TOP TEN 1. Hustlers 979 pts. 2. Phi S D 898 pts. Roaring Day At Sebring 3. Pi K A 827% pts. 4. Kappa Sig 748% pts. Sebring, Florida, is a small, facturer's trophy. i number one and two winners ir I 5. TEP 537 pts. quiet town just off Route 27 — Two Ford-Cobras, entered by world production standings. 6. SPE 527 pts. with the exception of one noise- Shelby American Corporation of This is the first time an Ameri-1 filled week in the spring when Venice, California, finished fourth can engine has lead in world?!* 7. Sigma Nu 493 pts. the internationally famous Se­ and fifth, but are actually the' competition, 8. Phi D Theta 476 pts. bring races take place. Pool Draws To A Close 9. Aquinas 398 pts. A seldom-used airport is con­ . . winner up for grabs 0. Sigma Chi 398 pts. verted into an intricately planned five and a half mile race track that includes a hair-pin turn, a l*S"-turn, and flat straight-aways If the Hustlers win the Prexy where speeds hit 170 mph or cup, it will mark the second time higher. the coveted cup leaves the hands of the Greeks. Sigma VD won the The winners receive more than Swim Meet Begins cup over ten years ago. If last cash prizes, for along with the year is any indication, the Hust­ $2000 to the overall winner of lers are in fbr a rough time. The the 12-hour race goes the cov­ The Men's Swimming Meet will begin Monday, April 13, Greeks got together, and began eted Alitalia trophy. for the preliminaries. The semi-finals will be held Wednesday, throwing matches to Kappa Sigma The half-day contest is perhaps April 15, and the finals Monday, April 20. All swimming will to keep the cup in the Greeks' the best-known part of the Se­ be held at the Biltmore Pool in Coral Gables. hands. bring races. Saturday, March 21, was the date of this year's en­ Each individual is limited to two events and a relay. Diving durance run, won by a Ferrari will be held Wednesday, April 15. driven by Mike Parkes of Eng­ land and Umberto Maglioli of 1. I've decided on the kind of job 2.1 hadn't thought of those Italy. I want when I graduate. specifically. What I had in Air Force, mind was a job where they give ORDER OF EVENTS 4:00 pjn Diving - complete Although Ferraris captured Knowing you, I'd guess you a lot of assistants. I think 3:00 pjn. 50 yds. free style 4:30 p.m. 100 yd. free style the first three places, they will it to be something modest- that would be nice. 3:30 p.m. 50 yds. back stroke 4:40 p.m 200 yd. relay Army Clash not be credited with points to­ like Secretary of State ward the international manu- or President of GE. Very nice. Maybe they 3:40 pjn 50 yds. breast FINALS stroke ( conventional). . The following is the schedule could start you off at MONDAY, APRIL 20, 1964 a hundred grand a year." 3:50 p.m .50 yds. butterfly 3:00 P.M. for Air Force and Army intra­ stroke murals for Thursday, April 16. Thought is the 4:00 pjn. „150 yds. relay 3:00 p.m 50 yd. free style The strong teams in the Air Force (back, breast, free) 3:15 pjn. 50 yd. back stroke are: Sq. 16, Sq. 24, and Sq. 28. seed of action— 4:15 p.m. 100 yds. free style 3:30 p.m 50 yd. breast The Army powerhouses are, Co. RALPH WALDO 4:30 p.m _200 yds. relay stroke (conventional) B and Co. C. EMERSON (4 men, 50 yds. each) 3:45 p.m 50 yd. butterfly stroke * * * WEDNESDAY 4:00 p.m 150 yd. medley Co. D vs. Sq. 16 APRIL 15, 1964 relay (back, breast, Sq. 22 vs. Co. B — \ SEMI-FINALS free) Sq. 24 vs. Sq. 28 4:15 p.m 100 yd. free style 3:00 pjn 50 yd. free style Sq. 14 vs. Co. C 3:15 pjn. 50 yd. back stroke 4:30 p.m 200 yd. relay 3:30 p.m 50 yd. breast Co. A has a bye. stroke (conventional) I? 3:40 p.m 50 yd. butterfly stroke 3:30 p.m 160 yd. medley JOIN THE CROWD AT THE 3. Well, I did run an extremely You think maybe I should lower relay successful Nickel-a-Pickle sale. my sights a little. Don't forget to demand I'm afraid to tell you COLLEGE INN plenty of stock options. what I think. Make Up Ball HOME OF THE FAMOUS "C. I. BURGER"

Games, May 4 BREAKFAST FROM \i „45± All rained-out Softball games LUNCH FROM I|y] J|ptL_l85i from March 17 will be replayed And it's not too early to start Monday, May 4. Postponed games DINNER FROM __I"Xi------85£ thinking about your job future. of March 25 will be played Wed­ nesday, May 6. If you like the idea of being in business for yourself, with no OPEN THROUGH THE SUMMER ceiling on income, then you Leaders in softball so far this should do some thinking about season are: Lambda Chi, Hust­ 6390 SAN AMARO (FRATERNITY ROW) MO 7-9167 the field of life insurance sales lers, Kappa Sigma, Tau Epsilon and sales management. Phi and Sigma Nu. Provident Mutual's training program begins white you're still a student. You get a head* 5. I'd be willing to settle for 6. You really have a way of SPECIALIZING IN CORVETTES start—-an opportunity to earn a vice-presidency. seeing through a problem. while you learn about this Look—why don't you see Booming with you has dynamic and growing business. if you canqualify for one taught me a lot. ROBSON CUSTOM AUTO REPAIR You'd be wise to investigate of Equitables executive further what we have to offer training programs. NEW MANAGEMENT you. Call or write for our free The work is interesting, booklet, "Interning for the Fu­ the pay is good. And if you prove you have the SHIPPING AVE. ture." Or stop by bur campus SAM ROBSON 3745 office. ability, you may very well end up with a title 443-5008 at Douglas and S. Dixie and a couple of assistants. DAN SOBUSH 1150 S.W. First St • SPEED TUNING • OVERHAULS For information about career opportunities at Equitable, see your • FUEL INECTION • HEADERS Phone FR 4-7621 Placement Officer, or write to Wjaham E. Blevins, Employment Manager. *> • SCATTER SHIELDS INSTALLATIONS The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States • PAINT AND BODY WORK PROVIDENT Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 © 1964

MUTUALS=fINSURANCE COMPANY OP PHILAOILPHIe LIFEA THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 5B Nominees Music To Hold Sway At UM ROFFLER BARBERS

For Oscars 3 MamlemrtmU siting for a real musical. jazz to classical, and from folk- like the special woodwind ar­ «t? You'll find just what you singing to band music. rangement of the old war tune 7 Barbara pt at the annual All-American "When Johnny Comes Marching Choral music will be pro­ In Movie Uairmtmllmg nCert, Sunday, April 12, at Home." Special faculty feature vided by a men's and a women's Room femtmrima kDi, in Beaumont Lecture Hall. will be George Roth's "Sonata chorus, as well as a mixed By BOB SMITH for Cello and Piano." Ass't. Entertainment Editir the t mm am a resented by Phi Mu Alpha, group. There will be a women's * * * . music fraternity, and Sigma barbershop quartet composed Academy Award nominees Al­ OtSffc jha lota, the music sorority, of members of Sigma Alpha This season's 26th Carillon bert Finney (Tom Jones) and s program will consist of a Iota. Also featured will be Concert will be presented on Rachel Roberts (This Sporting •iety of numbers by American folk-singer Betty Presley, Sunday, April 12, at 5 p.m. The Lire) lead a distinguished Eng­ program will include hymns es­ nposers. The keyword here is hootenanny artist currently lish cast in Alan Sillitoe's award pecially for "Good Shepherd Lriety." There will be well- working at The Flick. winning motion picture Saturday Sunday" and selections by Bee­ Night and Sunday Morning. jffn selections and original If you like instrumental music, thoven and Wagner. Dr. Ralph A staggering drama of a rebel­ ^positions of every type from Harris is carilloneur. you won't want to miss numbers lious young man who crams his 2824 PONCE DE LION BLVD * JtH Jeff* — defiance of a tough, unrelenting PHONE HI 6-9445 world mto every fast-living 10 IRELAND WITH LOVE boisterous week-end, the film co-stars Shirley Ann Field (The Entertainer) and was produced by the British wizard Tony Rich­ OUB FAMOUS rt ardson (Tom Jones). # A lice Stockdale—PoetessThe winne r of three awards DELM0NIC0 STEAK (Best Picture of the Year, Ra­ HKRVBm 0!9 A HiZZUMG PLATE J^ersin chel Roberts as Best Actress, lings. By KARSTEN J. STRUHL and Albert Finney as The Best ^ Ameri. Narrieaat staff Writer Newcomer) by the British BAKED POTATO * worW When Senator John F. Kennedy, then a candidate for the Academy, the film blends hu­ TOSSED SALAD mor, drama, and sex into an $135 i esidency of the United States, arrived at the home of the absolutely staggering motion with your favorite dressing e former ambassador to Ireland and Mrs. Grant Stockdale, picture. GARLIC ROLL ;y gave him the main bedroom. There, into the late hours Praised by all the major critics the night, before going to sleep, the Senator perused several as one of the best motion pictures anuscripts of poetry. In the morning, they were surprised to emerge from Britain in many hear him discussing those manuscripts at the breakfast table. a year, Albert Finney's perform* X ance as the angry young man is RESTAURANT Four years later, the Pres-^ almost flawless. 7«?7o/* Ant took a fancy to another Shaw remarks in the village Performances will be at 7:15 Post: pjn. and 9:30 pan. in Beaumont ? 190 SALZEDO STREET e CORAL GABLES lemby Alice Boyd Stockdale. Lecture Hall. Admission is 504. And on March 6, the first concerned a young man Alice Boyd Stockdale The dialogue is in English. copies of her book—To Ireland . . . bewitched by Ireland alking his collie through With Love — arrived with a xjenix Park, Ireland. The foreward by Senator Edward itimMiimmm M. Kennedy and back cover Education—"Discovering Modern iem ends with the lines: praise by such different kinds Poetry." The course meets once THE NEW WORD F0R% a week on Wednesday night at Would that, through the soft of Irishmen as Sean T. O'Kelly, the Trustee room of the Ashe mist falling, former President of Ireland, and Bing Crosby. In less than Building. You could hear a stranger e a week it had gone into second [in calling: printing. By March 18, it had hey give Stay. gone into third printing. To think The President suggested to date, it has sold well over PEGGERS Bee Boyd Stockdale that she 5,000 copies. slacks rite a book of poetry for Ire- Favorable Reviews nd. She was well equipped for .e task. Wife of the former Am- Favorable reviews' have come issador to Ireland, she had been from such sources as the New witched by the "Emerald Isle" York limes, the Miami Herald, jring her stay there from 1961 and the Miami News. The noted • 1962 and had previously re- Irish poet Padraic Colum has irded impressions in verse said of her: "Alice Boyd Stock- ther directly about or applicable dale has found a way of being gay, fresh and revealing in verse • the Irish theme in various ... A lively appealing image of ish publications and such Ireland between pilgrimage and merican magazines as Saturday homecoming." &r\ vening Post, Ladies' Home xirnal, and McCall's. Only a few days ago, Padraic. Colum's publisher, Liam Miller Attended UM Classes of the Dolmen Press in Dublin, She had already told Pro­ asked to publish her book of cessor Fred Shaw, whose cre­ poetry. He called her book "a ative writing class at the uni­ charming evocation of a very versity provided her a sounding personal view of Ireland." d lower ward and critical feedback, Mrs. Stockdale is currently en­ iat she wanted to write four gaged as co-discussion group * five essays about Ireland.' leader of a course sponsored by 1 Sow, it was to be poetry. the Foundation for Continuing

Students: For Successful Advancement > Plan your studies and reviews now

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Huf>ij»j^S^in^e/]EilitoXIX I The small brush is encircled

jean of deep, dark paint, and rnovecLlW tne holder to aijfarg'e,- OiH^Trftl^e^jcpnyas••w

jlii^eiKtne^'iLch^ekjr-.iOf tiai>/gigantic' hallowed'^&o'^aPGrAw'iJ cr^atibri' \>Y^cWim0fi^o^8cm^ .animoTn xabnue one iirgm -W-*aringloonei;i^oJdeii:i*aBarririg, kndttsiHmuscled, nfiarll*.fe>eardeaV I\^ikienbyoiigs,/onlyj to the'jartisisb in* nHirnselfe BTheisom a£*:rtai!rarv.- iigrants, ,Kar was - bornijm^Ha*! CCa, Hfe/H AtiJthe-dgei^frtthiBevj I hbt-oemtracted -polios permanently• i SlosingtheoTfise'iofibothijIe^s.oHi yd .(aonol jnoT) noabiB Nevertheless, Jie devleopedLa -^Sl '9fc^e3rr1a^qaTOjrji*l ^vfrf' an(feiH*rkj©4;i near i theo»cean shi%8 h^1W«s i*»trH ttodlA bns rfaiiiiH aril v,d (ismoawsK iirNatening skiefe cau*g^ij|rilWjjtuBl)ulefl-| se^w^^ossed^j^^^w^^jj^ ^f J hertgwns^fho^ltegga fgajfey .-and | pSe9fo£@hon| 49g ^jtvejo&MrflcT* ^ arl; lo 'jrrrori srij ^Q bevins ^galcjig bajinU ^ffi lo jprtsl I which has beeh open sinofil£)flq TaSffi^o io[6m 9rit HE yd beziffiH BJuod slsl Qdi. oini .sisrlT my \ a^lireW^s^aaSs *4kte$m& jve^frfe)ieVi^^Saffl9lrt SffirfTJftgo MJ wm saiHn^;iaftcF-,l^elia^1atf4o'¥pfi'i-J plfersf "h 8pJ>bT6cin*@S\iR™ff 'ufi*61fiJ his own suggestion?83*7'6" RECORD BAR . flI:V ~ta 9rJ lliw ssonarriioris? mS 9 MIRA S^fr 9rf|AJ kAam % MIRACLE JnornuaeS ni ,m.q 08:6 bns .m.c tS( [.^03 ai noiaaimbA .IfaH. 9*iuio9J CARRIES A COMPLETE A ffcuisnS? oi si s-jjuolsib $ Br%fW^;rfR6tBtl?n W^\^W^^pES FORrifWB«vina nne nignrrnare wdrfa * fJT .faflferh#TrTa4iTB*I Xff Peat mgboM 8nh9v6oai«KUIO^TERS^9CAiJS ban ^bannaH ^ HI i n9 r9Bm rfDue d 9aiBT STUART WHITMAN AHoccaf|"c YAPE°PLAY Er? ' ^ IB id-gin yabaonbgW no v lloa 97xf WkYtrWhto fellow j*jhis -> Y99W B tvd«H O .T naa8 ae nsmffsiil 1 iriaA 9fiJ 10 mo n*9biedi*I i9«rio ,N'SffiiIfii Wi man of Sjens^iv vdaoiD %niH bn ed to Si RECORD BAk cultur< tir tit tt Natural brutal beauty""TIlF> Ml &+6m\77 * ' * hiirfi otffi ono Treatment: w ^fllJI I TSVO Hsw hloa aeri ii ,aia peals to the artist. If you're t b9ja9gg^jA-.tfi9bia9'T*i% going to paint life, you've got •SSasMSs«iMi^^^M^ii^™^MMi«M to know what it is. I like to swdlVsA oldaiovs'i get a shack; make everything * it 0^PY McOOy/AtW that goes into *uVmyself. It gives me a feeling, of satisfaciton. eue. moti Fm j* always .ttjvlt^^&;-prove something^-what, I don't know. May be that I can make it where SUNSET some; others ctaSt^ QN U. :S.. 1 • S. MlAMh, iilsiLaJlllt'sv %f ] 9o 10 YJBW bnuot asd icAwrrSUNSET DRIVE "With what he .calls objective 9v ni gnl bna HsaT :e! )hNOW TOWJ TUfcS? 1 painting in a non-objective style, •/Igvil / rai.^J 3JJ3 bne anoi j&oilauq thjSTartirt;catches, the subtle qual- hi ity of motion in the brilliance of ebiij NOMINATED FOR 5 a tro^Msu colors—threatening- skies Incredible moH ACADEMT AWARQS s camg^^tJi^iiB^tUrbulent seas and .a'Ifj3sM bna J 3: tosse4 back. -*m§L Mr.Limpet JJmit^d Return ii/ tnpjagement or "They're sel^^o^^^^. Mi­ chelangelo saiq^aAnd somehow TECHWCOLOR" when speaking [to* mm, yo^fcari see boats and feel \he power af, gmbnuo^^fc | tAbivo-iq j the sea, because" this is a porttfaxLJ DON KNOTTS - CAROLE COOK • ANDREW DUGGAN -JACK WESTON t3badh99^Ba /j hns of the man and his paintings are Mother and Child extensions^ of himself. THE STORY OF GUIDO .bn SBERTFIIfEY "TOM JONES^HbSKiRlffiW 81%ld ms^'AftsT^ss**'* Exclusive:

%AYERS JnemssnovbA lu rkway theatre TONANP EEDING'S DRUGtweive i E L corcrf way at 12th TO ©nil ©felt NOW THRU TUES. Which Ve&my yk\L "wirf 4hV *64 AND "THE SEASONS MOST pennants, and who are the indi­ eairllJTUO 3J ; vidual players expected to star wm 923)1 ARGUED ABOUT FILM" this season? Read the insjdVan.al.- HO 23TOM Z'WMF* ysis b"rWk§ x^^^ TOeiflserves m wen y(9vil TMENT STOREytlsi o SPORT'a^uivEplL Limited Engagement c 3 um wort riinom y In theXiinfie Dift wsw 1% A special five, feature report on I 93 Id WoH . the pittmngexpfosion including; : Mondo SANDY KOUFAJfelAND re 2 pfoqe noij6« /f ; ifiboi UOM.JWSNER1... , oiJoGit s ylno 31203 JW isq eetim \ Cane Hear "MdRW?!?1" A PLOT AGAINST isoifoGiq is tfldeit Dinner t%m Nominated for best I 19 song of the year! b9lyj2 o\h SOnfld ss uoy "3a*»9 M '! *•0*" bs•""*i " h t3Sffia-aisriE J 9t9i3 ,nomis > (ii*i .loot 9_rij to Wou I hessdib THE THREAT TO M jld bsbst D^ bno >ID Mb IT ,02>$ CORAL WAY OUR OLYMPIC TEAM'' >vil 3 A ?9biuc - Df D U7. sb rl-o&B DRIVe-IN These-are only a few of the many, S.W. 24th ST.cS 70th AVE. in-depth profiles, first-hand t£k The most Important thing in tne gui­ iPECIAt porjs^ou'JI find in >fay SPORTV tar you buy ./utis sound! Ts it autheritibebnJ jq.rnEo 9Tiiovst luoy JA B* NOW SHOWING the magazine that keeps you tic? a^ETSCrfGUlTARS araiCTMore *. 91078 apace of all events on the college folk singers value them today fSrOi & aa*»**TOftWTTO5TON arid pro sports scene,With action- their perfect balanctfandgoodleoBe* ^jm packed photos and liver^nform- tftan any other guitars, u See your Jgp ativa£articles. Get music dealer for the authentic sound JM Of the timesi.. GRETSQH. Arable - f i "THE CARpy^'' ; May in Folkr Junribo and Classic fhddels. . And ask JrourcdeaTeriabout the ^ 3 Nominated 5 Academy Gretsch Folk Guitar Contest; ,You can Wms§ H3BB bno I win a 20th Century-Fox Records cbri- J Kn< « .irtfAwards — plus Favorite- magazine of the sports traction Write for Frge GRETSCH i^iiri^ri'ini rg J AkMGMi&A HOLDEN ^ stars and the sports-mindedl- Folk Qui tar Catalog. XrVB^Rfttf* • 02 avm Yii kO Gretsch Mfg. Co., 60 Brbadway, ' •S 2HUO "THE LION" NOW Jem* SAU&. Brooklyn 1 tf N. Y. Ibeol Hot Trtfc MiAMr HURRICANE, F»iDA¥ji Ak>RiL 10, 196U 38 UMSfiideutsCan Win s^p^^^ajijjp^p^pjpagp^pg^r: yies;A B^^SOMm BlllS fa/™t$k$g¥^ Cofiiefts famed Thin Man series starring *V BOB £UDNI AssC Eiitertainrntort.Mittr,, William Powell amr^feyirtta K Mnrricjne'f|tMriinment Editor MAS &hA3e *^r9*tste|)*s^ of the f-'W^^n-^eBeattyj!, Natalie.:..Wood, ;r £*act with Epic fe^*sir^ie^agSiB6^T rnVS*® ggF^Mf ATIP v lo riaq qu dxs [^Uza^etb,^ ^^tes Rockr Hudson, *n^yT7^^^^T^»n?TTffr^TWnr^??p!?r^?S35T1 and many others make up this je, friable stereo pnonogfapris^'an r ^ndle'ss'list W^ftarJBw^H rhile- 30AT2OH 3HT mO*A\ SUVn HI . ''.-.*• eeW»i»ibWfrnoabnB [ iisJn9D xJieisvmu iu* nr einsbute art* tied isvO .won* sW io&Thoo rfquate abiJit^CtO aiets atrfgmflagw ^Noyc^^aygt^IrejTitsMJ a M Fine Eor •hat tney $%M*f^jffifc ^ WerldSs^air -disappear edt -but--else "many -of I I^n^^^^-^f^c^Sj^nJQ^o^ge flrcWrrW&$ft ^4^i9^eter the great directors have had gfllljft !or rtfe§ ^^J^niv^sejj Be^t^fifage^t^iii ?€^$^r9A$i8P€inT theh* careers cut short because* 31£9q§93B b n > 2 very uccasio fhe f^t 85^ J&isl' fSMpT^ifiei ^^!^^ nt^^ij^^^nt— [At Concert they believed in producing], £ror tivery f^i1?!§ft&§&i K^WWJfe\fW$Ni?k, -a^<6lr?P5feo^Rftin?nfffrpson— nf^Lnfl h#^U^I^jyefT? J^WS* fWrr^ninsqo eno wen s gnibuto > The University *mB»n)i-vas4!<0f fcOfc QjHfi isji A StrudentifWew^^EheaVictoi's." Antonini, Amer] SMITH the man re-* Information on any^of'tnese9 £3ffft?St§ c*itrtfrjfe 'dmainexr'Dy $tVrjning ?&W Ky Fillmore, LilJiSi^?SWofy sponsible for many -.classicsv igntbf ibifS 9ia 29X192 29rvoM trl'gil I Hurricane Entertainment Editor at ext. 2581. 910 AH lim David Bennefejjajjid „T^^r|anjin4uring the early perjiq^in '••'-• • -"* " ••'•• •"•••'" '- •orfqos qot emoc bns) aioinu[ sgimve-g 10? nottexlliviO neeqaiu3 l&Ielodies by ymcent. Bach., * history. '10t B'9n'ff6iq al 9 \i\ yi(T •bi«"I!j iliivj 'JILMJJ I &ddS$ nest olmdbsoA .1 l 9S9llos"|9 isey sno rltlw (tsiorn C Fred McCall, nahdmaster, will . Such films as typBhtikft 'dm gniH ad* le .m JX 0S:8 iB SS IhqA I ons rf a v o VI fldH ^d bobfi9d share the opdium with assj£tan| fugitive Froja^r^ Cwfyk jfcang, eA1 I twme BadnauiinM Birjflorfeig *^4 -?l?Itfi Wfe*li teatffflUdotV Wth[ fbtf^ffind \o iTssv owt rftrw (eeiomorlqoajrtqoa qoqotl onios- bns) srtoinui eaeievS-gBTSVl 8 haar, and -4uguK Suva, a Aenioc Bogart'a ^Maltese FalU9», ^oJ>in- rtgirt ni owt bns"|einsq2 oa»Ho9a»HoD fcwtosvts e 9S9II03 Studffl)^ rjccsi4Jct^r. ;BilJv~ Rpf^eU san's.'/LHfle Caesl^fC^gn^y'^ wrfl $ Will be featured as trumpet solo­ Public Enemy One -^aa**jd^*gttblic Mi i w ! Eneflay itfe*4riW "tlie mn^iis7l>in- [ The public invitecr* to attend >^ner Alt Eight within all-stjpr cast the prograat ^ifftn Wrtsaihp IP inrthiffit^.^fhig Bararympregif Jeafi Gin© Bachauer,. ,the jTiotedioGi-'.eek; 'piajFasJoiiqaliolb^ndihe [featured 1 : admission cfial^e : -HarT ow, Wallace' Beery, ills} \ii jest soloist with the University of Miami 3y$i^ftmy *©rcr&£stra, abie^^e)^^tco^(|upi^ngts3i^he en^enibJ.eJse.e**ght£>o p.^ir o£ season pcerts ne^tzS^d^,oAprfin.9fiJ «aifnMi£atti09&acr^ and HTUOZ (ZU1MA3 10 -mS xna' londay, AptilvT-3c at DaderCouitfy -AucUtoriummo^nl vwm id* MO^ 7-3-112 miH ba Mme. Bachauer, who last appeared wth the,TJM Orchestra in YAWH .891192 9 68, fi-fll* fWfbrm 'Johannes 'Brahms?" dramatic "add rhbSifing- *&%ano a^Toodoal rigid BTiH I ni blari jmcerto No. 2 in B-flat Major." .filoiqnon) hetne ng0» AIR I tU. b9l3OT9$fli ibute bad- lo 9 j "0303 SlornlM ,i2S3irtO • .*iu w)b«W .3 «t (nstiBlMsnon CONDITIONING [* .aai|wl 88BS The major orchestral work oh the program will be Jean Sibelius' INSTALLATION EssiflbSi Symphony No. 1." Opening the concert will be a symphonic version AND REPAIRS UM&IV1 f George Gershwin's "An American in Paris." .Tvt8nb:eoT the c^miys'TurT^1^?TT^r^ 'stjP •^favorite of European royalty, Mme. Bachauer

  • *Worwa*y*s' m*^ 6laf, "^ dynamic and forceful personality anjunltmited financial op­ rincessj\largaret, Princesses Birgitte and Desiree of Sweden, portunity in te^jij&salesuhrough its fprrrijal training?program. s well as the Greek monarchs, Queen Frederica and the late ang Paul. ^ Yic^fTBKGC^j na|ive^iof ?A&ems» she g^O^he'r first recital at the ageof eight. F fffllfwhy not come in and discuss your future with us. laferi^studied!Mri':liaris5with Alfre.d Cortot. Her first big bre& ^f^EL'^LIG^llNT, BALANCE ' ^ re when she performed the Grieg Piano Qdncerto at LongoSs TEE^PIG and BRAKES ert iHall under the well-known »epnd"L|ctor* •J$.$x! Sherman/^ Personnel Department — lOth^Ipor ickdts, prieen jrorn2$fi/S td/p$4T5t), are stiB available for ie f83 South Miami -UNITED MERCHANTS ANO MANUFAcfuRI [daj| (Apr. 12) performance %t Miami Beach Auditorium. I^ne '14CJ7 Brf ad* s^ at jftth Street nday^e>eninfi-.H»egfo£man£es have been sold out through "SeaBohi Hl""9&\Yy I New SWk drty cription. jf*****"™0"**!

    ///

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    use i-r^fco?— \j\. aa$ (TheyH probably let if qo "fo ttidf heads)

    But then, wouldn't any man? If he ntfdenly found all those starry-eyed gals looking at hi$? j So, if you think you can handle It, go ahead U$$ SHORT CUT! Uftitlm^lbfc JMiiTOe^^Wetft^briJ^K caty^iy^rit^ 3-Day Weekend, Fri., 5 PM from $59 give it more body, more life. Keep it 4-Day, Mondays, 5 PM from $64 - SAILS from downtown Miami (pier 3) xUDde/^controrv^cr^ake• :yoy t^ok FARE TKCiebES ship tiyour hotel, all meals plus three snacktlmes dally, fins ^watWfy'i>

    Miami I. Fla.; Pier 3. P.O. BOX 882 • FR 3-7501 FLORIDA POWER & New York 4. N.Y.: 17 Battery PI.* BO 9-0460 Chi'cago3.lH.;37S.WabashAve.*CE 6-7566 LIGHT COMPANY 5WV-K3\ •^^virv Helping Build Florida uoa TA QAOS asia 8B THE MIAMI HURRICANE, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 'Hostage9 Held At Ring An English soldier is kidnapped and held hostage by the Irish Republican Army in retaliation for the imprisonment of an Irish patriot. Foreign The Hostage, beginning Sunday, April 12 at the Ring Theatre, tells, this story which was written by the late Brendan Behan and Study is for it directed by Robert Lowery. In order to keep the atmosphere of the play, Lowery has Language Majors u retained the Irish and Cockney dialects. He has the cast speaking with Irish brogues both on and off stage since rehearsals began. 0nly.JL

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    I \Be'd WHAT? ....the NEW booths and /\ I GREAT FOOD at- 0 L HUi" -rRRiCANE BIRD ROAD AT DOUGLAS ROAD k.