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Page 110 text:
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Miami liosts Super comebaci( In front of 75,179 people in Miami ' s Joe Robbie Stadi- um, quarterback Joe Mon- tana hit wide receiver John Taylor for a 10-yard tou- chdown with 34 seconds left in the game to defeat the Cincinnati Bengals 20-16 in Super Bowl XXIII. The Niners had won their third championship of the decade and had laid claim to being The Team of the Eighties. In the first Super Bowl played in Miami since 1979, Jerry Rice set championship records, and was awarded with the Most Valuable Play- er trophy, with 1 1 receptions for 215-yards and one tou- chdown. The game pitted such stars as Cincinnati quarter- back Boomer Esaison, the National Football League ' s Most Valuable Player, rookie running back dancing sen- sation Ickey Woods, stand- out 49er running back Roger Craig, as well as Rice and Montana. After two consecutive Super Bowl blow-outs, the Bengals and Niners went to halftime with the score 3-3, the first time a Super Bowl had been tied after the first half. In the second half, the teams traded scores until late in the fourth quarter with the Bengals on top 16-14, Montana hit Taylor for the winning touchdown in 49er head coach Bill Walsh ' s final game. The game featured four products of the University of Miami football program. San Francisco starting de- fensive lineman Kevin Fagan, reserve lineman Dan Stubbs, Cincinnati wide re- ceiver Eddie Brown and de- fensive lineman Eddie Will- iams. San Francisco quarterback Joe Montana drops back to pass in the first tialf of Super Bowl XX- III. With their 20-16 comeback win over the Cincinnati Ben- gals, Montana led the 49ers to their third Super Bowl win of the decade. Dodgers take series from A ' s It ' s still not quite clear how a team of unknowns with an Opie-esque pitcher beat-up on the American League champion Oakland A ' s and Jose Canseco. How- ever, unbelievable as it was, the Los Angeles Dodgers, behind the near flawless pitching of Orel Hershiser, drubbed the A ' s four games to one in the World Series. After miraculously de- feating the National League East champion New York Mets, the Dodgers ignored the talk of the impossibility of their beating the baseball machine in Oakland. They were criticized for fielding perhaps the weakest lineup in World Series history by NBC sportscaster Bob Cos- tas, but the boys in blue lost only a 2-1 decision in Game 3 on a ninth inning home run by Oakland slugger Mark McGwire. Hershiser, who was named the Series MVP, won two games during the series with one shutout. Though out of the regular lineup due to an injury, Gibson provided one of the most memorable mo- ments in World Series histo- ry when, in Game 1, he hit a two out, game-winning, pinch-hit home run. After completing the first 40-40 season with 43 home runs and 40 stolen bases, Miami native Jose Canseco, the catalyst of the dangerous Oakland offense, hit a mea- ger .053 in his first World Series. 106 Headlines
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Page 109 text:
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Tuition increased by administration Citing the need to raise [faculty salaries and finance short-term construction costs of the James L. Knight I physics building, University (administrators announced in • January that undergraduate 1 tuition for 1989-90 will be !$ 11,860, a 9.8 increase over I the previous year. Provost Luis Glaser said lUM professors earn less than tthe national average and that ito remain competitive the I University will have to pay pthem better. Additionally, the money I from newspaper magnate Knight ' s $56 million gift will mot start flowing for about two years, Glaser said. UM iwill use its own money to ;begin construction of a phys- ics building the gift will help finance. Student reaction to the tu- ition hike ranged from mixed to apathetic. Said Freddie aid. Stebbins, president of Stu- dent Government: At best we view it as a necessary evil. The Miami Hurricane criticized SG for what the newspaper claimed was a lack of leadership in protest- ing the increase. Raising tuition has be- come a trend (some students would say a hobby) among UM administrators. The past several years have seen hikes hover near 10 percent. Glaser promised that trend will change in 1990, when administrators plan to lower the rate at which tuition increases. He predicted the increases will stabilize at about 7.5 percent by 1995. The University also raised its cost for housing in 1989-90 by 8.5 percent, but tempered both housing and tuition hikes with a 14 per- cent increase in financial Sparked by the shooting of a black man by a white, off-duty police officer, rioting began in Overtown on the holiday com- memorating Martin Luther King, Jr. ' s birthday. Architecture student wins lottery Winning an $8.3 million lottery jackpot wouldn ' t change a thing, thought Car- los Sanabria. He could fly up to Tallahassee, pick up his check and make it back to campus in time for class. Sanabria, a fifth-year Uni- versity of Miami architec- ture student, won the Florida state lottery November 19. He was Florida ' s youngest lottery winner. He may also be the humblest lottery win- ner ever. I won ' t change any goals, but it will be a stepping stone, Sanabria said of his new-found fortune. Every- thing will go on as planned. Now I can dedicate myself to school. Sanabria ' s randomly se- lected numbers, 7-15-24-30-31-49, would fet- ch him a yearly check of $419,000 for the next 19, before taxes. Professors and friends characterized Sanabria as someone whose feet were planted firmly on the ground, and they say they were glad to see him win the lottery. He ' s a real cool custom- er, said Michael Stanton, an architecture professor who was working with Sanabria on his final exam project. Sanabria and Stanton work- ed together two days after Sanabria learned he had won, but Stanton had no clue of the windfall. He ' s not a flighty guy, Stanton said. If I know Car- los, he ' ll finish school and become an architect. That was exactly what Sanabria planned to do. He hedged speculating too far into the future because he was focusing his attention on his final exam-a theoretical rendition of a 70,000 square- foot Pan American Art Insti- tute. After graduating in May, he planned to complete his internship with The Russell Partnership, an architecture firm where he had been working part-time for the last three years. It couldn ' t have hap- pened to a nicer person, said Daniel Tinney, Sanabria ' s boss and part-time architect professor. Tinney said he went into the office Saturday and found Sanabria working. He ' s handled it so well, Tinney said. That says a lot for a 22-year old. He ' s a real asset to the University. Sanabria couldn ' t say if the money would change his life. A week after collecting the first installment of $427,000, Sanabria said, I ' ve been too busy for it to sink in yet. Caren Burmeisler Miami Herald Brtan Smith Headlines 105
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Page 111 text:
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Summer Olympics marred by drug scandal When all was said and done in the 24th Summer Olympic games in Seoul, Ko- rea, the United States Olym- pic team, though disappoint- ing to some, had captured 94 medals including 36 golds. These Olympic games would be remembered due to several outstanding individu- al performances. Swimmer Matt Biondi, who won seven medals including five gold; teenage swimmer Janet Evans, who brought home three golds; sprinter Flo- rence Griffith-Joyner, who took four medals and an Olympic record; and diver Greg Louganis, who for the second consecutive time, swept the diving events. These efforts helped to off- set the major disappoint- ment of the men ' s basketball team bringing home only the bronze and the men ' s gym- nastics team not winning any medals. Other teams, how- ever, fared much better win- NBA finally lands in South Florida On Saturday, November 5, professional basketball fi- nally landed in South Flori- da. The Miami Heat, one of two National Basketball As- sociation expansion teams, opened their inaugural sea- son in the Miami Arena with a 111-91 loss to the Los An- geles Clippers, a team that had won only 29 games in the past two seasons. The night began with a 40 minute pre-game party, in- cluding appearances by ce- lebrities such as Don John- son and Ben Vereen, cele- brating basketball in a football dominated city. A sellout crowd of 15,677 wit- nessed an electrifying event come alive in downtown Miami as the Heat took the court for the first time. The Miami Heat and the Charlotte Hornets, part of a four-team expansion plan created by Commissoner David Stern ' s office, each made their professional de- buts in November. In the following season, the NBA would expand to Minnesota with the installation of the Timberwolves. Florida would also become the host of its second NBA team in as many years as the Orlando Magic begin play. In beginning a team from the ground up, the Heat own- ers hired Ron Rothstein, a former assistant coach under Detroit ' s Chuck Daly, to coach the young team. With the aid of an expan- sion draft and a number eight pick in the regular NBA draft, Miami at- tempted to fill the roster around its number one pick 6-foot- 10-inch center Rony Seikaly from Syracuse Uni- versity. Seikaly was joined by such players as Billy Thompson, Jon Sundvold, Pearl Washington, Slyvester Gray, and veteran point guard Rory Sparrow. At the half-way point in the season, the Heat were on track to set a new record for futility in a season with a record of 4-37. In front of a sold-out crowd of 15,008 in tfie Miami Arena, the Miami Heat, one of two NBA expansion teams, fall to the defending world champion Los Angeles Lakers 138-91. ning a total of three golds. The women ' s basketball, baseball, and men ' s volley- ball teams each stood atop their respective worlds. The greatest controversy of the games came as a result of the men ' s 100-meter dash final. It was supposed to be the moment of the Olympics in the Games ' showcase event. However, 9.79 sec- onds later as Johnson crossed the finish line ahead of Lewis, it was all but over. Three days after his victory, the world was shocked at the report of his failed drug test. He was stripped of his gold medal when traces of ster- oids were found to be in his system. Lewis was presented with the gold and Johnson left Seoul without a medal, his eligibility, and having been banned from interna- tional competition for at least two years. Headlines 107
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