the miami hurricane - digital collections - university of miami

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1100 to graduate next Employment major vonvern B\ tIMli C till, \ Murrecana Stall Writ., leave the I nivi r ill with a variety of hee>, and feeiin. alma mater Seniors, gradual ing or not, who about their tin Iheae seniors, ean seek guidance at ihe office of Career Planning and Placement, under tl i »r T h o m a s She i Career Planning and I'laiemeni is in the business of placing I'M grad nates in job*. A Stllde llllee ihe Office ni •. areei PI.. Placement and picks up a ei. nals packet consisting of w o r k his lory forms, personal resume forms ;md recommendation forma which upon e ompletion, will m ment tile lp,- quasi bv the student, the i r Planning and Plate send this information out to busi- firms, industries, gradua: professional M I iverament Through trt, non, 'h Monda agetie ies to UM for recruitinesi pur- >, rile its repre'se least 550 positions About 175 n.i tional agencies < onie for mown pus interviews throughout (hi year e \ eluding August In addition to the interviews .ind the mailing of resumes, the Office of Career Planning and Placement has a career library which consists nl thousands of current college bul- letins, applications, annual n i from businesses .ind important pertinent I laird publu a tions At the end ol ter the di vision ol student Affair! and the Offue e,| ( areef Planning .mil Placement will he condu> I vey of the spring 1 »78 graduate- which will concerns itsell with the jobs and/or further educational pur- suits of the graduates as w, their general feelings about the versity. The results of this survev will be used lo compile statist| to how many UM graduates actual Iv go on to professional and gt ate schools. "There are different supply ami demand situations that exist for dif- ferent majors, but if the studeni wants to search deeply enoug! make a few geographical come sions then there are ample jobs to be found in every area," She said "The job market has opened up in the past two to three year*. This vear alone, there was a SO pet cent increase in the number of recruiters Of) campus, showing thai the mat eepening for the e olli Sheeder said Mvutl ,11 I'Otlllllfs sltt'tt r ht l s ihropologisl. author am- vv ill give the address at , ment exercises on Sunflav, Ml lor approximated 1 500 canon for degrees !10(l from ihe I'ni- '- e• rsit- iindeigradii.ni and schools, and EJQ from the Graduate School I he ceremonies vv ill M p.m in the south hall of the M i Beach Convention (enter UM President Henry King ford will award the degrees, im hid- ing four honorarv degrees In Mead will receive Uv >l Hu mam I liters as vv ill Mrs | , . IM Sihilanoi Hills, thi woman presideni of the American Press Association publisher ol El Mundn. \ a/a i ai < )nii .nd Rabbi Rob. the heneel Symp liam Ri p , will gradi this Mav and June Margaifl i< /. I V t|(t/e The Miami Hurricane \ ol. .">:>. No. r>2 Friday, \ ( nil 2li. I«»7; I'lion,-: J.*; I I III! i* M art students receive a nurds I menu al I he l niv >': totalin j $1 250 to 8 ;u.ie in- and of 500 DOUndS Ol I i.e. lee nni' -.indent at tin opt ning ol the- annual studt nt in Wonda; | awate: thi $200 Bo Bern paintings considered outstanding work eet ,e hrsl vear gradual- deni, "Topograph I" and in untitled wort- Zinni, the (100 Wil liam ti oppt I '.ward lor an untitled painting Virginia Bradley, the $loi> Irving Rabirtowitz \>\ard fen a painting 'What imbers 1100 • nam Rattnet Award im two tings, "An Overdose ol Dutch age •" and "Retrospet .tion eel i eav Eleven . rrniallr Wougnum. Ihe $50 (lav ton Charles Award [or a fiber pine, "Not Death A < hangi eei Worlds"; Kevin Decker, the 150 William Oberman Award fin I painting, "House Painting ', and Michael Paul Vascellarc $50 John Klinkerherg Award I'" his painting 'lebruarv 1878 I .ini'iii' Si hei t ret eived the $200 1'llh MFA Studeni Award .mil \ t Department Award for ,m untitled painting; Helen* Grubar won tht $50 Bernard Sacks Award lor Ivvei pieces of sculpture, "Plomberie sans 1 imites" and "Ondulapioo"; John iiluni Award foi graph I'- II de" : illian Beet* standing Still Life; v\ i en | ward in nn, ' Miami 11 an. Stat Itidilli Russell won marofl won the $50 •i Im " Rielliii in Dougl Varonj -•- o Hells Art Supplv fo I rail, and eudv ] | Mam for Ihr• - ,mil I i • and an area telii.e < eeloiailee, and i ii-- -.en ed patntini at Broward Corrtmunit uried SB V blasts dorm search procedures Bv MAKSHAI I STEINGOLD Edtlor B-23 Hon11 iiiititt "I.aura \.ve" Komid at lowc Vi I MIIMMIIH ... MF i exhibition l>\ graduate student It. Mils St en t'ullt UM students involved in "lake*' incident Sextet.! ta tha Hurrec.ee. Three men were shghtlv injured on campus Saturday in two related confrontations Lee Haack and James Roth were headed for religious services at the Hillel Foundation when UM football players Jody Myers. Mark Wittort. and Jim Pokorney reportedly threw rocks and a bottle at them. Haack was then tossed into 1 ake' Osceola after scuffling with the three athletes Later, as Haack, Roth, and lout companions from Hillel were cross- ing the campus to the security ol fice, the group met the athletes again. This second fracas resulted in the injuries None of tho athletes were injured Manv of the details of the stories of the two group* conflict But <h p football players admitted throwing objects at Haack. 22, a helpei if Chabad House, and Roth a UM stu- dent who lives on campus "I saw these guvs." said Pokor- ney "one of them dressed a little funny. 1 said in a foreign accent. 'Hey man where are you going. I do that all (he time, just kidding around. The guy told me that I had a speech impedimeni and stalled walking away " Myers said that Roth then nude an obscene gesture at the athh "We started trotting after tl • recalled Pokoruiv. 'nisi to scare them a little, hoping that thev would run awav We also l brew lit Me 'pebbles al Ihem hut none ol Ihem even came close \"< ! ,h a' bottle wasn'l even t k ve/* It isn't known which ot the three players threw the bottle The three football players, all frwlSmen, maintain that thev were provoked bv Haack's taunts in the lake dumping incident and b> the group of Haack's companions in the second free-for-all 20 minutes later. Ira Michaels, a si nior medical student, disagrees He was accom- panying Haack across campus to make a report to security when the second fight broke out "Lee (Haack) weighs 118 pounds I am no more than 145." said Mi- chaels. "These guys are I'M football players, and, beiieve me. I don t think I ee is suicidal and neither am I " Senior law student Jerry Kolish asked for an apology from the ath- letes. When the two groups met again in an apartment area parking lot. Myers threw punches at the two graduate students and a mi in' followed. Nedra McNamara of the UM News Bureau reported that two of the Jewish students have filed for- ma! complaints with the campus Public Safety Department. Haack and Kolish charged the athletes with assault, said McNama- ra. The charges are to be reviewed by an investigative panel of the school administration. A decision on whether disciplinary action will be taken against Myers. Wittorf, and Pokorney could come today. According to the„ police report, said McNamara. the football plav- re-s veiled abusive lanj Haack as he walked near the lake that' "You're a f — king fag are you going dress one of the athletes allegedlv ed. said McNamara Haack was v t and Jewish religious garments i the time he was thrown lata the lake The football players mail there wert no religious overtones in • I he w hole thing sounds t id lous to me," sani I M football I em Sahan "Il seems that 111 hai happened pLi»i'i battles The next 20 years are hers Bv C1NDV VOVA and .MAN KRATISH Murrecana Staff Wrettri Accounting professor Wilhelmina Zukowska has had a very colorful career over the past 41 years. But when the first summer session con- cludes at the end of June, so will much of her career. Zukowska graduated from UM magna cum laude with a B.B.A in 19f>7. However. 20 years prior to getting her degree, she worked la advertising, the accounting end of manufacturing, and public ae count- ing 1 sort ol did things baik\> . she said, referring to her return to school afier so manv vears in the business world. During her junior vear. /ukows- ka sat for the CPA exam, conse- quently passing it and becoming e ortified two years before her grad- uation. After graduation, Zukowska had an opportunity to teach at the Uni- versity, and accepted it. I had only planned to teach for a lemester or two." she said. "Then I hought. "Well another semester I think you students must have ured me into staying " Apparently so Zukowska is now .ompleting her 21st and final year as a faculty member "I think the next 20 vears" are nine." she said. LJ She plans to spend her new found" time having the free-dom to do things that interest her without keeping an eye on the clock. "I want the type of change that 1 can't have with the restrictions of a full-time job," she said. During Zukowska's professional career she never viewed si-\ dis- crimination as a problem She noted, however, that when she served or, the Advisory Com- mittee for Academic Affairs, salary discrimination was present on this campus. She went on to say that some corrections had been made as a result of the committee's findings "Women today are not just'fight- ing for salaries." she said "They're fighting to be recognized for their abilities as well " She said that, for her. working m public accounting got her beyond the man-woman conflict "In a professional field vou have to work at being a professional and keep up with changes," she said. "YOUJust have lo know youi ttufl No student of Zukowska's. past or present. ian argue thai tin does, indeed, "know her stuff " Still, she insists thai sometimes she has learned more from students than they have learned from h Zukowska has tried hard to moti- vate her students: however, she summarizes her limitations in that area by quoting a Chinese proverb: "What a teai he the dee When discussing studt i over the years. Zukuw-.ka i il isos as a low point for the i ni tv ht Vietnam Wt oa i a m p u s as an i a apt ' she said "The unhappy part was the ug that developed " Since the late fOl -!;• \ouldn t have asked for lasses." Zukowska feels (hat the snii student is studying is not tant as his learning how to be unfamiliar situation and survive It is widely apparent thai School of Business kowska. Larlier in the month, at a Gamma Sigma Business Honorary installation. Zukowska was pre- sented with an apprei i.iUein award for her years of serv During the presentatuen. dean ie[ the Business School. Edward rehashed his attempi to tall /llkott sis,I into ' • lag more time to spi nd with hvt family and friends with bright In dents "I Ihink oi v our univers challenges tha' | in ordei full JrOt' ided. , A . ompli peil- •i.in entry i called Mmi. nt Bai Ass.- 'e 1971, outlined Right and Re of human and I teed under the < Onstituti ham nel Dean's (Wfii ' ' lined in ihe "Studi nl Rigi •liihlii"'. 1! .•- itho 2 rtie u during a fi lot ' "Authorizat, D I7(AX2)) 1 h i •ed during subs, ' i 1 he | of drug-related p.. Italia, v I'houl b a s i s fee; i). full-Mown 6 The prov is . searih warrant It nable doubt standard m a student major di ing (Section A.(2M! In a letter ti i ailed upon th. Dean to "immed sis! these until such time 'Rights and R dent handbook . vised to refiei' and just appm ation i* siened I

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1100 to graduate next Employment

major vonvern B\ t I M l i C t i l l , \

Murrecana Stall W r i t . ,

leave the I nivi r ill with a var ie ty of hee>, and fee i in . a lma m a t e r

Sen io r s , g r a d u a l ing or not, w h o abou t their tin

Iheae sen io r s , ean seek gu idance at ihe office of Ca ree r P lann ing and P l a c e m e n t , u n d e r tl i »r T h o m a s She i

C a r e e r P l ann ing and I ' l a i emen i is in t h e bus iness of p lac ing I 'M grad n a t e s in job*.

A Stllde llllee ihe Office ni •. areei P I . . P l a c e m e n t and p icks up a e i . n a l s packet cons i s t ing of w o r k his l o ry forms , pe rsona l resume forms ;md r e c o m m e n d a t i o n forma wh ich u p o n e omple t ion , wi l l m

ment tile l p , -quasi bv t h e s t uden t , the

i r P l a n n i n g and Plate send this i n f o r m a t i o n out t o busi-

f i rms, i ndus t r i e s , g r a d u a : profess ional M I i v e r a m e n t

T h r o u g h trt, non , 'h M o n d a agetie ies

to UM for r e c r u i t i n e s i pur->, rile i t s repre'se

least 550 pos i t ions About 175 n.i t ional a g e n c i e s < onie for m o w n p u s i n t e r v i e w s t h r o u g h o u t (hi y e a r e \ e lud ing A u g u s t

In add i t i on to the i n t e r v i e w s .ind t h e ma i l ing of r e s u m e s , the Of f i ce of C a r e e r P l a n n i n g a n d P l a c e m e n t h a s a c a r e e r l ib ra ry w h i c h c o n s i s t s nl t h o u s a n d s of c u r r e n t co l l ege bul­le t ins , a p p l i c a t i o n s , a n n u a l n i f rom bus ines se s .ind i m p o r t a n t p e r t i n e n t I l a i rd p u b l u a t i ons

At the end ol ter the di vision ol student A f f a i r ! and the O f f u e e,| ( areef Planning .mil

P l a c e m e n t wil l he condu> I vey of the s p r i n g 1 » 7 8 g r a d u a t e -w h i c h wil l c o n c e r n s i tsell w i t h t h e jobs a n d / o r f u r t h e r e d u c a t i o n a l pu r ­su i t s of the g r a d u a t e s as w, the i r g e n e r a l f ee l ings abou t the ve r s i t y . The r e s u l t s of th i s survev wil l be used lo c o m p i l e s t a t i s t | to how m a n y UM g r a d u a t e s ac tua l Iv go on to p r o f e s s i o n a l and gt a t e s c h o o l s .

" T h e r e a r e d i f f e r en t supply ami d e m a n d s i t u a t i o n s t ha t exis t for dif­f e ren t ma jo r s , but if the s tuden i w a n t s t o s e a r c h d e e p l y e n o u g ! m a k e a f ew g e o g r a p h i c a l c o m e s ions then t h e r e a r e a m p l e jobs to be f o u n d in e v e r y a r e a , " She said

" T h e job m a r k e t h a s o p e n e d up in t h e past t w o to t h r e e year*. This v e a r a lone , t h e r e w a s a SO pet cent i n c r e a s e in t h e n u m b e r of r e c r u i t e r s Of) c a m p u s , s h o w i n g tha i t h e mat

eepening for the e olli S h e e d e r sa id

Mvutl

,11 I'Otlllllfs sltt'tt r ht l s

i h r o p o l o g i s l . a u t h o r am-vv ill g ive the a d d r e s s at , men t e x e r c i s e s on Sunflav, Ml lor a p p r o x i m a t e d 1 500 c a n o n for d e g r e e s !10(l f rom ihe I 'ni-'- e• rsit- i i n d e i g r a d i i . n i

a n d schools , and EJQ from t h e G r a d u a t e School

I he c e r e m o n i e s vv ill M p .m in t h e south hall of t h e M i Beach Convent ion ( e n t e r

UM Pres iden t H e n r y King ford w i l l a w a r d t h e d e g r e e s , im hid­ing four h o n o r a r v d e g r e e s In Mead wi l l rece ive Uv >l Hu m a m I l i t e r s as vv ill M r s | , .

IM S i h i l a n o i Hills , thi w o m a n p re s iden i of the Amer i can Press Assoc ia t ion pub l i she r ol El M u n d n .

\ a/a

i ai < )n i i

.nd Rabbi Rob.

the heneel S y m p liam Ri p ,

will gradi th is Mav and June M a r g a i f l M « i<

/ . I V t | ( t / e

The Miami Hurricane \ ol . .">:>. No. r>2 F r i d a y , \ ( n i l 2li. I«»7; I'lion,-: J.*; I I I I I !

i* M art students receive a nurds

I menu al I he l niv >': total in j

$1 250 to 8 ;u.ie in- and of 500 DOUndS Ol I i.e. lee nni ' -.indent

at tin opt n ing ol the- annua l studt nt

in Wonda; |

awate: thi $200 Bo Bern • p a i n t i n g s c o n s i d e r e d o u t s t a n d i n g w o r k eet ,e h r s l vea r g r adua l -d e n i , " T o p o g r a p h I" and i n unt i t led wort- Z inn i , the ( 1 0 0 Wil liam ti oppt I ' .ward lor an un t i t l ed pa in t i ng Virgin ia Brad ley , t h e $loi> I rv ing Rab i r towi tz \ > \ a r d fen a pa in t i ng ' W h a t imbe r s

1100 • nam Ra t tne t A w a r d im t w o t ings , " A n O v e r d o s e ol Dutch age •" and " R e t r o s p e t . t ion eel

i eav Eleven . r rn ia l l r W o u g n u m . Ihe $50 ( l a v ton C h a r l e s A w a r d [or a fiber p i n e , "Not D e a t h — A < hang i eei W o r l d s " ; Kev in D e c k e r , the 150 Wi l l i am O b e r m a n A w a r d f in I pa in t ing , "House Paint ing ', and Michae l Paul Vascellarc $ 5 0 J o h n K l i n k e r h e r g A w a r d I ' " his p a i n t i n g ' l e b r u a r v 1878

I . ini ' i i i ' Si hei t ret e ived the $200 1'llh MFA S t u d e n i A w a r d .mil \ t D e p a r t m e n t A w a r d for ,m un t i t l ed p a i n t i n g ; He len* G r u b a r w o n tht $50 B e r n a r d S a c k s A w a r d lor Ivvei p i e c e s of s c u l p t u r e , " P l o m b e r i e sans 1 i m i t e s " a n d " O n d u l a p i o o " ; John

iiluni A w a r d foi g r a p h I ' - II de" :

illian Beet* s t a n d i n g Still Life; v\ i en | w a r d

in nn , ' Miami 11 an. Stat I t id i l l i Russell won

maro f l won the $50 •i Im " Rielliii in Dougl

V a r o n j -•- o H e l l s Art Supplv fo I r a i l , and eudv ] |

M a m

for Ihr• -, m i l I i • and an

a r ea telii.e < eeloiailee, and i i i - -

-.en ed p a t n t i n i at B r o w a r d Corr tmuni t u r i e d

SB V blasts dorm search procedures

Bv M A K S H A I I S T E I N G O L D Edtlor

B - 2 3 H o n 1 1 i i i i t i t t " I . a u r a \.ve" K o m i d a t l o w c Vi I M I I M M I I H

. . . MF i exhibition l>\ graduate student It. Mils St en t'ullt

UM students involved in "lake*' incident Sextet.! ta tha Hurrec.ee.

T h r e e men w e r e shght lv injured on c a m p u s S a t u r d a y in t w o re la ted c o n f r o n t a t i o n s

Lee H a a c k and J a m e s Roth w e r e h e a d e d for re l ig ious s e rv i ce s at the Hillel Founda t ion w h e n UM footbal l p l a y e r s Jody M y e r s . M a r k W i t t o r t . a n d J i m P o k o r n e y r e p o r t e d l y t h r e w r o c k s and a bot t le a t t h e m .

H a a c k w a s then tossed in to 1 ake' Osceo l a a f t e r scuff l ing w i t h the t h r e e a t h l e t e s

L a t e r , a s Haack , Roth , and lout c o m p a n i o n s f rom Hillel w e r e cross­ing t h e c a m p u s to the secur i ty ol fice, the g r o u p met the a t h l e t e s a g a i n . This second fracas resu l ted in t h e injuries None of tho a t h l e t e s w e r e injured

M a n v of the de ta i l s of the s tor ies of t h e t w o g r o u p * conflict But <hp

footba l l p l a y e r s a d m i t t e d t h r o w i n g o b j e c t s at Haack . 22, a helpei if C h a b a d House , and Roth a UM stu­d e n t w h o lives on c a m p u s

"I s a w these g u v s . " said Pokor­n e y " o n e of t h e m d res sed a l i t t le f u n n y . 1 said in a foreign accen t . ' H e y man w h e r e a r e you go ing . I d o t h a t all (he t ime , just k idd ing a r o u n d . T h e guy told me that I had a s p e e c h imped imen i and s t a l l ed w a l k i n g a w a y "

M y e r s said that Roth then n u d e a n o b s c e n e ges tu re at the a t h h

" W e s t a r t ed t ro t t ing after tl • r eca l l ed P o k o r u i v . ' n i s i to scare t h e m a l i t t le , hoping that thev w o u l d run a w a v W e also l b r e w lit Me 'pebbles al Ihem hut none ol I h e m even came close \"< ! , h a ' bo t t l e w a s n ' l even t k

ve/* It isn't k n o w n w h i c h ot the three

p l a y e r s t h r e w the bo t t le T h e t h r e e football p layers , all

f rwlSmen , ma in ta in t h a t thev w e r e p r o v o k e d bv H a a c k ' s t a u n t s in the l a k e d u m p i n g inc ident and b> the g r o u p of H a a c k ' s c o m p a n i o n s in the second free-for-al l 20 m i n u t e s la ter .

I r a Michae ls , a si nior medical s t u d e n t , d i s a g r e e s He w a s accom­p a n y i n g H a a c k a c r o s s c a m p u s to m a k e a r e p o r t to secur i ty w h e n the second fight b r o k e out

" L e e ( H a a c k ) w e i g h s 118 pounds I a m no m o r e than 145." said Mi­c h a e l s . " T h e s e g u y s a r e I 'M football p l a y e r s , a n d , bei ieve m e . I don t

t h i n k I ee is suicidal and n e i t h e r a m I "

Sen io r l a w s t u d e n t J e r r y Kol ish a s k e d for a n apo logy f rom the a t h ­l e t e s . W h e n t h e t w o g r o u p s m e t a g a i n in an a p a r t m e n t a r e a p a r k i n g lot . M y e r s t h r e w p u n c h e s a t t h e t w o g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s a n d a m i i n ' f o l l o w e d .

N e d r a M c N a m a r a of the UM N e w s Bureau r e p o r t e d tha t t w o of t h e J e w i s h s t u d e n t s h a v e filed for­

m a ! c o m p l a i n t s w i t h the c a m p u s P u b l i c Sa fe ty D e p a r t m e n t .

H a a c k a n d Kol i sh c h a r g e d t h e a t h l e t e s w i t h a s s a u l t , sa id M c N a m a ­ra . T h e c h a r g e s a r e to be r e v i e w e d b y a n i n v e s t i g a t i v e pane l of t h e schoo l a d m i n i s t r a t i o n . A decis ion on w h e t h e r d i s c i p l i n a r y ac t ion wi l l be t a k e n aga ins t M y e r s . Wi t to r f , and P o k o r n e y could c o m e t o d a y .

A c c o r d i n g to t he„ pol ice r e p o r t , said M c N a m a r a . t h e footbal l p lav-

re-s ve i l ed a b u s i v e lanj Haack as h e w a l k e d n e a r t h e lake

t h a t ' " Y o u ' r e a f — k i n g fag

a r e you go ing d r e s s o n e of t h e a t h l e t e s al legedlv ed . said M c N a m a r a

H a a c k w a s v t a n d J e w i s h re l ig ious g a r m e n t s i t h e t i m e h e w a s t h r o w n l a t a the l ake

T h e footbal l p l a y e r s mail t h e r e w e r t no re l ig ious o v e r t o n e s in

• I he w hole th ing sounds t id lous to m e , " sani I M football I em Sahan "Il s e e m s that 111

hai happened

pLi»i'i ba t t l e s

The next 20 years are hers Bv C1NDV V O V A and . M A N

K R A T I S H Murrecana Staff W r e t t r i

A c c o u n t i n g p rofessor W i l h e l m i n a Z u k o w s k a h a s had a v e r y color fu l c a r e e r o v e r t h e past 41 y e a r s . But w h e n t h e f i r s t s u m m e r sess ion con­c l u d e s a t t h e end of J u n e , so wi l l m u c h of he r c a r e e r .

Z u k o w s k a g r a d u a t e d f rom UM m a g n a c u m laude w i t h a B.B.A in 19f>7. H o w e v e r . 20 y e a r s p r i o r to ge t t i ng he r d e g r e e , she w o r k e d la a d v e r t i s i n g , t h e a c c o u n t i n g e n d of m a n u f a c t u r i n g , and public ae c o u n t ­ing

1 sort ol did t h i n g s baik\> . she said, r e f e r r i ng t o he r r e t u r n to school a f ie r so manv v e a r s in t h e bus iness w o r l d .

D u r i n g h e r jun io r v e a r . / u k o w s ­ka sat for the CPA e x a m , c o n s e ­q u e n t l y pas s ing it a n d b e c o m i n g e ortif ied t w o y e a r s be fo re he r g r a d ­ua t ion .

After g r a d u a t i o n , Z u k o w s k a had an o p p o r t u n i t y to t e a c h at the Uni­ve r s i t y , a n d a c c e p t e d i t .

I had o n l y p l a n n e d to teach for a lemester o r t w o . " she said. " T h e n I hough t . "Well a n o t h e r s e m e s t e r

I th ink y o u s t u d e n t s must h a v e ured me i n to s t ay ing "

Appa ren t ly so Z u k o w s k a is n o w .omple t i ng he r 21st a n d final y e a r as a faculty m e m b e r

"I th ink t h e n e x t 20 vears" a r e n i n e . " she said.

LJ S h e p lans to s p e n d her new

f o u n d " t i m e h a v i n g t h e free-dom to d o t h i n g s tha t i n t e r e s t h e r w i t h o u t k e e p i n g a n e y e on t h e c lock .

"I w a n t t h e t y p e of c h a n g e that 1 can ' t h a v e w i t h t h e r e s t r i c t i o n s of a fu l l - t ime j o b , " s h e sa id .

D u r i n g Z u k o w s k a ' s p rofess iona l c a r e e r s h e n e v e r v i e w e d si-\ d i s ­c r i m i n a t i o n a s a p r o b l e m

S h e n o t e d , h o w e v e r , that w h e n s h e s e r v e d or, t h e A d v i s o r y C o m ­m i t t e e for A c a d e m i c Affai rs , s a l a ry d i s c r i m i n a t i o n w a s p r e s e n t on th i s c a m p u s . S h e w e n t o n t o s a y t h a t s o m e c o r r e c t i o n s h a d been m a d e a s a r e s u l t of t h e c o m m i t t e e ' s f ind ings

" W o m e n t o d a y a r e no t j u s t ' f i gh t -ing for s a l a r i e s . " s h e said " T h e y ' r e f i gh t ing t o be r e c o g n i z e d for t h e i r ab i l i t i e s a s wel l "

S h e said t h a t , for he r . w o r k i n g m pub l i c a c c o u n t i n g got h e r b e y o n d t h e m a n - w o m a n confl ic t

" I n a p r o f e s s i o n a l field vou have t o w o r k a t b e i n g a p ro fe s s iona l and k e e p u p w i t h c h a n g e s , " she said.

"YOUJust h a v e lo know youi t tu f l N o s t u d e n t of Z u k o w s k a ' s . past

or p r e s e n t . i a n a r g u e thai tin d o e s , i n d e e d , "know her stuff "

Sti l l , s h e ins is t s thai s o m e t i m e s she h a s l e a r n e d m o r e from s t u d e n t s t h a n t h e y h a v e l ea rned from h

Z u k o w s k a has t r i ed ha rd to mot i ­v a t e h e r s t u d e n t s : h o w e v e r , she s u m m a r i z e s her l i m i t a t i o n s in t ha t a r e a by q u o t i n g a Chinese p r o v e r b : " W h a t a tea i he t h e dee

W h e n d i s cus s ing studt i o v e r t h e y e a r s . Zukuw- .ka i il isos as a l o w point for the i ni tv

h t V i e t n a m Wt oa i a m p u s as an i a apt ' she said " T h e u n h a p p y part w a s the ug tha t d e v e l o p e d "

S ince t h e late fOl -!;• \ o u l d n t have a s k e d for

• l a s s e s . " Z u k o w s k a feels (hat the snii

s tuden t is s t u d y i n g is not t a n t a s his l e a r n i n g how to be u n f a m i l i a r s i t ua t i on and s u r v i v e

It is w i d e l y a p p a r e n t thai School of Bus iness k o w s k a .

La r l i e r in the m o n t h , at a G a m m a S i g m a Bus ines s H o n o r a r y i n s t a l l a t i o n . Z u k o w s k a w a s pre­s e n t e d w i t h an a p p r e i i.iUein a w a r d for he r y e a r s of serv

D u r i n g t h e p r e s e n t a t u e n . d e a n ie[ t h e B u s i n e s s S c h o o l . E d w a r d r e h a s h e d h i s a t t e m p i to ta l l

/ l l k o t t s i s , I

in to ' •

lag m o r e t ime to spi nd w i t h hvt fami ly and f r i ends w i t h br ight In d e n t s

" I Ih ink oi v o u r u n i v e r s c h a l l e n g e s t h a ' | in orde i

full JrOt'

ided.

,

A . ompli • peil-•i.in ent ry i

ca l led M m i . nt Bai Ass . -

' e

1971 , out l ined Right and Re

of human and I t eed u n d e r t h e < Ons t i tu t i

h a m nel Dean's (Wfii

' '

lined in ihe "Studi nl Rigi • l i ih l i i " ' . 1!

.•- itho

2 rtie u during a fi lot ' "Authorizat, D I7(AX2))

1 h i •

•ed during s u b s ,

' i 1 he |

of drug-related p..

Italia, v I 'houl • bas i s fee; i).

f u l l -Mown

6 T h e prov is .

s e a r i h w a r r a n t

It

nable d o u b t s t a n d a r d m a s t u d e n t major di ing ( S e c t i o n A . ( 2 M ! •

In a l e t t e r ti i a i l ed u p o n th . Dean to " i m m e d sis! t he se u n t i l such time ' R i g h t s and R d e n t h a n d b o o k . v i sed t o r e f i e i ' a n d jus t a p p m at ion

i* s i ened I

T H E M I A M I H I R R K ANfc Fr iday. Apr i l 2» , 1»78

pdate— 0n4 tun jut lla / l | - ( IMI IJ i<

Jetus Students Fellow ship Mill have a communion and Bible Studs tonight at 7:30 p m in Room SIMS of the Student I nion

Panhellenu is sponsoring a party, tonight, at 5 p m in the Panhel-lenit Courtyard There wiH he four kegs of b*»er. one keg <>( » i n f mun-e hies, music and fun for all of IPC and Panhellenie.

Ihe \Vesle> Center is sponsoring an end-of-classes bar-B-cue. toda\ at 5 p.m at 1210 Miller Dr There will he> volleyball, hainburge-hotdogt end enjoy1

The i .ening Worship Celebration this Sun­day at 7 p.m Ihe Chicago Kolk Service wi l l be useed

The Lutheran/Methodist Campus Ministr) u. ill suppl> a place for students to sludv Sundav through Friday . beginning at 8 p m . in Kresge Hall at the w e»le> Center The hall has tables and chairs, and a pot of coffee to keep vou awake

Students who plan to part ic i ­pate in graduat ion on M a y 7 should pick up their cap. g o w n and t ickets in the book depart­ment of the Bookstore, today and next week . For more infor-m.itie>n, call x - l 101

Iranian Student Association is .sponsoring a lecture, tomorrow. 1 1 M a m in the privite dining room of the IBIS Cafeteria

The president of the Centro "Simon Bolivar" invites all CM students to join him at the Rathskeller. Friday. May 5. from 8 p.m to midnight to celebrate the closing semester. Come dance to Latin and American rec­ords. Don't miss the "Friday night fever." Admission is SI .

Anyone interested in flying to the Bahamas or anywhere in the Car-nhean and sharing the expense of the flight, contact Mark at 57h between 6 and 11 p.m.. Monday through Friday

International House, a truly unique and living learning experience wil l provide a variety of social, cultural and educational programs for Its residents. Applications are available at the Residence Halls Office, north wing of F.aton Hall

Exhibition of documentary photographs by the students of COM Ihe works of Jonathan Utz. Dyan Berenson and Randv Cruse will

be on exhibit from 1 to 4 p.m., Monday to Friday, and 7 to 10 p.m . Mon­day to Thursday in the Communications Gallerv in the communications photo lah

I ii I Hi unit nni

Let's do it together! Join the 1979 IBIS Yearbook Team. Applica Uoilf are now available in the Business Office. Room S221 of the Student Union

Applications are now available for positions on the Rathskeller Ad­visory Board for next year. They may be picked up al the Rathskeller.

Kappa Delta Pi, the honor societv for education, is looking for mem-hers Call 595-7736 or x-3711.

IBIS YEARBOOKS will now be distributed through the Hurricane business office. Room S221 of the Student Union Please brini; valid CM I D .

Any senior who paid to have an IBIS Yearbook engraved with his or her name, and who hasn't picked it up yet, should come by Room S221 of the Student Union and claim their book.

Attention all laculty and students who will be here for the summer. The summer schedule will be as follows:

Saturday, May 6 — closed all dav Monday. May 8 through Friday. May 12 — I I a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. May 13 — closed all day Monday. May 1 5 — resume regular summer schedule: — Monday through Friday. I I a.m. to midnight — Saturdav 5 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Don Luce. International Representative for Cle'gy and Laity Con­cerned (CALC), will give a speech on his recent investigations in Iran, to­morrow, at 11 30 a.m in the Ibis Cafeteria

Lecture** Seminars

"Samskara." a Kanada movie with English subtitles based on a wor Anatha Murthy, wil l be shown in the Law School au­

ditorium lomorrow ai 7:30 p.m Admission is fre«. The event is spon­sored bv the India Association.

.toll Opportu*ie*

It vou ran speak and write both English and Spanish and are a regis­tered voter, (tie Metropolital Dade County Election Department is look­ing for you. It's a chance to earn $35 and be a part of the election night drama. Anv one who can devote one full day is asked to c.ill the election <>partn.ent at 579-4218.

Roving Photographer

Carni Gras, (-reeks highlight semester

C A R I \ G O O D M W . n o w . ing that th.it I 'm ' I n j ; and • < for 11 •

I O N I F I ' P I R raking ool the last bolt of tin ' h ot m y last Carni (

TOM RI HI I be a dacl.lv'"

I 'm gums; to SHI I I IV SI \ \ ( Y / k llll'l ItliitlV H W |H'<l|lii the first woman mone im ( a n i l G i t

DAI Rebel leaving

Question:

"II hoi mis stmt mosi memorable expe rience ol t M litis post §eme»ter?"

C A T H Y P O R T E R : W h e n I went to Phi ladelphia to visit m y hovfri4?nd

C I N D Y C U T L E R : 1 snick on top of Ihe p.irnii r ide at Carn i Gras w i t h U his name, and being In Dt I cis' Public Relations course

L I N D A G I N S B E R G : Becom ing a L i t t le Sister of Del ta S igma Pi fraternitv

S A M T H O M P S O N : The ar ­r ival o f finals and the end of the year. '*

C I N D Y M A R X : Being cho Greek Spirit Chairperson for Homecoming ' 7 8 . "

DR. ELIPSE: " /he Trustee's approval of ihr major innova­tions to the Health I

ATTENTION (,R \l)l \TIN(, SKNIORS

THE OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS ANNOUNCES

OPENINGS

FOR FOUR 1978 UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI

GRADUATES TO SERVE AS

REGIONAL ADMISSIONS COUNSELORS

CEILING FAN SALES* SERVICE 843 NE. 129 Strtet N Miami. Fla. 33161

IN NEW ENGLAND METROPOLITAN NEW YORK

• PHILADELPHIA-WASHINGTON • CHICAGO

FULL TIME EMPLOYMENT FOR AUGUST 15-DECEMBER 15. 1978

PERIOD

TUITION REMISSION FOR FULL TIME GRADUATE STUDY AT UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI DURING THE 1979 SPRING SEMESTER AND SUMMER TERMS.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

GEORGE F. GIAMPETRO DIRECTOR OF ADMISSION UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI FIRST FLOOR ASHE BLDG.

284-4323

ABORTION HOTLINE

SAME DAY APPOINTMENTS

FREE TESTING CONFIDENTIAL COUNSELING

595-7812 WOMEN'S CENTER ' U i a c t n t to Baptist Hospital I

jor->xacooooeox3<>er>ooo>aeo.

ff ice Hairstyling

19l3Ponc«d«Leon Blvd Coral Qabtas

446-8600 4032SWS7thAvanu*

South Miami

6674891

1320 S D m a Hwy. Suit* 140 Coral Gabl*»

665-5349 -*><iQ

.^W

Theorist Stem refutes educational system

I udav, Apr i l 2S. M i l M I A M I I I I R R I C A M

APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE!! For a Salaried Position on the fall, 1978 semester

Hurricane. Apply in Room 221 of the Student Union.

B ) M I M \ i .AHUOOl) Ce-CxtitaOali Editor

I earn ing is dependi nl on pnvi-ronment. " said l ) r Aaron Stern

.lay night m the Internat ional ion

• it, a German-born l iv ing in M iami , talked to the < rowd

..hi l l . inai v at ional method whi i h he i alls

Is thai thi il ed-

k i l l ing the i uriosit) and inquis i t ive-

i f fer f ro i , , i | ttn m ind . " In said "Onlv 20 in 50 per-e e nt i l l eelir br,.

I fnl Stern said ale no battel than higi i siheieils and | niai si hue.Is vv i l l i then uiedioe re standard on

-\e i t em, sludenis •ugh bai k lo tin

what the jireel. iven i l iem

he said Stern n f fe i i rj

what he calls "To ta l Suhnn 1 d i l u t i o n " I his method is based on a lew lemi epls

Ihe 1 l ist is lhal people I learning at hn th and del nut unt i l death, and lhat h-.u n n i ,

ess w h i c h , ihe nnie The second one il thai i hn-

e an begin to learu nan Ii earl ier than anyone th inks just th rough i . . . exposure to learning tools, sn e lassical music, and th rough stant dialogues on vvlial is (OtarJ em around them

Stern, in order to prove his theo­ry , used his l wo chi ldren a

In order to prove the n n reetness ol his Iheot ie , thai en', i ronnieni is most responsible tor how chi ldren learn or don't learn and that IQ tests are wo r th l i tak ing in to account a pet son mai i l ics, potent ial or environment

s tern taised Ins f irst ch i ld . Edith, using the "Tota l Submersion method

He cal led a press conferapi her b i r t h , and announced to the w o r l d that he wou ld raise a superi­or human being

Stern decided not to talk to her in baby ta lk , and forbade her to have toys that weren ' t educat ional and wh ich d idn ' t reflect his goals and desires for social justice in the w o r l d . ,an aspirat ion w h i c h is very impor tant to Stern

"Do l l s had to be black and w h i t e , " he said

The Sterns' modest rcsiden. e was decorated w i t h posters Stern got f r o m a travel agency Thev were posters depict ing places f rom around the w o r l d . One was a photo graph of a bombed-out t.uropean c i t y .

"She had to learn the t r u t h . " Stern expla ined.

s i tern and his daughter i " i s tan l dialogue Ihev took

wa lks around their neighborhood In New Y o n id Stern » have Ldi th read to h im the atreel signs

One t ime Ihev c ante upon a | ol b lacks and Puerto Ricans pi ing a union w h i c h was excluding Ihem f rom hip

Stern expla ined to i d i i h w h v they were p icket ing , and he had h i t m u m the- number ol stories in the bu i ld ing in f ront n l wh i ch tin elers w ere assembled

However , according he Stern II was a case of l inn te l l ing Edith what to do

" I chal lenged hei abihtv to at a l l time nl, "bu t I let her disagree w i t h I

Stern played classical musii . I hours a dav in his house lievea classical musi i to bt useful learning too l , and ,.i lhat n gave Edi th a s n rmony and nob i l i l v . wh i ch faci l i tated her learning process

Ld i t h went to si hool, but otaaists and ps

• I " student Accord ing to Stern. this resulted f rom the m e d i o hei classmates and teat he pare'd io hei learning env i ron al home

"She recognized ihe bo redon • »t school and the st imulate-

GRAND OPENING SPECIAL I am Great

Because I am

!FRESH !

X \ .noi i Stern

i eiv. ,ud •

smarter than Ihev are given • for Accord ing to h im. t in to i hi Id-raising than nn-re ing diapers, and it i

" W e don't ed in i lul to learn, and it is destroying

us." he said.

tjwA •

COMES TO CAMPUS! 1 lb. fresh Stone Crebs or

broiled or fried fresh Boston Scrod

4.95 BROILED OR FRIED

FHM of Red Snapper or Sea Scallops

Fresh Yellowtail or baby flounder

5.45

3.95 [Served with baked potato, potato salad, or trench fries and cole slaw, plus . . . All the (Hot or Iced), coffee, tea, or Sanka from the, World's First Beverage Bar.

Endless salad bar FREE for early birds. . . arr ive before 6:30 p.m.

Un£ E D U C A T E D South Dixie HighwayYs^nset

FISH (Formerly the Pasta Factory)

667-6666 [A UNIQUE SEAFOOD RESTAURANT TmL- _____* __L_Z_j_____l__

OPINIVeRYDAYtO.OINNl.MAP.M I3K6 OUT AVaU30lH

CRAZY DAVE'S CHRISTMAS SALE

OFF ON EVERYTHING

Sale ends . . . when you go home.

* Saxony * Dunlee * French Legs * Boulet * Snapfinger * Nugal * Claude Clement * Geno * Etalage * P C s

* Paris 2000 * Sasson * Sisley * Etalage * Winks * Bon Jour * Paradise * Gent leman John * Foxy Lady * Jupiter * Viceroy

* Cheveto * Les Gemeaux Silks * Weaver * M a d * Clipper * Chemin De Fer * Wi ld West * A.K.A. * A.T. and Co. * A-Smile

CLOTHING AN OCCASIONAL PIECE 78 MIRACLE MILE, CORAL GABLES 448-5858

(Across From Fayva)

THE MIAMI HURRICANE Friday. April 28. 1978

The Mian*! Hurricane

Academic year '78: projects completed, and projects started

Al the end of the semester it is only fitting that a recap of the events that seemed to fly by us all so quickly be given.

If a name is to be given to the spring '78 semester let it be known as "productive quietude." Much was accomplished, but lit­tle noise was made. Instead of complaining, students actually got out and put projects into motion.

The lake was cleaned several times this semester by various organizations. USBG initiated a lake-cleaning program that was a success this semester and, hopefully, will continue next year.

Ponce de Leon Blvd. is half completed as commuters let out a huge sigh of relief, for as the workers were struggling to repave one side of the road, the potholes on the other side of the street were getting bigger and bigger. In all probability, if everything goes as well with the second half of the road as it did with the first. Ponce de Leon Blvd. should look brand new by next semester. A lot of complaints were lodged about the repavement of the avenue, but it vvill be appreciated in the end.

The Jenkins Business School will be built between the Merrick Bldg. and Mahoney/Pearson Complex. Due to a grant of $2.5 mil­lion by George Jenkins and matching funds of $2.5 million by the University, the building will house the business school and take up additional space on our campus, besides the fact that the building will house present administrators and cost $5 million that could have been put to other uses. But that is one of the problems the University faces when a gift of that size is restricted, meaning that the money must be put to a specific use.

Pre-registration has been put into effect. At first, the idea seemed like a winner. In practice, though, business students are the saddest people on campus. It seems that 10 to 15 per cent of the class coupons are being put away until next year's registration, de­feating the whole purpose of the early registration. The University should have long done away with this shabby, archaic system of waiting in line for four hours at a shot only to get closed out of a good deal of ones classes for the semester. In fact, Sid Weisburd is proposing that the system be computerized for next year.

Lastly, the tuition retention plan has not created a wave of en­thusiasm one way or the other. It simply is a plan that has student government sticking its neck out about 30 yards.

No one can predict whether or not the enrollment for next se­mester will be increased. It is a gallant effort on the part of student government to think they can attract new students.

We realize that a final conclusion to the program at this time would be premature. However, a final analysis of the situation is necessary.

1. The only way to keep students on campus is to improve the University.

2. A new attitude must be employed by the faculty as well as the Administration on campus to improve the academic system.

3. The residence halls must be upgraded to encourage habita­tion by students who wish to live on campus.

4. A new light must be shed upon the area of academics in general. The possibility that money is about to be spent on a tram service (as mentioned by Business Manager Bonnert in this meeting of Dialog '78) to carry students around the campus to keep them out of the rain is profoundly ridiculous.

As long as the administration continues to spend their time on talking about proposals that seem to hold no academic weight, we cannot hope to see a changing University in terms of enrollment.

The Hurricane proposes an alteration to the already estab­lished tuition-retention program.

If the main objective is to find out why students are leaving and how to attract more, then why not contact the organizations that are directly involved with handling these students? Student Orientation Service was never asked to aid with the tuition-reten­tion program. It would seem that they would have the most contact with students as they arrive on the UM campus and are orienting themselves into a new surrounding.

Programs such as HPS and LTP (human potential seminar and leadership training program) should be made mandatory and of­fered as a course, if necessary, for an incentive. Anyone who has been on an HPS or LTP program will tell you that the experiences are worth a good deal of introspection.

The freshman student weekend is vastly understaffed in terms of personnel. This is a program whose resources go greatly untap­ped. It is essential for as many freshmen as possible to be present on this outing. It gets students from the campus together. That's what we're all here for, isn't it?

Orientation service that walks new freshmen and transfers around the campus has not been asked to serve on the retention committee either.

It seems to us that several important organizations around the campus, that have been set up for the sole purpose of orienting the student to the campus, have been left out of the picture.

It's not just leaving the organizations out of the picture, it's leaving the students out as well.

And we know what that means: less revenue and increased tu­ition.

If the Administration has given their praise to this program and is sincerely working with USBG to lower the cost of tuition, why, then, have the trustees anounced an annual $200 increase over the next five years?

If administrators and student government are to be serious •bout upgrading UM and attracting more students in order to keep the rising cost of tuition down, then they should show it by taking the logical steps, and consulting the people involved.

Hopefully, the committee will heed our advice and work to help, not deceive the students.

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MARSHALL S T MNOOLD DONNA LEE FRANKLIN Mitor Business Manager

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My last column, part one! ? There's no news in this paper!

It's not big enough! The facts aren't accurate!

These are, probably, the most typical phrases uttered if one asked a UM student what he thought of the Hurricane.

A simple reply seldom serves to appease the questioner,for, no doubt, the question was prompt­ed from the fact that a piece of information was not printed or reported upon.

The Hurricane is the newspa­per for the school and covers as many events as possible, work­ing with the limitations that are within it. Many readers do not care to learn the problems and will most likely stop reading at this point.

For the others who are more concerned with the operations and limitations of the paper, I will attempt to make a clearer picture of the realities of putting out a campus publication twice a week.

STAFF ORGANIZATION The Hurricane consists of five

departments, composed of one or two editors. The editors are paid $20 per issue and the assis­tant editors receive $15 per issue. Writers vary in number according to the department. News, this semester, had a seri­ous problem. There were very-few news writers, therefore a lack of being able to seek out stories. When this occurs, a paper must rely upon those who call the office with news, news releases, the UM news bureau, and a few incidents that are able to receive coverage.

Writers are paid $5 per story. While any student may write for the paper, only a full-time undergraduate may be paid.

Gripes are logged every day

marshal! steingold

editor-in-chief

that range from the lack of cur­rent information to the scarcity of actual investigative news sto­ries. These complaints could not be more true. The simple fact is that it takes dedicated, hard­working writers to go out in the field and seek out information and make it news.

Most often, the Hurricane is informed of events by the orga­nizations themselves or by the UM news bureau. It is seldom that a news story is actively sought. This is a terrible detri­ment to the newspaper and to the campus. The shortage of staff writers and investigative reporters seriouslyhampers the scope of the paper from cover­ing as many events as possible. The end result is something like a bi-weekly news magazine, not a newspaper with current, breaking stories.

FINANCES The Hurricane costs an aver­

age of $1,000 to print per 10 page issue. To run a color mast head or one color anywhere on a page costs $60. (Color may be used at the same cost on the front and back page.) Two col­ors costs $90 and each full-color picture costs $350 to run.

Much of the finances needed for the publication fee is ac­quired from selling ads. The re­

mainder is allocated to the Hur­ricane from the Student Activity Fund Allocation Committee (SAFAC). SAFAC pays for ap­proximately 50 per cent of the printing cost of the paper. The Hurricane's per issue allocation comes to about $1,500. In previ­ous years, due to poor manage­ment and unscrupulous business managers, the Hurricane was in debt. Within the past :hree years, including this year, the Hurricane has turned money back to SAFAC in excess of $20,000.

Due to the purchase of com­puter terminals this semester, the turn-back of funds will be much less. Nevertheless, the Hurricane will remain in the black.

There are. at present, two ad salesmen, a production staff of two, and a business manager.

The business ma. ger's job consists mainly of dealing with the ad salesmen and advertisers. There is also a seat on the SAFAC allocation committee for the business manager. The num­ber of pages that appear in the Hurricane each issue is deter­mined by the amount of adver­tising sold. The paper has yet to publish an issue under eight pages. Average size is ten to twelve pages.

The real power behind thr management of the finances of the newspaper, however, is under direct control of the fi nancial advisor from the vice president of student affairs' of­fice. Any large sum of money oi special allocation must first hr approved by the Hurricane's fi nancial advisor.

The finances of the paper are closely checked. At times it seems as if they are checked toe closely and that the business manager has little authority in allocating money.

One of the most important as pects of the newspaper is the communication that must exist between the editor and the busi­ness manager. The number of pages is determined by the amount of ads sold. If the busi ness side has sold enough ads for 18 pages but there is only enough stories for 12, then a compromise must be reached.

DEADLINES Every Saturday and Wednes­

day mass confusion breaks out amongst the editors. This is the time all the stories must be com­piled, edited and laid out on the pages as they will appear.

The advantages of operating as an on-campus publication is that the UM bureaucracy re­mains constant while the stu­dents constantly pass throush. The school contains a number of departments and organizations that are easy to report upon due to their perpetuance long after a student has completed his four years here.

In other words, there are a few people to talk to about aJI the events that happen: the president, vice president, direc­tor of the Student Union, the chairman of SEC, director of SAGA, director of financial aid. dean of the college of arts and sciences, etc. Mostly, all news stories can be handled by talk­ing to the various people who hold these positions, including the students who are involved.

In all, the Hurricane tries to report on as much information as is humanly possible with the nicest layout. Each of the staff members actually tries to go to classes as well.

The Hurricane can be a very warm, exciting, aggravating, in­tellectual, stimulating expen ence. At least, that's what it has been to me. The student news­paper will be here as long as there are students to write and read it.

As the next editor enters to receive the many joys and ag­gravations of being the focal point of all criticism on campus. I wish to pass on one piece of advice.

I hope that he will publish what he sees fit, stands up what he believes is the tdith. and accepts all the critifiisn. given to him.

Old time values needed for seventies By MICHAEL W t B E R

Hurncana Celumnltt

There once was a time when the responsibility that each of us felt extended beyond those frag­ile borders that individually de­fine us. Now we are in a period, an era. a collective mood, where this simply isn't true.

The next time your parents hit you with "When I was your age . . .," listen to them. Things really were different then.

In those recently past times, duty was a revared ideal. Every man, woman, and child felt a definite responsibility towards his family, his country, and his church. Each of these institu­

tions called for, and received, obeisance greater than that given to the relatively unimpor­tant self.

The vibrant social conscience of the 60s seems to have hern replaced with the stagnant self­ish conscience of the 70s.

Sure, I want a family, but not

until I have acquired a veritahle alphabet of academic accom plishments to place after'nn name. Not until I have climb"'1

those mountains and swam those seas will I seek to ally my self, body and soul, with anptli er. Not until after I have taken my fair share will I look <" share with somebody elsr

Thank yous and apologies To the Editor:

Congratulations to Jamie Colby. Harry Rimm. and Jeff Breslow on the comprehensive article on the Holocaust in the last issue of the Hurricane.

The inset of my poem in the middle of a picture depicting concentration camp inmates was very effective. However, I must ask you to correct the ty­pographical errors which, as an English teacher, I cannot toler­ate over my signature.

In line four, the word "their" was misspelled and appeared as "their."

In line 14. the word "daring"

Letters-to-the Editor

appeared as "dare."

! would appreciate it if you reproduce the poem in its prop­er form.

My persona! thanks to your staff TOr their interest aVd com­mitment with which they have

expedited this assignment. Helen Fagin

English Department

EDITOR'S NOTE: Our apologies to Prof. Fagin for the mistakes that occured when printing her poem. Following is a rfprint of the HOLOCAUST poem, correct

and complete: Marching columns of humane

«y Dehumanized Emaciated (their badge, the blue Star of David on a dirty white armband) Led to their annihilation For sins never committed "•or reasons never under

stood. And the wort*. watching, knowing, and ignoring. Daring not to call this ' • M i j a n p a i

Friday, April 28. 1S78 IHt MIAMI HURRICANE

Intercourse is not an endurance test It's time again for a wrap-up,

time to say. in smiles and tears, goodbye, good fortune and warm wishes for continued per­sonal and professional growth, joy and resiliency — all tied to­gether with rainbows of love into a balanced beautiful life. We'll miss those of you going from academia into a new life style and hope you'll keep in

. touch, remembering the fun and work we've shared. The rest of you — working, studying or playing — please take time to look at the clouds in a clear sky and get to know yourself, a most important person, so you return in the fall with estab­lished goals and fresh determi­nation. Rest your souls. Be quiet and restory your bodies. In short — enjoy!

I'm sorry there are yet so many questions unanswered. If yours is among them please un­derstand that space is short and problems long. I try to choose those which are most represen­tative of the multitides. If you need help now, please get it. The professional counselors here will welcome you with

non-judgmental understanding; or give me a quick call for a ref-feral.

After a last three day week­end in my beloved second home, the Bahamas, I shall spend the summer studying, reading and writing. That doctorate will be earned by the traditional means of blood, sweat and tears. This has been a chaotic semester and. like you, 1 shall breathe a long breath of sheer gratitude when the grades go in. We'll all make it through finals. Relax as con­sciously as you study this next week. Cut out speed and substi­tute sense. Use constructive ten­sion releases (please — no fren­etic sex or unwanted pregnan­cies) and remember, I wish you much good in these days of eval­uation.

I began my teaching career 30 years ago. Today, more than ever, I feel our lonely earth, spinning in the heavens, is safe in your certain loving hands.

Q: Please take this question seriously. We are students from the School of Engineering and Environmental Design. We have a friend who has been bragging

across mrs. g's desk

by marian grabowski

about his sexual stamina. Ac­cording to him, he had sexual intercourse with bis girlfriend 12 times during a period of six hours. The question is: is this physically possible?

A: It's possible. Many men, as you know, have a new erection following a short period of rest. Once every half hour is within the realm of the feasible. I sus­pect this is a one-time record for him and that the woman had a very tender vagina. I'm sure he didn't get to class the next day. A man who must brag to reas­sure himself is a man about whom I worry. He won't last in your prestigious school if he keeps his mind on sex rather than grades. A man, who is

comfortable with himself and the expression of his sexuality, lets if flow naturally and quietly as part of a balanced life, a man who enjoys all facets of each fresh day: aware, sensitive and considerate.

Q: I heard you talk and I had more relief from a problem than I have ever had before in my life. I don't mean to make a bad pun but my penis is too large when it is erect to wear a con­dom comfortably. You men­tioned that, although it was very rare, it did happen. Will you please print it so that more women will get the word.

A: This is indeed very rare. One size fits all, in any color, fluorescent or otherwise. There

are a few men, however, whose penises when erect are loo large for a condom. They are not only uncomfortable but they have a tendency to split, which some­what negates their purpose. Now women, don't let your mer use this as an excuse. If neces­sary, get out a ruler.

Q: I got so scared when you talked about the adverse effects of the pill used as a contracep­tive that 1 went right over to the drugstore and got the literature that is put out by the company which sells them. I almost faint­ed when I realized that you had only read excerpts from this pamphlet. Is it true and should I come off the pill?

A: A company which is mak­ing a mint from selling oral con­traceptives is not going to print materials which are untrue or unfavorable about its product. I am not a medical doctor and I would not presume to give you

advice about what kind of con­traceptive is right for you. I would suggest consultation with an excellent gynecologist who includes not only a physical ex­amination but a very good medi­cal history of you and your fam­ily. As a counselor, however, 1 can suggest that you pass that paper around among your friends. There is no question that the pill is the most aesthetic and effective contraceptive there is. Its side affects are now being well documented and the list is growing longer each month. I have stood on my soap box for way over a decade now, being anti-pill, almost to the point of carrying placards. At first, I was laughed at by the people who felt that the pill was the ultimate answer in contra­ception. I can't help but feel that many of my views, based on what I knew of physiology, are being vindicated.

Student apathy dominates campaign By SARI SHAPIRO

Hurncana Calumrml

After a long, hard week of campaigning for the recent elec­tions, I learned something about the attitude of the majority of students here.

I would be a millionaire if I got a penny for everytime I heard the comment, "Why are all you people bothering us now — we never hear from you until election time."

If you think about this, you will realize that it is the fault of the students that they never heard of, or saw, any of the can­didates until the elections.

People like Bobo Naistadt, Al­icia Cervera and Yale Galanter (the presidential candidates) are on a constant "campaign" to help students here, and if the students don't realize that, it is because they make no effort to get involved or help.

I would bet that 90 percent of

the student body never stopped to think about how many long hours of planning and work goes into Homecoming, Carni Gras, teacher evaluations or any other event that helps the stu­dents.

This year we were fortunate to have three qualified and dedi­cated students running for pres­ident, as we have had in the past.

Bono has a long list of accom­plishments and activities to her name. She has worked hard to put Homecoming and Carni Gras together, not to mention all the other things she has done to help benefit the students.

Alicia is responsible for facul­ty evaluations, giving students the opportunity to grade their teachers, and for arranging to have preregistration for all stu­dents in April.

Yale has also helped out with Homecoming and Carni Gras and has done work on various

committees for us.

Where was the student body when these people were up all night doing things for them? Probably, out getting wasted or complaining about how there is nothing to do on campus. Or perhaps they were studying, but I can't accept the fact that this school makes you study for ao long everyday that one can't find any time to get involved in some activity or to at least show up at an event for an hour or two.

It is these students who sit around, not getting involved. who complain the loudest about being bothered with campaign literature.

If more students became ac­tive, then there would be less need to package candidates as if they were a product. That's pol­itics, I guess.

One guy came straight out and told me that he wouldn't vote because the system

couldn't work without apathetic people, and that student govern­ment is "a lot of crap." It wouldn't be a lot of crap if stu­dents would have faith in and help their representatives, or at least show up for the functions other students organize.

I wanted to scream when people would say that all Allan Lubel and his workers have done is put canoes on the lake. These students should look at his schedule sometime — it's completely filled with meetings and appointments. Why? Be­cause he cares and wants to help students. He has done a lot for us; all we have to do is read about it and enjoy it.

Presidents and presidential candidates aren't the only ones working for the student body — there are hundreds of dedicated students working hard for us, and they all deserve to be thanked, not criticized.

Second look

Photo hv Tonv Blank

Career Planning fails to find jobs for graduates Although there exists no such

course as Introduction to Job Hunting 101, there is a tech­nique for job searching which includes not limiting oneself to any one particular source.

Career Planning and Place-Iment (CPP) is a campus organi­zation, and one ot the numerous sources which students should turn to since it is partly funded with tuition dollars. Unfortu­nately, CPP's policies as part of a national organization prohibits it from accepting outside help.

Meryl Hersh. who works with a company known as Man­

agement Recruiters, recently called the CPP office offering to place students in various office jobs, only to be thoughtlessly turned down. "Thev were not interested or even cared to ac­cept additional help," Hersh said.

When asked why CPP had re­fused to accept Management Re­cruiter's offer. Dr. F. Thomas Sheeder. Director of CPP. said he was not aware of Hersh's original call (Management Re­cruiters has called more than once), but that as part of a na­tional organization. CPP has to follow certain policies, one of

collegiate woman

by maria albisu

them being what Sheeder refer­red to as "discouragement of third party recruitment." and another being "the family edu­cational privacy law."

Management Recruiters in Coral Gables is one of 250 of­fices across the nation. It is a service for which employers pay. Clients who fill out job ap-

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plications with Management Re­cruiters do not have In pas I fee.

Horsh is a UM gradual* with a degree in elementary educa­tion, having graduated in Maty, 1977. While she was in school. she filled out the 1 1-page packet along with references and ommendations that CPP re­quires of each applicant. Hersh said she only received a one-day job offer which did not even pertain to her major, Hersh, who claimed that CPP could not afford to turn down any help they could possibly receive, complained that CPP's system of operation is inadequate be­cause they couldn't offer her a list of applicant's names, since they only maintain I

CPP's two main purpose-, are to help students in all levels with career information, and to aid all seniors and alumni in finding jobs. In order to get in­volved in the CPP program, a student is given a packet of ap­plications lo fill out. The infor­mation is then placed in a tile until a company representative comes looking for a certain skill, at which time the student is notified and an interview is set up.

CPP offers numerous other services including seminars on how to prepare for an interview and how to fill out a resume. It also offers salary comparisons and job information. During this school year. 175 company repre­sentatives have visited the UM campus through CPP Also this year, more than 2500 applica­tions were filled out by stu­dents.

Director Sheeder says he has no exact way of knowing how many students have actually been hired through the CPP pro­gram, but he estimates that, on the average, each student has received at least one job offer. (Some students may have re­ceived five, and others none.) Sheeder also said that a new-system will be instituted this May. for which every senior

will receive a questionaire ask­ing whether or not they have acquired join; but this system only involves seniors graduating in May.

"We offer students conve­niences that recruiters don't," stressed Sheeder, referring to ihe seminars and the Career Li­brary which they maintain.

All these conveniences must be well paid for since they are being maintained with tuition dollars, and that's no small mat­ter, either. Maybe with the new system we may get to find out whether or not CPP is a luxury I M can afford to maintain.

As a student, I'm disappointed to find that one of the conve­niences that CPP does not offpr is the number of students who have obtained jobs through their program. But it may be to the Administration's benefit not to disclose a figure which could turn out to be more disappoint­ing than the figure they has • timated.

In any case, whether CPP's records for actual job place­ments is good or bad, as long as they can't place every student that fills out their application packet in a job, they can't afford to refuse help.

If there exists a law prohibit­ing third party recruitment, then the law itself contradicts the purpose of CPP. After all. they themselves are a third party between the student and the employer. As for the "Fami­ly Educational Privacy Law." it is the student who should have the ultimate say in who can ob­tain a copy of his records and who can't. Besides, Management Recruiters only asked for a list of names, not a copy of records.

Any student who bothers to fill out an 11-page packet of ap­plications is obviously serious enough about finding a job not to object to being referred to a company that may very well find him a job.

THE MIAMI HURRICANE Friday, April 28. 1978

Answer to finals week woes: keep on truckin This column is written for

those who have had enough this semester It's written for those who wouldn't be happier if the semester ended tomorrow in­stead of in one week . It's writ­ten for those who are ready to leave for the summer, and for those who just want to end it all.

I realize that this applies to just about everybody at this time of year to some extent. It's not as if everybody wants to quit living for a month or two. just that many want to throw in the books for this semester. It's strange that everybody seems to think they are the only one going through this turmoil, that they are the only one feeling the world's weight on their shoul­ders. But, I suppose it's actually universal.

Wouldn't it be nice if Presi­dent Stanford announced that classes would end tomorrow, and that there would not be any final exams? I think this would solve some people's traumas: but it would leave the many

people who are counting on raising their grades, through good finals, in an extremely bad way.

How about if President Carter made an address to the public and said, "We are declaring April 15 a national holiday hon­oring taxes: nobody has to pay any this year?" I suppose this would help some people in reaching their goal of happiness but then again, somebody would undoubtedly lose out.

What then can we do to for­get these miseries. We can't quit, or work half-assed, be­cause we would be sure to re­gret it — so what's left? The work just isn't as easy as it was a few months ago.

Which would you rather do: spend an afternoon reading sta­tistics or go to the beach with the crystal clear waters, the beautiful sand, the warm sun. and the all-around relaxing at­mosphere?

Would you rather study for a biology exam or rent a sailboat on Biscayne Bay, followed by a

chris crystal

hurricane columnist

"N on working for another one-and-one-half weeks, and then it'll all be over. But. unfortu­nately, it'4 not that easy. It's the old story of "easier said than done."

Wouldn't it be nice if we could just sit down with a nice book and study, not thinking about the beautiful weather and the enormous amount of fun things we could be doing?

few good sets of tennis and a few good cold beers?

How about comparing an eve­ning in the library to an evening with a few drinks and your best girlfriend close by your side?

What about having spent 20 hours designing a hotel resort complex and the other four hours a day having the instruc­tor tell you what you've done wrong, instead of sleeping all week?

So where are we? Back in the same place. We've still got the same amount of work not done,

but its a half-hour later.

What now?

Well for those of you who are still reading this. I have bad news for you: I don't have the answer. I know the answer isn't in complaining about it. because that only makes tt worse. I know the answer isn't to forget your responsibilities. And 1 defi­nitely know that doing away with your life is not the answer. On the other hand. I have no idea what is the answer.

I I K rasy nir . m I suppose we should just keep l ° me. instead

Wouldn't it be nice if we could just leave our work for about two weeks and then fin­ish it? How about another spring break?

Unfortunately, I'm really looking forward to getting my work over and done with quick­ly and easily and not postponing it .

"Quickly and easily'" — those are the magic words. I suppose it's just human nature to want the easy life, to let things come to me. instead of having to

chase after them. Maybe It's • little bit of laziness, too. I sup­pose if you really want some­thing, whether it be good grades or a job paying $50,000 a year, you've really got to work for it.

Again, where does that leave us? Now we've spent even more time reading this column and still haven't accomplished any­thing.

I guess the real reason I'm writing this is to let everybody know that they're not the only ones suffering from the "end of the semester blues." I guess al­most everybody knows how it feels when finals start getting close, and things start piling up.

This is to let you know that 1 know how you feel and wish you all the best success in over­coming the distractions that keep us away from what we ought lo be doing.

Good luck ' this week and finals week. Then enjoy. . .

Fear of failing

Overcome the fear of failing finals: get to work! "Sure you can," he crooned,

his velvety deep voice washing over her like a warm tide. "It won't hurt at all." Brown hair cascaded over his strong shoul­ders, and a faint mustache turned into a smile. "You know I love you, baby." His blue eyes sparkled like so many stars. Her fear melted in the heat of pas­sion. Their bodies met . . .

"If there are any exams left.

let's have them now. Time's just about up."

Her fantasy dissolved into the birdlike figure of her physics professor, with his squawky voice, bald head and pot belly — a tribute to a constant diet of breakfast squares and Pepsi. He was looking at her. In fact, he couldn't help but look at her — she was the only student left in

ken chun

hurricane columnist

the classroom. In his hand was a sheaf of lests left by the rest of

the class.

"The bell rang a few minutes ago. I thought I'd let you work a little longer since you seemed to be having so much trouble." He looked genuinely concerned.

"Thanks, but it really doesn't make much difference. 1 failed it anyway."

"Let's see," he mused, scan­ning her paper. "Why. Majonca, I'm surprised at you! Isn't it ob­vious from B that M is equal to the original mass over the square root of one minus the quantity V over C squared?"

"Sure," she said distractedly.

As she walked dejectedly back to the dorms, her super­ego and id had it out at the ex­pense of her ego. Her super said, "Well Majorica, you've done it again, failed another exam! That was only physics. You have four other classes. Do I have to re­mind you?..."

Id cut in. "Now wait a min­ute, you're not here to beat you're head against the wall. Blow it off. Party. You can al­ways catch up."

" . . . As I was saying, do I have to remind you that it costs $6,000 to fail calculus at this country club?"

That was the last straw. She decided to start working, pull up her grades, and be rid of that sick feeling she always had after exams. After all. if she wanted ulcers, she could always play the stock market. Yes. she would definitely turn over a new leaf.. . tomorrow.

And tomorrow was today yesterday, but she had so many letters to write, not to mention the fact that she had to clean all the old sandwiches from under her bed where her neurotic roommate threw them, hoping the cockroaches would stay on the other side.

She collapsed, exhausted, that night. And the next night Danny Porschowner took her to Hiale­ah and supplemented her marine biology course with a lesson in comparative Equestrian anato­my, and so on.

The next day in physics. Dr. Floodlenoodle gave back the tests. The look he gave her could have curdled milk. It had a similar effect on her blood.

Then it hit her. She had a cal­culus exam the next day. If she was going to study, she had to do it now. Back at the dorm, her mind went into high gear — of a Volkswagen.

She fiddled with the radio, searching for some study music. After passing four stations play­ing her favorite foot-pounding tunes, she masochistically tuned in Beethoven's "Symphony No. 3 in E-flat. Opus 55." She began to write, "The first derivative of sine equals cosine," when the radio blared out, "This after­noon, two college students were

brutally murdered in their dorm by a 12-year-old burgular. The murder weapon was a Trac-T w o . . . "

She winced. Her paper had everything the newcaster had said on it, as well as an occa­sional integral here and there. Disgusted, she switched off the radio.

"O.K., I'll just study in si­lence!" she yelled at the wall. And the wall answered with 250 watts rms, sending the dorm into oscillation as her next-door neighbor fired up her amplifier. She also became aware of other sounds: her roommate's clock ticking, the elevator humming, the impact of beer bottles rebounding off the walls of the incinerator shaft.

At this point her stomach began to protest the lack of something to do. "You can do my studying," she said morbid­ly, as she headed for the cafete­ria.

Needless to say, when she left the cafeteria her stomach ache had become a reality. Returning to her room, she read the same page over and over for about an hour, snapped off the light, fell into a very deep sleep, and dreamed of calculus books with fangs and of having her deriva­tive taken — only to be shocked awake instants later by the in­cessant jangling of an alarm clock. A shower and a short walk later she was at George Orwell's proverbial Room 101.

She already knew what awaited her inside.

Oh well, maybe next time.

"Tolerate the tolerant and the intolerant," Christian says By JONATHAN LOCKWOOD

Ctnlrl.xrtl.f Calvmnl.t

Although I must confess to taking a certain pleasure in en­gaging in often heated debates on issues of varying sensitivity, there are certain subjects on which even this author finds moderation to be a wiser course. Such a subject is the controver­sy over the beliefs and evangeli­cal activities of the various Christian groups on campus, about which such writers as Tennen, Garwood, and Stearns have written their various criti­cisms and comments. This writ­er intends to offer a counter­point of sorts to these criticisms.

Tennen and Stearns, in their respective editorials, made the

not unreasonable criticism that the behavior of certain Christian individuals (e.g.. Anita Bryant) and certain organizations (e.g.. The Children of God, The Way) have displayed behavior which is distinctly "un-Christian" in nature. This author certainly does not contest that. How often is it that we Christians (yes. this writer is "one of them") read the Bible verses pertaining to our personal salvation through a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, then remember only the ones which speak of the fate awaiting those who do not be­lieve, forgetting the verse which says. "Judge not, lest ye your­selves be judged" (Matthew 7:1)? Ms. Tucker made a valid

Letters Welcome The Hurricane welcome* letter* from tl* rend­

ers on topic* of interest to the I niccrsitx communi­ty. All letter* are subject to editing to conform lo style and space limitation*, til letter* must he signed, although names will be withheld on request.

point in saying that every indi­vidual is responsible for making his or her own personal decision as to what ultimate reality to believe in. although to say so does not mean that there is not only one reality. To say that there are "many ways" is of no help to the individual in search of meaning for his life; all it does is tell him that the person making that statement is as un­certain as he is!

But why is it that Christians have come under attack simply because they tell others about the happiness and personal ful­fillment they have discovered? To read Mr. Stearns' article, the only crime Christians commit is that they smile too much for his liking. To hear Mr. Tennen tell it. the implication is that Chris­tians are narrow-minded, into­lerant of others' views, and even fanatical. But in making such implications, these gentlemen run the risk of displaying "intol­erance for the intolerant.'' These kinds of sweeping gener­alizations about various groups sound disturbingly familiar. Here are some other examples of the same kind of statements, some of which may be recog­

nized by the reader in his or her own experience.

1) Jews are money-grubbers and Christ killers.

2) Blacks are stupid, lazy, and good-for-nothing.

3) Women are not as intelli­gent or aa capable as men.

4) People in the military are there because they enjoy the prospect of killing others in a war.

5) All homosexuals are hope­less perverts who should be locked away for good.

Does this list need to be car­ried any further? Hatred and prejudice have not disappeared in any of us; they have merely taken on a different guise or re­surfaced in other areas of our lives. No person is immune from the error of making sweeping judgments about the intentions, attitudes, or real personal worth of various individuals and groups on the basis of surface impressions. And it is painfully clear that none of us possess the ability to control our own atti­tudes and behavior toward oth­ers, or make a genuine change

«

for the better, without assis­tance that is nothing short of di­vine.

Am I proposing a magical "cure-all" for the triels and petty annoyances which plague every one of us? Am I saying that a personal relationship with Jesus Christ is going to auto­matically resolve ali of your problems? No, that would be highly presumptuous of me or anyone else to aay. What I do presume to say for Christians as a whole is that, at least in my experience, a relationship with Christ has provided a great source of strength and personal comfort: a source for which countless individuals have spent their lives searching in vain.

Do I condemn others who hold conflicting views? A« tempted as I am to often do so (and not, mind you, by 12 de­mons brandishing billy clubs), I recognize that it is a matter of individual choice. We Christians do not have the power to "con­vert" others: conversion is a process involving the individual and God alone. All that a Chris­tian can do is witness to others about what he or she has dis­

covered, and let them make their own decisions.

Christianity is not an exclu­sive "club" for the "select few"; it is for anyone and everyone. Nor is it composed solely of naive or simple-minded people (If it Is. then I invite all of you to attend the graduation cere­monies this May and have the privilege of seeing this member of the "intellectually handicap­ped" get his M.A.)

If we seem a bit overzealous at times, it is because we feel that we have something truly wonderful which we want oth­ers to have a chance to share. We are basically willing to be tolerant of others. Is it really that much to ask the same thing in return? After all, tolerance is (or should be) the name of the game!

POSTSCRIPT: Don't go away! Next year this writer re­turns to take up the defense of the Domino Theory! All levity aside, though, my association with the editorship of the Horri-cane has been an interesting and enjoyable one, if just a bit vocal at times. Enjoy your summer!

Friday, April 28 . 1978 III! MIAMI HURRICANE

Listen to the depths of the silent ocean This if the story of h o w I g u s t 0 n | y , a t e r d l d , r e a | j z e ,

came to love something - not w a s o n l v e s c a p j n g m y o w n s U l . someone, and not just any thing, p.dit.es, absurdities, and ha-Specifically, I am referring to t r e d s . the ocean and the beach.

I don't mean the beach as it is usually thought of in our minds: that is, frisbees, rafts, beer tans radios and the like. I'm talking about the ocean at night and early in the morning, before man arrives to leave his foot­prints in the sand (as well as his residue).

At first, m y only motive for seeking the ocean w a s sheer es­cape. One night, having had my nil of the wor ld and all its ab­surdities, stupidities and ha­treds, I left the UM campus. leaving behind me a trail of dis

The peace permeating ttw beach breezes late at night reju­venated me; however, the total silence with my heightened sense of loneliness i l ightened me. The rowdy dormitorv in which 1 lived suddenly didn't seem so bad, so much so that ! left, hastily

Nonetheless, it wasti'i long before the wal ls began d o s i n g in again, and, before I knew ii. 1 was once more standing on the beach of Crandon Park, staring at stars in an endless sky, and thinking of my o w n insignifi cance.

steven garwood

hurricane columnisl

I his realization ol nn unim­portance in the al la irs of the universe was the first lesson 1 was taught by the ocean. It troubles me that this lesson, as well as the lessons I have \e learn, have not. as. ol ye l . put into prat i

I guess anothei set ret nt the nt can <i in' ocean doesn't deliver

its secrets to you — you must look for them) is humility. This goes along wi th the feeling oi insignificance, and anybody w h o has stared at tht ocean at night has felt the sensation ot laughter, w i th the dropping ol their head in the direction ol tht sand.

Th< ns learned only the beginning, only the siir-

an, fathoms deep, had more to otter io nu•. and I decided to stay and listen.

Listening anoth' : of the ocean. As all secrets, it must be listened foi tinsel-, .ind si­lently, for the ocean does not communicate In the w a y ot mortal man. The ocean tell> what is on its mind by lay ing nothing at all. Funny, bin tan a l w a y s understand what it is saying.

So, another lesson learned is the lesson ot si lence - total and complete si lence I ha \r learned. or have tried to learn, not to be afraid ot total si lence, and to be totally alee

There Is a natural tendency on the part of mankind to shun si lence. We like the comfort ot noise, other people, and o\

in on. But. by the ocean al night, there is no noise wi th which to drown out your thoughts , no bed with covers under which to hide, and no friends on w h o m to call. Alone with your thoughts, like the baby imitating his parents char­acteristics, you begin to Imitate th" characteristics of the ocean and sky. Its beauty causes you to think thoughts of beautiful people you k n o w or have

k n o w n , and of beautiful experi­ences that have passed The vaslncss ot the sky and somehow ou to think in larger terms. Your past, present, and future t o m e together into

and you better understand w h y you are where you are

Men art act ustomed lo think­ing in terms of convenience . Their lives are like tiny bed­rooms, where everythinj within easy reach and the furni­ture never moves . Il is Imp ble to think this w a v w h e n

1 wi th the prospect of infin­ity itself.

The immensity nt the gives birth to deep thoughts in anv person with a fertile imagi­nation, thoughts conceived haps, tor the tirst time

Of course, amongst 11 thoughts there may be ones that

more ugly and unpleasant than beautiful. There is a ten­dency to run from them, back inland lo civilization. But, r

ends the chance ot discovering parts ot himself

splored At the shoreline, there are

none of man's modern conve ­niences. In tact, there is nothing al all which is man made There is only the black empty sea. the dark endless sky. and the limit­less desert-l ike bench. There is nothing but darkness and empti­ness as tar as the eye ran see. and it can overwhe lm you, send­ing you running frantically for your car.

Or, if you manage s o m e h o w to resist this temptation, you may discover something wel l

n d any of vour socialized inceptions, unveiling the

Creativity and insight which can g r o w out of sheer nothingness . This concept is hard to under­stand in a society w h o s e teach­ings equivocate nothingness , empt iness and aloneness w i t h fear. But it can be underst<x>d by-standing on the shoreline • >t Crandon Park.

The reason most individuals

l i ar nothingness is because they not realized that wi thout it

there would not be a concept of somethingness — that balance

si 'ates negativity for posi-tivity.

This is. again, someth ing which can be understood by

Iv watch ing the act ivit ies of the ocean, a long with the sun .

Sit on the sand along the shore around five in the morn­ing, whi le the moon is still shin­ing brightly. You may be driven to leave by the darkness, but even as you are going, the sun wil l begin to rise from behind the clouds fringing the horizon. Vuu then will w o n d e r w h y you ever, feared the night, and begin to realize that, if not for the darkness , there could never be

exhihrat ing anticipation which precedes sun rise.

To those of you whose inter­est has been sparked by this dis-t ourse, there are t w o dangers .

One is the fear of si lence and darkness already described. The sii ond danger becomes evident upon overcoming the first.

The second obstacle to be avoided is overdoing a good thing. A person w h o spends many of his or her nights at the heath tends tn lose track ot the materialistic aspects oi man's world, so enraptured he be­c o m e s in its beauty.

The ocean may begin to lack meaning for the person w h o s iares at it for too long. He he-g ins to take it for granted, see ­ing only the ocean. There is a univcrsi beyond the hori/.on, an immensity appreciated only through periodic absence and rediscovery.

This column must be, for the most part, a failure. It can be nothing else. For something as beautiful as the ocean and sky at night cannot be depicted in words . It needs to be seen and felt .

A sailor comes home from the sea and finds a home T h e sailor on shore leave got

off the bus in d o w n t o w n Miami. It w a s the hottest day of s u m ­mer, the heat rising in w a v e s from the street. The asphalt sh immered , sizzl ing under the noonday sun. He crossed the parking lot and w e n t into a drug store for coffee.

The place had a broad counter on one side, and a row of booths along the other. Little tables w e r e scattered about b e t w e e n . Behind the counter w e r e t w o wai ters in w h i t e aprons and peaked caps.

In o n e of the booths w a s a group of high-schoolers: three boys and t w o girls, drinking cokes and laughing. A wai tress from a nearby restaurant w a s sitting at a table towards the back, smoking and looking in­differently at a movie magazine.

The sailor sat down at a table and ordered coffee w h e n the waiter came over . He w a s an older man, wi th a red face and wrinkles on the back of his neck. He seemed to want to talk. He asked the sailor about the fleet and his gunner's insig­nia.

The waiter w e n t a w a y and he began t o look about. The kids in the booth w e r e smoking and snickering, talking loudly and wear ing clothes that did not fit wel l .

The waitress in the corner smoked and s l o w l y turned the pages of her magazine. She w a s a hard woman w h o had seen a lot and took no interest in the sailor. She had glanced up w h e n he came in. but only briefly. Sailors, she had seen.

The other waiter behind the counter was a youth. His face w a s pimpled and his attention w a s on the boys and girls in the booth. He watched them anx-iouslv, wait ing for an opening to join in their talk. But they re­garded him haughtily, call ing him "garcon" and punching each other on the arms.

The sailor thought he would like something to read from the magaz ine rack but didn't want to bother. He tried to think about things and found he could not. He tried to think about the girl, and her letter saying good­bye, that she w a s marrying a friends of his: a good friend w h o had helped him work on his car. greasy in the hot afternoon un­derneath it. w h o had gone with him to the train and gotten him a magazine .

He tried to recapture it, but the image faded. He knew he had received her n e w s with in­difference. "No big deal." he thought, yet not believ ing it.

He thought of his buddies on­board, packed in the tiny bulk­head, smoking and joking. He heard the crackling sound of playing cards being shuffled.

He g a v e it up and sipped his coffee, watching the boy behind the counter w h o yearned to be part of the kids in the booth. He called for a second coffee and the old waiter came over, ask­ing if the coffee w a s alright and called him "man."

One of the boys in the booth nudged his f e l lows and smirked at the sailor. In an exaggerated undertone he quipped. "Knock it off. Dave. Don't you know you are supposed to salute when you see an admiral." The others hooted and stamped their feet. The girls giggled

The young sailor didn't mind their arrogance. But he wanted quiet. He looked at them point­edly end said nothing. It aur-

;; him inside lo reallae that a year a g o he would have stood up in indignation, telling them to shut their punk n

N o w he just I >oked into his coffee and shook his head, laughing a little to himself. Not that he wanted to laugh, but he wanted them to be quiet.

Brought d o w n , they turned a w a y and resumed their chatter, a little sullenly. One caught his

anthony atwood

hurricane columnist :* *??

V glance wi th intelligent • half mocking, but halt ashamed. The eves said "I'm sorry. These are my pals. We don't k n o w . I guess it's different."

The waitress had watched this wi th an uplifted brow and then returned to her pictures She found one she liked and scrutinized it w a n l y , silently. putting Then Irom a handbag she took a mascara and began to make up her e y e b r o w s , using a small pockei nurrtu.

The sailor finished his coffee and signaled the old waiter. l ie tame- o t e r and w h e n the sailor reached into his trouser pocket the waiter stopped him. "Naw, son. The treats on me. A lways help a serviceman."

The sailor thought of how alone be felt, how far apart he w a s Irom this one w h o wanted to be his iriend. He got up to leave.

With his hand on the doeir handle he stopped, flooded hv an emotion that made him want to sit d o w n again. He s a w that he wanted to spend his life there, not to talk, bin just to sit — sit and watch the old man. and the yearning young waiter. The students and the bored waitress . Just sit and watch , forever and ev.

The old man slapped his hand on the counter and waved . The sailor turned and pushed lata the street, the door closing hind him.

The sunlight da/z led his eyes

Summer time!

W e of the Miami HURRICANE wish everyone in the University family a very happy summer va­cat ion. To those w h o will be staying on for summer school here, or attending classes e l sewhere , w e wish y o u the best of luck in your academic pursuits. Some of you will not be returning in the fall, and w e hope that you will a lways have fond memories Of our campus. During the past semester, w e hope that w e have satisfied your interest in current events here end stimulated you to thinking about the important issues that have affected us all. If w e have done this, then w e have fulfilled our primary ob­ligation as your student newspaper. Sometimes we have made you angry. The articles that may have brought about this feeling in you, at times, were intended solely as constructive criticism. Hopefully, by the free flow of ideas, w e may all come out as better individual", in the end. Again, have a good sum-

whether you will be relaxing or studying. We hope to * e yau again in the fall.

and the heat rushed up, engulf­ing him. Warmth washed

through him. The day w a s so bright that he stood still, con­sumed by warmth and g l o w i n g . The sun beat d o w n on him like a baptism. Sunlight and w a r m t h Hooded through his being,

wash ing a w a y his past and his future, all longing and dreams.

• aved Where he stood, sur­rendering. Sunlight and w a r m t h bathed him.

Me' blinked and stared at the asphalt roasting under the sun.

As he stared, his feelings took form. From inside, he spoke to himself, and the revelat ion brought the edge of a grin to his face .

i

"It sure ain't the best of worlds , but its good to be al ive. ' '

He grinned at Ihe broiling street , the grin inching into a smi le . The young sailor turned and started off. wonder ing h o w much of Biloxi could be seen ori a three day pass.

Miami happenings By DAVID BERKOW IT/.

Contributing Celumnett

Greater Miami visitors are in for a Summer Fiesta, an excit ing late spring and summer filled wi th a host ol spt'e uil events .

W o m e n bowlers Irom around the United States and other parts of the world continu converge on Miami through June 6 for the Women's Interna­tional Bowlmg Congress Tour­nament, the largest single sports event, based on participation, in Miami history.

Miami celebrates its ethnic variety and cultural heritage during the 1978 Miami Interna­tional Folk Festival, Wednesdav through May 14. Some 70 ethnic and national groups will partici­pate in the festival, which in­cludes entertainment. food, dances, arts and crafts, sports, costumes , and a Parade of N J tions.

Admission to all Folk Festival events , except the International Ball, are free.

The world's fastest propel­ler-driven boats test the waters ol the City of Miami Marine Sta­dium. June 2 through 4. in the Eighth Annual Champion Spark Plug Unlimited Hydroplane Re­gatta.

Another important boat is the $100,000 Mojave Max En­durance Nationals at the Marine Stadium, June 25. The race fea­tures Grand National and endur­ance tunnel-hull boats in mara­thon competit ion.

Some of the nation's top young w o m e n track and field

. manv with an eve to the I MM) Olympics , will be in Miami

July 8 and 9 lor the National U S ' A - A A U Girls' Age Group Outdoor 1 rack and l ie ld Cham­pionships. Competition in a wide range ol track and field e v e n t ! is set tor Miami-Dade Communi ty College North.

National champion amateur bowlers , representing 24 na­tions and territories ut the

Annual Bowling Tournament of the Americas at Cloverleaf Lanes. '

Miami adds some emphasis to its Latin American flavor during the July 28 through August 13 Latin Summer Fiesta. The festi­val features dances , a picnic, a carnival, amateur jai-alai com* petition, a rowing regatta, folk-loric events, a softball tourna­ment , horse racing and motor* boat racing.

The National Football League's Miami Dolphins host preseason contests in August at Miami's Orange Bowl s tadium. The games, which have added importance because of the n e w , shorter NFL preseason, are against the St. Louis Cardinals (August 5) and the Minnesota Vikings (August 18).

These highl ights , coupled with the many attract ions and recreational act iv i t ies offered around the Greater Miami area.

Western Hemisphere, will be in make late spring and early sum-Miami, July 9 to 15, for the ltith m e r a great t ime for a visit .

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THE MIAMI HURRICANE Friday, April 28, 1978

Recognition for SEC in order; rougher job than it seems

By IRA RL'BNMZ HurrecaM »tatt Writar

Amidst the multitude of organi­zations affiliated with and working for the campus community, the Stu­dent Entertainment Committee .(SEC > comprises a 'ew individuals who try to provide lun for students and concomitantly to bring the stu­dent body together. SEC members are not paid and receive virtually no benefits in their respective posi­tions Yet. the committee gets no appreciation or recognition for their services from anyone.

A recent criticism of the SI I proved to be overabusive and misin­formed In an interview last Tues­day with SEC advisor John Stofan, 1978 Chairwoman Lisa Berlin, 1977 Chairman Dennis Menard and cur­rent SEC member Michael Finkel-stein. various aspects and functions of the SEC were discussed, along with recent Hurricane coverage.

"My major criticism of the article in the Hurricane was that it only in­cluded three shows we put on. as if

$92,000 was spent on them alone The Tubes showed exactly what so­ciety's about in a lot of ways," re­plied Stofan upon initial reaction to negative reviews

Menard contributed, saying, "The sado-rock image in the tubes pre­view was sensationalism They have a higher musical complexity As far as 'love and life.' Mark-Al­mond inspired these emotions if anything at ali, and cetainly weren't loud!

"The article was selfcontradicto--tephen Stills was the highest

attended, yet worst concert on the Patio. Not five per cent of the peo­ple walked away happy. Dan Fogel­berg was a $14,000 rip-off. He was offensive and didn't play at all to the crowd, which is exactlv what 1 aBelle did do.

During her sound check, 1 aBelle may have been loud, but when per­forming, she got lower, and she didn't scream! The article left out the other fine concerts that happen­ed, like the Dixie Dregs. Chuck Mangione and the Pure Prairie

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League. This "love and life is straight out of the 60s. It's unrealis­tic: even though I lament it "

Among the many problems fac­ing the SEC. Lisa Berlin explained. "People don't realize how hard it is io get a band down here. You men­tion Miami and promoters laugh saying. 'What're you, nuts?" The closest gig is Atlanta or Tampa, if bands get there at all. Bigger pro­moters also beat us in getting bands or try stealing them away.

"Also not mentioned (.in the arti­cle) were the discount tickets which started when Stofan came down to take over former head of the Stu­dent Union Kay Whitten's place Certain bands are too expensive for the Patio but are well worthwhile

mdents to catch. The only wa> was buying blocks of tickets from promoters. The program will con­tinue, with us hopefully getting more choice seats in the future

people complaining about the si C only being concerned with concerts and ignoring other mOOttS ot entertainment, Stofan added. "We mainly do concerts, but we do need variety; e.g.. fine arts, dance, plays, etc Cultural events are nice but they have to draw-, too You mav not be aware, but the Program Council gets S20 to $30,000 a year to bring in small bands. They do it. hut with a lack of publicity and. therefore, small attendance We may try to work on getting grants "

Among other events besides con­certs this year were the circus. Homecoming and various lectures. as well as exhibitions

Asked if any other obstacles block the path for the SEC to oper-

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ate at full throttle. Berlin comment­ed that "The SEC la not together Many people don't show up for meetings or concerts and di' than expected from a member The voting gets them in. while abilities aren't really taken into considera­tion "

Menard added. "It's a popularity contest. 1 know v.ith this adminis­tration you get where you are by who you know ' Stofan mentioned that irresponsible people are fired upon the realization of their ineffi­ciency In the future there will he a three day training program set up to allow for • o n sharing of chores with less responsihilu > being placed on thr chairman.

With respect to the suggestion that music mechandising or

become an integral part of the NI i either internally or externally. to give advice, all seemed to think that these people would be ideally suited for the committee Addition­ally, the idea of having people in the music engineering program worh sound and stage set-up was kicked around, with a more definite re-pmmm to be worked on in the im­mediate future.

Menard stated. "With the and c.usman Hall cooperating, both having access to sound equipment. tap could cut expense? and give our own people some good experienie "

Among other problems. Fmkel-stein said. "We have limited •.['an in which to put on riWWI We have a -'.500 persor limit with 15,000 people on campus We were prom­ised a facility back in '71 by Stan­ford, but that hasn't happened.

1KA flea market, festival lt\ \ I KM l i l t . \K\ IN

iaa .ea l la the) Hwrre.aret

Want some good bargains' A flea market drive and two i.o-

ombay food booths will be spun-sored by Alpha Kappa Alpha Soror-it\ (AKA), Iota Nu Undergraduate Chapter, during the summer tee money for the initiation o( their

ill reading program. The flea market drive will hi lee

cated at the Tropicaire Flea Market at 7751 Bird Rd on Saturday, Mas 13 and Sunday. May It Varum-. items, ranging from clothing and small appliances t. > household items, will be sold from 7:30 a m . lo 5:30 p m

\K A Will Bin juttiiipate in the Annual tiootuhav lesm.i l lhal Will be held in Coconut Grove on Satur­day, June 10 and Sunday, June 11 on Grand Ave.

The Goombav Festival is held

vear in < oconut Cirove to eel ebrate the Bahamian Culture

last year, over 100.000 men women and children attended the festive affair, where they danced to Bahamian music, ate Bahamian food and bought arts and relics of thr Bahamian culture.

AKA will be sponsoring two food booths i .insisting of conch salad, conch fritters, watermelon and hni dogs for the children.

AKA Sorority is the oldest black (.reek I etter Sorority in America founded in 1908 at the Universitv ol Howard by some aspiring young women who wanted to rieriie.iti their lives to the betterment of mankind, from whn.li grew their theme. "Service to all Mankind " The SororiK has established manv organizations commensurate of their theme, such as the job corps

Dorm repairs begin this summer By MARIt BE1ANCOI RI

Nverltaaxj JfaM tffrrfar

With thr end o! spring semester, repairs and maintenance will begin on the various residence halls

"There are three main tvpes of repair work to be done ft Shoffner. Director of Residence Halls, said

"First, there's the annual mainte­nance, repair and replacement work common to operating resi­dence halls Second, we have the continuation of last summer^

finished projects. Third, there air the repairs determined bv the Presi­dent and the mainienaim CTMTin.it-trr that must he completed in Ofdei for the residence halls to be ade­quate for 11s- Shoffner

"Every summer we paini some of the facilities, strip and PMCal Moot I, repair broken things, clean carpets and do just ahout anything to get the halls back in shape," said Shoff­ner.

Among the work that will hr continued from last summer are:

• The third phase of the re-

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placement of the hot water risers in Faton Hall.

• The removal of the desks from the walls, making them mo­bile.

• The repair of the ceilings in Mahonev/Pearson halls.

• The repair of the heating sys­tem in Pearson, making the heat flow control more efficient.

"The management committee has determined that some repair work must be completed in order to open the halls," Shoffner said.

"In the 1968 and 960 Towers." Shoffner said, "the bathroom show­ers vjlill be tiled to make them clearfer. more attractive, and free from flaking paint.

"The walls in '68 will be refin-ished and the ground level of both '60 and '68 will be repainted." Shoffner said.

Repairs in Faton Hall include the painting of the exterior of the build­ing, refurnishing floor lounges, ren­ovation of public rest rooms, re­placement of exit doors with differ­ent types of doors, and the replace­ment of jalousie windows to im­prove the temperature control on the ground floor.

In Mahoney/Pearson there will he the continued replacement of Ve­netian blinds.

"We have three projects planned for the apartments," Shoffner said.

• The replacement and repair of damaged furniture.

• The permanent blockage of the entrances to the roof.

• The renovation of building 42 in preparation for the new Interna­tional House.

"Dr. Barr. of the music depart­ment, and Laura Morgan, Interna­tional Student Advisor, have worked on such recommendations as a lounge for the students and other refurnishings," explained Shoffner.

August 1 is the deadline for the repairs.

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F r i d a \ , Apr i l 28 . 1978 THE MIAMI HURRICANE

COISO executive candidates state platforins^qualifications De IAMII m i R V p. . , M. M. By J A M I E COLBY Hurr .cn. flail Writar

Vincent Om»chomu, a senior In­dustrial Engineering siudent. is unopposed for the position of Coun­cil of International Students Orga­nization (COISO) President. Vincc-nt s a resident of the apartment area

•nd has been involved in many campus activities He is currently the President of the Industrial Engi­neering Honor Society and has re­ceived many honors while here at the Universilv.

Vincent has many ideas for next semester, including a tutoring ser­vice for International Students in the Intensive English Program. He would also like to see plans for In ; ternational Week finalized at an earlier date so as to avoid last min­ute rushes

Subramanian Swamy is a finance major in the Graduate School U P I I unopposed for the position of trea­surer. He came to the University last lune and has been ictl

.Subramanian is a member ot the Beta Gamma Sigma Honorary and now serves as Vice-President of the Graduate Business Studeni Ac­tion. He is also secretary and surer of the India Association of Miami

Daniel Young is a junior industri­al engineering major Fit is a resi­dent of Pearson hall and has applied for the position of vice president.

Young is presently the presideni of the Florida Engineering Societv as well as vice-president of Alpha Pi Mu and-the American Institute of Industrial Engineers

The other candidate for vice pres­ident is Wendy Franklin Wendv is a pre-med major who has been very-active in various activities around campus. Some of her past experi­ences include being COISO Cabinet secretary, treasurer of the Organi­zation of Jamaican Students, tary of Mortar Board, I9H8 dcirm representative, and a member of thm Biology f l u b

Cs tun Mii i < hii.ii'liuiii.i S w a i i n ^ ovnn

Should there be His in dorms? Personality holds major importance

By CHUCK CAS.NrR Hurnc.n. Stall «Vrel«r

Are resident assistant-, a thing of the past? The question of whether or not the RA is really needed on each floor has been brought up many timet before.

Scott Stipe, an RA lor the ninth floor in thi N O I .implex, said that it I i most definitely a needed posi­tion.

"Programming slmuld hr the main part of the RA's job, as well as building the floor's community," Silpe said "The resident assistant's primary job should be to program floor events and encourage the floor members to participate in these ac­t iv i t ies"

Silpe went on to say that the more cohesiveneM a floor has the. closer the floor wi l l be, and. as a re-

Homecoming planning (all I

extravanganza By MIKE WEBER Murrlcana Stall Writar

The Homecoming Committee for 1978 is already hard at work plan­ning next year's activities.

Tentative activities include the traditional parade. Queen's Contest, pep rally/boat burning and dance, as well as new events such as an Art Contest.

The theme for Homecoming '78 will be "University of Miami: This Is Your Life" and will concentrate on memorable events and famous alumni from the University's past.

Lee Butcher, chairman of Home­coming '78, worked on last year's Homecoming as well as on Carni Gras in 1977 and 1978.

Butcher Is also an active member of the TKE fraternity, acting presi­dent of Omicron Delta Kappa, a member of the Order of Omega, and vice president of Scabbard and Blade Honorary.

Anyone who is interested in help­ing with any aspect of Homecoming '78 is urged to call the Homecoming office at x-3578.

According* to chairman Butcher, this year's committee is not trying to out-do the events of past Home­comings.

"We just want to see the maxi­mum amount of people get the maximum amount of enjoyment from Homecoming '78," Butcher said.

suit, the more activites the flour will engage in.

Silpe said that personality is ihe major factor which makes a resident assistant. If the RA It . there is usually mutual harmonv among the residents of the floor But if the RA is bad. then he eir she will run into a conf lie I. with I munication breakdown bein| end result.

"The toughest part ot the job is building respect, because get it, you more than likely wil l not lose it," Silpe continued.

As a result of this respei i. s floor has had very little vandalism, and this fact has enabled him to build a strong rapport with most of the members on his floor.

The female's role in being a resi­dent assistant has been thought of as being different from that of the male's.

Pam Morrison, a resident assis­tant in the women's tower nf the 1968 Complex, savs that the male RA's main function is to deter the damage and vandalism that occurs

so frequently in the men's tower, whereas the female s role is to be able to act as a counsellor, helping with any problem that concerns her

•• floormates. A large problem with the girla, she savs, is room-male i onf..

Morrison, like Siipe. agreed that personamv is the major factor in determining how effective the RA wi l l be.

"Students need somebody tei look for support and ad\ ice." Mor­

rison said. "Without the RA on the floor, the residents would have to

higher and more formal au­thorities in order to relate their problems to somebody. H\ having the RA. the studeni < an talk to him or her on an informal basis "

•e Buhl, a resident assistant for the men's tower in the 19ISH Com­plex, disagreed with Morrison with respect to what the ma!' an RA should be. He said Ihe male RA must also Mrvf. as an informal means of communication for the residents of the floor, as well as to look out for vandalism.

Buhl said the RA is .i position, one that must be filled by a person who must perform'a moth-er-like function tn his or her fellow residents on the floor. Students must have someone with whom to talk over pergonal problems when they are in a bad predicam

"I'm not a policeman." Buhl said. " I thought mv job wa-, io enfore il­legalities only if thev \> ous."

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J T f E MIAMI HURRICANE Friday. April 2*. 1B7B

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Imagination and initiative alive at the University of Miami.

By MIKE WEBER Oootvra tstmm

The semester's end is near at hand; all other recent events have become insignificant in the face of finals and summer plans

This ic not to say. however, that the happenings of the past term have not been noteworthy If fact, spring '78 was one of the must memorable in UM's history

Numerous "firsts" incurred on campus, testifying to the fact that imagination and initiative still live at Miami

For the first time, students were able to register in the spring for the fall term Many students took ad­vantage of trie new procedure. many were dissatisfied But. re­gardless of the mixed results, early registration was a giant step in­wards improving the lot of students here at UM

The tuition increase.announced in January, was definitely not a first, but the student response to it defi­nitely was.

There were no demonstration, no riots, no take-overs, no arrests, and no marches on the battle-weary Ashe Building. Instead, there was the USBG/Administration compro­mise. The compromise outlined a plan for students to work with the Administration to increase enroll­ment and retention for next year.

At this point, no one really knows If the plan will have the de­sired effect of lowering, or even maintaining, the present tuition level. On the other hand, any good that might arise from the compro­mise will be an improvement on a rapidly deteriorating situation

For the first time in recent histo­ry, the Hurricane ran an April Fool's issue. The March .11 edition did not contain a single serious arti­cle (this may or may not have been a first), but it did spoof another brand new event: "We Care About U" Week.

Sponsored bs I SHi, as an effort to bring attention to the hrighi OOP of University life. "Wa I U" Week tried to get students in volved in numerous fun activities.

Unfortunately, the Hurricane's sarcastjc "We're Apathetic Ahout U" Week was more appropriate for the week that was largely ignored

In other firsts for this semester, we were asked to bus our own ta­bles in the 960 cafeteria, we elre ted a Cuban USBG president, polling places for USBG elections were lo­

cated by each of the dorm-, canoes were seen skimming in the lake. President Stanford was seen clean­ing the lake, and parking lots dis­criminated against non-legal, non-musical, and non-dramatu students

There was one other notable first

Despite the efforts of many ener­getic students and manv concerned administrators. Carni Gras '78 was a dismal failure. No amount of money, iio influx nf student partici­pation, and no extra forethought or hindsight could have forestalled the inevitable.

iand hnpfliilK the last) lime .is fell victim lo the finicks I lorida weather.

Ihere were many more news­worthy esents lhat were not firsts

Tti< e ene was e-\( ning if not always popular Ihe infamous lubes ali< -1 and dis­gusted thousands; Patti I • gave her heart and soul io an emai­ls' large, audience, and charits o ilutely no complaints — absoluiels no imp showed up.

International Week provided Ihe UM community with an interesting glimpse of manv foreign mltures. With a non-stop schedule of foreign food. song, dance, and numerous other activities, Ihe week pros be a smashing -

Mack Culture Week was .mill her winner In its I Ith seat. Black Cul­ture Week -ought I<-> reach the sur­rounding commutnts a* well as ihe students Ihe week was highlighted by the traditional Miss Rlai I Pageant.

leer memorable events included plans for a new Husmess School building, the controversy over the dredging at Pigeon Key. the erec­tion of new lighls around the cam-phs. and the allocation of user $3 million for dorm renovations

There were also a few s.un BOtM that occured during the spring of '78

We were reminded that rape does on the I'nisersits umpus

Sex-killings at Horida State, and several assualls on this campus aroused fear in many co-eds New lights were erected in response *o this menace, but more needs to he done before the women at UM feel safe to walk alone at night

Related to the topic of rape. Di­rector of Public Safety David Wike started his own controversy earlier this semester.

Wike stated some rather ques­tionable viewpoints on the subjeect

l.SB(. Presideal Mian Label Sfroka M few k . . . an n tnt in es Iu ition tin 11 II si

The Year Pas I By MIKE WEBER

Two solitary stones lay side by side

Neither sees nor touches the other

They strike together and make a spark

Friendship's kindled from that spark

The Yeor Post is the thought­ful striker

A field lies under the gentle sun

Carefully plowed and sown and tended

New sprouts j loot upwards towards the sun

Our minds are like that fer­tile field

The Year Past is the diligent planter

A river flows swiftly on its path

Carving what surface it meets ond passes

Making impressions unique and timeless

Memories ore sculptures im­pressed on our hearts

The Yeor Past is a stretch of the river

I r iduN M « h l H a p p y H o u r a l the R a l

. . . *tarlin% the weekend oil ri/_hl

nt rape and. in doing so. re down upon himself the anger of a large portion of the college commu­nity

Arabs protested against th-pearance of Yitzhak Rabin protested against the Daniel Saffrin concert and against Palestinian Day: and University workers agi­tated for their own union

On the lighter side, the Ga} MM ance staged a son of mas-, mm slam onstration with their recent c,ay Blue Jeans Das

Spring '78 will also he remem­bered for two significant "lasis

Chief tlator-hater Walt Kichefski is retiring after this semesiei Att.i tt) vears with Ihe UM alhleti, gram, especially with the football team, he feels that he should now spend more lime with his fanuls

Kichefski was ss cll-knowie well-liked by all who came in cost-tact with him He will he missed greatly in the sears to c o m

Also leaving the Unisersiis aftef ihis semester is Directoi of student Activities Tom Rebel. Rebel was

mely well liked among the students, and they are sure io feel his loss in the semesters ahead. Rehcl is resigning lo take a position with a law firm in Allanta

In looking back over this article, I feel that I must conies-. sometlMiig ta sou. I'm frankly ama/.ed at how much I wrote during this semester Hmmmm. maybe it wasn't such a bad year after all . . .

Miss I \\ — I..HUM Taylor . . . 11 mt ned dm in a Hornet onitn.

These "Greek Goddesses* Enjoyed Themselves . . . AtriOM t.itel. II ,el, in Mm, I,

SHi I ' r e s e n l e i l M . t n s ( i i l i e e l | s

. . . appsenrinp herr is n membet ••> Imbei

Summarizing another ll's time io summarize another school

we do at the end of every year. People start taking minute pictures of people they will ne e^ain; photo albums and scrap books are hemg compili another fantastic year comes to an end

Observing the various activities thai one can view by merely standing on g fire exit, it is tmm lege, especially the UM. offers so much to thus, willing to reach out and grasp it all.

As the year romes to a close, the dorm rooms he come barren.with posters taken from walls, removed from floors, and the rooms once again looking like the four walled prison cells we once entered. These naked rooms become filled with students vigorously

• ing for those final eXalM, as do the lino.-lobby study lounge

People seem to he slipping into various hiding places, where they can find quiet and Isolation the Ii hrary sta< ks" are filled, the edents are

ed primanK in studie . and thosi people thai 1 • er) day are now- hei om

Couples walk to i lasses holding hand ihose last weeks together they reminisce ahout the fjrst lime they saw ea< h olher in the e . •

Photos By r

» • • • • • • • • • • • # • <

Friday, April 2*. |J»7» THF M I A M I H I RKICANE \}_

Success of student activities provides good year for all

Lecture Series Chairperson I to ho Naistadl . . . nned with liiruldo lliieio's tipeech

Bs CHRIS CRYSTAL ' • a l t e ra Wrelar

It was a good year for student in­volvement with the implementation of many new programs and the great success of many old activities.

The yew started out as a disap­pointment when Yes almost became the first group to perform a pay-concert for the University, and can­celled nui a few days before the event From there, student activities went uphill.

October brought with it a new Assistant Director of Student Activ­ities. John Stofan, and, together with Director of Student Activities Tom Rebel, he started the ball roll­ing

Perhaps the largest activity of the fall term is Homecoming, and this year's went well Under the leadership of Yale Galanter. the 1977 Homecoming Committee plan­ned a good series of events and had even better participation.

Ae cording to Tom Rebel. "It was a good solid Homecoming, and Yale and the committee deserve a lot of credit " Rebel went on to attribute most of this year's success to the dedication and unselfishness of the committee

Some of the new programs in­volved with Homecoming this year included the Student Art Show, giv­ing students a chance to display their works and win cash prizes. Other memorable events were the

llJCJ if l y V V

V.iiii i.iI Beauv Ar! .Show .ii the Lowe . . . voting ladies intrigued ris orfuorfc

y

I oritur |sin.r,i I'rinie Mininter ^ il/..li Rabin . . . spoke iinuilsi student protasti

r school year at UM sarins that for man. fhis fantastic relationship is com-"iR to an end, along with the year. For some, though. this emptiness is non existant Thoughts of marriage •md living together are becoming very real in their minds.

\t the close of esers sear, decisions must he made e.iting seniors have to decide what to do. and

rt to go Non-graduating students think about their nplishments and ss here to go to accomplish more

Applications from v i leges are sorted into the

I- lorry Rimm ]

mailboxes, and one more phase of our life is over

Needless to say. the end of everything brings us to the beginning of something new

The events lhat take place during the four years of college remain very special, and those memories wi l l never be forgotten. The friendships that have heen gained will never end, and that in itself is enough But for all those who do not consider that enough, there is a lot more to be gained from college

At this point, as 1 sadly watch the year end. I wish all those graduating seniors the best of luck And to those who remain. I can only say ENJOY . . . it's al l there, and i ts only there once.

dance, featuring Chuhhy Checker, the parade, and the football game againsi Tulane

The fall semesiei was also the .beginning of tke 1 ci .me Recreation Course Program Developed by the Student Activities Office, the i ei sure Recreation i o m e s were a tre­mendous success, offering students claases in disco darning, wine tast­ing and various arts and crafts Over 250 students participated in these courses last semester, and over 600 this spring

In an effort to keep the students knowledgable about student activi­ties, a campus "hotline" was imple­mented to go along with the calen­der already in use The hotline proved very advantageous to the student body and received close t.> 50 calls a day.

SI i had a good vear. as wel l . Al­though there were mans complaints ahout not getting "top name" enter­tainment, the committee got a very long and diversified group of enter­tainers Concerts this year included Chuck Mangione, the Mark Almond Band. Pure Prairie League. The Tubes. Patti Labelle. Carmen l.undv and the Dixie Dregs, who are U M alumni

In addition to concerts. SEC also implemented a program offering discount tickets to various area per­formances Tickets were available through SEC for Ben Vereen. Steve Martin and "Annie." as they are now for tomorrow's Renaissance concert.

Video Tape Services ( V T S ) also expanded this year with the acqui­sition of $15,000 in equipment VTS. which sponsors tapes that are seen in the Student l'nion and throughout campus, did a great job of increasing their services to the student body. Wi th their new

equipment, VTS is definitely capa­ble of heing a first rate studio

tl full of excite­ment this year, with some of the world's in-. ., smakers turers included William Buckley. Stanton I reedman, authoi lames Kirkwood. former Israeli Premier Yitzhak Rabin, and ABC newscast­er Geraldo Rivera Ex-Chairman of Lecture Series. Bobo Naistadt. de-scribed this year's series perfectly when she said. "It catered to ail

John Stofan types of people and all types of in­terest

Student activities also increased in Ihe USBG office this year with implementation of many new ser-sires and the increased involvement in existing

Heading the accomplishment I SBd this sear was the placement of a student on the I ' M Budget Committee Check cashing hours ssere extended tn accomodate more students and a Student Discount Card was set up to save students mones

Other projects which USBG worked on included canoe rentals, dental health service, student loans, bicycle loans, "We Care About V"

I and the tuition compromise.

Ml m all. it was a productive tot Student Government, and a

productive year for "God" Lubel and all of his prophe

l !nfortunately, we have had bet­ter se < ami Gras than this. although many still had fun. Jeff Miller and his committee did an ex­cellent job of organizing the festival bin rain drenched the field and de-strosed the expectations of every-

l A o l s e d

I lections soon followed, and al­though they were organiz.ed poorly, many students had a good time

I he sear was also full of many interesting weeks. Greek Week wa* the first, involving all fraternities and sororities in various activitie* for spirit points. International Week. Black Culture Week, and Recreation for Life Week highlight­ed the semester, along with USBG's

Vve (a re Ahout U " Week, and, of i ourse, the Hurricane's "We're Ap­athetic About U" Week.

Overall, it was a great year for all concerned. Students were put a*

top priority' in the student activi­ties office and much was, accom­plished.

Student activities are to have a good time, but, more than that, they are a learning lab for the student body It was a good year." Tom Rebel said, and I'm inclined tn agree.

Well , it's all over The semester is at an end. the Hurricane printing for the semester is at an end, and this feature, too, is at an end.

IONV gLAevJK

Former I M Student S\l%ester Stallone .. . . tisiteil I M romput recently

The E ncl Is Near

Bs C H R I S l R V S I A L

Aga in we are here — It's the end of the year. Let's have a beer And stand up and cheer

To some it is mere. But to me it is deat So I'll make it clear For all to hear.

So to every peer, Give me your ear. Find a direction and steer, Don't end up in the rear.

We ' re in fourth gear, There is no more fear. This is the last tier, For the end is near

l , l ini |t . ir"s l,;a|iii<: ( ontes l I e . i l i n e d

. . . during ( OI^O International H rri>

H THE MTAM1 HURRICANE Friday. April 2 8 . 1 8 7 8

The Beatles and Vietnam clouded memories By KEVIN M M , Baiartaenmant C.etor

Two new films. Coming Home and I Wanna Hold Vour Hand, both deal with mythical archetypi the 1960*$ : Vietnam and f h e Bea­tles. Vietnam has come to symbol­ize the insanity and futility of mod­ern war while The Beatles are still

the ultimate rock band and the sv m-bol of youthful enthusiasm. Coming Home is a heavy-handed, brutal Iv realistic tragedy; I Wanna Hold Your Hand is a sophomoric slap­stick comedy. But somehow their effect is similar. Both films something we have been waiting for for too long: a remembrance of those gory-glory days, the

Coming Home has been hailed as the first major movie to deal explic­itly with the U S involvement in Southeast Asia It is the story of Sally Hyde (Jane Fonda), who falls in love with a disabled vet while her husband, a marine, is fighting in Vietnam The film gauges the dif­ferent means that each of the char­acters use to adapt to the trauma of

the war. and how the war forces them to grow as Individuals.

The early scenes take place In a veteran's hospital where l.uke Mar­tin (Jon Voight) is confined to a bed and wheelchair due to a crippling injury sustained In Vietnam. Here he- meets Sally Hvde who, in a surge of patriotism, becomes a vol­unteer in (he hospital. In keeping with the times, these scenes are played quite realistically and the audience is spared little. The physi­cal aspects of the incapacities of a crippled vet are shown in almost as much detail as they are described in Born On (he Fourth of July, the au­tobiography of Ron Kovic.

The realism is not sustained at this pitch, though, for that would probablv prove too much for most audiences The love storv proceeds with the usual romanticism. In this

Ct, the movie is not much more modern than The Best Years of Our l ives in us depiction of the power

The Youthful Casl <>| 'I Wanna llol<i Your H U M P . . . return tilth us non ft> those thrilling <i<iv* of j m l e i j — I

I Want To Hold Your Hand tells the story of a group of teens in 19fi4 who decided to drive to New York in order to I upon the hotel where The Beatles were staving and possibly touch the four mop-topped icons This is a pretty good idea for a movie, but it turns into slapstick The gags that the director has the young actors doing were al­ready DM w hen The Three Stooges did them.

Almost inspite of itself, the film is MMMfcow enjoyable. Although the story is rather silly, the actors seem

W enioving themselves Ihe most winning performance turned in bv Nancv Alien, who

d the luscious toul-mouthed chick in Carrie who "went down" on John Travolta In a reprise of her Carrie role, she performs the same

ie on one of The Beatles' gui-l u t ,

.Line I «rn<l.i VIHI Bruce Drrii . . . first of riuinv films ulmul I ietnain

The film appears geared iieit to grownups who went through Bra-tlemania, but to the voting girls of today who have never had I In one unifying idol their older sisters had in the The Beatles Do the young girls in the audience MUTIII when the "fake" and real Beatles appear? Yes. thev do.

The fake Heatles are photo­graphed from behind and from thr knees down The voie.es give them are res.mahle faisinulirs Ihr real Beatles appear on video tapes of thru legendarv Fd Sullivan | in-lormances These tapes ire identi­cal to one's memory ol thi first ap­pearance of The Beatles. Ihe black and white images of tht young rockers provide the same kind ol feedback one gets from the combat

(outage of Vietnam They are at istui v and men,

This conflict bet wren lusmrv and personal memory is integral to both films Watching Coming Home, our

instantly living to iumpatr what is on thr screen with what one remembers about the period. It can he asked of hoth films ho' curate their recreation of thr past actually is.

\ letnam and Ihe Beatles an the siibire Is e.t more than ,i few lilms iii.ii arc tiling releaaed In Ihe mar futurr These subjects i.irrv • lot ol weigh) and i an stand a riumbii eil treatment* I his examination of the OIK i* I ng overdue and will be lommg ii i drluge during the next few years Hopefully, it will help sort out our confused, i luuded niemoi

Entertainment i i Oscars:

Hollywood's annual backslapping By JONATHAN MOYA

•nteartainmant aVritar

The Academy Award are over

and done with: and, at least for this year, quality in films has won over box office gross. S u r Wars, with­out a question one of the most pop-

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D i i i l U k r u l o n iii "(joodbar" on the oscar (or 'Annie iiuir

ular films of all time, was, howev­er,'not the best movie made this year. Annie Hall was. and it was the only one of the five nominated for best picture, with the exception of Fred Zinneman's Julie, that really deserved the Oscar.

A test of how good a film is is how well it can stand by itseif. If it has a gimmick, like most of the films released this year, now well can it stand up if that gimmick is removed? What would happen to Star Wars if all the special effects were taken out? If would be badly altered since it depends so heavily on the visual ef f •

Rob tiie Goodbve Girl eif its humor and you will find a slender story line that, at best, could be termed sentimental and "humd rum." Cut the dance scenes out of The Turning Point and vou have the endless type of situations and confessions that are found in day­time soap operas. Strip these three films of their gimmicks, and they topple.

Only two films can stand the comparison. Julie would still re­main a good film if the flash-back narrative that sets up Lillian Hell-man's Jest of her friendship for Julie by consenting to smuggle bribe money out of Germany was taken away. In fact, if the flash­backs were cut out the picture would be vastly improved sino they slow the pair of the film. Annie Hall, even with all its jokes and gags removed, would still re­main a nice film about the break­down of a contemporary relation­ship.

However, even though overall excellence in American films was recognized, the same cannot apply to the foreign film category. Of the five films that were nominated for Best Foreign Film, Madame Rosa was probably the best. A Special Day was a slick, overly talky film about the encounter between a bored and lonely woman and a clos­et homosexual. That Obscure Object of Desire was a nice film, though not quite successful in its handling of a character that sees the ideal woman as two separate personali­ties. Iphigenia was too much of a stage play, more suitable for public television than movie houses. Oper­ation Thunderbolt was a highly ro­mantic piece of Israeli backslapping about their own heroics at Entebbe. As for Madame Rose, judgment will have to be withheld since it has not played in Miami yet. But, overall, the reviews for the picture were mixed

Still, could Madam* Rosa have been the best foreign picture re­leased this year? It I* doubtful. The best foreign film was undoubtably Padre Padrone, a double prize win­ner at Cannes, the first picture in 30

to achieve this distinction. This film, an uncompromisingly na­turalistic examination of the type of brutality fathers inflict upon their sons who try to escape but can't since they are part of the family clan, was released first on Italian television and was, therefore, ineli­gible for an Academy Award nomi­nation.

Neglecting thia masterpiece under these terms It understand-

Vanessa Redgrave In "Julie' . . . caused the only real stir an Oscar night

Music Editor bids fond farewell So here it is, folks; after four long

|years they are putting me but to . jiture. I heard someone refer to it the other day as graduation. Al­though I have been accused of being la this school since 1923, I have only been here since. 1974. It has been a good four years and I have enjoyed working for this paper. Say, anyone got a Kleenex?

Don't worry, I'll be back, in one way or another. What do you mean, that s what you're worried about? Well, just for that I might as well •tick it out for the summer issue.

1 hope you enjoyed the Hurricane in the past years. I know it has changed a lot. Editors come and go with their bright "new Ideas" that were better left in a toilet, and staff members blow in like the northeast, wind, once every two months

And what about those errors that make the editors hide under their desks? Being an editor is not fun and games, except of course for me. Ideas for articles must be conjured up and a staff member must be as­signed, along with a photographer.

Somewhere along trie line the ataff member or the photographer usually messes up. If we are lucky, w e might have the article oni weeks after it was supposed to be handed in. Then the editor must plav interpreter, making sen the writer's article. And wh< have people like Ira Rubnitz on the surf, well, vou begin to know what impossible is.

After having finishe**" with the V_ _ —

rich laiks music editor

story, we give the article to our copy desk staff which makes addi­tions and subtractions to stories in accordance with their moods, which are sometimes injected into the story. Once in a while the edi­tors and copy staff have verbal fights, which are a load of fun. over words such as "multiple orgasms" (see page 209 of yearbook).

That joke picture in the yearbook was an editorial comment. An edi­tor and myself had to fight with the copy editor over the use of the term "multiple orgasm" in a movie re­view. Needless to say, we won, and to show the copy staff what win­ners we were, four of us bought T-shirts with "multiple orgasm" writ­ten on them to drive the copy desk nuts, which we proceeded to do.

Being an editor has its advan­tages, like doing a spread on a group that the Student Entertain­ment Committee is planning to present on the Patio and having the group cancel after the ggperis out*.

That makes you feel so good! Or having someone at the Miami Her­ald, where the Hurricane is printed, mess up the copy under a picture whereby a picture of the rock group Journey suddenly becomes Be Bop Deluxe and Be Bop Deluxe's picture is suddenly dubbed Journey.

I hid under my desk for three days after that one.

Oh, yes. Another advantage is having your staff not handing in important material for deadline. The winner of this -year's "Most Late for Deadline Award" is, may I have the envelope, please . . . Ira Rubnitz!

Incidentally, Ira's nickname on the staff isn't Ignatz Rubbernuts, it's just Iggy.

Of course, your social life in­creases as an editor, but you have to pay for it at the massage parlor down US . 1. I thought my social life would increase 1000 times over when I became editor, and it did — 1000 times nothing is nothing. I

even had a girl scout refuse to show me her cookies!

And now for something com­pletely di f ferent . . .

There are many people who have been kind to the Hurricane, giving us promotional copies of records, which you see reviewed. I would Sincerely like to thank those people, especially: Mike Harris at FM1. I isa at Capital, Greg Eagle at Columbia. Sally Towne at Polydor, Cath at w"EA. the guys at Pickwick and the people at MCA and A&M.

I would also like *o thank one of the promoters who was kind enough to let us into his concerts: Larry Tan.ofsky of Rockland Cen­ter.

I have spent four hard years on the Hurricane, making little money, but for what I have learned there is no substitute. I have learned more about music, the people in it and the behind the scene look then can be learned from any book The only thing I have discovered is that they are the same as you and I.

If you have a semester or more to spend at the UM. I suggest that you get off your ass and get involved! The Hurricane is an excellent way to expand yourself and you will feel good about what you are doing. If you're going to stick around this summer, why not work on the sum­mer issue: or if you're coming back in the fail, why not submit an arti­cle to one of the editors? Good luck and have a great summer!

able, but neglecting another one is totally reprehensible. This other masterpiece is Werner Herzog's Strotzek, a vivid dissection of the underlying absurdity inherent in the American dream. The Academy has a penchant for nominating films that are optimistic in insight to ihe point that they are often blinded by any picture, be it good or bad, that shows the slightest hint of pessi­mism.

There were only two real big surpises thi* year, and both of them came in the Best Actor/Actress cat­egory. The odds-on favorite, and a seven-time loser, Richard Burton didn't win the Oscar. Instead, Rich­ard Dreyfuss won. And Diane Kea­ton, instead of winning as Oscar for Looking For Mr. Goodbar. wound up winning for Annie Hall over the extremely heavy performances of Jane Fonda, Shirley MaeLaine and Anne Bancroft.

The other major awards were, overall, justly awarded. 1 he Best Adspted Screenplay Award went to Alvin Sargent for Julia. I hr Best Original Screenplay went to Woody Allen and Marshal Brirkamn fe>r Annie Hall. The lirst Supporting Actress. Vanessa Redgrave, man­aged to overcome all the pro-Pales­tinian remarks she has been making in the national press to eek-oui • victory. And Jason Robards earned another Oscar for Julie to go with the one he won last vear for All Ihe President's Men. Woody Allen, de­spite his avowed hatred for Holly­wood, djd win the Best Director Award for Annie Hall.

Who will win next year? Right now it is much too early to tell But at least the quality is looking better. A few trends that Just started last year will most likely be exhausted in upcoming films.

One of these trends is tht current increased surplus of movies about the Vietnam War. The first of these war movies that tried to examine the effects of the war was Rolling Thunder, which was nothing better than an exercise in sado-maso­chism. The next one was the Henry Winkler vehicle. Heroes, which was only slightly belter, but stifl por­

trayed the returning war veteran as deranged.

And there are two more which will open today at area movie houses: Coming Home and The Boys in Company C. Coming Home is un­doubtably the better of the two. Di­rector Hal Ashby, the man who did the wicked satire of high society at the time of the 1968 presidential campaign in Shampoo, has taken tha same time period and given us the flip-side of the issue. Instead of seeing people trying to Ignore the about a crippled veteran learning to adjust to his handicap and to society (The Men) and a more recent film about a handicapped person who finds romance after a debilitating ski accident (The Other Sid? of the Mountain). Coming Home stars Jon

' Voight, Jane Fonda and Bruce Dern. war that is happening in Indo-China. we see people who are in­volved in the fight, and who are trying to come to terms with the experience. It is an odd cross be­tween Marlon Brando's first film

The Buys in Company C, from the looks ot the trailers, appears lo be another variation on the theme of a platoon of hoys who go off to war, learn a reality lesson, and come back home as men.

The two biggest Vietnam War films are tentatively scheduled for late summer release.

The first one to hit Miami vvill be Dog Soldiers. Il is based on the Na­tional Book Award-winning novel by Robert Stone, which, after four years and many imitations, is still the best book, fiction or non-fiction, about Vietnam. The main emphasis of the book was is dope racketeer­ing which, in a strange and appro­priate way, related to the war, since many veterans did return home addicts. The movie has not changed this emphasis.

However, the ultimate statement won't come until Francis Coppola releases his epic Apocalypse Now, an updating of Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness, a classic study into the nature of evil —

See page'14

Lili Bita, actress and writer is Greek through and through

i rnda>, April 26. 1078 THE M I A M I HURRICANE 13

By TARA SOLOMON int.n.erem.rel Wnt.r

Dr -gobet Zaller and l i l i Bita are In love with Greece, the theater, writ ing and each other. As husband and wife, Robert Zaller, a U M his­tory professor, and Greek-born Lili, a consummate ae tress of fiery power and emotional depth, present a striking example of a harmonious marriage of minds, personalities and talents.

In addition to having taught his­tory at the University of California in Santa Barbara and in Queens Community College in New York (prior to UM) , Dr Zaller is an ac­complished playwright and author, wi th a very long string of literary credits

Lili comes from Greece where, as a young actress, she first experi­enced the euphoric exhilaration of applause and flowers thrown on the stage

"When I die I would like to hear the applause," says i III "It's like a drug."

Mrs. Zaller graduated magna cum laude at age 17 from ;i i onaer\ atory in (Jreecc, and at Hi graduat­ed from drama school I ilt wil l re­ceive her master's degree in drama from the University this spring, a very important and highly celebrat­ed honor that wil l he marked by her brother's visit from Greet i

U p o n m e e t i n g Ihe / u l l e r s . eene can't help but notice their friendli­ness, confidence and enthusiasm for life

Robert greets vou cordially, in a manner which is iasual and p ant. quickly putting one at ease l i l i possesses a lively and effeivese ra< character, bubbling with an exuber-ence which soon becomes conta­gious.

Their private feelings toward each other are not hidden, as so often happens, behind a facade of formality They get along like new-lyweds, smiling, complimenting each other frequently, and holding hands whenever walking around campus Lili feels lhat too seldom • r e spouses also lovers.

"You fall into a routine." she

says. "Take out the garbage — and did you take my underwear to the cleaners?"

Robert and Lili are the proud par­ents of two boys, Philip. 20. and Kimon, 16. who are described by their adoring mother as "very hand­some and Greek "

Their views about the theater are ss strong as their feelings about their private life.

Robert's idea of the theater is "not something that the spectator consumes, but something that con­sumes the spectator. He needs to be somehow jolted out of the comfort­able assumption that he is there as a passive element of theater A guy comes into the theater the way he walks into a record store, or a supermarket — to buy or sume something — something he will take home and control and fon­dle and eat — that is his

I i h . also a playwright, poi and novelist, views acting as "the point at which human beings reach each other "

While I ill is tight ,il home on stage and before cameras Keeheit prefers to remain behind i as the writer

"When Lili in : engc of a i ;a, everything lights up.

Zaller. "When I do. I frec/e ( i t funny, petrified faces with mouth agape)" He is currently coedltor (with Richard Greaves) of the Bio­graphical Dictionary of British Rad­icals in the Seventeenth Century. whu h consist! of "approxiih M O biographical ent n and women in 17th-century Lngland who contributed most significant Iv in social change in law. politu ucation, religion and medicine It is, says Robert, "thi' lurge t linglc project ever undertaken in the field of Stuart history."

l i l i has just returned from Aus­tin, T x . where she attended the opening night of her play. "Sundays in the Cemetary," and was dulv thrilled

"It was the first time I couM eene else do something I had in­

vented." she said.

"Greece is in my mind," she

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"It's Inside, in my blood" — and she beautifully expresses herself as both a woman and a Greek in her bilingual collection of poems, enti­tled "Blood Sketches":

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of lost poets .'Through nights of insomniac agony/To record the destiny of the sleeping wor ld / In im­ages of fire i el blond "

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—Thundercrack— With tongue bulging in cheek, McDowell and Kuchar use the B movie haunted house format of people taking refuge in a remote, mysterious house on a rainy night as a framework tor a marathon e»-ploration ot sexual and psychological aberration;,, A hybrid it there ever was one, the film variously suggests "Long Days loumey Into Night," "Female rouble,' The Boys in the Band."

"Who's Afraid ot Virginia Woolf7.' "The Night of the Living Dead" and the com bmed works of Andy Warhol and Paul Mornssey as seen from a sexually neuro tic and humanistically jaundiced per­spective

This is one ot the most relentlessly voyeuristic works in the history of the cinema, as episodes involving inflatable dolls, giant vibrators, suction tubes, cucumbers and French ticklers are al most invariably witnessed by an IntMM ly interested, unnoticed outsidei M,i turbation and heterosexuality dominate up to a certain point, until finally the homosexual streak running throughout

the picture resolves itself in a genuinely ettective hardcore scene which is carefully photographed and compilMUly scored. Kuchar himself who, in a virtuoso mon­ologue with graphic flashbacks, ram­pantly recounts his recent tryst with a circus gorilla, that this discourse con Uins the truest emotions expressed throughout the film is a good indication ol the pervasive silliness of the entire enterprise

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Summer promises a variety in films

M I D N I G H T S H O W S C O M I N G FOR THE S U M M E R

"THE RULING CLASS" — "FRITZ THE GAT" "HEAVY TRAFFIC" - "EASY RIDER" "SHAMPOO" — "5 EASY PIECES" — "3 STOOGES" — "HARD TIMES" — "ZARDOZ" — "HEARTBREAK KID" — "KING KONG" — "BARBARELLA" — "LONGEST YARD" — "SONG REMAINS THE SAME" — "ROLLERBALL"

From page 12 from turn-of-the-century Africa to the rice paddies of Vietnam. The film cost $30 million to produce, and has gone way over budget sev­eral times, so much so that Coppola has sunk half his personal fortune into the film Apocalypse Now was scheduled for an early Christmas release, but was pulled back for re-editing, and to give enough time for the studio to come up with a full scale advertising campaign.

In addition to the trend towards exploratory war films, there has been an abnormal amount of pic­tures dealing with psychokinesis. There was last year's Carrie, and this year's "Carrie-like" film from

ime director. Brian de Palma. The Fury. Since then, other films that have dealt with the subje. t have been The Medusa Touch, star­ring Richard Burton, and Jennifer. Later this summer. The Shining, based on the Stephen King novel, will be released. One would be tempted to shrug this off as another run-of-the-mill horror film; howev­er, it promises to be the best of the lot since it il directed by Stanley Kubrick of 2001: A Space Odyssey and Dr. Strangelove fame.

Another trend is foreign directors making their first English language film. Ingmar Bergman's first En­glish film. The Serpent's Egg, has been anxiously awaited by e\ one, but. when H was released in New York City, it was universally condemned as the worst picture Bergman has ever made. It stars David Carradine and I.iv Ullmann in a story about a circus making its wa\ through Germany during World War II. and a Jewish tight­rope walker trying to avoid becom­ing another victim of the Holocaust If it is as bad as some people say, it may never play in Miami. If it does. though, it will meist likely end up on a limited run at one of the art houses around town.

Una Wertmuller is another for­eign director who has been given the shaft when her The End of the World In Our Usual Bed in a Hatful of Rain opened in New- York. It is a feminist comedv starring Giancarlo Gianmni and Candice Bergen. It

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may play here, then again it may not.

The only foreign director who has survived the transition i glish is I oms Malk His Pretty Baby opens today at many area movie houses Ihe film has caused quite a sensation while receiving an unusu­al amount of ci has made an overnight e-tar of 12-year-old child actress Brokke Shields, who pla>s a prostitute in the film.

One notable American film that ma>' be of interest io some is the re­lease of the new Bob Dylan picture Reaaldo and Clara. A mammoth four-hour-long documentary-drama, its main attraction is. of course. Dylan singing his hits The other aspect of the picture, an elab­orate deification of Dylan by Dylan himself, is ao egotistical and self-centered that the New Yorker movie critic Pauline Kael mm plained. " . . . Dylan has given him­self more tight closeups than any actor can have in the whole history of movies."

John Travolta and Sylvester Stal­lone also have new films coming out. Travolta has the starring role

in Grease, the movie version of the 94a rock 'n' roll revival musical that is currently Broadw,i> - lo*tget*l running hit show Stallone Mai K.I.S.T.. which opens today, and is about the rise of an influential labor union boss Ii is directed by Norman lewison. who also directed Jesus Christ Superstar.

Jaws II will open here In mid-.lune. after having been ro-edited when directors were switched in the middle of shooting.

Other films due to hit Miami MM are the new I- Iliot Could film Capri­corn One, about the possibility that all the moon shots were staged:

Bertrolucri > 1900, a four-and-one-half hour epic (the American ver­sion, however, is only three-and-eiiii-half hour* long) about Italy from the turn of the century through WWII; The Duelist, star­ring Harvey Keitel and Keith Carra­dine, about a long-standing grudge harbored by one man; and Irwin Al­len's Litest disaster flick about an invasion of killer bees, The Swarm.

Miami, since it lags about six weeks behind the New York release of a film, is simultaneously going to get hit with some of the worst of the old films, and the best of the new — a mixed bag if there ever v\ as one.

Bunuel at Beaumont

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Showing this weekend at Beau­mont Cinema is Robert Bresson's Four Nights of a Dreamer. This movie is Bresson's most surprising film. The story updates Dostoyev-sky's "White Nights" to contempo­rary Paris; a painter befriends a young girl bereft of her lover and secretly falls in love with her. Bres­son's camerawork creates a haunt­ing fairyworld around the Pont Neuf bridge: one scene in particular — the night-time apparition of a pleasure boat gliding down the Seine — ranks as one of the most enchanting visions in all cinema.

Also showing this weekend at Beaumont Cinema is Luis Bunuel's The Milky Way. Bunuel has contin­ually made films intriguing to emo­tions, passions and intellect. Simul­taneously simple and ambiguous, his films never have lost the ability to shock, outrage, excite and In­volve his audiences in over 40 years. In The Milky Way, Bunuel continues to exhibit the audacious creativity for which he is known.

The fiim depicts the surreal Odys­sey of two vagabonds, played by Paul Prankeur and Laurent Terzief. who travel through history wit­nessing and participating in a series of moral and religious controver­

sies. At each stop, Bunuel probes deeply, reiterating questions that have troubled Roman Catholics through the ages, exposing hypocri­sy and challenging church dogma that contradicts human nature.

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"Popcorn Logic," an original play written by Christopher Chisholm, will be appearing at the Theatre Arts building tonight, tomorrow and Sunday at 8 p.m. Admission is $1.

Chisholm Is a senior drama major at UM. This will be the first time his play is performed before an au­dience.

"Popcorn Logic," a tragi-comedy. is directed by Theresa Donahue and features author Chisholm, Larry Kety, Brian Mullin, Ivy Gordon, Scott Burin, and Joey Perlmutter in the acting roles. The play, set in a park, concerns some unique individ­uals who gather there and the sub­sequent events that change their lives.

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Assistant D i rec tor o f Admissions

T O : G e o r g e F. G i a m p e t r o D i rec tor of Admissions

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We'll see you at tonight's Awards Dinner! - « •

Records 1 Kridav. April 28. 1978 THE MIAMI HURRICANE 15

lesls f And Then There Were Three intic

eve Hackett ease Don't Touch irysalis

Jcirnrsis rrminds one nt a man ho has had t w o I T U V M W <eironar-

and is still alive and kicking, to Ir surprise of his doctor. Surely. Ihen PetPr Gabriel left the group a Iw •/•Ml ago. rock critn I ae rOM ie country gave the group little nance of survival. After all. wasn't pe lead singer (Gabriel) the heart ' the group and who could imagine

j tirnesis concert without Gabriel's |umerous costume disguises? And he biggest question of all was.

lould the remaining members of genesis find a replacement for Ga-friel and top the sales of their latest {lassie album. The Lamb Lies Down )n Broadway?

Well, Genesis survived the loss of Sabriel. Drummer Phil Collins tame lp from the back to take the reins \i the group. Collins, and band riembers Steve Hackett, Michael lutherford, and Tony Banks, con­

tinued the legend of Genesis with fhree excellent albums. Trick of the Tail, Wind and Wuthering and Sec­onds Out.

All seemed smooth sailing for this English quartet until the sum­mer of 1977 when guitarist Hackett announced his departure from the group to follow a solo career.

_.vhich he had been leaning towards Isince the release of his first solo •album, Voyage of the Acolyte.

llackett's departure surely would Imean the break-up of the group, Isince only three members were left land Collins was working with I Brand X.

But no, my friends, Genesis is alive, well, and kicking.

Collins, Banks and Rutherford have just released an album appro­priately called . . . And Then There Were three.

Genesis has survived to remain probably one of the best bands ot our era. Michael Rutherford has taken over on guitar and doubles on bass on the recording.

The album starts off with "Down and Out," a hard-throbbing number in the basic style of Genesis. Collins does an excellent job on vocals and Banks' keyboard wizardry is amaz­ing! Rutherford lays back on the bass, only to come out alive and kicking on the'other tunes on the album. Rutherford's acoustic guitar is quite good, especially on soft numbers such as "Snowbound."

Genesis even gets a little island-funky with "Follow You. Follow Me." a catchy bright number thai might even pass on American Band­stand.

"Deep In The Motherlode." the best tune on the album, was penned by Rutherford. Lyrically, it's a cow­boy song set in the 1880s, but. mu­sically, it's set in the 1980s.

"Scenes From a Night's Dream" is a fast moving foot-tapper about a child named Nemo Dreams. Who would name their kid Nemo''

"Scenes" is followed by "Sas It'. Alright Joe," which is the onlv hur-ing track on the lp II follows Gene sis' old soft build-up, something they frequently use in songs, trying to excite the listener after Mtfcja i ing him to a soft, boring beginning and then climaxing to a heavy build-up.

The rest of the album contains no surprises from Genesis and the pro­duction sounds similar to their other fine albums. . . . And Then There Were Three is an excellent album by Genesis (which doesn't need a testament).

Around the same time Genesis re­leased their latest album, former guitarist Steve Hackett released his second solo album, his first since leaving Genesis. If this album doesn't make Hackett a household name, then I think I'm ready for the

Sex Pistols' appearance on Donnie and Marie. This album is easily the best solo album this year.

Hackett has an impressive line-up on this album, including Kansas members Steve Walsh and Phil Ehart, Richie Havens, and Randy Crawford, a great singer.

Oh. I almost forgot "Necam," the computer, which makes its debut on this album.

The album starts off with "Nar-nia." a fresh, bouncy tune sung by Steve Walsh. If this was on a Kan­sas album it would probably be a big hit. It also happens to ^ .me of the best tunes on the lp, save for "Carry On Up the Vicarage "

With "Carry On Up The Vicar­age," Hackett's voice is mixed through what seems to be a com­puter that brings a smile to your face when heard. The melody is dedicated to authoress Agatha Cnstie. and the words to the mys­tery/song can only be deciphered by reading the liner notes

"Racing in A" gets off to a fasi start, with Steve Walsh returning to lead vocals, and is followed by "Kim," a pleasant instrumental lea-turing Hackett.'s superb guitar work.

Richie Havm tals on two tracks. "How Can I." a nice soft acoustic number, and ''Ica­rus Ascending," which gives tke album a strong ending "Splendor wings of ambition, melted bv the sun. to the spa of remorse, grave­yard come," sings Havens

The title song on the album, "Please Don't Touch." is a fine in­strumental by Hackett.

Please Don't Touch! is a flawless album Hackett has done a great job — musically, with his guitar, and lyrically — with the songs as well as in the production of the album, which was done with the help of John Acock. Please Don't Touch! is not an album to be left untouched!

— Rich Laiks

THE MIAMI HURRICANE invites you to apply for a staff position

for the fall semester — SU 221

START MEDICAL SCHOOL SEPT. 1, 1978

Absolute accreditation with WHO luting. M a n i eligibility requirements of tha Association of Amarican Madical Collage* for the COTRANS program. Approved institution for HEW guaranteed student loan program and V A benefits. The school is xxrell established and 3 classes have elready graduated. Over 1,500 U S . cituens are currently enrolled A non restrictive admission policy and 2 semester pre-med program are m existence. Applications are being processed on the basis of first qualified first accepted Intensive language instruction starts in lata June We are not associated with any American "Admissions Office" and there ere no exorbitant fees involved. Inquiries should be made immediately and directly to the Dominican Republic. You mey call 809-688-4516. You may write

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I f THE MIAMI HURRICANE Friday, April 28. 1978

eaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaal

F r i d a s . April 21*. 197S 1 Ml M I A M I HURRICANE 1 7

V i \ tournament herth still in doubt

Tennis season ma\ CMICI at Gainesville By :X)B KNEELI i

. , , ll.eee Saartx telelor

The men's tennis team will • their 1071 mati h agai Munrias but Bn it

• I In their linal n tomorrow.

I he Murncaii' son againsi ihe FIU Sunblazers on February 18, and beat them 9

courts romorrow's n a big problei:

I M For Ron Myers, John i

and l a n s Dennett Ihe male: heir last home

match. I he top Hire i players team w i l l graduate next mon th .

The on March 2.r> Warn*. I I I I A M iam i The score of that mat, h 7L2. but ,is ing

•ut the aid of Chuck i w h o

I londa packing the stands, will hold d a di- .urt adsai

said .e-e more bask i

I ess is added thji not IM e-nnis lhat olhet fans have, but it was something thai his learn would liase iti pui up ss ith.

Illnesses and inji. been the reasons for their disappon but certainly r i"'< table, r< This ephomore Ian Duven­hage a hadls . i n k l e - a lee :

iied his hai k al the same linn that the team competed in a I three

•• Carol ina. Nor th Cat i u t ive ly .

Wit

w i l l get picked for ihe Ni name I lie beginning o

• •.. inta Ihe ti

it, but

'he eight i

' uns and indisid-

11 fie- tourm

l ess is is confident that his No. 2 singles player, John Geraghty, will

lected to go to the tourney, in­dividually.

" look ing over his record, he ' s been one of the more steady players on the team." Lewis said "Steve Rogul (the No. 4 player) has also had a good season, but the No. 4 po­sition is different than the No. 2

NCAA tournament will be M I I I May 22 through 29 at the

University of Georgia campus in Athen>

Mark Betten roneentrates, mi his delivery . . senior righthander is trying to break mil ol slump

'Canes pitc team to 38

Bs BOB KNEELI , Axxlifanf Sport. Editor

The strongest asset the h u e hall team has been blessed with ihr son has been its pitching staff, ae cording to head coach Ron Fr.i

"Our pitching has been ihe strongest part of the team thi* sea son," Fraser said while running down the occurrences ol the K so far. "We se got an average de­fense, average hitting, and we steal a lot of bases, but it's the pitchers who keep us in the games."

The pitching staff, led by Augie Ruiz (9-2), Randy Guerra (6-0) and Tony Vila (11-0), has maintained a 2.14 earned-run-average through 45 games.

Despite the lack of hitting. Fraser stated that he is more proud of this team than any other he has coached in the past few j

"This team svas scrambled to­gether at the last minute lasi Fraser said. "Very few of the play ers ever knew each other and they've produced at least 100 per­cent all season."

Last 'year 's recruiting i were wasted svhen a large part of the recruits signed with pro learns, leaving Fraser without much hope for the season.

The team has now compliled a 38-8 record this season and needs only two more victories to be war-thy of a berth al the NCAA play­offs.

The team captured their .iHth vic­tory of the season on Wednesday night, when they beat visltln) cayne College 4-1 •

For Vila, it was victors numhei 11, as the senior pitched a no-hitter for five innings In the top of the sixth, Vila was replaced by Mark Batten after gising up hits to the first three batters he faced, and giv­ing the Bobcats their only run in the campaign

Batten was less .successful than Vila had been, walking the first tsvo batters he faced and being replaced by Guerra, who managed to leinie up with the save

"I took Tony out because le getting a little tired," I after the game that ss as played in relatively chills weather.

In Batten's last (ess outings, his luck has sri'ined lo run drs

"Mark needs to go out on the mound when sve hase ,i Mvee run lead." l-rasei explained "Thai wa) he can concentrate on pitching and not worry about the game "

The 'Cane* are presently ranked third In the nation behind I S( and Arizona, who are ranked first and second, respective!) Ihe 'Canes have the best record of all southern independent schi

There is a possibility that Miami, the University of Florida and Flori­da State University svill meet at Mark Light Field for the NCAA re­gional playoffs The Gator* and the Seminoles are both ranked in the top 20 teams in the nation

For Miami to be able to host the regional playoffs, they will have to have won an NCAA hid by May 8. the day that the location for the tournament is determined

hers lead -Ji record

Miami has two home games against Stetson University tonight and tomorrow, and will close their home season againsi 1 -TU on Wed­nesday. May '!.

The 'Canes will close their season with four game on the road: two against Georgia Southern in States-boro. Ga., and two against Jackson­ville University, in Jacksonville

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"LITE TASTES GREAT AND IT'S LESS FILLING. I ALSO LIKE

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Former All~Pro Lineman

^J

IS 1HL MIAMI HLRR1CANI t-nday, April 28. 1978

Bonnie and Lat lead Athletes of Year In my infinite wisdom, I I

picked my Athletes ol the Year for each sport at the l M S e. hoices w • me were ronaways. All are right.

Here goes. FOOTBALL: I'll start with an

one. All-American middle guard Don Latimer led the squad in tackles, quarterback sacks and heads collected. Even though he was constantly dou­ble-teamed. Lat dominated the line of scrimmage nearly every time he played

so t« . IK trom Algiers. Algeria, Feth Bra-ham, is the winner here The talented striker was the team's leading scorer and. at the risk of using a cliche, "the best all-around pl.i WOMEN'S

I'm no expert in this category. I've never been to a game and probablv never will. Last se­mester's sports editor. Rick Straub. picked the winner: freshman Ally Holand.

BASEBALL: One of the

aeaaaal ^ ^

,oe 9lick w+wk sports editor ^ g j

I \\\\\\\\\\\\\W \

T E R M PROJECTS Summer break

Keep yourself e n t e r t a i n e d

COME TO REX ART! We have it ALL!

i!2(i.'{ x.inii,iwi . | ;7 u t e n u c . i m . n n i . Mmnl . t . ' ! . '{1I" .O.VII.VI II

toughest choices of the column At press time. Randy Guerra was batting .277 with • t een leading 10 homers and -19 RBI's, and what 's more, he had a 6-0 pitching record. He was mv third choice. Ron Batter, one ol the club's leading hitters ai is superior in every phase ol the game, except power, to his

catching predecessor. Pat I han He more than filled the void left by the now -Baby Yan­kee. Batter finished second Augie Rui/ overcame nagging shoulder problems to compile •

eitching record and a minis-cule 1.33 ERA. Without A who pitched poorly only once the Canes wouldn't be headed

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for a berth in the Regional play­offs. He wins.

MtN'S H N M S : Another lough choice, but All-American John Geraghty takat It He had the team's best sing!' even though the No. 2 player drew the opposing team's best man.

U 'OMrVS 11 N.MS: Kim Sands, the team captain and No J single^ playci . went through ihe whole season unscathed. She edges Al 0 lor the pick

WOMl VS GOLF: The easiest choice Carolyn Hill won a tour­nament and came clOM m tWO others She also won the piesli-§ioaa DolMrt) cup. proving tiiat she is e>nt' ol the top amaleui goiters in the counli v

M I \ s (,(»i i \ m iiiaie Stave Golliher, Ray Coa) and let iv Hashimoto all had their momenta, opt Coay had m i n e t h a n his t c i m i i u t c s

W O M l N"S H \ S K I I l« A I 1

Wand) Foote, evfco averaged ovei IMM, wins going .iu.i\ she is one oi Flori tla's tinesl

WOMl N'SSO! I HAI 1 Pitch' Bogner gaiai the

honor. The talented senior was also a strong hitter on Miami's inconsistent club.

MEN'S SWIMMING: No one tilled the shoes of David Wilkie, but let's face it. he was one in a million. Richard Talley, the IM specialist from Bay Village, Ohio, wins this highlv competi­tive categorv

ATHLETE Ol m l NEAR: Women's swimming hasn t heen mentioned vet. Homne Glasgow, the treshman tiom Severn. Md. set two AIAW national records ilus yeai, in the .,011 l u r s l s l e (4:47.13 Ml the Utioaal champi­onships) and in the 100-IM

| ie I against the GatOTt), She also set • st hool record in the 200-IM and was the Hurricane's Athlete of the Week twi te lIns spring. Now she's the Athlete of the Year. Latimer was lecowd in the one inan balloting

COACH 0 1 HU M AK: Oat l a w a r d . R o n I I . I M I a n d

SKIP Bertman ihare tins one lot guiding the baseball team h othei top-rate season, ihe mn-ner-up in this liual categtiiv is women's tennis coach Anna Kuvkendall. one ol the finest college tennis mentors m Amen e . 1

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i in- worn ira is prfs-ently competing In thf aecond day Of t h e three' Bay I 'AIAW si.iti ckampionships In Csinesville si the University of Florida campus The tournament began yesterday and will concludi tomorrow.

I In '.vi in ie 11 n e t t e r s u "lit iiil.i ihe tourn- .niini; ol t a !M) shut­out of the I lorifla S t a l e t in ivers i tv Seminoles on Saturday, April 22 at the UM court! lhal match marked the liual collegiate dual match for seniors Kim Sands, who finished with a perfect 16-0 mark, and Jodi Appelbaum. The team's Ne. 2 singles player, who accumulated a 12-.I mark on the season

Next in lini foi the Kirl netters, who closed their season with a team ret nni eef 15.3, is UM AIAW southeastern i hampionships. tu be held in Mississippi Thursday through May 11, and the AIAW na­tional championships, which will be played In Maryland at the Salisbury State University Campus from June 4 to 12

The Hurricane leccet squad will go onto the field in September with the assurance that their coaching BfOblem has he-en resolved.

.lamal Shurdom, the lormer tant undi Dr Richard Thomas and a co-head coach with Brian Killeen. also a Thomas assis­tant, has in in named the head coach of the soccer learn

Killeen, who had wanted the job. did not complain, but was pti that the problem was finally re­solved.

"I'm glad they made a decision." said Killeen. "It never would have

• el with two ' oaehi i " Killeen will stay on next year as

an assistant COM h The whole problem arose when

'i Thomas resigned devot, ins time to coaching

.Inin,11 Shurdom

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Fr iday , April 28 . 1978 I H t MIAMI HI R R I C A N E I t

Sands in action Kim Sands, the women's tennis team's No. S singles player

shows her winning form on the UM courts. Sands i s the only girl on the team to compile a perfect record this season (16-0). Sands' play this season has earned for her the Miami HURRICANE'S Women's Tennis Athlete of the Year. Sands also won the HURRI­CANE'S Athlete of the Week honor on Tuesday, April 25. Naxt year, the graduating senior hopes to join the pro tour.

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METHODOLOGY

Mountaineering, as all but the chronically misinformed know, is the skill, the science and the art of drinking Busch Beer. It begins by heading for the mountains (i.e., a quick jaunt to your favorite package emporium or wateringhole) and ends by downing the mountains (i.e., slow slaking swallows of the brew that is Busch ).

tR However, between those two points lies a vast area of personal peccadilloes sometimes called technique and sometimes called methodology (depending on your major v Hence, this ad. <3I Sipping vs. chugging. Both have their merits, of course. But generally speak­ing, except for cases of extreme thirst or a leaking glass, sipping is the more prudent practice jbr serious. sustained mountaineering. SI Next.

Sipping vs. chugging i3 Fi,.a "" g:

can't be prohibited (this is, after all. a free country), they are frowned upon. Please be advised thats^rrdr'ity is a virtue, and the natural refreshment of Busch is best uncompromised.

ST Finally, there's the issue of containers. Good taste dictates a glass be used. But bad planning sometimes prevents that. If you find yourself forced to drink from the can, you should minimize this breach of etiquette. Be formal. Simply let your little finger stick out stiffly (see Fig. 4). Happy Mountaineering1

the proper posi­tion. Some swear by sit­ting: others by standing. Suffice it to say that the most successful mountaineers are flexible, so youll find both sitters and standers. ( Except on New Year's Eve. when it's almost impossible to find a sitter.) ^ Which brings us to additives. Occa­

sionally a neophyte will sprinkle salt in his Busch; others mix in tomato juice; and a few on the radical fringe will even add egg. While these manipulationsj

Don't just re-ach for a beer. BUSCH Head for the mountains. sst 1

xea^xea^iPaaa^iPaaa^iPaaaM

THt MIAMI HURRICANE Fr iday , A p r i l 2 8 , 1078

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*

*

* *

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>

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*

*

*

Cl.assifieds ANNOUNCEMENT

APARTMENTS FOR RENT : . . t l i " I HtaeVtM "

lurkf ttlreejiiote A g-

2 7 A * ? . *

f u r m t b e * 1 bedroom oportmer-i* leate

Ma> mrouoh August (option ttw

toneoeii*oot on root 5 rmrtules l igm U M -

t ^ 1 * 6 7 2 ) 5 2

Apartment to wMW MOW opho" 'ot

W l lontoi 3 bedroom I both pool ten

*m saunoj M — f t — y i 2 7 4 - j m

C * f M tOf-iL'S rf you -#i ti my on* beet

•oor*» aporsmmeft at taomt i_.ee.

t-rrm tone I *oo< IOMWI ' a . aua tb* II St*

pie porton o» marred . oup e I •

Monday AAOv 1 •>( heard C**0*n>0'

**s Tsna w ?»4

lOi'eiifrf -,.,# per-)

'C**Pt A C |»OOl t#HW' ' *Ao>

Mtjh A o t e r b e d ond ru<'.ivt.eng>

"tsqu* 393 1 5 * 3

• * # « y f u r n i P h o * a p a r t m e n t

onp bedroom tpoc>ou> a . healed poo'

' •scot'O'e in OtKOnv, G t * t

APARTMENT WANTED

HELP WANTED National iomaarOf needv r**c*rl mmcnortcli

*•» company car ond etpentet Willing

to I tgvti t<ngie P*«f«rt«ei tend return* *0

Mar*. M m I 13 Hofto Way lonawrjod,

Hff -do 3 2 7 X 1

W o r i tot w m r M r itocb work ond cath

remitter dcpeandobto pt*rtttval ond oil

orownd Amenccw typo - CoH 667 3684

and Pitt •<" Mike ....

HIGHER ORDER S o t t l o S t a t i o n s

• a f t l * S t a t i o n ,

I .1 fl I r t a t a t Mu M no' o

drill A.. pertorute, man bottle >fetien,

S « * t f > m

J i m ' • • ! , • I n <dcd *o

rxctp' ') M *C return to A f f t f * and »*>

pfce^ee,! t n * H t f * , eopcro*# or dm

teWe mnnoii t o n e , think notK > g

ble'

Th.x K K Q O I . , dotenqtV b o * at detmihor,,

S a o t h e f a f a t y

ot jrie I A | Z u l u i a - n i H - a r t a i • l i d -

t r p k t o T r i p o i

- r M a u n l a i n - .

. ,tOi> H 'he O « 0 * r t

- ftuoh

CtiitiOtti- - L tory ot th«

G a l * * • * H p r i u l o i

Si.'bi«t • 2 b**d*ooni ond or May fhrough l\Ar King. Cool.. Spam-.'! ' •oc» 0»*por,-.brf ("oil onyt.mt 595 0 9 0 6

ot aft 3 9 2 6

' bodreor*. apai'ei#e ' - a n i # d to tublol

M«)|r ' »h^o^»g^ I

^ 7 3025 o' EolKf : B A _ * * 5 0 _

A U T O M O i l l E S FOR SALE W A N T T O I U T

I od Maw ..:• M l >8<4

1«aV* t u i c h S p a < . a i

t * * d c o n d i t i o n

e M t v n i ? - » 3 S 0

T a l a p h a n a

1*74 H a n d « CI55C Cr-ood ( w d i l M i i

$ 9 5 0 or b* - i ot(#. :o« )ahr. C at

1 ° 7 2 *Of ih« A/C A M . M

• 1906

' 7 4 r-ireb-'d ffiptft A I A M FM ataroa,

M owrvcr a>ttang $4 0 0 0 - CoM I."do at

, 9 6 1 9 1 . * ••-

1973 lemon-,

door V0-» 58 00C •• »

^ J U 7 ^ 0 d « 5 W 9 6 ^ r i j t M - ^

CLOTHING AITER ALTERATIONS

ol .on , 5 * 4 ' 6 ^i

COUNSELORS Ma4t covn*ator>, » o n ' * a

•eomp Con 667-1556

COPY SERVICES f - he.jti» I I tlity '

• M M priflhrig <t •

Cot Monor. Dtjd.e, 261 0 9 .

COMPUTER OPERATORS

-— t » - y i e i f 0W " "

bie l*tton« 6 5 2 761C

DRIVERS WANTED •Voni o ' i CodiHoc to Bo

•imoiR on Moy 12 *Ki AutaTrom A I M pay

tora, ot you enoy diiv* \tfot.jht throvgh

P-t»refK«i required Call 861 R 9 t l

Worit Butch dtivan to Chigoco or Chain

pogne. M n p i l .ometirrte <n May Wil l po-/

FOB BENT

vjorogo aportfn#"i nf»it path a u i r.'.#

private entrance 5 ' ? ! I H | 1 *

only must lo»e on-moli 2 m t * i trom U ©•

M M 7 44Q9 BT O W N I I Cond* M K a n d * 11 Onva lwo*ooo>ooin, tw« both first ftaor drepei carpo'tng mir* rarad watt, i i u n i . r«< r *«m, S*5 -« )27

S M * « I HOUSI M o i r i ioden' to .hare •

i ta«ed bockyord. wideck MOtlbg equip

rnejert washer dfyei wothshop Own rootn

with * C telaphone. tv neo- Univemty

eHrt so tot Oevay Prefer athletic non imok

or who oppraciote', unmhibiterl 'emirle'

but hoi no time or mottay to

tome $ 1 3 5 month including ol) ept

•god Call Dn" « 8 5 « - 6 i ? 3 _ _ _ _

W A i K T O C A M * U S

I bedroo*n oportmenh air cond'tionod

t*jrn<',hed «hort terra taOMl. behtnd t u r g

or King CoH 6 * 1 9003

t a a m f a r R a n t

Private antrorwe. Kirniihed tompte'elv

•an (onditioned. ottice rofrigerata' ond

hetplote OuWt garden >.u*rounding-, 15

trom the Ootveriity $ 1 0 0 per

month call 4 4 3 3905

2 bedroom o«>Ottm#nt pool balcony 10

minutei from comput 3 minutei ttottt

W m n pi me 5 minute-, doiti Suniet Shop

prng otea neoc park J 2 7 0 per month m

Ckiding uti l '"ei 665 0 8 7 6 tent trom Moy

a* August

ataatt* tar w a n t

In a three bodr00m apJ*tment Eiceltaett

toco'ion I t t tmt . pooli o**t mim.te trom

Kandott Mo l l Seopp.ng Plaia CoH

7 7 4 J t l a

* « r t t * t l Mwwc tor rent Complete mobtta

•.y.tem ow* record) or yoejrv Gteot lor

baorh paxrh*'.1 For more • n l o c a t i o n coll

Sceet at M 1 9 1 5 5 otter 5 p m

FOR 5ALE

tO» SALE C O C A M matchtMab* tmr

»«la 10 *»r *1 .»0 . UMQM »•* • '•'••" otwplti an* mmrm infar-matian an <wort*tn MAKMS , tmU IRIC • * 1-3550 ttotwaon 7 p.m. and miLdrtlfht

N W O N M i ""th mote cn.d - e e k , now' CaH 9 4 0 3 * 3 9

' whn» Ford CMdoiie 500 G o o d <on

gihon tgOO on n> i a t 9 Q

C H O K I tmmWmt i I 'ouo.e yaraS al

beo. j fcM brawn p.t- Cmly 54 0 0 per

y a r d S * * 5 ^ 1 1 t 5

T-eem t i tad mae»r#j.. * . i t t<>apor* A t t * 2

lawn chain a n d •>**nn*t hmrhen r h o t sho4

anty dtit tomatter Oamg chaop nttjna

* f 4 4ao5 anyeeme

f u n tMrtWh heneaVreade mererKhawm papal,

Wiaar puixta fetofi and vharh very cheap

it awaeattad cod 2 *4 6339

I tata 1 ktoo w d l choti 1 -.ota bod

- vg CoH 5 9 5 0 5 1

Autoeenobata f M tope dock pane*pnw

- t t eeceBint tpeoaen aaceitant laundmg

A C tn*- tola Facettent coenomo" 8 .000

r J teta at 595 7 2 6 *

• •cent ; Have Khok> t o

tkawa crou A *a*Kto-mv la t a * mod d H n t , .

«0w«30t trowMti . Coll 2 7 * 4 * 2 0

C x . i i 0 . f l tot ot I

t w o > * i l I ' 01 I M « < Croat S2O0 0C

•' • * 2 * 4 -TtO*

Yaor aid ra»r i fa ro» i . Foi tale raa imahle

< * * • n y t a a w * fvry IN H c d b a t n i N W |

l-kMH»pt 3 1 2 N i 11'ROM owd A M 9 ipeoh

» * 2 ! 7 0

Two For a aaaortar one to* o dame 1 -

1 Caedeje

More M o - lo r ry at - 3 * 0 * attor 4 p m

a * 3 9 * 0 3 a *

1 o w n * ) rmakPmo) ena>*ro. 1

atojego- a***) w P a t r a o 1

I I I U B I I O i k * . c * « a * t o M M .

*mm • « « f l e f a w y « * * 5 - * * » *

W h t n I ma'ch north the woild 1

iH be-eatl-

In all Inkelyhoed. • • ofl j< ' n big

• y m h a l but >t you hove o«e, you may ot

a a * rto<t the a t * ana. . , ,

C o m a p t i l « f k !

C a f * K i r b y , l i t f l a J o h n ! 1 "•-:••,« h i l lo !

• c a l l e r )

5 f t S o u n d o r t

*he Noble Savage

S t a t t i t h S w p o r i t o r * r v n w i t * in

t h a t t r o a t t a f A m a r i « « (

. i i t M w i c a o d e d «n creafLng mo-

d*>pt w h * *- \p my mimon out •»

t e n t dean 1 o - a S * v i * t A f p n t and

.t ma\ •)• I V U I I M B rio* a§ain

a f m p , . r ' - *#• k | W*0 *

wtlt itater tire .to^^-P trooper, get high

Tha i v M c a * * be "if 0 « f * t y the viogon .

t 0 « t h * l o t O t y ! - I-3, iht

S i f m a i - - . - ' i M ' ; - - a >-cv.ledo.e

T h o r a w i l l too # * t e t y »n A f r i c a

A t a w u n t o f h o m i a l w o i - t h o r a

w.11 b o a h o l i d a y i n p a r t t r o a t t

N a t w r o t T o o !

HOMES fOK RENT

PERSONALS Door P.V.,

Sorry obou* your i lauf t tad . but I rwtved

the doodhne Anyway, hod a tuper hma

Ot dinner and hope to t p a n * mora haw

with you ond your roOOaBtOOO

•Oh. by the way. where hav* you boon

Oil my l-te'

Leva From your.

V a » l S c a l a p . f i .

0 e o . * ' " rod

We < • 1 ail ove< ond I .ovWn't hova

mod* it without you looking t e i w o ' d to

tun lime over the w"w>«'

• n.y lo** Fiod

T o m e guy at A d C*mp

Thank» tor ee-erythmg Nope vou It b »

there te-n^ht' Sor-y aboL'T oil the

FtOping w a l l be able to make a da*dl't*t

M i l * r o . . D t * t H ' N t ' ' » ' , , . VVh** t a

l be-*', en* heii ot a eme.ter

Oeeige V_% ii fOei.g to be one k*fl *> o mot

r»46hJAH l»C

Although it dedr t -arork may way I

• arrtad it tuck •> M o N a l everything

w * r i t the way wa a lwoyt wont -1 to Any

way. I know wa writ orwoyt bo CIOL*

lriand» Unhl wa moat o g a m

J * tat*

M Mamari*« a l the p o , i >m*N y M H i „ .«

km toievei The kid-., o n * I mtyv you *giy

mu«*

* Thoni . ttv thiee g i r o ' paon

w a y . be * * r . tpecio' t * me

h p * «nnual i**nh*Hanac party _9

derwoy ot 5 0 0 p m taoay * * * » ' • * n*t

T 0 . o " 0 u . i)M itx/denK

Small hmert avemwall-r o i l * i f f

D o i t l * i * w * r d t y « w < « n * I l

I lajejfOl * t y o u b i f o t i l

C t n d y

i t t *e*t-*g war -e '

T o t a l h o p p i n o t i o n * l o r e

b o e e b t t • • » * r y » * * y

Thonki tor a g o * * y*o* • * • • * • r *

•y ** the #i<* o» *he >.h*«l year

I lor tludent-, low

5 * 5 0 lo-ely twrm.he* '^ountr , -home o.r

<enditi*>nad c*rp«tt , drdpo Igr . -

•n vo-d G r e a t f c

4 4 V 3 I 3 * F'*m 51*C l e . r i v one one* ' * e I

• p a r t m * |

535 a * r e «

togei o . .

pen okoy G r e c I

tent n c * ' *c" i*>* roS t.

'©Om :en i r a l o.r pool a * " a |

acre oi land near the U o' *••

S225 utlllt•e^ -ixiljoed _>^ •• .• or»oge

on eonditeoned .-arp*'! rtinpa ol' * p p l '

Otxet, very roomy Ord private.

4 4 3 - 1 * 3 *

low rent' Corner three t r -

drftoned harmikod <>• :••>_•• *&__ 6

month <»a>,e. ReoJMp-ewjfl ;orpe' - bo- b

gue walk ta tcha* '

1 1 * 1 0 OF I O O K I N 0 *

We e-o.t hu'-'ired 0 ' L I •

ment* Kause* dupleae' . C o : -

*J*oM 'ies a n * price; Call today a r d

r*-Oa tonight

R I C K I N R I A I T T . I N C | •

O p * n 7 dovi 9 o m 9 p n.

tO* Volxtncta A C o r * . Goblet

443 3839

for ,o,e by o - ^ e i , C U O J C * KEY Cudtoe

Gordon. 1 1 acre tots - deep conol,

high ground Coll 374 9Q92 • J?7

3 bedroom C I S on ocre 533 6 0 0 -

• 0 0 4 South»e*t' 42nd Avomai Ham root.

solor wot«' hoc**' U al M .

666-0362

J O i OPPORTUNITIES S U M M C * C A M *

C O U N 5 I L O 0 S W A N T I 0

Femo't: * M 78

troche'•.

S W I M M I N G *M -*-r>i' - 2

l i -NNIS ?

W A T f * SKIir'tG . .1

June 72 Aug 2 5

C A M * T A P A W I N G O Sweden. u , i r 4

EST 1919 170 romper', girtt * 16 6 0

counselor Owet 1000 ocret m fhe toot-

hitk ol N M White Mtt A C * O'credited

Brochure ond application, avoilob'e in the

Student Eri^toymant Servicei O H " • or

write V .Kogar . P O Do> 911 HaMandalo.

9 ot call 1_456 1890

Pervon tp pal p'Ogromt at Community

Recreation Center. Year round pieterred -

CaH Mr Milton ot 2 7 9 * 9 2 9

T O M I T A 5FC A f * l ( A N O U T T i l

5 l $ T | * 5 T M f M I A M I TICK I T

M O M f C O M I N O A N O 0 * 1 1 * 1 W i l l

I X I C . C O M M f T T H S . 5 C O O " M T .

A N O I V l t r O N f I * 0 * O O T T O

M I N T I O N

T h a n k 1 f a r a * r « a t y * « r , a n *

h e l p i n g m * %at a w * • • m u c h a t t

pu> t n , A n * r o n t o m k a r t N T H I

L A N D O r T M | B L I N D T H I O N I

I T I 0 M A N 15 K I N O

0 J 5 - M T A O M I G A * 2 0

"Cra-v

THonk. toe r> _s

ook te 'word 'e gtodueaticn a n *

M l t le .e you* V o u ' * » o -

l * . e

M y tmpott-of * o*..hon

I ' * * tound mv a n t a n * 1

-ee'

THI * 4 N H I L L f N K *A*TT 15 COM INOIM M T I I A O Y OOi A G * I * T

A C For arm *G00 BTU I g'*o> I

-M hod G o o d '-J-i

on tinoK and h«ve a g * -

The .eo Ma ••:••

birtnday

K n o . n g

b -.:>

• t

5*

• 7 *

Ftie>nd> I t H •

1 • * * * * 1 "•»

-• • -

1 'o be • a *appt

• • ' - - . • • . ' •

oO'y t p e - o l maofe-ftf f* •*•#

a

i h e p * you Fw*i o io*eer that 1 *

ei*erg.T ana imaoartahva m m * to ma Fullest

You daser** tha be*H Thank, for your

.. and Far a l l the time, you kept

the laughing through t h * aPrvtcjMari. ID

. . . . Lo--.

Deor Nor , ftebo l a r b IkJeflf, Shefy.

Ha-/ tond ;

Four yeon an4 I va hnolly mad* M Thanks tor -.hor.ng the l « t port o* • * m

ma

Gale

To the .WkgVO * n d

G o o d kirk an y *u* Fmalt and h*v« 1

giaot summer. Tha thing we canajwar I

• U 5 H Sea you mU than'

u*e . %miy

5UMMI* j O * 5 Now hiring countelort, other. Work iune

2*Fh thfu Augutt I, 1978 Compi m

South Florida Fun. votary • room and

board It tntero-tted. call 253 4841 Girl

Scout Courml Tropical ' lo t .do <r'

STAYING I N M I A M I ?

Col lege students er g r a d u a t e s n e e d e d this

summer t o sell fo r the

DADE WEEKLY JOURNAL

Call 672-1OOS or 6 6 6 - 3 0 5 0 b e f o r e M a y 6

• Ask for D O N N A -

LESSONS letMmi gieen 01* fled f ' f l u Cet i l ted

Water Sofoty knirtnto* children or adult-,

begttmert ad 'onced o n * Me toving

too' C** MA ot 6*5 8*02

levtorw gt**n - roasonoble rrjfet

ea>aVanced. any ttyle spociol

aB evomngt Iro 645 890?

AND FOUND The M I A A t l H U V I K A N I oHr. ' I l l

Lett ond Found oat to o v readert Stop

by th« H 0 * O 0 0 C A t * f olt.ee room 271 m

the Student Union to place the ad up to

15 wor*-,

Mack ceramic panther b*h<nd Eaton Hall

N o ouettioni asked I I W A R 0 Call Mike

ot . 4 2 3 *

Clqwe in 1 0 4 M*rr,ck

Found t * t of keyt at tha S«F***i at *><•.<

nett e thie 7 7 5 Athe See Morga

Found S 1 0 0 7 potrt a l pefwipp-or,

gnu ie i k l a t k • * brown C O M Stop by Me

mortal S t O V

MARTIAL ARTS k O m n w program at ' t > C M A * t * o ko

ra t * . KtMNJ K « . and e P e r i Tap rn-itrurtor

m * W tovkeytt pkacat Write AAMA the

A 5 P I H A C A C h l M T O f T t M M A * .

T I A l A « T * Dtp* M. l o e 1939 Atpan

MODELS " phewagrophte »

Ta >50,'h> C o * 57frQ*»4

A N WANTED • ASS P i A T W WITH 518 AMJTY A0*B FNTIMST IN JAM

Dear V.rgimo,

Your mo*at vuppc't h o . helped me

through ihu iemeitee You e a p' t t tbje.

Iriend IK m m you na«t vemafehtr. but

hope you mornoge Ikrinft yow ph l h * hop

pmeti <n tha world Don't ever target tha

up. ond down-, of U * f M Sea y * u m tha

crty'

love

M e m baoucoup p«ur voire omour

ie *ou^ • •ma,

Petri I M M

G o o d b y e U M .

W a * * • « * * ) , y a w r *

t i n f r i d o f m a . b u * . l e a f n o t , I ' m

l o o w i n g y a u a e » * t h a r C h i e f a , t p

l * » o a n d t o c h * r t e h

T * t h o f o n u - n * p e o p l e w t t a

h e r t p r a v a n t h a m > a l « a i t * b o

« • * * f r u * t r , a n d t - A l a n . J o m * .

T * m r S h a l l o y , a n * T a . h y a

T * t h o p * * p t > w h o p r o v i d e d

t h * b w m b t in m y o * u « * t - o n * l

'•od I * • p r * w n a n a a f A t a r * « o -

i i * t h * t t h o y w a r * a n i n t o g r o i

p * r t « f I f r w h n ( t h a t * * a * n 1

m o a n t h a t I h a w * * * M b o i t . )

W o m a j * o it « m a i o r » n « t i t a t i o n

• n * I p r a a t H o t a h o o p i t t h * t

w a y b y c a n f r l b ^ t t n g t a ttoa a * u m

* H f u - t * . ( « a * * a n ae I o a f • « • a f

0 * n t a t 5 t h o o t 1

A t a a e t a l a u r o r * t r ,

Dream your

com* hue

t tn** they will

love

I * 0 t yau* dream guy

Me my own o n * athart I -am* v « u hop

ptnau * n d n c r t j i * w * u * * o u t yaur yo^

UoO-y

D e a l tor f a t ta pay your f

Yau amy* o pa* eamot".

Ta m r partner , r let b a a ) o e * * in t r t a p *

You ho«e both been hua fuend. I * too

a lwor , been the-e when l n e e j -

Ma»r a g M I >ummer a n d ' Mdiaieiy loeiv

forward to our aig> naal yaor

^ tos.i partner

Memo/tot me »:*e . n-3 'c -yOu Of my weddmg c on Natepnal AM

knot . . . J o k e m i i r . .

^ G*nny

5-cfc and abvurd

* w e i t got hmo

*o • •-* rs *^* I -

P E R S O N A I S " Corny

• a * N do it deeper S*o you this vom

H o p * you mm your b u t g * b the b*rne

I R want yau the V 1

I M * _ _ , Wfc nnd Abu tod

lO«*

Although «e , i , , ^

• • . I , my lo.e - , l l todAeWaa .

O gioot •-

l ib* deM»l».el

kev*" 1 • • ' • u 1 1

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PERSONALS

Carol

- tot y*ur dett i f .

the Fhp wda

won mt ttvoiuiiON win NOI w nn

v i S t D T H * » t W4 i l I t N O M M

THI flt-VOiUTtON S G O N N A fti

i H t I A H 8 A R I A N

To the bott t o r e I

At Ph. it ' ly ing High

....

t a Mo

Move o I

-

Yov ' Fotor^e mode!

To « n * - h e m aoeng to . w . e a d a n *

r**ch die top. orl ot m , love ,

O"* whatever e t .

FLASH!

Hot f lashes f e r the rULLER M A N

This m a n wi l l pul l t h r o u g h a t f h e last m o m e n t .

Thanks fer t h e chance.

Dr. G r e e n Shirt

A i d *e *he w * r t * . g»eo*ev

c b u , I <mk you a * tha best o*

wi-Cft i m you tsttvro eontwre a n * h o p e to

**>rhcepo*0 m mpr* crmguai n*al yaor

lunch n on ma'

• W I S

Hge* a great wmm#r See y d j

• o t k c

' •

l»0 partner ' *A._, yau Wi i ^nuttfr

Spec a l t h a n k t t o J o n o t

J o m i a H a r r y S t u . tadt, l e y a n d

J e e t h e f a * y * u r d a d i c a t i a n a n d

w o r k o n t h a p * p * r * h . » y a * r Y o u

h o i k • ' ( b e a n a p a r t of m a k i n g

th io t h a m o » t r * w * r * t n f a n *

m * m * r a b l * t i m * t « r m a a t t h o U

* f M . l e t * e i i h e t tn t h o t p f a r a .

^, I o w a O a n n a l o *

T h a r * H a v * b * * n • • m * a t Mflg

U n r v a e o i t y w i t * b a v * f i e a n *na

mora t h a n * n a * u * t a F i * n M y p a -

p e r e n t a i W i f b t h * * * p e o p l e h a v e

o p o n o d m y m m * a n * m y b a a r t f a

• b e w u t . l u i w o r l * . t t i i w i t h f e * « t

r o p e c t t h a t I w * a i * M l * t p t h a n e

M M b a a t C p r l a b a c k D a * d K * n t

' ' O t a t W h i - e . Or r * h n t o n . O r .

l o a b o O r . Z o M o r . O e . F o a m Ot f l

My DoorosT S a n d r a

I LOVE YOU

Oanna L a *

To Ou* Frtendfe of i > .

The 5 * 0 0 C M * to e .

p ' t n . Mi appreciation o n * p ra t i tu * * ta aH

* h * have helped make our >toy hara *

- . . . « • • - • - . tp ofl.

fh« one and • n l *

5a,

Don

0 * * ' t ej^rey ob*t.t vocahon -

t h a i ? , You ft a U a y t be T H |

t * t * Omag-a * t j« | 9 6 * C 3 198

Y*t* de.etae t *yr gtganr.t t 'opf.ie. lor

beting ve patient «.•*) My* 5^ mp,mt ,f m9

aodod up 8m - the economy [,.

ready Ir;- t . . .

worked

to** you a n * i k n « w f aa ga^.^

y * u

Oaho Stgmo *

Yaw k*ve wch • greo i -mr

vomaona that they are wpeoo' Thaynkv for

* e fr>end'>ip. the m x t m o * * . (tha parte* .

oi rev f ie ' ond my beau '

mot i u r t t btoomed'1 Yau re one he'l at a

group"" lore 1

y*ut * Q

•eto Omega 9C3

f l g v a you tyack Sat-jrooy Fe^hr

Fe**r m return to* yau k n e e - h o t . .

• y Fhe - o y I khk bkome you tor the d.

»*rce o n * the twa yeor o l d Pttt"'

lo>«

7 * Floor

rati' • A uaookmg - ' .or-r For

the Votebne the M,kl p o d o n * the t«rl

mg t.*p wrfhout wr." *{>„ emsde m f , < *

" a t g ti.a^a *o- , o „ - pr,* .

lorO.

N o n n a

W I M *

I teua you ond 1 !| M i * y l be ysfjat,

You . a mode pty . , ( . farpo* R*M

moke it ta tha top together

l a *o teteear

My Future m'lhonotre

Whan om I going

itn|fTTTT Your pahent Cubajw

Doo* ianmter t e member grommy ot Miami near tho

Tommem She t o t * t C * H O W 5 * hhre

werk tot youi See you a n * Albert M V a n

t a n *

t e - e

Yon ore ink end apuhSetic Hope you

recover toon flamambar — * * * * * 0*0

phwtty at getne m the p a n *

l a v

Sock mod A b u t * *

la** W k * n d A f l v t o d _

K wot o groat yanr o n * out ftPufOt

well bo full ot tun togadter Thotmi for 0*>

With lave Frgm yoaat t|Mee>a**.

»*F». 1 l O V I YOO U T S G O POP IT T O

G C T M H

N A N C T

W * u . I V W Imnh e4 w a r e * * (Oy

Karon «a' f l bo * ta a*Uy p i « * a * l o i wtfh

***ttunti a n * >* * iaa i * iL thooi.) The W a r t '

The Work ' -by * W way. - h a t twaa o r * we

Ahhough you w a n t be totwrtiauj to U

o l M ne»t momr | h o p * thot »,«

t o m h o n * 0--OV-, r*too*n goad ' Jove

ke tod i A tu , T O

been a g e a r

I II OPM you a ;

P A N H I l i I N K

• . t . the ••anheP»e<v. flgjrty a* 5 «

ckpy lee- - m e

John * n d Mbo

G o « 3

-looking F o - o r * te on e.veete--' t

or** tr^- • b a p . „

m a '0 I

I f oH " *» t year l o o . fl - - k fc-

k o * a • gtejot isgornm a n * f_\

em . C.

it » been g-eo* bmng firanflk. - ocod ruck

•-.th t h * tcript. :

l *U>0

C t o r * b a r

I l p | p e t - e t -

I needed a i -ond 1 a u t>o<- t

•kpeb -

y ?u • wt but keep

Ar thur

roNv ••

Ar ux.ttv uid hup^y gnd

be Hgnfl

l e oh -

Other than that r,a*e a greot day'

RI

C h r i e .

F r o m i n t o ! * * a n d g r o a n t u b *

t * p t * u * m g 5 0 5 t h r u H * m * < a t n

b e * . v a c a t i a n t . w e d d i n g * a n *

t u g h t t yau r * t h * b o t t ' T * f * t h

* r w a w i l l m a k e i t )

l a v a a f w a y t .

I A Y

TAFIA 1ARA

V> fen

- e t o * * O t r a t

late to bieaxh -t •

PHI DELTA TRETA W l A l l THI CHAMPIONS!"

To •

TUTORING I M C A T D A T O C A T

. 'RtPARAlLrtT C O U I S f .

S h o l * o n flo.o l a u c o t i o n o l C a n t o r

9mm thghwoy Ai fO. , trom U M

• the Riviera Theater lutkdmg Suite ?>6

,1 oabhtt phone 448 ?3J6 or

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i L S A T G M A T 0 * 1

P M I A O A T O t i

S h o l * o n * * e e l * u t * f i * n * l C a n t o r

r •• - • bo*J U M

—of*! Ivildtng I t

phone 448 J'lrb ot

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3 MATH SCIINCI-RIAOING

Sholdon Rata Educational Contar • •

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4 S p e e d R e a d i n g

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the Riviera Ihemr 16 in

phone 441 ?_U6 or

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R O O M M A T E S

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Snoot Cook, •hilo.opeiv OH "

lO* ' My. tery t a d .

-Robert Ra .

Cynth i * Frp,

Time r*tit on. Tha year l 9 7 | •

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Cr-^t- I O * *

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Ost> tt «*o, a great yeo*

The Cl*

Deo' Id ' • do.

8 HO V I IT The CKrukamon Department

Dear Donno tee

I o u t at *Ou' " r - p o p e ' deF.very boy'

Don't target the Ranhellemc "arty today at

5 p m 1 Plenty *F beer. w m * . too* , and

aasod xbEMO for everyone • Don't mni o-it

O r . * * n g . — p a f i * n t o ->

M e e r p a l tuwim**'

y * u forerer. bu* unt.l than I H

YOUI. Ol-O-Tt.

R M

lobt * m*et 0 good hao i

G a * * kick an tha Monoway M yOu

tat

Oanna {00

Ta Donna tee

W e think you re I

•Im on* Ala.

hebenir Taooy 5 0 0 p m ' Ma**ty a l * « * * .

WQMJ. muwdbtai. otWOun

A * famw y o o r t c o m a t * a n a n *

a e t * I pempmra t o l o a e o t h * a l *

U M I * M b * t * F l i a n b t h e s e w h o

h a * * mmdm t h a a a y o o r t t h o b * o t

o f m y K*fo>i C F t r U . N t l t o r i . J e e i k . .

K o r a n . M a . I h a « i N a n c y J U N y .

V o l * o m * K a r o n . U n r t a I t N a n *

A u n t aVayko. O a n e t y . J i m . O r 1 m e n ,

W l i tamt f i b * « * t e * n t l * t » a t h a r t I

WtaaeaoalOla, t j r r fb 0 * l i t t l a l o t o e t e

a t a * t h i e . * > • Cam n o w * a a n y

To My D n r o l a b 111

Banco Do**te Oance"

ApprociaN emryfheng Soa yaw 1

t o * FPOH PAMDY'

lo*e Spa

LO»T »OAO*U040*P*S

KXJNO flrOAOWUFmNtn MQURf CM cut

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351

y * u t h * m a t f I b o o * Apt Sum

ROOMMATI F INDI IS •'•' •OOhtng lor an Of

need a roommate tor u c

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Cofi 4 4 1 5299 7 dot -

Male 'OOnmotj i

room I r. •

ho'* uMitiev A.ci . .abi* v a f 7th I

at 442 9 7 8 8

S u m m e r R a a m m p t * N e e d e d

i b * * t O o m opoftmrnt looking tor one

•uom-na'r to' vummer months M i l t

througr Aug- • ' I a * * brat i

Fully don* Spon.vh Trace l o m o k i loroted •vimmeiiy

pool gym if eOarcttae* all Robby at

5 9 4 X 5 0 5 .

f t R a n t

Duplet ? b e d ' o o m 5

compui 5 7 5 0 4 4 5 0 1 * 3 5 7 0 9 I W SR

-FOR I N F O R M A T I O N O N H O t v

* N - D t A . R O O M M A T t C A U *.95 5 * 6 7

f O O M 10 A M TO 7 P M O F U C f I O

CATt-D O N I * 10 M I N U T t S FROM C A M

R O O M M A T I R I F I R R A ! S

R O O M M A T f W A N I F b tor thrrr bedroom

koute 3 bath, large tcreened pool * vail

oble immediately Onl-i 5 1 3 0 per month

Coll l a r b at 274 8 5 2 3

J bedroom, tutty Lbpaj h.

rtool tenmt rourtt tauno C a * M.fcr i t

595 6 5 3 0 altar 7 p m

SABBATH SERVICES Coma tpend S A 0 0 A T H at 8 N m b t a M

t rd* 8obb ' Gkamon 7.100 Southwest 173

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SERVICES m a ratraeariON couesit

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