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Briefs

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Men’s Tennis

Todd Widom, the 2003-04 All-American player of Miami’s men’s tennis team, will be competing in two local pro events. The 21-year-old Widom has been a pro tennis player for one year and will be making his second appearance at the Key Biscayne $10,000 Futures Jan. 25, and the $380,000 Delray Beach Millennium International Tennis Championships Jan. 31.

Widom joined the pro tennis tour in May 2003 and in seven months jumped up 600 ranking slots. In his first six months he won the $15,000 Futures in Hawaii, and a $10,000 Futures in Joplin, Mo., in addition to being a finalist in another $15,000 Futures in Hawaii.

In 2004 he was also a semi-finalist in a $50,000 Challenger Tournament in Denver, Colo., and a finalist at the $10,000 Futures Tournaments in Tampa, Fla. and Toronto, Canada.

This month Widom will be playing at The Tennis Center at Crandon Park for the $10,000 Futures Tournament from Jan. 25 to Jan. 30. Then he will be traveling north to the $380,000 Delray Beach Millennium International Tennis Championship Jan. 31 to Feb. 6.

Women’s Track & Field

Kimberly Barrett won the weight throw and discus, and Brenda Faluade won both the long jump and triple jump to lead the 21st-ranked University of Miami women’s track and field team to a first-place finish at the Leonard Hilton Memorial Track and Field Meet in Houston, Texas.

Miami won seven of 15 events on Friday and finished with 108 points to defeat a strong field of 14 teams including fifth-ranked Texas (92 points).

Barrett captured the weight throw with a school record and NCAA automatic qualifying mark of 20.77 meters (68-01.75). Her throw shattered the old school record of 17.13 meters by nearly 12 feet.

Barrett led a 1-2-3 Miami sweep in the weight throw as Akera Latham finished second with a mark of 17.71 meters (58-01.25) and Khadija Talley took third with a toss of 17.49 meters (57-04.75).

Barrett also set a school record in winning the shot put, posting an NCAA provisional mark of 16.52 meters (54-02.50).

Faluade, who earned All-America honors in both the long jump and triple jump last season, won the long jump with a leap of 6.11 meters (20-00.50) and the triple jump with a mark of 13.04 meters (42-09.50). Both marks provisionally qualify her for the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships.

Other individual winners include All-American Wiande Moore, who won the 60-meters with an NCAA provisional qualifying mark of 7.37 seconds, five-time All-American Charlette Greggs, who won the 400-meters in an NCAA provisional time of 54.62 seconds and Melanie Schultz, who captured the Mile Run in a time of 4:55.52.

Etc.

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Dear V,

I spent last semester studying abroad in England and fell in love with London. I love everything about the city and am incredibly sad that I had to depart. I’m now back in America, a place I have grown to dislike. I feel as if I left my heart in London, and I will not be happy here in the U.S.A. Do I pack up my bags and say adios to America to join my British counterparts, or do I stay here and try to cope with a country that I feel is going down the toilet?

– Almost an Expat.

Dear Expat,

I can definitely sympathize with your temporary misgivings about the Yankee nation, and clearly a lot of “blue” Americans who voted in the last election can too. But, let’s look at the reality of your situation, shall we? In order for you to pack up your bags and your American flags for the Union Jack, the question of your legal status in Britain definitely becomes an issue-visas, visas, visas! Furthermore, assuming that you are a student and would continue to be a sage in training in the U.K., you couldn’t ignore the issue of trying to get into a school over there, lest trying to transfer credits. Oy vey! You would have a lot of research to do kiddo, to say the very least. What is it exactly that makes you so unhappy about living in this country? If your problem is in your realm of feasibility to change, then by all means, please change it before you decide to permanently change your homeland.

So, let’s say that you find yourself brutally unhappy at the end of the semester, despite your attempts to change your state of mind, and completely devoid of American Pie, I think that you just might owe it to yourself to explore the possibility of spending more time overseas. In the meantime, give it a shot here in the ol’ U.S. of A before you do anything drastic because maybe you’ll be able to readapt to your old ways.

Best of Luck,

V.

Dear V,

I thought that my living situation was golden last semester. I lived with a bunch of girls that I really got along with and admired. However, over Christmas break, one of my roommates decided to move out without consulting the rest of the house and got a stranger to take her place. The way in which we moved out was done in a completely underhanded way. I think that she thinks that we’re morons! Even worse, we’re missing money from our account! Basically, she’s being a giant shade ball. She wants to be friends, but I still can’t comprehend that she would have moved out on a whim without even so much as a telephone call. What is the best way to go about all of this?

Good Riddance

Dear Reader,

It sounds as if you’ve found yourself in yet another unnecessary mess. Don’t you love the way that life pans out? In my opinion, your former roommate sounds extremely deceptive. Good Riddance is right! Just think about all of the things that she’s done to you-moved out without telling anyone, stole money. I’m completely sure that the list doesn’t end there. Come on now, as ideal as it would be to forget about your past history with her, would you really want to surround yourself with a person of such incredibly low caliber? Probably not.

I think that the best way to gently creep around this mess is to be straightforward with your ex-roomie. Flat out explain to her that you don’t appreciate what she did, and that you really have no interest in trying to rekindle a friendship with her. Furthermore, get your cash back! The less you have to deal with this person, the better.

Good Luck!

V.

Fact O’ the Day…According to a poll, approximately 58 percent of couples like dirty talk during sex…*!&#@$ Well now.

Dear V is published every Tuesday and Friday. All submissions, comments and questions are kept completely confidential and can be directed to DearV@hotmail.com

Cohen earns national ranking

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Josh Cohen, a standout sophomore on the Hurricane men’s tennis team, tirelessly prepares for many of his matches through heated one-on-one practice sessions.

Manipulating the court and even his opponents with a colorful mix of grace and power has helped Cohen accomplish quite a bit in his short tenure on the Hurricanes.

This year will prove to be a considerable test as the team enters the tradition-rich Atlantic Coast Conference where they will face 13 teams ranked in the ITA’s first top 75 spring rankings, including No. 9 Duke and No. 10 Virginia.

“It’s a great opportunity for our team and me to prove ourselves on a national level,” Cohen said.

Cohen, a native of Weston, Fla., posted an overall record of 8-4 during fall play this season and took the USTA National Open Indoor Championship for the second consecutive year in December.

These accolades and accomplishments have not clouded his focus for the season to come.

“I think I must show up being more aggressive from the beginning of the match…obviously there is going to be much tougher competition, and I’m looking forward to it,” Cohen said.

With a new spring season looming for Cohen and the rest of the team, he received some more encouraging news when he was ranked No. 26 overall in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association’s first spring rankings of 2005.

His response to the added pressure of the ranking and heightened competition was brought with a trouble-free smile.

“When your tight you’re obviously not going to play to your maximum ability… it’s more about having a good time and just giving it your best,” he said.

This week the Hurricanes take on a non-conference foe in the Owls of Florida Atlantic University.

“We want to take a positive outlook on the ACC after this non-conference match up, and try to do as well as we can from there,” he said.

And a positive outlook is what he and the rest of the team have, yet he still is very much conscious of the road ahead.

“I think there’s a lot more depth [in the ACC] I mean in the Big East there are about three or four good teams and [in the ACC] every team’s at the highest level of the national caliber, so you know every match is going to be pretty tough,” he said.

As Cohen looks upon this season with high expectations, he views his new head coach, Mario Rincon, as an integral part of his potential success.

“I think everybody on the team agrees that our coach has done an excellent job preparing us and everything, but you know we just have to go out there from day one and the first match and show them that we can compete in this division.”

Larry Nolan can be contacted at l.nolan@umiami.edu.

Miami tennis teams to begin play in tough ACC

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New beginning, same attitude. Mere words that describe the fresh new outlook of the men’s and women’s tennis teams on their upcoming seasons this spring and commencement in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

The ACC will not only bring stiffer competition for both teams but a chance to prove what they have to offer on the court.

“The ACC is a battlefield and if we can improve and defeat some of the difficult teams we will be facing this season, then that’s a great accomplishment for us and a chance for us to move up in the rankings,” men’s Head Coach Mario Rincon said.

Beginning its first season in the ACC, the men will have to face 13 teams ranked in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association’s (ITA) top 75 spring rankings, including No. 3 Florida, No. 9 Duke and No. 10 Virginia. This will not be easy for the men as they enter the season ranked No. 48, but if strength as a team and determination are any measure of what can be expected this season, positive results should be expected.

Among the top competitors this season for the men are sophomore Josh Cohen and junior Tim Krebs, ranked Nos. 26 and 123, respectively, in the ITA. Cohen, who finished his fall season with an 8-4 record, and Krebs, who went 8-2 during the fall, will be definitely be prominent leaders for the team.

“This season is about playing the ‘A’ game and nothing else. The ACC is definitely a tennis conference and we will be facing a lot of difficult teams this season,” Rincon said.

The women will also be facing serious competition this season from No. 8 Duke and No. 15 North Carolina in the ACC. However, with the tremendous amount of talent on the team, such as No. 2 senior Megan Bradley and sophomore Audrey Banada, the women can be a force of dynamic proportions.

“We have to play with the same attitude as we did in the Big East, and with that same attitude we will have success this season,” Head Coach Paige Yaroshuk-Tews said.

With players like Bradley, who ended her fall season with a 19-1 record and the ITA National Championship singles title, success this season for the women may not be too difficult.

The upcoming season will begin for the Hurricanes this week. The men will begin on Wednesday facing off against Florida Atlantic University at 3 p.m. at the Neil Schiff Tennis Center. The women will be hosting in-state rival Florida Atlantic to begin its season on Friday at 6 p.m. at Schiff.

Antoinette Cordova can be contacted at a.cordova@umiami.edu.

Trouble on the Court

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The University of Miami women’s basketball is falling short of its preseason expectations after initially being ranked fourth in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

After Thursday’s loss to the North Carolina State Wolfpack, the women are now last in the ACC with a 0-4 record.

The women’s team managed five straight wins against non-ACC opponents since the middle of December, with victories over UCF, Montana, Fairfield, Loyola Marymount and Coppin State. Despite the team’s potential and strong efforts, the ‘Canes were unable to overtake conference foes Florida State, Wake Forest and the University of North Carolina.

Miami had a slow start in the game against the Wolfpack in Raleigh, N.C., Thursday night. The women’s team closely trailed N.C. State after a number of turnovers and failed attempts to score. The ‘Canes took the lead by one point with a lay-up made by Imani Dhahabu. After finding its niche in the game, Miami stayed ahead closing out the first half with a score of 36-34 thanks to a three-point shot by senior guard Yalonda McCormick.

The squad had a positive start to the second half, with the ‘Canes scoring the first six points, but the tide soon turned in favor of the Wolfpack after several successful free throws. Turnovers and missed free throws contributed to the ever-growing lead N.C. State held. Forward Tamara James ended the game with a two-point field goal, making the final score 73-59 in favor of the Wolfpack.

A win against North Carolina State would have been the first time the ‘Canes ever beat the Wolfpack. It would also have been the team’s first ACC conference win and the first road win of the season.

While the women’s team may not be seeing success in terms of wins within the conference, individually the ‘Canes are setting records. After scoring 11 points in the last game, James is only six points away from becoming the sixth player to have a career total of 1,500 points at the University of Miami. James leads the NCAA in scoring with an average of 23.7 points per game. McCormick is second in the ACC in both steals and assists.

Although Head Coach Ferne Labati and her squad have their work cut out for them in such a competitive conference, the season is certainly not over.

On Thursday the ‘Canes face another conference team, the Florida State Seminoles, at home.

Stacey Arnold can be contacted at s.arnold@umiami.edu.

Telemarketers are slow or special people

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It never ceases to amaze me how telemarketers have the guts to call a college dorm every Saturday at 9 a.m. I can set my clock to it! Don’t they know that I didn’t go to bed until 4 a.m.? Doing the math, I’m not getting my eight hours of sleep because some woman halfway around the globe is trying to sell me a Visa card.

So here I was, lying awake in my bed with barely five hours of sleep behind me pondering the question,”whatever happened to the national do-not-call list?” I remember signing up for that, including my cell phone number, my home phone number and my dorm phone number. Perhaps the fact that the calls are coming from India circumvents the national in the “national do-not-call list.”

But what used be annoying has turned into a new game. The calls now have gotten to the point where I have begun to have some fun with them, and I encourage everyone to do the same. Using Special Ed’s survey question “Do you know any slow or special people?” (Crank Yankers on Comedy Central, for those totally out of the loop), I actually got one person to say that I was the only “slow or special person” she knew. I can’t imagine she was too happy about it after I had a little discussion with her supervisor about this offense.

Another caller admitted to me that “his company just gave him my number to call but that they had most likely purchased a list of numbers from my University.” Lovely. As if $38,000 a year isn’t enough anymore. Well, come to think of it, we did lose the Homecoming game, so perhaps the alumni are a bit slow to give this year.

I am left to wonder how much my dorm phone number is worth. To find out, I am going to begin handing out phone numbers of University administrators. Perhaps I can even make a little cash on the side by selling those. I think I will start with Financial Aid. I could use a scholarship boost; perhaps a Visa credit card would help them with the money they don’t have. Then I will most likely move on to the vice presidents and the Office of the President. I can’t imagine them not taking any counter-action if they are getting awoken at 9 a.m. on a Saturday by the Visa sharks.

I would love to hear from anyone who has had a great phone conversation with a telemarketer. It would be great to add transcripts of such conversations and tips & tricks to my Campus Brainz webpage for everyone to indulge in.

Felix Boecker can be contacted at f.boecker@umiami.edu.

Opinion – THE BEN IS MIGHTIER

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By now, everyone who’s familiar with the CBS Evening News is well versed in Rathergate. Unfortunately, since CBS regularly finishes a distant third behind NBC’s Nightly News and ABC’s World News Tonight, “everyone” is really nobody when it comes to caring about who Dan Rather’s eventual replacement (or replacements) will be.

So, when CBS chairman Les Moonves spoke publicly for the first time last week about his future plans for the Evening News, one particular possibility stood out as an ideal option: Jon Stewart.

You see, Moonves isn’t only chairman of CBS; he’s co-chair of Viacom, which owns such cable stations as MTV, VH-1 and, you guessed it, Comedy Central. Furthermore, the sharing of talent between Viacom’s channels isn’t uncharted territory: Ben Stein, for example, may best be known for his Comedy Central game show, but thanks to his political know-how (he was, after all, a big part of the Nixon brain trust), he offers financial advice on a weekly basis on CBS’ Sunday Morning.

So the idea of using Stewart, if only as a correspondent, is not entirely out of the question in Moonves’ eyes. But my question is, why doesn’t Moonves take it a step further?

Using negative descriptions of the current evening news format such as “antiquated” to explain “the voice of God” (in referring to a single-anchor serious) format, Moonves pointed to revolutionizing the news to make it “something that younger people can relate to.”

And what better way to make the evening news relevant to America’s youth than by handing the reigns over to Stewart? Rolling Stone recently featured him on its cover as “The Most Trusted Man in News,” The Daily Show rakes in Emmys every twelve months like it’s Christmas, America (the book) is topping bestseller lists nationwide, and the show’s equal opportunity lampooning is a far cry from a fabricated document about W’s military service used to give someone a connection to the Democratic National Committee.

Sure, news purists may sit with mouths agape at this suggestion, but they can always tune in to ABC’s Peter Jennings or NBC’s up-and-comer Brian Williams. For CBS to make any kind of dent in the Nielsen ratings, though, a drastic change is necessary-one that John Roberts or Scott Pelley just cannot provide (does anybody know who John Roberts or Scott Pelley are, anyway?)

The biggest obstacle would be to find a way to get The Daily Show itself to switch from cable to network, but the concept of airing live in the Evening News’ old time-slot and then re-airing on Comedy Central at 11 p.m. isn’t entirely out of the question.

Of course, a humor format may seem like a giant step backwards, but if you know anyone who doesn’t like a good laugh at the end of the day, well, that’s news to me.

Ben Minkus can be contacted at b.minkus@umiami.edu.

“Et tu, Bushus?”

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Well, America, you got what you wanted: another four years of Bush in the White House. I hope you’re happy-I really do hope you’re happy, as you’re the only ones who can possibly be happy with his victory .

However, I’m not happy, and most of the rest of the world isn’t either, because if the previous four years are any indication, the next four will be downright catastrophic-and I bet the red states won’t even be aware of it.

America has become the modern Rome, and although many people (particularly in the red states) might view this as a good thing, they fail to remember the things that made the Roman Empire fall. They are frighteningly applicable to America in this day and age.

For instance, we feel the need to “spread democracy” to the Middle East, which we see as inferior because it just happens to worship a different deity. Just like the Romans felt the need to spread the ideals of “civilization” to the barbarian tribes in Germania and Britain, and of course the Judean insurgents-just look how that turned out.

And don’t forget that Rome worked quite well as a representative democracy-which soon degenerated into a totalitarian state. People came to resent this, which gave an opening for barbarian tribes to completely sack Rome several times

The Roman Empire also possessed a society just as functional and complex as ours (hell, they had barber shops and public restrooms). Most importantly, they thought they were invincible, which made them overstretch their capabilities. This put a strain on the empire, leading to their complete collapse as an organized society. Western civilization would take centuries to recover.

See any similarities between Rome and the Bush administration? They both claimed to be spreading “democracy/civilization,” deviated from the system of government they’re supposed to follow, and were attacked by a certain enemy (Hannibal/Bin Laden) which they’ve held in much contempt (Hannibal/Saddam Hussein) who they thought would never be able to touch them (Hannibal/Hussein/Bin Laden/).

The only difference is that the public actually elected a leader that will lead them to certain doom, despite historical warnings to act to the contrary. All I can say to the American people is that we dangerously mirror Rome in it final days, and once we overstretch ourselves, then, well, let’s just say the Dark Ages weren’t a lot of fun.

Jay Rooney can be contacted at j.rooney@umiami.edu.

EDITORIAL – Luxurious parties vs. end to world hunger

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This weekend residents of Palm Beach were treated to a spectacle that the Palm Beach Post called “the wedding of the century.” Guests flocked from all over the world to attend the third, yes third, wedding of billionaire Donald Trump as he wed Slovenian supermodel Melania Knauss.

And it was just last week when the political heavyweights, and those who pay to be their friends, were treated to the pomp and circumstance known as the presidential inauguration.

While weddings are a once-in-a-lifetime event (in this case, three times), and the inauguration of a president is an historical moment, it’s hard to overlook the amount of money spent on these events. Beyond giving money to help the victims of the tsunami, consider all of the people going hungry and the other orphaned children throughout the world. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, it would cost $5.2 billion a year to end world hunger. While that may sound like a lot, if one considers all of the corporate donations that go to lobbyists and to attend swank events, or even to buy real estate or other material goods, it doesn’t seem as much. Just consider some of the extravagant costs associated with the Trump wedding.

The now-famous Dior wedding dress that graced the cover of Vogue magazine reportedly cost $200,000. It took 28 seamstresses over 1,000 hours to make, and weighed more than 50 pounds. The bride also wore her 13-carat $1.5 million engagement ring. The reception took place in a $42 million ballroom. The guests sipped Cristal Champagne, costing over $300 a bottle. They dined on steamed shrimp salad, beef tenderloin and their very own individual Grand Marnier chocolate truffle cakes. The additional seven-tier wedding cake was 32 inches in diameter and weighed over 200 pounds. It makes you wonder how many starving people could be fed with a 200-pound cake.

While Trump did encourage his guests to donate to tsunami relief instead of purchasing gifts, the couple registered at several places, including Tiffany & Co. It seems that if they really wanted to encourage people to donate to a worthy cause, registering for gifts is hypocritical. After all, who wants to be the one to show up without a gift if everyone else is bringing one?

In fact, according to the Palm Beach Post, the couple registered for $54,8000 in gifts at Tiffany. They asked for a $390 salad-serving fork and, of course, a $4,000 silver coffee pot that is apparently a necessity in every billionaire’s home.

While the gifts that the Trumps asked for may seem outlandish, they are nothing compared to the $40 million that President Bush and his administration spent on the 2005 inauguration. The spending easily outnumbered President Clinton’s $33 million 1993 inauguration, when after 12 years the Democrats returned to the White House. Granted, most of the money came from wealthy contributors and corporations; however, this money could have been donated to the Red Cross or another relief organization in honor of the President (what a good p.r. move that would have been for the country). It also helped the economy, as all of the guests had to have something to eat, something to wear and somewhere to sleep. This economic stimulation, however, may not outweigh the burdens of inaugural costs put on the surrounding areas. In fact, the District of Columbia, not the federal government or any corporate donor, had to incur a reported $12 million in expenses for the inaugural events. Among the reported costs were nearly $3 million to build bleachers to view Bush taking the Oath of Office and $43,260 to makes special license tags that limited access.

The extravagant “Trumptials,” as they have been affectionately called, also helped the economy. Just one boutique in Palm Beach sold over 40 dresses costing between $4,000 and $26,000 to wedding guests. The same goes for the inauguration. Think of the designers like Carolina Herrera, Oscar de la Renta and Badgley Mischka that reportedly dressed the First Lady and the Bush twins for the countless ceremonies and balls. They would probably be out of work if it weren’t for the numerous balls held through out D.C.

Instead of donating to the victims of the tsunami, or to any other poverty or hunger stricken-nation, for a mere $250,000 donation to the Presidential Inaugural Committee, you could get a seat at a candlelight dinner attended by the president. That’s right, you and the Bushes at a nice and romantic candlelight dinner. Exciting enough to make you forget about starving orphans, right?

NEWS BRIEFS

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UMNEWS – Miller School of Medicine

findings could improve cancer treatment

New findings that could improve cancer treatment have been made by a team of scientists at the University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine and published in the Jan.7 issue of the journal Molecular Cell. The team, led by Beatriz Fontoura, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, figured out how one viral protein disrupts the movement of molecules in and out of cells, which could lead to more effective use of the virus to kill cancer cells.

The findings may prove useful in improving a cancer therapy technique, which uses certain viruses to deliver a targeted killing blow to cancer cells.

“Moving molecules in and out of cells involves very complex processes, and if traffic goes wrong, and molecules are stuck in the wrong place at the wrong time, you can develop disease or therapies can fail,” explains Fontoura. “Our results provided more information about this cellular pathway.”

Scientists from the Department of Microbiology and Immunology and the UM/Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the School of Medicine were also involved in the research.

ELSEWHERE – Stanford freshman get ‘naked’ for a good cause

(U-WIRE) STANFORD, Calif. -When an earthquake sent tsunamis crashing across the Indian Ocean shoreline Dec. 26, killing tens of thousands, Andrew Burmon, a freshman at Stanford University, and fellow first-years Pam Geist and Joel Lewenstein, had the idea the idea for a pinup calendar featuring 14 naked first-years to raise money for the affected areas.

It took them two weeks to shoot and produce the 12-month calendar, each month featuring a different coed-or two-from Larkin, the university’s largest all-freshman dorm. The black-and-white calendar starts selling next week for $10, half of which will go to Save the Children by way of the umbrella group Stanford Students for Relief.

They have already received orders for 70 calendars.

“Suggestive nudity,” is an appropriate term for the style of photography, Lewenstein said.

Dylan Keil, also known as Mr. May, is reading a copy of The Daily in Stern Dining, a tray over his lap with apples and a banana suggestively situated on top.

Miss February is Cori Marquis, who donned librarian’s glasses and nothing else. The TIME magazine featuring President George W. Bush as Man of the Year covers her pelvis.

Lewenstein and Burmon stripped down to become Messrs. August in what is perhaps the calendar’s most risqu

CALENDAR

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WEDNESDAY – Jan 26

The University of Miami School of Architecture presents a lecture by Professor Luis Trelles on “The Work of Trelles Architects” at 6 p.m. at the Episcopal Church Center, (Corner of Levante and Stanford Drive) on the Coral Gables Campus.

THURSDAY – Jan 27

More than 150 student organizations will be at the Spring Involvement Fair from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the UC Patio.

The Wesley Coffeehouse, sponsored by the UM Wesley-United Methodist Ministry, will be open from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. and will feature music by Hope Littwin.

Helen Brand and Eric Robespierre, authors of The Yummy Hunters Guide, will be at the UM Bookstore from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. to discuss weight loss management. There will be free food tasting and a book signing.

Diane Mauch, an associate faculty member in vocal performance at the Phillip and Patricia Frost School of Music, will sing the praises of 20th century British composer Benjamin Britten at 8 p.m. in the Maurice Gusman Concert Hall.

TUESDAY – Feb 01

Black Awareness Month kicks off with opening ceremonies, “Call Me Black,” on the UC Patio at noon.

The Eta Delta chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., in collaboration with United Black Students, will hold its annual Miss Black and Gold scholarship pageant at the Clarke Recital hall at 7 p.m.

WEDNESDAY – Feb 02

Last day to drop a class without a “W” or to change a class from “for a grade” to “for credit.”

Man behind Cubavera T-shirts revealed

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After postponing the first football game of the 2004 season several times due to inclement weather, excitement built for the rival match up against Florida State University. UM President Donna Shalala requested that the student section become a “sea of orange” by wearing shirts bearing the name Cubavera. Students gladly accepted the free shirts and wore them as they cheered the ‘Canes on, but who was behind the thousands of shirts and what is Cubavera?

The shirts were donated by apparel industry’s George Feldenkreis, chairman and CEO of Perry Ellis International. Feldenkreis came to the U.S. from Cuba in 1961 with nearly nothing. He began importing Guayabera shirts that were fashionable in Cuba, and these shirts helped Feldenkreis create an empire in the world of clothing in Miami that employs more than 1500 people and is worth $650 million.

The company has expanded from importing to owning labels and creating attire. Perry Ellis, the original penguin and Nike swimwear are a few of the better-known names that the business has rights to. Cubavera is the label created by the Feldenkreis family that became the modern version of the Guayabera clothing.

“My brother Isaac and I built the company from the ground. Oscar, my son, has expanded the business further, creating a publicly traded company,” Feldenkreis said. “We have achieved the American Dream.”

As a member of the board of trustees at UM for a number of years, Feldenkreis has been an avid supporter of higher education and athletics at UM. He has two granddaughters, Erica and Jennifer, who are business majors at the University.

“I would be involved in the University even if I did not have relatives in attendance because I think that Miamians should support the institution of higher education,” Feldenkreis said. “In our community it is an investment itself and should be a high priority.”

Shalala approached Feldenkreis on the subject of donating shirts to the student body and he agreed to the idea.

“It was a win-win situation for everyone since the students would get free shirts and the company would get national advertising,” he said.

While no set plans have been made to make the donation an annual event for the first football game of the season, Feldenkreis feels positive it could happen in the future since it was a success this year.

“We are big supporters of the sports programs at Miami, including donating to the athletes’ scholarship fund, so we will be involved in times to come whether it is with clothing or not,” Feldenkreis said.

Stacey Arnold can be contacted at s.arnold@umiami.edu.