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Loss of Gore, Parrish leaves big holes to fill

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Commentary by Darren Grossman

Someone in the NFL Draft Advisory Council owes Roscoe Parrish an apology.

The 5’9” 172-pound wide receiver has decided to skip his senior season to enter the NFL draft after someone showed him a projection of where he would be drafted. While no one knows what was told to Parrish, he has said that he expects to be a high selection. For his sake, I hope he is right.

On Jan. 6 Parrish became the fourth Hurricane in the last two seasons to forgo his senior season to enter the NFL draft. The next day, running back Frank Gore became the fifth. Gore, who has had a history of injury problems, declared for the draft despite his coaches telling him his stock would significantly rise if he stayed for the 2005 season.

When I look at these two decisions, I think both guys are taking risks. However, Gore’s decision makes more sense than Parrish’s. Gore’s injury trouble makes it very risky for him to come back for his senior season. While a good year would significantly improve his draft status, another knee injury would all but end his hopes of playing in the NFL. If I were Frank Gore and had that kind of risk involved, I would have decided to enter the draft too.

However, Parrish’s decision is a bit more puzzling. While small wide receivers can be high draft picks like Santana Moss, Parrish has yet to display the ability that Moss did at Miami. There is no doubt that Parrish has that potential and his speed will make him attractive to NFL teams. However, I think a solid senior season would have made Parrish a first round selection, perhaps even a top-15 pick, and therefore made him a lot more money than he will get now.

As it stands now, Parrish is listed by Mel Kiper Jr., the draft expert, as the fifth-best wide receiver. In a year that isn’t great for wide receivers, that will probably put Parrish in the third round, which is not terrible, but a return to Miami for a senior season could have put him much higher.

These two departures, along with seniors Antrel Rolle and Brock Berlin, will leave more holes for the very young Hurricanes to fill. Looking ahead to next season, Miami has several question marks. At running back, losing Gore will hurt their depth, but Tyrone Moss is a capable replacement that should fill in nicely. At wide receiver, the depth is a little thinner, but Lance Leggett and Sinorice Moss have shown potential to be big-time receivers there.

However, the departure of Gore and Parrish does leave Miami without veteran leadership at the skill positions, which would have been important considering Miami’s inexperience at quarterback. While Kyle Wright is the favorite to become the quarterback, the Hurricanes lack anyone with real game experience. With a young quarterback, it would have been nice for the Hurricanes to have veterans to help their quarterback. Now, they will ultimately be a very young team again next season.

So what this all means is that we should expect about the same performance next season. Another three-loss season and a trip to a New Year’s Day or New Year’s Eve Bowl game. However, don’t be alarmed, Hurricane fans. Young teams eventually get older and in a couple seasons, the Hurricanes will be national title contenders again.

Darren Grossman can be contacted at d.grossman@umiami.edu.

REPORT CARD

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By Eric Kalis

I am sad to say that this is the final report card of the season. The No. 11 Hurricanes finished with a 9-3 record and had important victories over Florida State and Florida but suffered excruciating losses to North Carolina, Clemson and Virginia Tech. There will be worlds of pressure of next year’s team to get back into the BCS.

Offense: B-

The receivers were much more reliable than last year’s group, Frank Gore had a solid season and Brock Berlin put up impressive numbers. However, there was just something missing with this year’s offense, especially when you compare it to the Ken Dorsey Era.

Quarterback: B

No one can deny that Berlin improved significantly from a year ago. His numbers speak for themselves. But when the team needed him most against Virginia Tech, Berlin could not make anything happen.

Running Back: B

Frank Gore’s numbers do not jump off the stat sheet, but the junior tailback was durable and solid. One could argue that he was not used enough in certain games.

Wide Receivers/Tight Ends: C

To be honest, I expected much more from Kevin Everett. I know he was injured, but before the season he was projected as an early round draft pick. Greg Olsen looks like he will be fabulous in the coming years, but potential does not earn points in the report card.

Offensive Line: B-

The loss of Eric Winston really hurt the o-line and was a major factor in the three losses. It is difficult to criticize this unit because it dealt with injuries and still put together some solid performances.

Defense: B

After three games it appeared that the defense would be one of the best to ever play in the Orange Bowl. Then something terrible happened and Louisville, North Carolina and Clemson exposed major weaknesses in the linebackers and secondary. The defense recovered nicely at the end of the season, however.

Defensive Line: A-

One of the deepest units in the nation, the d-line was great the entire year. The team will miss Santonio Thomas, but most of the group will be back and dominant in 2005.

Linebackers: D

Anyone who read my report card during the season knows how I felt about the linebackers.

Secovndary: B

The secondary had major ups and downs this season. It was superior against Florida State, Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech and Florida and abysmal against N.C. State, Louisville and North Carolina. Antrel Rolle will be sorely missed, but the secondary might actually be better next year if Devin Hester becomes a full-time cornerback.

Special Teams: A-

Brian Monroe was much better than last year, Jon Peattie struggled with injuries but should be excellent in 2005 and enough has already been said about how spectacular Hester was.

Coaching: C+

You will not hear me complaining about Larry Coker, but the offensive decision making was very shaky at times and the defense looked lost in several games. The head coach has to take responsibility for that but Dan Werner and Randy Shannon know they need to improve some things.

‘Canes put up good fight versus No. 3 Duke

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By Douglas C. Kroll

The students showed up in full force at the Convocation Center on Wednesday night to support their surging Hurricanes, but Duke’s talent was able to hold off the ‘Canes 92-83. In front of a sold-out crowd, in which 1,000 were students who lined up as early as 3 p.m., the Hurricanes fought to the end against the number three team in the nation.

Miami was led by Guillermo Diaz, who finished with 25 points, while William Frisby added 18. Anthony King and Anthony Harris also finished in double digits. Miami’s leading scorer of the year, Robert Hite, was held scoreless in the first half and finished with six points due to suffocating defense from Duke’s backcourt, which is nearly 14 less than his season average. Hall-of-fame Duke Head Coach Mike Krzyzewski couldn’t compliment the Hurricanes any more than he did after the game.

“We beat an excellent basketball team tonight,” Krzyzewski said. “Miami is not just athletic, but they are really a confident, positive group and very difficult to guard.”

Duke was led by a career night from Shelden Williams who finished with 30 points, including 11-of-12 from the field.

Early in the first half, a Diaz three pointer rimmed in to cut the Duke lead to 16-15. Miami took the lead 17-16 shortly thereafter with a Gary Hamilton tip shot with under 13 minutes to play.

After Miami then tied it at 22 on a Harris three, Duke reeled off a 10-2 run. During that run, Harris connected with Diaz for a thrilling alley-oop that brought the sellout crowd to a deafening standing ovation. Duke guard Daniel Ewing then hit back-to-back three pointers to finish the run and to quiet the crowd. A J.J. Reddick three pointer then gave Duke a nine point lead, its largest of the half. The Blue Devils went into the locker room with a 41-34 lead at the break.

The Blue Devils ended up shooting nearly 61 percent from the field for the game, including 48 percent from behind the three-point arc. The percentage was by far the best they shot all year.

Miami out rebounded Duke 37-30, including 20-6 on the offensive glass. King led the Hurricanes with 10 rebounds.

“We played tough out there tonight,” Miami Head Coach Frank Haith said. “Our kids fought to the end, which is important for us as we continue to build this program.”

Miami came out and cut the Duke lead to 44-40 early on in the second half, but that was as close as the ‘Canes would come as the Devils went on a 12-2 run and took a 56-42 lead.

The Blue Devils would lead by as many as 19 in the half, as Williams proved to be too much for Miami’s interior defense. No matter what zone defense the Hurricanes threw at Duke, the Devils were able to connect from outside, or inside. Miami never gave up down the stretch, cutting the lead to as few as 8 in the final minute, but Duke was able to hit its free throws to clinch the victory.

Although the Hurricanes hung in there with one of the best teams in the nation, they came into the game knowing they could win, not just wanting to hang in there with an elite team. One thing’s for sure: Haith can take home that Coach K. believes in him as a head basketball coach in the ACC.

“Frank looks like a guy who’s been here a while,” Coach K. said. “His team looks like a team who has been coach by him for a while.”

Douglas C. Kroll can be contacted at d.kroll@umiami.edu

Victory sendoff for seniors

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By Eric Kalis

Miami’s victory over Florida in the Peach Bowl was a fitting way for the seniors to end their careers as Hurricanes. The season had been declared a disappointment by many, but the lasting image of the seniors’ legacy will be the Hurricanes celebrating on the Georgia Dome turf after pummeling the Gators once again.
Head Coach Larry Coker said the Hurricanes did not underachieve this season and the glorious moments should be remembered over the three losses.
“We had a lot more ups than downs,” Coker said. “I want our players to remember the good times. I want them to remember the Florida victory, the Florida State victory, the Louisville victory coming from behind, and the disappointment of the Virginia Tech loss when we had everything on the line. It was something of an up and down season. I wouldn’t characterize it as a bad season.”
Senior quarterback Brock Berlin took a lot of heat from fans and the media during his two years as the primary signal caller, but he finished the 2004 season with impressive numbers: 2680 yards, 22 touchdowns and six interceptions. Berlin also never lost to a school from Florida as the Hurricanes won the Florida Cup for the third year in a row.
Here is the 2004 senior class: Antrel Rolle, Brock Berlin, Matt Carter, Derrick Crudup, Kyle Cobia, Talib Humphrey, Santonio Thomas, Rod Parker, Kris Smith, Brad Kunz, Alex Garcia, Joel Rodriguez, Chris Myers, Kevin Everett and Alton Wright.

Gore, Parrish decide to leave early
In the aftermath of the Peach Bowl, two of the Hurricanes’ best offensive players, junior running back Frank Gore and junior wide receiver Roscoe Parrish, decided to forgo their senior seasons and enter the NFL Draft. Gore ended the season with 197 carries for 951 yards and eight touchdowns. Parrish had 43 catches for 693 yards and eight touchdowns.
Coker was pushing for Gore to stay another year but Gore told ESPN that his mother’s wishes for him to enter the draft pushed him towards his decision. Gore has a two-year-old son and his mother has a kidney disease, so he did not want to risk another knee injury next year that could prevent him from supporting his family.
The reasons behind Parrish’s decision were not disclosed.

Hester shines once again
The Hurricanes knew their chances to beat Florida would greatly increase if Devin Hester made plays on special teams, defense or offense. Throughout the regular season Hester was used in all three facets, excelling in kick returns and tying for the team lead in interceptions with three. He did not disappoint at the Peach Bowl, returning a blocked field goal for a touchdown and intercepting a Chris Leak pass.
Coker said he wants Hester to focus on one specific aspect of the game this spring so he can be used more often next fall.
“He’s a young player…The thing that we want him to do is we’d like to see him be really good at something rather than pretty good at a lot of things,” Coker said. “We had Roscoe returning the punts so Devin’s playing a lot in terms of offense and almost every snap on defense.”

Miscellaneous
Florida actually out-gained Miami 406 to 277 and picked up 22 first downs, six more than the Hurricanes did…The Georgia Dome crowd was largely rooting for the Gators. There were Hurricane fans in attendance but the Florida faithful drowned them out at times…O.J. Small had a nice game for Florida, catching eight passes for 92 yards…The Hurricanes finished the season at No. 11 in both polls.

Eric Kalis can be contacted at e.kalis@umiami.edu.

Just Peachy – ‘Canes devour Gators in bowl game for state title

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ATLANTA-Losses to Clemson, North Carolina and Virginia Tech might have cast a dark cloud over the Miami Hurricanes’ 2004 season, but the departing seniors can take solace in the way it ended: a convincing 27-10 victory over the Florida Gators in the Peach Bowl.

This year’s graduating class will leave Coral Gables without ever losing to Florida or Florida State, an accomplishment senior quarterback Brock Berlin does not take lightly.

“There’s no better feeling than beating FSU three times and Florida twice [in two years],” Berlin said. “If that isn’t big, I don’t know what is.”

Berlin did not have his best outing, however, going 13-for-24 for 171 yards, with a touchdown and an interception. The Florida transfer was aided by the playmaking ability of Devin Hester, who returned a blocked field goal for a touchdown and intercepted a Chris Leak pass, and Roscoe Parrish, who returned a punt 72 yards for a touchdown.

Both offenses struggled to move the ball early on. The Gators had the first scoring opportunity after Tremaine McCollum blocked Brian Monroe’s punt, setting up first-and-10 from Miami’s 20-yard line. Florida’s fortunes took a disastrous turn for the worse when Matt Leach’s 32-yard field goal attempt was blocked by Thomas Carroll and recovered by Hester, who ran to the end zone untouched to give the Hurricanes a 7-0 lead midway through the first quarter.

Florida responded with a 15 play, 55-yard drive resulting in a 34-yard Leach field goal. The Gators got the ball back quickly after a Frank Gore fumble, but Leak’s next pass was picked off by Hester and returned 28 yards, giving Miami the ball on Florida’s 34-yard line. Jon Peattie kicked a 47-yard field goal to extend the Hurricanes’ lead to seven points late in the second quarter.

Miami’s defense held once again, and Parrish electrified the 69,322 fans in the Georgia Dome with his aforementioned punt return to make the score 17-3. The Gators blew a chance to close the gap before halftime when Leach missed a 41-yard field goal.

Head Coach Larry Coker said the speed and athleticism of Hester and Parrish was the difference in this game.

“Roscoe and Devin are really special players,” Coker said. “I don’t know if you can coach a lot of the things that they do. But they love to play; they’re tough kids and they’re really competitive and they’re playmakers.”

The Hurricanes blew the game open on their first offensive possession of the second half, as Berlin found seldom-used wide receiver Ryan Moore for a 20-yard touchdown. Chris Leak threw a 45-yard touchdown pass to Jemalle Cornelius late in the third quarter to make the score 24-10, but that was as close as the Gators would get. Jon Peattie added a 32-yard field goal in the fourth quarter to complete the scoring.

Coker was unusually animated after the game as he celebrated with his departing seniors.

“It is very emotional because it’s a small class and it’s a class that has been maligned a little bit from the standpoint of ‘how come you didn’t win a national championship?’ That’s kind of been the benchmark at Miami,” he said. “They’ve done everything I have asked them to do and for them to go out – they never lost to Florida State, they never lost to Florida – and play that hard and that well to come out with a win; I’m very gratified.”

Many fans worried that the Hurricanes would be too disappointed with the regular season-ending loss to Virginia Tech to get excited for the Peach Bowl. Coker said the team was entirely focused on beating the Gators, however.

“We didn’t want to go out with two consecutive losses, and again playing a team like Florida, it’s very special to win that last game to finish recruiting and go into spring practice,” he said. “We’ve got a lot of players back, and hopefully we can build off this.”

Eric Kalis can be contacted at e.kalis@umiami.edu

NEWS BRIEFS

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UMNEWS

UM School of Communication announces dean finalists

Tom Fiedler, the Miami Herald’s executive editor, and Sam Grogg, dean of the American Film Institute Conservatory, are final candidates for the position of dean of the School of Communication.

Fiedler started at the Herald 32 years ago as a political reporter. Through the years he was an editorial pages editor until becoming executive editor in 2001. He received a master’s in journalism from Boston University and a fellowship in journalism from Duke University. Fiedler made national news in 1987 after breaking the Gary Hart-Donna Rice story, when Hart dropped out of the presidential race.

Grogg recieved a doctorate in pop culture and film from Bowling Green University. In 1972 he co-founded the Journal of Popular Film & Television. His film credits include heading the USA Film Festival in Dallas, executive producer of Above Suspicion and The Trip to Bountiful. Grogg has a motion picture company, FilmDallas, and is founding dean of the North Carolina School of the Arts’ School of Filmmaking.

Dean Edward Pfister plans to retire in May and will maintain a teaching position.

ELsewhere

Charges pending in guinea pig incident at Indiana U

(U-WIRE) BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – A self-proclaimed “prank gone bad” might come back to haunt an Indiana University freshman who tossed his guinea pig out of an eighth-floor window.

An animal cruelty case is pending against freshman David E. Feldsott at the Monroe County Prosecutor’s office. If convicted for the felony charge, he could face fines and possible jail time.

Feldsott, 19, admitted to IU Police Department officers to using dental floss, masking tape and a garbage bag to parachute the animal out of Briscoe Shoemaker on Dec. 16.

Freshman Laura Robinson led IUPD officers and Briscoe employees to the animal after she spotted the guinea pig wedged between tree branches.

“I felt so bad for the poor animal,” she said. “From the ground, I could see the guinea pig shaking.”

Janitors used the contraption normally used to pick up trash to rescue the animal by latching on to the “parachute.”

After spotting a window with its screen off on the eighth floor, IUPD officers questioned Feldsott.

“He told us his intentions were to get the animal after it landed on the ground, but [he] couldn’t get to it,” IUPD Lt. Jerry Minger said.

Minger said Feldsott told officers he accepts full responsibility for the incident and understands what he did was wrong.

The guinea pig, now nicknamed “Noel” for a triumphant survival story, was adopted by a local family through the Bloomington Animal Shelter.

ETC.

The Nu Kappa Tau chapter of Mortar Board National Senior Honor Society is now accepting nominations for new members. Nominees must currently be of junior standing and have a minimum GPA of 3.42. Nominations should be turned in to Mortar Board Nominations c/o The Smith-Tucker Involvement Center (STIC) UC 209, no later than 5:00 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 14, 2005.

The price is right

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By Christine Dominguez

Time to call Guinness World Records, because this one is for the books. The University of Miami School of Medicine announced on Dec. 6 that it received a historic gift of $100 million from the family of the late Leonard Miller, a longtime South Florida businessman and philanthropist. In honor of the donors and in recognition of the gift, which is the largest in the school’s history, the school has been renamed the Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine.

“The Miller gift provides truly a remarkable opportunity for the School of Medicine,” said Dr. John G. Clarkson, senior vice president for medical affairs and dean of the School of Medicine. “It provides the catalyst to move this already great medical school to international prominence.”

The $100 million will be used primarily to create four Miller professorships, augment the school’s academic mission, conscript the next wave of biomedical scientists, and resolve any other of the school’s vital needs.

“The UM School of Medicine already has many world-renowned departments and this money will help to support current research endeavors and create new ones,” Manny Zusmer, second-year medical student, said.

The donation is part of Momentum: The Campaign for the University of Miami, which has raised $800 million toward its goal to raise one billion dollars by 2007. Thus far, the School of Medicine has raised more than $500 million.

“Receiving such a large donation is encouraging for the students here. It shows that the community has faith in our school, to continue to provide hope for all those suffering from disease,” Levi Kitchen, second-year medical student, said.Leonard Miller arrived in Miami in 1954 and invested $10,000 from his own pocket into a small home-building company. By the time of his death in 2002, that small company had grown into Lennar Corporation, a national company with more than $6 billion in annual revenues. During his lifetime Miller and his wife Susan were supporters of UM, particularly the School of Medicine. He served as chairman of the University’s board of trustees during the entrepreneurial development of the School of Medicine, and understood the great potential of the school.

“It’s a quite a distinguished honor that a family feels so strongly about a program to donate a huge lump sum of their entire life earnings to better and improve it,” Brooke Albright, second year medical student, said. “In a time when there is so much war and hatred around the world, it’s a good feeling to know that generosity, giving, and caring still exist.”

The Miller School of Medicine is continually growing, with new programs and projects currently underway. Recently, the school was awarded a $13 million grant from the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation, creating the Wallace H. Coulter Center for Translational Research. The University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital Center for Patient Safety is a pioneering, first-of-its-kind facility that is dedicated to inspiring the growth of patient safety knowledge through research and clinical investigations. In addition, the school also received a $5 million grant from the Dr. John T. Macdonald Foundation, which will go towards creating Miami GeneCure Diagnostics, Florida’s first comprehensive medical genetics diagnostic laboratory.

“[The Miller] gift is about moving to greatness, not about funding the day-to-day operations of the medical school. It ensures that for the coming decades the School of Medicine will have the financial foundation to invest in biomedical scientists to help develop our centers of excellence in research and patient care, and to enhance our educational mission,” Clarkson said.

Christine Dominguez can be contacted at c.dominguez3@umiami.edu.

TSUNAMI’S EFFECT FELT WORLDWIDE

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Children were left parentless. Entire towns were wiped out. In one horrific moment, over 150,000 people lost their lives and mill-ions more were left homeless when a massive tsunami hit the coastlines of South Asia. Amid the overwhelming tragedy, the world-and UM-has responded with relief efforts.

Vithya Balasubramaniam, sophomore, witnessed the devastation as it occurred in Sri Lanka. Balasubramaniam was on a volunteer trip to work in orphanages in areas that were war-torn from 20 years of civil war.

“On Dec. 26, around noon, about three hours after the tsunamis hit, we were driving toward the coast and a tractor stopped in front of me and I saw dead bodies in it,” Balasubramaniam said.

She was originally told that there was a bit of a flood, and it wasn’t until the next morning when she was watching BBC that the tsunami had hit all of South Asia and parts of Africa.

“We spent the next two days going to the displacement centers donating supplies and basically listening to what they had to say to us-how the water came up to them, how they lost their families,” she said. “Listening to them was the hardest part because you couldn’t tell him it’s all going to be OK because you really don’t know.”

Balasubramaniam realizes that she could have been directly hit by the tsunamis had she left earlier in the day.

“I think I got lucky for a reason, and I’m very thankful that I was there are the time to help people, to listen to their stories and to tell people here,” she said. “They basically have nothing and who knows how long that’s going to last.”

Relief initiatives have already begun at UM, with students and administration stepping forward to aid in the efforts. Approximately 80 UM students are from the affected areas, and all of them were contacted immediately after the tragedy.

“I sent out an email to all international students to let them know that we were here to support them, especially if they were having trouble re-entering the U.S.,” Teresa de la Guardia, director of International Student and Scholar Services, said. “We wanted to offer our support right away. I did get a couple of emails back from students saying that they appreciated that we were reaching out.”

Administration is encouraging a collaborative effort from the UM community.

“One important thing is really helping students who want to coordinate fundraising efforts rather than lots of little events that might not be as successful,” Pat Whitely, vice president of Student Affairs, said. “The administration will work with students who want to raise money and help in any way we can.”

The Council of International Students and Organizations [COISO] is dedicating the semester to raising money for tsunami victims.

“COISO should take a leading role because we represent the international student body and those affected by the disaster,” Ciara Mohamed, COISO president, said. “I hope that we, along with the rest of the University, can coordinate an outstanding relief effort.”

Both Balasubramaniam and Sanjeev Chatterjee, a resident master at Eaton who also traveled to the region, said that it’s very important to pay attention to where the money donated is going.

“The issue is in the long run how do you bring back these people on their feet. People who have survived have only the shirts on their backs. They have lost their identities,” Chatterjee said. “Support the organizations that are invested in the long term.”

“It’s going to take years and years to rebuild what they had. All the donations that are going to UNICEF and the Red Cross are coming from us,” Balasubramaniam said. “If that money stops, then the relief stops. Donating once isn’t enough. Just don’t stop.”

>> There will be an open mic event to raise money for the tsunami tragedy all day Feb. 3 on the UC Patio. The proceeds will go to the Red Cross International Relief Fund.

Megha Garg can be contacted at m.garg2@umiami.edu.

CALENDAR

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TODAY JAN 21

The University of Miami’s Department of Art & Art History and The New Gallery, in collaboration with Africana Studies, will hold a special opening reception for Africa/A Harvest of Quiet Eyes from 7-9 p.m. at The New Gallery. The exhibition runs through Feb. 12 and is free and open to the public.

SUNDAY JAN 23

Jazz Concert on the Green, performed by University’s Studio Jazz Band, will be from 3-5 p.m. on the University Green. All students are welcome to bring blankets for picnics and concessions will also be available.

The Rock Climbing Club will hold a meeting for any students interested at 7 p.m. on the second floor of the Wellness Center.

MONDAY JAN 24

The Toppel Orientation for juniors and seniors is all week long, with five sessions on career programs and events, features of CaneZone, internships, job search resources, and more. Call 305-284-5451 to RSVP.

The Tau Rho Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority will hold is opening ceremony for Delta week at the UC Patio at noon.

TUESDAY JAN 25

United Black Students will host “Black Men Who Have It All,” a dinner and discussion, at 8 p.m. at the Faculty Club as part of Wake Up! Make the Dream a Reality, a celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

THURSDAY JAN 27

Spring Involvement Fair will be from 11-2 p.m. in the UC Patio. Student organizations will be passing out information for those interested in participating.

FRIDAY JANUARY 28

The first ‘Canes Night Live of the semester, Art Love and Rock ‘n’ Roll will be from 7-11pm on the UC. There will also be a student art exhibit hosted by the Art Students League. Following the event will be a Tsunami Relief benefit concert at the Rat until 1am featuring several live bands.

MONDAY JANUARY 31

The Sue and Leonard Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies is hosting a lecture by Dr. Robert Rockaway, Professor of Jewish History at Tel Aviv University on ‘But He Was Good To His Mother’: The Lives And Crimes Of Jewish Gangsters from 8 – 10 p.m. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. at The Miller Center. The lecture is free and open to the public. To RSVP call 305-284-6882

Black Awareness Month, BAM 2005 “Going BLACK,” begins and will continue through the month of February.

THURSDAY FEBRUARY 3

The Screaming Monkeys will hold a tsunami relief open mic marathon. All proceeds will go to the American Red Cross International Relief Fund. Participants can read works by artists from the tsunami stricken region or can also read an original work. Readers will attain sponsors for each poem or story they read.

More than 200 students go home ill after stomach virus breaks out on campus

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By Natalia Maldonado

More than 200 students living in the Hecht, Stanford and Eaton residence halls reported symptoms of a gastrointestinal illness [GI] over a 24-hour period that started on the evening of Dec. 15, when many students were getting ready to leave campus for winter break.

Dr. Howard Anapol, Director of Student Health Services, first received a call early in the evening about a student with stomach illness.

“It sounded like a typical call,” Anapol said. “I later received a call from a resident master. He told me that there were many sick students, some at the emergency room.”

Over the next 24 hours more students reported symptoms, which included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and in some cases, fever. The Miami-Dade County Public Health Department [MCPH] was on campus Dec. 16 to investigate the cause of the illness.

Although the final report has not been released yet, results suggest that the outbreak was caused by Norovirus, a group of viruses that cause stomach flu or gastrointestinal illness and are spread by coming in contact with food or people infected with the virus.

“It started a few hours after I’d eaten,” Reed Hoffman, freshman, said. “I was packing to go home and I couldn’t do anything. I had no energy and started throwing up all night. I had to change my flight [home] till the day after.”

Though the timing of the outbreak seemed unfortunate to most, the winter break actually helped reduce the risk of re-infection on campus, since the virus can be active for days or weeks before it dies off, Dr. Anapol said. In addition, the University used the time off to disinfect the affected areas.

“The last night [before break] was ridiculous. There were people throwing up all over the place. They had to call the paramedics.”

matt rosenberg
Freshman

“During the break, the University cleaned, disinfected, and sanitized all common surfaces to include all bathrooms on campus and all food service facilities,” Mel Tenen, director of Auxiliary Services, said. “The guidelines used for that cleaning were provided by the Miami-Dade County Health Department.”

According to Linda Gilardi, director of Quality Assurance for Compass Group, of which Chartwells is a member, outbreaks of Norovirus are fairly common, especially in crowded areas. A similar case occurred early in January when about 100 passengers on a Royal Caribbean cruise were sick with Norovirus-like symptoms.

“It’s prevalent in South Florida in this climate,” Gilardi said. “It seems to emerge every winter. They call it the winter flu.”

Although most students felt better within one or two days, some felt the experience was more than inconvenient. A group on TheFacebook.com titled “I survived Chart[well]’s food poisoning” had 38 members and stated “real good planning, Charties, thanks from the bottom of my aching, vomiting stomach.”

Matt Rosenberg, freshman, joined the group on TheFacebook.com after he spent all day vomiting, unable to eat.

“The last night [before break] was ridiculous,” Rosenberg said. “There were people throwing up all over the place. They had to call the paramedics.”

The MCPH inspected all university facilities and found no violations.

“They’ve been here three times for three inspections after the GI breakout,” Tenen said. “They have found no violations at UM. For that matter, they have found no violations for the past two years.”

Inspections of the food facilities consisted of investigations of cleanliness, hygiene, safe food handling practices and proper temperatures for both cold and heated foods.

According to the health report from MCPH, “[the sickness] was not a result of food poisoning, rather an exposure to Norovirus.” The illness may have been spread by point-source contact, meaning that many people became sick simultaneously and that the source of illness cannot be pin-pointed to one person or food.

Precautions that can be taken to avoid coming in contact with Norovirus include paying strict attention to hand washing, especially after using the toilet and before preparing food, thoroughly washing fruits and vegetables before consumption, and keeping all toilet areas clean.

For more information on the gastrointestinal illness on campus visit www.miami.edu/student-health.

Natalia Maldonado can be contacted at n.maldonado@umiami.edu

Top lists to close out 2004

Alejandro’s TOP 10

1. STYROFOAM

Nothing’s Lost

(Morr Music)

2. ANIMAL COLLECTIVE

Sung Tungs

(Fat Cat)

3. CLOUDDEAD

Ten

(Mush)

4. DUNGEN

Ta Det Lugnt

(Subliminal Sounds)

5. MADVILLAIN

Madvillainy

(Stones Throw)

6. IRON AND WINE’S

Our Endless Numbered Days

(Sub Pop)

7. XIU XIU’S

Fabulous Muscles

(5RC)

8. NOUVELLE VAGUE’S

Nouvelle Vague

(Peace Frog)

9. LALI PUNA’S

Faking The Books

(Morr Music)

10. SONIC YOUTH’S

Sonic Nurse

(Geffen)

Erin’s TOP 10

1. MIRAH

Cmon Miracle

(K)

2. IRON AND WINE

Our Endless Numbered Days

(Sub Pop)

3. ELLIOTT SMITH

From A Basement On Hill

(Anti)

4. CAMERA OBSCURA

Underachivers Please Try Harder

(Merge)

5. XIU XIU

Fabulous Muscles

(5RC)

6. BOBBY CONN

The Homeland

(Thrill Jockey)

7. RILO KILEY

More Adventurous

(Brute / Beaute)

8. SUFJAN STEVENS

Seven Swans

(Sounds Familyre)

9. BRIAN WILSON

Smile

(Nonesuch)

10. STYROFOAM

Nothing’s Lost

(Morr Music)

When it comes, go

By Leigha Taber

Last summer began with 103.5 The Beat and the UM Convocation Center teaming up for The Beat Down, an incredible show featuring Pitbull, T.O.K., Jadakiss, Ja Rule, Ashanti, Fat Joe, the Ying Yang Twins, Trick Daddy and Kanye West, among others. The lineup was amazing, the show even better. It was hard to believe that they could ever have another show that compared. Then, on Dec. 4, Bakapalooza took place-and it was nearly as good as The Beat Down.

Immediately following a certain game against Virginia Tech, depressed students made there way to Bakapalooza, where they were cheered up with performances by Ludacris, Lil Jon, Lil Flip, Lil Scrappy, Ciara, Pitbull and Jackie-O. There were even sights of Fat Joe and the rest of Terror Squad back stage. The audience was into the music and it showed. Some even came prepared with their pimp cups and, of course, lots of bling.

While both of the shows were amazing, few students bothered to go, even though the tickets were reasonably priced and the Convocation Center is an intimate enough venue, where there really isn’t a bad seat. If you’re not going to buy tickets to these quality shows, then don’t complain about having Winnie the Pooh and Bob the Builder dominating the Convocation Center calendar.

Leigha Taber can be contacted at ltaber@miami.edu.