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Coral Gables, Florida Since 1927 Volume 77, Number 41 WWW.HURRICANE.MIAMI.EDU March 24,21 HOW SWEET IT IS UM defeats Northwestern in close game SPORTS page 5 Hurricanes prepare for Tulsa tonight 16 page 7 See SG • Page 2 Law prof. Hausler, 76, dies By Reynold Rosa News Editor Professor Richard A. Hausler, a legendary figure at the University of Miami School of Law who taught notable attorneys such as Roy Black —who defended William Kennedy Smith —and Honda Attorney General Boh Butterworth,died March IB. Hausler, 76, had been on the faculty of the School of Law for 52 years, and was the longest serving member on its faculty. “Prolessor Richard Hausler played an important role in the development of the University of Miami School of Law." said William VanderWyden, associate dean of students for the School of Law "He loved teaching, and he was always prepared to give his students something very special in each class," said VanderWyden. “He challenged and animated his students, giving them both confidence and knowledge, tools for the practice and a love for the art of the law." Hausler was delightful and stimulating inside the classroom, said Minnettc Massey, a professor of law who first came to know him as a student. Outside the classroom he was just plain charming and always a bit elegant with a See HAUSLER • Page 2 FAWAD SIDDIQUII Humcane Staff THE WINNER: Jose Diaz talks to the Senate dunng the speaker election. Diaz to be SG speaker By Jessica McNeill Assistant News Editor Sophomore Jose Diaz, who was chosen to be the next speaker ofthe Senate Wednesday, started off his speech by having all those present rise and, at the call of“ 1,2,3, iump," tump together, trying to prove the Senate needs to work as a whole to get things accomplished. The Senate voted between three candidates: Diaz, senior Laura Batista and junior Shaun Smart. According to Chief lustice |on Gurney, a majority of votes is needed, and there was a clear win between the candidates. Diaz said he thinks the reason he won was because people have seen the way he works. "I work hard at what I do," he said. “People want someone to represent them who has a good work ethic." Diaz said he also wants the Senate to be more efficient, so as speaker he is making that one of his main goals In addition, he said he wants the Senators to get to know one another better, making it an easier work environment. Hurricane File Photo CUTTING THE NETS DOWN: The Hurricanes hope to be celebrating another big victory after this weekend in Austin, Texas HURRICANE SENIOR STARTERS guard After disposing of Arkansas and Ohio State, the Hurricanes have reached the a sweet sixteen By Jon Santucci Editor m Chef Since Leonard Hamilton arrived at the University of Miami in I 990, he has constantly talked about creating a winning basketball program and tradition at the University of Miami. And after the Hurricanes’ 75-62 win over Ohio State Sunday afternoon, it’s become a reality, lust a few weeks after clinching a share of the Big East Championship—its first ever—the team has accomplished another first: reaching the Sweet 16. “Once again we are swimming in uncharted waters,” UM coach Leonard Hamilton said. “It feels kind of good. Each time we win a game, each time we take another step forward, were making history for our program" This was all supposed to have happened last year, though The Lanes were the No. 2 seed in the East and knocked off Lafayette by 21 points before being upset in the second round by 10th-seeded Purdue. In 2000, the Hurricanes faced a much more difficult task in the tournament Miami's first-round match-up was with SEC Tournament champion Arkansas. The Razorbacks came into •t the NCAA Tournament as arguably the hottest team in the country after grab bing the automatic bid by winning the conference title, lust to get into the NCAA Tournament, Arkansas had to get past Kentucky, LSI and Auburn in the SEC Tournament—and after doing that they seemed poised to upset the Hurricanes. Many publications predicted the Canes to fall to Arkansas, but UM was able to heat the vaunted full-court press of the Razorbacks and withstand a late 10-0 Arkansas run to win 75-7I. “For 39 minutes, I thought we had things under control," Hamilton said after the game. “That last minute, I think we made it a little interesting." The second round was a much bigger challenge, as the Canes faced No. 3 seed Ohio State. The Buckeyes trounced Appalachian State in the first round and were being mentioned as a possible No. I seed before losing in the Big I0 Tournament. In 1999, Ohio State made it to the Final Four and in 2000 was led by the same cast—namely star guards Scoonie Penn and Michael Redd The Hurricanes fell behind 27-20 midway through the first half, hut rebounded and led 36-31 at the half. The score could have been closer except Redd missed a dunk before the half and Canes forward |ohn Salmons hit a long three-point shot at the buzzer to give the Canes a five-point advantage. The Canes never trailed in the second half, and with the score tied 50-50, senior guard (ohnny Hemsley hit back-to-back three point shots to spark a I4-I UM run. The Hurricanes never looked hack and continued to extend the lead by going I3-14 from the tree-throw line down the stretch. “We’re trying to build that tradition and mystique the way the Kentuckys and Connecticuts have," Hemsley said “This is just a great step." The Canes will face Tulsa, the No. 7 seed in the South, tonight at the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, Texas. Tulsa reached the Sweet 16 with wins over No. I0 seed UNLV and No. 2 seed Cincinnati. A win over Tulsa would put the Canes in the Elite Eight—another first and solid building block for the future. “You don’t build tradition in one, two, three years," Hamilton said. “A lot of times coaches take a step, take a step back. I just want to keep moving." MARIO BLAND center VERNON JENNINGS guard
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, March 24, 2000 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 2000-03-24 |
Coverage Temporal | 2000-2009 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (16 pages) |
Language | eng |
Repository | University of Miami. Library. University Archives |
Collection Title | The Miami Hurricane |
Collection No. | ASU0053 |
Rights | This material is protected by copyright. Copyright is held by the University of Miami. For additional information, please visit: http://merrick.library.miami.edu/digitalprojects/copyright.html |
Standardized Rights Statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Object ID | MHC_20000324 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_20000324 |
Digital ID | MHC_20000324_001 |
Full Text | Coral Gables, Florida Since 1927 Volume 77, Number 41 WWW.HURRICANE.MIAMI.EDU March 24,21 HOW SWEET IT IS UM defeats Northwestern in close game SPORTS page 5 Hurricanes prepare for Tulsa tonight 16 page 7 See SG • Page 2 Law prof. Hausler, 76, dies By Reynold Rosa News Editor Professor Richard A. Hausler, a legendary figure at the University of Miami School of Law who taught notable attorneys such as Roy Black —who defended William Kennedy Smith —and Honda Attorney General Boh Butterworth,died March IB. Hausler, 76, had been on the faculty of the School of Law for 52 years, and was the longest serving member on its faculty. “Prolessor Richard Hausler played an important role in the development of the University of Miami School of Law." said William VanderWyden, associate dean of students for the School of Law "He loved teaching, and he was always prepared to give his students something very special in each class," said VanderWyden. “He challenged and animated his students, giving them both confidence and knowledge, tools for the practice and a love for the art of the law." Hausler was delightful and stimulating inside the classroom, said Minnettc Massey, a professor of law who first came to know him as a student. Outside the classroom he was just plain charming and always a bit elegant with a See HAUSLER • Page 2 FAWAD SIDDIQUII Humcane Staff THE WINNER: Jose Diaz talks to the Senate dunng the speaker election. Diaz to be SG speaker By Jessica McNeill Assistant News Editor Sophomore Jose Diaz, who was chosen to be the next speaker ofthe Senate Wednesday, started off his speech by having all those present rise and, at the call of“ 1,2,3, iump," tump together, trying to prove the Senate needs to work as a whole to get things accomplished. The Senate voted between three candidates: Diaz, senior Laura Batista and junior Shaun Smart. According to Chief lustice |on Gurney, a majority of votes is needed, and there was a clear win between the candidates. Diaz said he thinks the reason he won was because people have seen the way he works. "I work hard at what I do," he said. “People want someone to represent them who has a good work ethic." Diaz said he also wants the Senate to be more efficient, so as speaker he is making that one of his main goals In addition, he said he wants the Senators to get to know one another better, making it an easier work environment. Hurricane File Photo CUTTING THE NETS DOWN: The Hurricanes hope to be celebrating another big victory after this weekend in Austin, Texas HURRICANE SENIOR STARTERS guard After disposing of Arkansas and Ohio State, the Hurricanes have reached the a sweet sixteen By Jon Santucci Editor m Chef Since Leonard Hamilton arrived at the University of Miami in I 990, he has constantly talked about creating a winning basketball program and tradition at the University of Miami. And after the Hurricanes’ 75-62 win over Ohio State Sunday afternoon, it’s become a reality, lust a few weeks after clinching a share of the Big East Championship—its first ever—the team has accomplished another first: reaching the Sweet 16. “Once again we are swimming in uncharted waters,” UM coach Leonard Hamilton said. “It feels kind of good. Each time we win a game, each time we take another step forward, were making history for our program" This was all supposed to have happened last year, though The Lanes were the No. 2 seed in the East and knocked off Lafayette by 21 points before being upset in the second round by 10th-seeded Purdue. In 2000, the Hurricanes faced a much more difficult task in the tournament Miami's first-round match-up was with SEC Tournament champion Arkansas. The Razorbacks came into •t the NCAA Tournament as arguably the hottest team in the country after grab bing the automatic bid by winning the conference title, lust to get into the NCAA Tournament, Arkansas had to get past Kentucky, LSI and Auburn in the SEC Tournament—and after doing that they seemed poised to upset the Hurricanes. Many publications predicted the Canes to fall to Arkansas, but UM was able to heat the vaunted full-court press of the Razorbacks and withstand a late 10-0 Arkansas run to win 75-7I. “For 39 minutes, I thought we had things under control," Hamilton said after the game. “That last minute, I think we made it a little interesting." The second round was a much bigger challenge, as the Canes faced No. 3 seed Ohio State. The Buckeyes trounced Appalachian State in the first round and were being mentioned as a possible No. I seed before losing in the Big I0 Tournament. In 1999, Ohio State made it to the Final Four and in 2000 was led by the same cast—namely star guards Scoonie Penn and Michael Redd The Hurricanes fell behind 27-20 midway through the first half, hut rebounded and led 36-31 at the half. The score could have been closer except Redd missed a dunk before the half and Canes forward |ohn Salmons hit a long three-point shot at the buzzer to give the Canes a five-point advantage. The Canes never trailed in the second half, and with the score tied 50-50, senior guard (ohnny Hemsley hit back-to-back three point shots to spark a I4-I UM run. The Hurricanes never looked hack and continued to extend the lead by going I3-14 from the tree-throw line down the stretch. “We’re trying to build that tradition and mystique the way the Kentuckys and Connecticuts have," Hemsley said “This is just a great step." The Canes will face Tulsa, the No. 7 seed in the South, tonight at the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, Texas. Tulsa reached the Sweet 16 with wins over No. I0 seed UNLV and No. 2 seed Cincinnati. A win over Tulsa would put the Canes in the Elite Eight—another first and solid building block for the future. “You don’t build tradition in one, two, three years," Hamilton said. “A lot of times coaches take a step, take a step back. I just want to keep moving." MARIO BLAND center VERNON JENNINGS guard |
Archive | MHC_20000324_001.tif |
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