Citation
The Shpiel

Material Information

Title:
The Shpiel
Alternate title:
Spiel
Place of Publication:
Gainesville Fla
Publisher:
The Shpiel
Creation Date:
November 13, 2007
Publication Date:
Frequency:
Biweekly
regular
Language:
English
Physical Description:
v. : ill. (some col.) ; 35 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Jewish college students -- Periodicals -- Florida -- Gainesville ( lcsh )
Jewish students -- Periodicals -- Florida -- Gainesville ( lcsh )
Students -- Periodicals -- Florida -- Gainesville ( lcsh )
Judaism -- Periodicals -- Florida -- Gainesville ( lcsh )
Jewish way of life -- Periodicals ( lcsh )
Genre:
serial ( sobekcm )
periodical ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Florida -- Alachua -- Gainesville
Coordinates:
29.665245 x -82.336097 ( Place of Publication )

Notes

Dates or Sequential Designation:
Vol. 1, issue 1 (Feb. 13/26, 2006)-
Numbering Peculiarities:
Issues also have Jewish calendar dates.
General Note:
Title from caption.
General Note:
"The Jewish newspaper at the University of Florida"--Masthead.
General Note:
Latest issue consulted: Vol. 1, issue 3 (Mar. 21/Apr. 3, 2006).

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
Copyright The Shpiel. Permission granted to University of Florida to digitize and display this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Resource Identifier:
65370113 ( OCLC )
2006229065 ( LCCN )

Full Text





THE SHP EL
VOLUME 4 ISSUE 7
3 Kislev 5768 16 Kislev 57686 November 13, 2007 November 26, 2007
t ~~~ei I ~~~~ t L r- I ii. S. iI IiI i


Colbert Bets


His Chips on


Stale Politics

BY RYAN WEISS
SHPiEL staff writer
One of America's most popular political satirists,
Stephen Colbert, announced his intention to run for
president in his home state of South Carolina "and
South Carolina alone."
But the nascent presidential campaign of Colbert-
who plays the part of an ill-informed, right-wing
media pundit on Comedy Central's Colbert Report-
is running into a bout of legal trouble.
Colbert announced that he would be running
under both the Democratic and Republican Party so
that he can "lose twice." As of Nov. 2, The South
Carolina Democratic Party's executive council voted
13-3 against Colbert's inclusion on the South Carolina
ballot.
To get on the primary ballot in South Carolina
as a Republican a candidate needs $35,000, which
Colbert announced he would not pay. To get on
the ballot as a Democrat candidate needs $2,500
or 3,000 signatures. Colbert obtained signatures
SEE COLBERT, PAGE 2


Rabbis Care for

Congregants

in San Diego

BY NERI STEIN
SHPiEL staff writer
Wildfires began ravaging San Diego County in mid-
October.
Over 250,000 residents of the county were
evacuated, including many celebrities. The San Diego
Chargers nearly abandoned the stadium. One hundred
miles of state highway is ruined and costs could reach
$250 million in repairs.
On Oct. 20, Jewish leaders and Rabbis convened
to discuss how to help the roughly 100,000 Jews in
the area.
While the fires raged, the Jewish community of San
Diego banded together to make the tough times a little
easier. Four Chabad-Lubavitch centers in the county
were initially turned into food-providing shelters
although two were evacuated later in the week.
Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein from Chabad of Poway,
located in the heart of the evacuated area, went to the
homes of many of his primarily elderly congregants


SEE FIRE-TORN, PAGE 2







21 NEWS


The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


Colbert voted off ballot


Record for number of
touchdown passes in an NFL
season:

Touchdowns Tom Brady has
passed for after week 8 out of
16 in the 2007 NFL season:

Approximate months Tom
Brady has been dating Brazilian
super model Gisele Biindchen:

Years since Eagle touched
down on the moon in first ever
landing:

Starting price for the new iPod
Touch in US dollars:

Price In Touch Weekly bought
the last photos of Anna Nicole
Smith's son for:

Milliseconds a foil must be
in contact with opponent in
Olympic fencing for the touch
to register:

IMDB.com rating of the movie
"Touch" (1997) starring LL Cool
J and Christopher Walken:


49




30




13




38



299



$650,000




15





5.5


Harprgo dsei bltt'


Rabbi helps fire-torn communities


FIRE-TORN, FROM PAGE 1

at 4:30 a.m. on Oct. 19 to check on their
situations. He also spent time working
at Qualcomm Stadium, where many
evacuees settled, to make sure people
were provided for and that kosher food
was available.
Goldstein had to tell several of his
congregants that their homes had been
lost.
Rabbi Levi Raskin of the Rancho
Sante Fe Chabad removed all Torah
scrolls before being forced to evacuate.
He also printed out community member
lists so the community leaders could
account for each of their congregants.
These actions have given truth to the
word "community."
Another rabbi reached out in a
different way.
Rabbi Yosef Brod is a rabbi for a
separate Chabad and also runs Camp
Gan Israel in the San Bernardino
Mountains. Brod sent his staff away as
the area was evacuated on Oct. 20 but
decided to stay at the camp he loved.


As fires roared in the camp's
backyard, firefighters were able to get
additional water from the facility's
pool. The fires stopped just 100 yards
off the camp's borders.
Afterward, Brod fed and housed the
exhausted firefighters at Gan Israel.
The news of a shelter that provided a
place to sleep off the ground and under
a tent quickly spread, and more firemen
showed. Brod appealed to other area
rabbis for help.
The San Diego wildfires lasted for
nearly a week and when the fires had
finally dissipated, more than 1,500
homes and 500,000 acres of land had
been destroyed. Seven people died as
a direct result of the fires and 85 were
injured. A majority of the injured were
firefighters.
The fires were declared, at least
partially, to be man made and at least
one was identified as deliberate.
After sunset on Shabbat, Brod told
the firefighters at his camp, "If we have
the power to destroy the world, we have
the power to make it better."


The Only Student-Run Jewish Campus Newspaper in the Country, Right Here at the University of Florida


Editor-in-Chief
Lori Finkel
shpieleic@gmail.com

Managing Editor
Giselle Mazur
gisellel@ufl.edu

News Editor
Joshua Fleet
joshlf@ufl.edu


Scene Editor
Douglas Sharf
dsharf88@ufl.edu

A & E Editor
Danielle Torrent
greeneone@ufl.edu

Executive Advisor/Mentor
Rabbi Yonah Schiller
ravyonah@ufhillel.org


Chief Visionary
Leo Stein

Copy Editor
Ben Cavataro

Layout Editor
Jackie Jakob


Photo Editor
Jeremy Fields
froma@ufl.edu

National Affairs
Hilary D'Angelo
hilaryd@ufl.edu
Corey Smith
corsha@ufl.edu


N
tw



E


M


COLBERT, FROM PAGE 1

thorough downloadable petitions
online, which is considered illegal.
In addition, he attempted to fund his
campaign through a corporate Doritos
sponsorship. According to campaign
fundraising regulations, the coverage of
a campaignrmay be corporate sponsored
but the campaign itself cannot. (Colbert,
for his part, has said he is "under no
obligation to promote the zesty, robust
taste of Doritos brand tortilla chips,
regardless of how great a snack they
may be for lunchtime, munch time,
anytime.")
Regardless of whether the Federal
Election Commission intercedes with
Colbert's "crunch money," the Colbert
juggernaut continues. Jn less than 10
days, over one million users joined the
Facebook group "One Million Strong for


Stephen Colbert" trumping "Barack
Obama (One Million Strong for Barack),"
which was created over nine months
ago and has yet to break 400,000.







The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7 NEWS 1 3


Raising Dead Prayers


Kesurrec

Prayer Resur

in New R

Prayer

BY DAVID CUMMING
SHPiEL staff writer

The United States' lar
movement, Reform Ji
adopting a new siddur (p
that offers everything
"Shema" to a reinstated
the resurrection of the d
The prayer book,
T'filah," caters to pi
traditionalists and ev
between -even those
believe God exists.
The new prayer book
development for over 2
was congregant-tested I
temples across the U.S.
Reform temple mer
dissatisfied with the old I
of Prayer," which was
in 1975. Congregants cl
sexist language and fail
an interest in participate
and spirituality.
Unlike "Gates of Praye
more traditional text has
denote responsive read
would alternate spea
between Rabbi and cc
Also there are no chor


t I O n notes, which instruct congregations
to rise and sit at certain portions of
reacted the service.
As early as 1985, committees
reform decided to deliberately re-ritualize
and return more traditional
Books liturgical texts to the new siddur.
Even references to traditional texts
from the medieval period have been
r reinstated.
Although the new siddur holds
gest Jewish on to some previous liturgical
udaism, is passages, it includes some prayers
rayer book) that were never before considered
from the service-worthy. After some
prayer for deliberation in Reform committees,
ead. more controversial prayers such as
"Mishkah the prayer for the resurrection of
rogressives, the dead, "Mehaye Hametim," were
reryone in restored. In the older version, the
who don't phrase "who resurrects the dead"
was replaced with "who gives life
has been in to all." This is because the notion
0 years and of resurrection was believed
y over 300 contradictory to Reform Jewish
interpretation.
nbers were There is still plenty of diversity in
book, "Gates the Reform movement and the new
published prayer book tries to take this into
claim it uses consideration. The book is reflective
Is to reflect of varying attitudes toward Judaism
ory worship and changing times.
Reform Jews still stand by the
er," the new, ideas that the Torah was written
no italics to by humans with divine inspiration,
ings, which that man and woman are inherently
king parts equal and that gays, lesbians and
congregation. intermarried families should be
geographical welcomed.


Mosque in Foz de Iguacu, Brazil, serves hundreds of Muslims in the area
where Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay meet. The area is believed to be a
center for the financing of Hezbollah activities and has been linked to the
1994 AMIA bombing in Buenos Aires.


Short,


riefs


BY BEN CAVATARO

Attorney General nominee confirmed
President Bush's nomination of Michael Mukasey for Attorney
General passed the Senate Judiciary Committee 11-8, moving on
to the full Senate where Mukasey was confirmed 53-40 replacing
Alberto Gonzales, who resigned in August. Mukasey, a retired New
York federal judge and an Orthodox Jew, became the second Jewish
Attorney General. Mukasey's nomination was marked by Democratic
concerns over his refusal to define waterboarding as torture, which
led Judiciary Committee chair Sen. Patrick Leady to vote against
Mukasey. Waterboarding, a simulation of drowning, has been used
overseas by U.S. interrogators.
Two Democratic senators, Dianne Feinstein of California and
Charles Schumer of New York, crossed party lines to vote to pass
Mukasey. Republican Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania also voted
for Mukasey, while Jewish Democrats Sens. Herb Kohl and Russ
Feingold of Wisconsin and Benjamin Cardin of Maryland, voted
against.

Czech neo-Nazis, anti-fascists clash in street battles
Neo-Nazis attempting to march through the Jewish quarter of
Prague battled with anti-fascist activists, resulting in at least 250
arrests and the seizure of gas guns. axes and other weapons in
violent outbreaks around the city. According to the Prague rescue
service, at least six people, including a police officer, sustained
head injuries.
The march was scheduled to coincide with the anniversary of
Kristallnacht, the infamous 1938 "Night of Broken Glass" in which
Jews in Germany and Austria were targeted by Nazis. The event is
often considered to be the start of the Holocaust.

Buenos Aires bombing suspects placed on Interpol wanted list
Five Iranians and a Lebanese man were placed on Interpol's
"red notice" list in connection with the 1994 bombing of a Jewish
community center in Buenos Aires. The attack killed 85 and injured
hundreds more. Officials in Argentina say Iran cooperated with
Hezbollah to carry out the bombing.
Israel and Jewish world leaders hailed the decision, and the World
Jewish Congress in New York said it was "a victory for all those
seeking freedom from fear or intimidation." The Iranian foreign
ministry denounced the move.

Damaged Torah returned to German synagogue 69 years later
A Torah scroll damaged in the Kristallnacht program in 1938 was
returned to a synagogue in the city of Cologne in western Germany
exactly 69 years after it was taken. A German Catholic priest,
Gustav Meinertz, rescued and hid the Torah from the synagogue on
Glockengasse Street, which was lit on fire in the attack.
Returned to the congregation after the end of World War IIby the
Cologne prelate, it was displayed for decades but could not longer be
used because of the damage. But in recently a Jewish artifacts expert
identified the scroll as historically important and a candidate for
restoration. The Sefer Torah was sent to Israel by the congregation
funds from the Cologne archbishopric and was restored using
modern technology and the transcription of over 300,000 words
over four months.
The Torah was returned in a ceremony on Nov. 6 attended by
German Jewish leaders, Israel's two chief rabbis, and the Archbishop
of Cologne.







41NEWS


The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


Iran's Position on the Holocaust Takes a Zero Degree Turn


BY JOSIT FLEET
SHPiEL staff writer

A sympathetic mini-series about the
Holocaust is flooding television set-in
Iran.
"Zero Degree Turn," or "Madare Sefr
Darajeh" in Persian, tells the story of
Habib Parsa (Shihab Hassini) and French
Jews during World War II.
Parsa is a student from Iran attending
a university in Paris. He meets a French
Jewish girl, Sarah Struk, and despite
tension the two become friends and
later fall in love. Parsa wishes to spirit
Sarah and her family away from France
and the impending Nazi onslaught to
Iran.
Channel 1, on which "Zero Degree
Turn" is broadcast, is a state-controlled
TV station. The show itself, like most
media in Iran, is financed by the
government.
That a television series in Iran not
only recognizes the Holocaust but
sympathizes with its victims doesn't
Seem to fit with the stance Holocaust-
denying Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmedinejad has assumed.
"Most of the hard-liners [in
Iran] do not deny the Holocaust...


there's a minority that feel like
Ahmedinejad," said Majid Sharifi,
a University of Florida professor of
Political Science who was born and
raised in Iran.
"I think it fits very well," Sharifi
said. "First of all, Islam in the
public of Iran is not Ahmedinejad.
Second, Ahmedinejad does not
run [the media]...There are 60,000
employees of state television."
Still, the show differentiates
Judaism from Zionism.
Enlightened and assimilated
French Jews, the soon-to-be victims
of the approaching Nazis are
sympathized with in "Zero Degree
Turn." But when Sarah's uncle
Theodore comes on the scene with
his Zionist fantasies of fleeing to
Palestine, the background music
hits a sinister note.
The glint in Theodore's eye, the
malicious curl of his lip and the
harsh rasp of his voice point to one
.assumption-he is evil.
Sarah's other uncle, Samuel, retorts,
referring to the possibility of a Jewish
state in Palestine: "The Jews, because
of ancient sins, have been homeless
for years...you want them to start their


excursion with new sins?"
The show posits that what happened
to the Jews in the Holocaust was bad,
even unforgivable, but what the Jews
do now in Israel is just as deplorable.
This contradiction is indicative of the


mainstream opinion in Iran.
The 22-part show began airing in
April 2007. Full episodes in Farsi can
be downloaded online. Ten-minute
clips with English subtitles can be
found on YouTube.


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The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


SCENE 15


Iebrew Homosexuality


Hillel rabbi and of concern.
During the initial job interview,
employee fan the Rabbi Yoni said he made a point to
stress that Hillel is a community-
flames on this hot topic building organization, and the Hillel
staff is not looking-to alienate any
BY GISELLE MAZUR members of the Jewish community. He
SHPiEL staff writer said understands the Orthodox view
of homosexuality in Judaism because
Homosexuality, same-sex marriage members of the movement are at least
and adoption, and sex reassignment
surgery may not be as taboo as they once
were in American mainstream culture,
but they're still hot button issues in the
Orthodox community.
Moshe Hajaj, the Israeli Fellow at the i
University of Florida Hillel, is openly
gay. He said the decision to come out OV
to his family wasn't hard. While his
family comes from a strict religious S S
background, they've always provided 6I
Moshe with a loving support system, I
Moshe said. IS l
"My grandparents are Orthodox, and b J
my grandma always, always tells me,
'Do whatever you want to do. It's not up
to other people to judge you,'" he said.
"It's up to God on Judgment Day. It's
a conversation between you and God.
God will decide what to do with you
afterwards." consistent. They follow all Jewish laws
When Moshe applied for the job at rather than picking and choosing which
Hillel, he made a point to tell Rabbi Yoni laws to observe.
that he is gay. He was open about his "I don't fault anyone's view of
orientation because it was important for religion and how they decide to live
him to know before moving to Florida their life," Rabbi Yoni said. "And if they
if his employer had a problem with his want to be a religious literalist, that's
homosexuality, fine.... I'm not saying you have to be
"This is a big part of my self identity, gay, but don't bring the prejudice,
I'm Jewish and I'm gay... And I'm a lot violence, hatred, anger, against anyone
of other stuff but this how I identify in the gay community."
myself," Moshe said. He attributed most of the problems
Rabbi Yoni Kaiser-Blueth, with the older generations, and said
Conservative rabbi at UF Hillel, assured that most-of our grandparents haven't
Moshe that his sexuality was not a topic dealt with homosexuality until now.


Homosexuality didn't have a face when
they were growing up and most had
never met an openly gay person.
Jen Torrent, 19, a student at came
out to her family about a year ago and
said that it was actually harder on her
than her family. She found comfort in
her Reconstructionist congregation
and said she can't imagine how hard it
would have been had she been another


end,



"I is lVe9


nmaomy-



gond sex.


religion. She once dated a devout
Christian who found it very hard to
reconcile her religion and sexuality.
"I don't think there is a more open
religion than Judaism," Jen said. "The
idea of coming out is scary no matter
what religion you are, but I think it is
easier to find peace if you believe in
a higher power. In Judaism it's such a
tight community that I don't worry I'll
be lost in a crowd and forced to deal
with it by myself."
Not. all congregations are as
accepting of homosexuality. Leviticus
18:22 says that "Man should not lie with


a man as one does with a woman. It is
an abomination." The meaning of this
excerpt depends on how literally it's
interpreted
The statement does not call
homosexuality a sin (zina), but rather
an abomination (to'evah). Parts of
the Conservative, the Reform, _and
Reconstructionist and Humanistic
movement have interpreted the
statement to mean that while
homosexuality is frowned upon, it's
not a sin in the-same way that theft and
murder are.
For example, while sex between a
man and a woman is seen as a mitzvah
to continue the growth of the Jewish
population, Rabbi Yoni said that today
this mitzvah could be interpreted to
mean.that a couple is responsible for
raising Jewish children. Therefore, a
gay couple that adopts or fosters a child
and raises that child in a Jewish home
fulfils that responsibility.
Moshe is in the process of forming a
Hillel support group for Jewish GLBTQ
students. GAYtors will focus on helping
students come to terms with- their
sexuality and how it fits in with Judaism,
uniting students under the umbrella of
a common heritage.
He'll also give a series of lectures
across the U.S. and Canada called
"Sexuality and Pluralism in Israel."
Through these lectures, Moshe hopes
to break down common misconceptions
about GLBTQ life in Israel and create an
open dialogue about acceptance and
tolerance.
"In the end, love is love," Moshe said.
"It is beyond anatomy-beyond sex."

If you're interested in getting involved
with GAYtors, contact Moshe at Moshe@
UFHillel.org


Jewish Cubans Anxiously Await Liberation of Homeland


BY MARCO FARAH
SHPiEL contributing writer

In light of the Cuban dictator's
recent pseudo-health crisis the prospect
of a Castro-less Cuba becomes more
plausible.
Since Fidel Castro transferred
executive power to his brother, Raul
Castro, following intestinal surgery
last year, many people have questioned
the leader's supposed good health.
The once-highly-visible despot has not
made a single public appearance in
roughly a year. Since Castro's sudden
seclusion, many have questioned if the
Communist leader is even still alive.


In any case many Cubans know that
the end is near. The Cuban dictator is
reaching the twilight of his life. Some
Cuban nationals are preparing to return
to their homeland as soon as news of
Castro's death is-positively confirmed.
As a result of Spanish colonization,
the vast majority of Cubans are Roman
Catholic. This majority, for the most
part, has been maintained despite
religious restrictions under the Castro
regime.
Although religious differences
separate Cuban Jews from the majority
of Cuba's population, University of
Florida student Aaron Crespin said that
being part of the Jewish minority has


not made him feel any less Cuban.
"Whenever Castro dies it will be
a time of celebration for all Cubans-
Jewish or otherwise. If it weren't for
him many of us Cubans would still be
living in Cuba today," said Crespin, who
is a Jewish Cuban.
Cuba has had a long history of
multiculturalism. A large percentage of
the population is of mixed racial and
cultural background.
It is understandable why, despite
their differences, Jewish Cubans still
readily identify with their compatriots.
Dr. Walter Renato Lambert has lived
in Cuba for nearly 40 years.
"In Cuba,. the problem of


discrimination was not that much of
an issue," Lambert said. "No one would
think too much about if a black or
Jewish or Chinese family moved into the
neighborhood-they were simply viewed
as just another family moving in."
Regarding a potential return to Cuba,
Crespin and his family have made their
home here in the United States.
"Though I don't foresee myself or my
family returning to Cuba as permanent
residents, I would gladly visit sometime
after Castro's death," Crespin said.
He also acknowledged that despite
his personal views, he expects exiled
Cuban Jews to return to their homeland
once Castro dies.








61 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT


The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


INVENTING

JEWISH RITUAL



















Vhamis.-a L OchDl


The Guide for the New Jew:



Author Challenges Traditional Ritual


BY LEO STEIN
SHPiEL staff writer

For those tired of an archaic, sexist
Judaism, the Jewish Renewal leader
Vanessa L. Ochs has written a guide
titled "Inventing Jewish Ritual."
The personal narrative examines
Ochs' detachment with the traditional
Judaism of her grandparents and
divulges on the new inventive practices
that have streamed out of the Jewish
Renewal Movement. She explains
new rituals like Torah Yoga, same-
sex marriage certificates and abortion
blessings.
More specifically, Ochs reconciles
feminist ideologies with what she
considers a sexist tradition of practicing
the faith. Such principles as separating
men from women in prayer, avoiding
celebrations for female newborns and
keeping matriarchs out of the holidays,
are eliminated in the Renewal world.
The movement instead allows women
to don the male-worn prayer shawls and
celebrate menstrual periods. The book
illustrates that ritual is a progressive
stream that does not look to destroy
the tradition of an Orthodox past, but
to fine tune it. This is exemplified by


the Renewal's usage of Hebrew in new
blessings and Talmudic stories that fit
for modern issues.
The book reads as a constant
dialogue between Ochs' personal
experiences and her explanations for
moving in a new Jewish direction. With
so much ritual boredom in the Jewish
world, it's apt that movements in our
day and age have reconnected people
to their faith.
While it's certainly praiseworthy to
apply Judaism to an egalitarian-aimed
society, I kept wondering how grounded
the Jewish Renewal Movement was in its
Jewish roots. For example, one section
describes placing a mezuzah.on a car
similar to the one on Jewish homes
to protect and bless those inside. The
idea is irrelevant since there is already
a specific prayer Jews may say while
driving for this very purpose.
In the same vein, how are the same
red thread bracelets Madonna wears for
her pseudo-Kabbalist masquerade an
important amulet for those who need
healing? Wouldn't belief in the power
of a thread be idolatrous anyway?
So I wonder, does Ochs explain all
the new rituals because she wants to
modify the old system, or does she


simply find new practices
convenient regardless of
their Toranic, traditional
connection? The answer
fluctuates depending on
the ritual, from the highly
needed (i.e. female rights
for a Jewish divorce) to
the extraneous (i.e. cyber
dating).
Nevertheless, Ochs'
background as a learned
scholar of Jewish texts
allowed me to trust her
personal reflections on
the question of what it
means to be Jewish. The
undertone of the book
isn't about her finding that
answer, but more on her
process of getting there
through newly manifested
ideas.
"Inventing Jewish
Ritual" serves to help
understand the new styles
of Jewish living that run
around the importance
of creating meaningful,
progressive practices for
our current generation.


pboto courtes)' of les'Iinejudaica.coln


GOOD News for People Who



Like Good News


BY DANIELLE NICHOLS
SHPiEL contributing writer

"Welcome to GOOD, media for people
who give a damn.
This is what the Web site states in
GOOD Magazine's "About" section.
GOOD Magazine is a publication
that strives to break the mold of the
mundane.
The magazine was started in 2004
by 26-year-old Ben Goldhirsh in a small
office in Los Angeles. Upon receiving
an inheritance from his father Bernie
Goldhirsch, who founded Inc. Magazine,
Goldhirsch started the magazine that
focuses on "culturally-conscious young
people and their take on energy, politics
and business," according to an article
on CNN.com for "Young People Who
Rock."
This up-and-coming magazine's


main goal is to produce an entertaining
publication about things that actually
matter. Rather than just regurgitating
facts blandly, GOOD adds spice lacking
in a lot of media writing.
While producing content that is
fun and interesting, the magazine also
focuses on important issues so that
it can be an appealing medium for a
younger audience. Morgan Clendaniel,
deputy editor of GOOD, most accurately
describes the magazine as being a
"Sesame Street for adults."
Unfortunately, magazines geared
towards young adults tend to run
the same types of articles with the
only change being the celebrity on
the front cover. Topics in magazines
like Cosmopolitan and Maxim revolve
around the three things? sex, losing
weight and superstars. GOOD breaks
free of this trend to produce a wide


array of stimulating and witty articles
in every single issue.
"Today's media is taking up our
space, dumbing us down, and impeding
our productivity," Goldhirsh stated on
the magazine's Web site. "GOOD exists
to add value."
To ensure this value and quality of
news, the magazine is split up into 11
sections to encompass an assortment of
topics.
The sections include: Statement,
Look, Transparency, Marketplace,
Portraits, Features, Provocations,
Stimuli, Guide, Projects and Blogs.
The first four pages of the magazine
are dedicated to the Statement section,
where an artist or group sets the tone
with an artistic representation of the
issues theme. .
The Look section offers readers a
taste of creative ideas from around the


world, with topics range anywhere from
leftovers being left on top of trash cans
for the homeless to metal music making
a comeback in Egypt.
Staff writers use the Transparency
section to illustrate data and statistics,
from student debt to sugar consumption,
while the Marketplace section offers
information on U.S consumer culture.
GOOD does mitzvotby donating
a 100 percent of the magazine's
subscription money to non-profit
organizations, including UNICEF.
Unlike many other magazines,
GOOD tries to keep its readers involved-
staff writers ask readers to document a
traditional craft for the project section
of the magazine.
The Blog portion of GOOD gives
readers the chance to write articles
that are shared, rated and possibly
published.


...^ .. .../^ .^ ^ ,:- -.,.,........ ...... ............... :.. ....-....... .. .... .. ,....- .... ... ...
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The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 17


The Private Parts of a Different Stern


Guitarist Marnie Stern
shpiels about ditchin'
journalism for music,
early influences and
her Jewish heritage

BY ELAINE WILSON
SHPiEL staff writer

The gritty, rugged music of Marnie
Stern compacted with raw energy has
been shredding its way into the hearts
and headlines of New York's music
scene.
Stern's debut album, "In Advance of
the Broken Arm," was released earlier


this year on the record label, Kill Rock
Stars. Zach Hill, the drummer of the
band Hella, helped develop the album
into what The New York Times called
"the year's most exciting rock 'n' roll
album."
Stern's method of playing is
technically referred to as "finger-
tapping." The guitarist applies pressure
to a string on a desired fret to create
a note, often creating a staccato result.
The process sounds simple but cannot
describe the driving rhythm and rush of
Stern's tracks with layers upon layers
of. organized, industrial noise, which
transcends the "shredding" label.

The SHPiEL caught up with the
sensational Stern over the phone:


SHPiEL: When did you start
playing music?
MS: I took a few lessons when
I was 15 and then put the guitar
down. I picked it up again around
age 20 -and when I graduated
from college, I decided that I
wanted to focus on music instead
of journalism, which is what I
studied at NYU.

SHPiEL: How did you get into
it?
MS: There was no specific
reason. I had always been drawn
to music but felt that it was in
another category for people who
had a natural affinity for it.

SHPiEL: How long did it take
you to finish "In Advance of the
Broken Arm"?
MS: I write about a song a
day. At least a snippet of a song,
and so most of the songs I wrote
for "Broken Arm" were done in
one day. Recording it, however,
was another story. [Zach and I]
recorded it in about 12 days, using
some of the tracks I had recorded
at home on my pro tools and then
doing overdubs at the studio in
California.

SHPiEL: The New York Times
hailed your album the year's most
exciting. How does it feel?
MS: I am so excited and
thankful to know that people are
listening to it, because there was
a point in time when I had been
working for 10 years on making
songs and I had no record label
and not many people came to
see me when I played shows. I
thought I would just be making
music in the house my whole life
and no one would hear it, so there
is so much satisfaction in being
acknowledged.

SHPiEL: I heard that Sleater
Kinney was one of your big
influences. They also signed with'
KillRock Stars. Coincidence?
MS: Sleater Kinney was an
influence early on for me. I liked
the way their guitar lines weaved
and blended into one another.
I also felt there was a rawness
and honesty to their music. But


Kill Rock Stars has always been a
seminal label to me and so I kept
sending my demo to them.

SHPiEL: How do you feel
about the label placed on indie/
progressive rock as a man's
art? Do you feel your work is, in
part, to eradicate the stereotype?
MS: Until I released the record,
I had never thought about it. f
I help to eradicate stereotypes,
then I gladly accept the role.
I don't think it's a man's art
though. I think it's a genre of
music that only a small group
gravitate towards because it is so
intense. It is constantly changing
and shifting with its tempo and
parts, and I think you have to
have patience to want to absorb
that kind of constant motion.

SSHPiEL: You are a Jewish
woman-does your religion at all
influence your music?
MS: Well, I'm not a practicing
Jew, but I am very proud of my
background. I think in some
ways my heritage has given me
the fortitude to press on, when
maybe others might have given
up. So I think having a cultural
Jewish background has affected
me more than the actual religias
practices.

For more information, including tracks
off the new album, visit www.myspace.
com/marniesternl.


1
_d
-
~di~i~c









81KVETCH


The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


I found a
few diaries
of mine when
I went home
this weekend.


th these, Irealize
how problems
have never
real ly
changed, they just take on new faces
and forms. also realized how dumb I
sounded.
Although some of the names of
people and places have been changed,
S these are generally unedited. For your
reading pleasure:

12/24/1996
Dear diary,
Mom lit the memory candles to
remember my grandma Lena and Aunt
Anna. I just said the Kaddish. I walked
away and looked back. The candles
seemed to (the fire) dance with joy. I'm
really sad that they died but I think it


will turn out okay.

(I was such a good little Jewish girl.
I mean, I wrote about this in a diary...)

9/12/97
Dear diary,
My mom is actually letting me grow
up a little more. Now, I get to shave
my legs, grow out my bangs and use
Noxema. The next thing I am waiting
for is getting a bra. Tonight, Katie is
spending the night.

(Wow. What a loser. Shaving and
wearing a bra are not privileges,
they're inconveniences. Noxema
ruined my clear, child-like skin and
gave me acne.)

9/19/00
I want to go to Red Hills*
Homecoming w/ Lindsay but my
parents won't let me. I wish Jewish
guys lived in Tallahassee. I don't know
how I am going to tell my mom about
my D+ in WorldCivilization. Dad


didn't take it too well. I wish I could
sleep more. I want to be a movie star
for Halloween.

(Omg get over yourself. Other
people have worse problems. Why
take up space writing about this crap?
School dances were dumb anyway. I
should have spent less time worrying
about going to a dance and more time
studying for World Civ.)

2/08/02
So, I got my first boyfriend about
3 weeks ago (?). His name is Michael*.
I liked him at first but then things got
creepy. I went to his dad's funeral
and saw his best friend Jon*. Jon has
blue hair and I thought he was pretty
cute. So I went to the movies w/ Jon
and Michael, and Michael kept trying
to hit on me. I didn't want him to, b/c
1fdon't like him anymore so Jon made
him stop...and now I like Jon. I really
don't think that my parents will let me
go out w/ him b/c he has blue haifrand
his ears pierced. But he's so different,


which is what I like about him. O well.
I wonder how Michael will react when
he finds out.

(I can't believe how insensitive I
sound. I was hitting on the best friend
of the guy I was dating at his dad's
funeral. Except that guy was truly
gross, and we only dated for two weeks.
Actually, both those guys turned out to
be losers. I ran into Michael at Publix
when I was in college, and he looked
like hell. He told me he was going to
community college and then asked me
to hang out. I politely declined. Jon
and I ended up working at the same
restaurant in my sophomore year of
college. He worked in the kitchen. Jon
ended up using too many drugs to
remember my name, much less that
we once dated.)


1

Legislators Give Back Qurans


KHADER ABUALHAYJAA The Governor's
Ethnic American
S Advisory Council
gave the copies
of the English
Translation
S. of Quran to
Oklahoma's 149
senators and representatives after a
panel on diversity.
Seventeen of them said they plan to
return the gifts after receiving a letter
from a colleague.
That college, Rep. Rex Duncan, said
a good thing, but for a bad purpose.
"Most Oklahomans do not endorse
the idea of killing innocent women
and children in the name of ideology,"
Duncan said.
Duncan's words reminds


me of what Pharaoh said:
"Let me kill Moses, and let him call
upon his Lord. Surely I fear that he will
change your religion, or he will make
mischief appear on the land." [40:26]
Pharaoh's techniques against Moses
are alive to this day. From twisting
arguments to old school Pharoah
technique of the good sentence for
a bad purpose he promotes a false
propaganda.
About innocent women and
children in Islam, in the Quran says:
"And what reason have you, that you
should not fight in the way of God
and of the weak among the men and
the women and the children, who
are saying: Our Lord! Bring us -to go
forth from this town, whose people
are oppressors, and give us from


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Your presence a guardian and give us
from Your presence a helper." [4:75]
Yes, from among my people who
killed innocent, I'm innocent of the
crimes of my community criminals.
All innocent individuals are innocents,
by definition, of the crimes done by
the criminals in their communities.
Some politicians abuse the media by
their one-liners and decorate their
words nicely to pass false propaganda.
The first verse- of the Quran to
permit fighting gave the permission
implicitly, since God does not favor the
fighting option, but, by his wisdom,
he allows it to defend the innocents.
"Permission is given to those who are
fought because they are oppressed, and
mostsurelyGodiswellabletoassistthem."
The Quran is fully accountable of


Tonya Blackman
TERRITORY MANAGER


Phone: (800) 258-2861
Fax: (877) 942-4135
www.myserviceoffice.com
email: t.bacMkan@servieeaffee.eom


what it promotes, but it's innocent of
any abuse of its text, regardless if the
abuser is a Muslim or not, a politician
or not. Islam is not Muslims. When
people follow religion, it doesn't mean
they have no other ideas. Sometimes
they mix in ideas from other cultures.
If Duncan had kept his copy of
the Quran, he would have known
that the Quran aims to protect
churches, synergies and mosques.
Freedom of religion requires the
freedom of thought, speech and practice.
The Quran protects the freedom of
religion and its pre-requisites. It seems
Duncan missed the whole point of
the panel on diversity. He's free to
hold his principles and thoughts, but
he was a bad example of how to be
open-minded and how to be a learner.




THE SHPiEL
Opinions expressed in this section do
not necessarily reflect those of The
SHPiEL. We encourage comments from
readers who possess all points of view.
No, really, we're interested in what you
have to say. Feel free to write a letter to
the editor or you can contact us with a
column idea. Please send comments to
theshpiel@gmail.com.







The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


SCENE 9


Relationships Like Pinocchio


Study offers look at no-strings-attached relationships


BY NICOLE FINE
SHPiEL contributing writer

Friends with benefits is basically the
McDonald's of the dating world, said
Lauren Ciaccia, a University of Florida
student.
"It is fast, cheap and probably
not good for you, but you go there
anyway."
Most. college students reported
having at least one of these relationships,
according to a recent study at Michigan
State University.
The research found that students
said they viewed these relationships as
safe and commitment free. The study
was the first to research this idea.
"Friends with benefits" is a


relationship between two people
without any strings attached, said Alvin
Lawrence, a psychologist at the Student
Health Care Center.
A New York Times article said that
of the students' relationships that
were researched, 10 percent of became
committed. The majority remained
friends with benefits.
Girls become enter this type of
relationship hoping that it will become
a committed relationship, Ciaccia said.
"Usually it is the guy who benefits
more because he is getting what he
needs without the emotional attachment
or stress of a real relationship," she
said.
Different wants and needs can often
lead to stress and confusion, Lawrence


said.
The relationships are intended to
be very mature, but often one person
develops feeling which can lead to
jealousy and insecurity, he said.
Lawrence said he has a neutral
opinion on the friends with benefits
type of relationship.
A "friends with benefits" relationship
is not any worse or better than other
relationships, he said.
He said that honesty from both
sides is necessary for the relationship,
to work.
"Students must be open, up front
and communicate about their role," he-
said.
Lawrence said he has not had a
student visit his office because of an


open relationship, although it can be a
side factor.
"Friends with benefits" seems to
remain popular among students.
The Community of Friends ,vith
Benefits, a Facebook group, encourages
students who join to find other
members and start friends with benefits
relationships.The group is a free and
casual version of Match.com and has
more than 1,680 members.
Kristin Bj6rnsen, a UF student, said
her previous experiences with open
relationships have led her to give up on
friends with benefits all together.
"One person in the so-called
relationship is wanting for it to become
more than just sex," she said.
"No one really benefits."


Well-Dressed Porn


BY ZAHARA ZAHAV
SHPiEL contributing writer

American Apparel designer and
corporate executive, Dov Charney,
wears underwear while brainstorming.
"He is definitely a pioneer," said
Rabbi Yonah Schiller, the Jewish learning
initiative educator at Hillel. "That's
what [Jews] do. We push boundaries, we
challenge industries, we cross lines."
Charney, who has been sued by
four employees for sexual harassment,
crosses a lot of lines.
His. conduct at work has been
questioned, often hiring employees
based on first impressions rather than
resumes.
Advertisements for his socially-
responsible company reflect his
sexually-charged attitude.
Schiller, who studied art at Brown
University, said that art is an expression
of self-reflection that emanates from
within us. He said advertisements
are often imitations of art, but their
expression of the superficial prevents
them from being art.
But many people think American
Apparel's racy ads can indeed be a form
of art.
"Yes, sex sells," said Erika Amaya,
an American Apparel customer. "And
American Apparel sells a lot. Charney
is boldly admitting that sex is their
campaign. It's genius, really. He is
telling the truth and that's what art is
about."
American Apparel's advertisements


may make you
look twice for
more reasons
than outright
sexuality.
Charney' s
be iefs
about what's
hot differ
from more
mainstream
clothing
lines such as
Abercrombie
& Fitch and
AmericanEagle
Outfitters.
His models
are often
unwaxed and
unshaved with
asymmetrical
hai r-d o s ;
Charney
prefers oddity
to normality.
Many of
his models
are multiracial. His shoots are often
unedited for sweat marks, untidy hair
or unappealing facial expressions.
Hannah Pyper, an advertising major
at UF, thinks the American Apparel
business model makes up for their
sometimes "less-than-classy" ads.
American Apparel makes clothes
in America and pays people well to
make a good-quality product, Pyper
said. "Those are excellent morals in the


AmedcanAMOM


business world."
The largest T-shirt manufacturer
in the U.S., American Apparel pays its
employees an average of $12 an hour.
Employees also receive benefits like
paid vacations and healthcare. Their
garment factory offers free massages
and lessons for employees who want to
improve their English language skills.
Charney's world may not be dictated
by ethics and morals, but from a


business perspective, his work is
impressive, Schiller said.
"'Sex sells'-may be the message, but I
don't think it's a good message," Schiller
said. "Judaism teaches that you should
see your partner naked in the bedro,9ri.
Not splayed across a magazine page."
You decide. For model images,
see: http://www.americanapparel.
net/gallery/photocollections/models/
index.html.







1 OISCENE


The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


The Plight of the Proboscis Problem


DOUG SHARF A long,
long time ago
in a galaxy
far, far away,
a smartass
gentile thought
it would be
funny to
proclaim that
because air is free, Jews have larger-
than-normal honkers.
Our people have endured one of
the most prominent stereotypes of all
since then.
Now, stereotypes are over-
discussed, and we have come to
accept that they exist because they
are generally somewhat based in
truth, but just how true is this hook-
nosed hoax?
Doctors unanimously agree the
Jewish muzzle is a myth, fabricated
for the sake of joke material. I,
however, pose a different theory.
This theory employs that all Jewish
stereotypes support the idea that it is
evolutionarily advantageous to have
a big beak.
According to Dr. Andrew Scholey


of the Division of Psychology at the
University of Northumbria: "Extra
oxygen has been shown to enhance
mental performance and memory
recall in healthy active adults in
several clinical studies".
With a bigger nose, it takes less
time to fill lungs with air. The lungs
can then be filled to capacity more
times in the same time period with a
bigger nose than with a smaller one.
This extra oxygen, which "enhances
mental performance," is the reason
Jews tend to be smarter, which may
also be the reason it is viewed that
Jews are generally more financially
well off.
There, I've said it-the- most
stereotypically Jewish paragraph in
history. Halle Berry should recite it
next time she goes on the Tonight
Show with Jay Leno.
Every time someone mentions
or jokes that the Jewish people
have sizable snoots, I think of the
vast number of Jews I know and
acknowledge that they seem to have
normal-sized noses.
It is only when a Jew happens to


have a big nose that people
point out, ."Oh big surprise,
what a Jew!" even though the
trait of the tremendous trunk
is pretty evenly distributed
among many different races
and ethnic groups.
The numbers that don't
lie are the JAP-y rhinoplasty
counts. High percentages of
nasal augmentation surgeries
performed on teens are Jewish.
Although this is certainly
significant, it has less to do
with the Jewish schnoz idea
and more with how Jewish
women are worried about their
physical appearance.
Medical sources document
that one cannot tell a Jewish
person based solely on physical
traits. There has been too
much marrying outside of the
faith. But, if for some reason
it is true about the substantial
snout, I think we should wear
them proudly like an elk bears
its antlers.
Alpha-nose dominance.


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,o.r FMend mi c Das.







The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


CALENDAR II


13
Twilight Tuesdays
8:00 pm.


Challah back
6:00 -7:45 pm.
^Gbajjab gaek

".Y. Abramovitsh
Between Yiddish
and Hebrew"
7:30. Room 282,
Reitz Union


ART BASH
7:00 10:00 pm,
at the Fine Arts
complex


The Jeff Coffin
Mutet at the Side Bar


Football
Gators vs. FAU,
12 pm. (home game)

'- '
Gator basketball
vs. Rutgers
7:00 pm


Mike Reiss
at the Reitz Union
Grand ballroom,
8pmn


Alberto Gonzales
at the Phillips Center
for performing arts,
8 pm.


T.. ilithr Tuesdays
8:00 pm



Gators basketball
vs. UNF,
8 pm.


Football
Gators vs. FSU
(home game)


Nb CI
Weeldy MA Poetry/
Fiction Reading at
Goering's Bookstore
8 pm.


ASSES
Gators basketball
vs. FSU,
8 pm.


MOVIE SHOWTIMES at the Reitz Union !


"One Flew Over
the Cuckoo's Nest"
Sunday 18th
Monday 19th
Wednesday 21st
Thursday 22nd


A Look at



What You



Missed:









Bill Nye talks at the Phillips Center
November 6th







121 SCENE


The SHPiEL:Volume 4, Issue 7


: We're


having a



SSHPiEL


party!



November 27th


Whiskey Room


10 p.m.


Challah at Yo' Heebs


A cappella group Challah
Back forms at Hillel

BY DANIELLE TORRENT
SHPiEL staff writer

Doov tsk kah, doov tsk kah.... what
combination of syllables will get the
cymbal crash?
Beat may not seem like a big deal,
but in the world of a cappella, it takes
a good amount of brainstorming to
arrange a song without instruments.
The saying, "The voice is an instrument"
cannot be taken lightly.
While the University of Florida is
not a school recognized for a cappella,
an initiative at Hillel is bringing Jewish
arts to The Swamp.
Jessica Kendler, program associate at
UF Hillel, came up with the idea to start
a vocal group for students, partially
because of her experiences as a lead
singer and member of various a cappella
groups in England and Jerusalem.
"[Music] is such a good way to really
express your Jewish identity in a really
positive way," she said.
With three rehearsals under its belt,
Challah Back is Hillel's new co-ed vocal
ensemble-while most of the members
are singers, accompanying instruments


such as the piano, drums or guitar, are
also welcome.
UF student Davita Manijeh has been
a singer in the UF a cappella group The
Sedoctaves since fall 2006. But when
she heard about the start of Challah
Back, she stepped up to be one of the
group's founding members.
"In general, I really enjoy Jewish
music and singing for a Jewish cause,"
she said.
The term a cappella is Italian for "in
the style of the chapel" or "in the church
style." But singing groups around the
country adapt the concept into the style
of the synagogue by combining singing
with their Jewish faith.
A cappella carries tradition in many
northern universities, -and Jewish
groups include Chai Notes, Jewbilation,
Mazel Tones and Shir Harmony
Challah Back is not considered
a religious organization, and a Jewish
ensemble should not be mistaken for
the role of the cantor in Jewish prayer.
It's a group whose place lies with
performance, not prayer space.
Rabbi Yoni Kaiser-Blueth, the
associate director of Jewish student life
at UF Hillel, said the debate of allowing
for performance on Shabbat, the day of
rest, is complicated and situational.
Regardless, Jewish ensembles are


distinguished
by the
opportunities for
performances.
RabbiYoni,avocal
percussionist,
said an a :.
cappella group-
he performed i
with as an NYU
student once held
a performance
during Kabbalat
Shabbat, the
time leading up
to Shabbat.
He said he would also like to see
Challah Back perform for Kabbalat
Shabbat and toyed with the idea of beat-
boxing as a guest of honor.
"I'd like to perform with them if I
can, but I want it to be student-run," he
said.
About 50 percent of the group's
repertoire will be Jewish, including
songs in Hebrew and anything from hip-
hop to gospel, Kendler said. Founding
members of Challah Back have begun
arranging songs already in existence,
and hopeful composers can have their
music debuted by the group, she said.
An audition is not necessary to
become a part of the group. But Kendler


said aspiring members do need a "high
level of commitment and a joy of
singing."
She hopes the group will perform
for charities, elderly homes, shelters
and schools. There is also a Hanukkah
concert in the works. Kendler hopes the
group can eventually become an official
UF student group, she said.
"When you're in that zone of just
making beautiful music and you just
feel it, everything else just feels great,"
Kendler said.

Rehearsals for Challah Back are
Thursday from 6 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. on
the second floor of the Hillel building,
and open to all who are interested.




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REPORT xsi:schemaLocation 'http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitss2Report.xsd' xmlns:xsi 'http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance' xmlns 'http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss'
DISSEMINATION IEID 'E20080606_AAAALK' PACKAGE 'UF00073858_00027' INGEST_TIME '2008-06-07T05:25:15-04:00'
AGREEMENT_INFO ACCOUNT 'UF' PROJECT 'UFDC'
REQUEST_EVENTS TITLE Disseminate Event
REQUEST_EVENT NAME 'disseminate request placed' TIME '2017-12-04T10:25:48-05:00' NOTE 'request id: 311545; E20080606_AAAALK' AGENT 'UF73'
finished' '2017-12-04T10:28:15-05:00' '' 'SYSTEM'
FILES
FILE SIZE '1791497' DFID 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNP' ORIGIN 'DEPOSITOR' PATH 'sip-files00001.jp2'
MESSAGE_DIGEST ALGORITHM 'MD5' efe32d50af05c875b17b042c50992f0e
'SHA-1' d81bc47be6461c72b3c25ae0be9228ed160e6c92
EVENT '2017-12-04T10:26:22-05:00' OUTCOME 'success'
PROCEDURE describe
'421187' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNQ' 'sip-files00001.jpg'
7576e52a24cb9f5a7428581c0c00d955
fe806e0ee6f6e0bbe47024d3d578f03336d196f9
'2017-12-04T10:26:44-05:00'
describe
'56763' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNR' 'sip-files00001.pro'
1722915d2035739e53a696864e4ac807
b433482b765514ec6aeb4f5c90b2c19c3450a276
describe
'47141' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNS' 'sip-files00001.QC.jpg'
55ef505247f5b52fcad6915924d91f35
6e21ebac750f1216179c565e7b9cbf9992091a8d
'2017-12-04T10:26:36-05:00'
describe
'43012036' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNT' 'sip-files00001.tif'
cb0c994cc562d8d56201cb6be938037c
6d8ec28597b49cdcd822ebf3ec133a60dc176294
'2017-12-04T10:26:43-05:00'
describe
'2376' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNU' 'sip-files00001.txt'
b92262bc523f4e63d632ac1f21c3e04d
966b8f2fef326886c6174e7722a0d765bc704ff0
'2017-12-04T10:26:38-05:00'
describe
'11755' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNV' 'sip-files00001thm.jpg'
d746f380c4db5100e96222219046461a
424e8abdfc03fd309c2528b2bcf7139e136bf282
describe
'1783282' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNW' 'sip-files00002.jp2'
1f92f6934a15caef940f44e86f1ae833
4c8a1594236264c4c12b0f03c60098b984928ce0
'2017-12-04T10:26:24-05:00'
describe
'322705' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNX' 'sip-files00002.jpg'
417e69234eb4b2a6e22dc0b4ffd235e4
491466f4e2d11aa2e6f2bc86e161234d28363951
'2017-12-04T10:26:27-05:00'
describe
'112445' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNY' 'sip-files00002.pro'
7c572ead9a3949714c0b9f738e7fd5ef
71197c8562c6ad316924e1b80735e1e68fc97084
'2017-12-04T10:26:28-05:00'
describe
'40008' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYNZ' 'sip-files00002.QC.jpg'
e48c152398adf1ba9cca4d4d1b37323b
8bd2a5e0ec9f3c2faf11f744d4786da2b945fd46
describe
'14281664' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOA' 'sip-files00002.tif'
82062af61e9e330d293c9d6e4f00b7ca
9bda16cc6d447ecddfec6ea0ede03a702b420be7
'2017-12-04T10:26:26-05:00'
describe
'4474' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOB' 'sip-files00002.txt'
88f34cf07bdd8ef95a0f08aaf4faec19
a58c31184d30d884829c1adf3f517197b00570cf
'2017-12-04T10:26:25-05:00'
describe
'10165' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOC' 'sip-files00002thm.jpg'
9a4e8799949e4c8de54e18d64f1051a5
a923e06cd02fde46658ce1ee6e48bd602b74d87b
'2017-12-04T10:26:37-05:00'
describe
'1777701' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOD' 'sip-files00003.jp2'
29eeed3f8ebdd2a8c903bc65d2dbdbc7
c4ca1fbe4db6dde0701df1cc0bcf34dc767021bc
'2017-12-04T10:26:35-05:00'
describe
'427590' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOE' 'sip-files00003.jpg'
8468993a66a16bee159279af413aa77b
077e73017b838baa1cb0c73acbf280d153191d2b
describe
'162599' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOF' 'sip-files00003.pro'
6916cf5af7003711e87ec25afeeaf69d
06c1fe8dfa17700a72196d854def4d08270166f8
'2017-12-04T10:26:34-05:00'
describe
'47471' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOG' 'sip-files00003.QC.jpg'
dbf32a2218d2af4fc519be52661aa1a2
83b18531cbe87dc52520b331eddfca78c09ca09b
'2017-12-04T10:26:31-05:00'
describe
'42679140' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOH' 'sip-files00003.tif'
07b7f2ede49a0a493cfa87de07dce381
d9cc4f097b41d29375eacd1e6d2ccac00454956a
'2017-12-04T10:26:33-05:00'
describe
'6318' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOI' 'sip-files00003.txt'
14b7639d2f3f5ffc0af5b750fde956da
e1b9b33394d4618a8c47b57a47734e5e7ad84134
describe
'11051' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOJ' 'sip-files00003thm.jpg'
5066b5664a68d940322b66c64fed0abe
fb0a6659851be96aecea4ea1586274bf4882df23
describe
'1769753' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOK' 'sip-files00004.jp2'
854e63672ea8883790b2033681dfcb68
d2131f6d1a4fa4f4f91d1196aed70c0e07fe5b59
describe
'372304' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOL' 'sip-files00004.jpg'
ca664cecdccd8a0d2dd98d372af95ff0
119dbbc8ef164631b267fcf097583eebda0e7440
describe
'98545' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOM' 'sip-files00004.pro'
c6cb148628da4d6f632d5269bc924654
431b1f32966f046c59a50b2b4f0f328523be782e
describe
'42190' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYON' 'sip-files00004.QC.jpg'
09b93f4ae1701d5a34d78ef03211d220
162dd6be7a39a9243dd4242aadbc30616db340bd
describe
'14175520' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOO' 'sip-files00004.tif'
af39e8e2a875d11550dc6955c3bb04bd
d27149db458e2625610ef4a1127b42f5f4b8024f
'2017-12-04T10:26:23-05:00'
describe
'4234' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOP' 'sip-files00004.txt'
9f03e84cfede2349c8881a7b5df6fec8
b26cb5c613915bb0acc6bba114044cee4e098ee8
describe
Invalid character
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'10501' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOQ' 'sip-files00004thm.jpg'
d79e2695e0c565adbefba13dc123a272
2f8011e6ab0d3864ae7c607cdc9d311622fc1943
'2017-12-04T10:26:39-05:00'
describe
'1785997' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOR' 'sip-files00005.jp2'
5f8c8eb1fd0cd2702fdd70afb15fc54f
d395f518c9c62978ee957ce0101e3ee1e16a25ec
describe
'369650' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOS' 'sip-files00005.jpg'
9557cca6b77863a6fb3c1decb46a35c7
bb47020f13cdd3ff61f9dbf49aceaba1abfa3aab
describe
'201165' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOT' 'sip-files00005.pro'
94b3a251207a5bf03fbb9d44440e6f79
88b522e31e4e187e1bada4394b9f85a876a84d0a
describe
'44755' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOU' 'sip-files00005.QC.jpg'
8d4c78ace08cdaa1896a99a3c5912a19
a398009e86c5877cf8b03221382cfd68bac8a15a
describe
'14303164' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOV' 'sip-files00005.tif'
1eeba478267b0d4a45c601d22e40adf7
afb1a8f513dac7cb35c4db4833ed6432172b1e4f
'2017-12-04T10:26:32-05:00'
describe
'8034' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOW' 'sip-files00005.txt'
95b413c62f7939f175e2f45b26b1fefe
7fef0524f47a976765f063664ed3ab121fbc6f0b
describe
'10697' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOX' 'sip-files00005thm.jpg'
d7d3167f289279a62ad40137a9fa87fe
d00f4904a82019d29546490ae1020efe038e3a67
'2017-12-04T10:26:30-05:00'
describe
'1789917' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOY' 'sip-files00006.jp2'
2789160987611a0cdeea0a10e60b48ba
dde9e0fd663ff0cfded4b5c687a6ac42d790bd1f
'2017-12-04T10:26:40-05:00'
describe
'358604' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYOZ' 'sip-files00006.jpg'
8a8ff521ed2c3b75b9562728f3737284
9f628ec6af1ca7a737ea6588ae7b1de68feba09d
describe
'168787' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPA' 'sip-files00006.pro'
1b8be23d51a8fcef73e9aeec64e42222
98094e3c6f83f83bfc8e3231e277411dfa7c70aa
describe
'44466' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPB' 'sip-files00006.QC.jpg'
9c528fd94ce500eefb46e1a46dec67d0
a887a1cebc3bdea233daed3497f12514728a4878
describe
'42971620' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPC' 'sip-files00006.tif'
2fdaf8ee1781c7504db56635f4a59a86
003a389080337a6e7123d7813830ef00dc9bb623
describe
'6891' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPD' 'sip-files00006.txt'
9204566ce23fb9d38da00ef3ae9b804f
d52449ccb3dbdf2228befb1ca4c53d6037193e0a
describe
'10813' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPE' 'sip-files00006thm.jpg'
7f6294282d946148aa11c611cdd1367f
b42dcaf5eb2d5ebfba3d3744a1b6d51f08778c0f
describe
'1796754' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPF' 'sip-files00007.jp2'
608121ab93d51606c457ca82cff6e97b
79e8f65d264f6f876d05165a220ff6117d164e64
describe
'397940' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPG' 'sip-files00007.jpg'
e37a9c3f7c8db9c11706374785b52abb
1a5ed9697c765c76ab5e42e55bcc0753001c3917
describe
'110500' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPH' 'sip-files00007.pro'
65b9b4e0b13694d705287f98daf49217
9c9ac54d4cff57de9978debd7451f675059c050c
describe
'45969' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPI' 'sip-files00007.QC.jpg'
35f6f1283fa104cfc170e3c1fd80a5ad
3dc101b231b70073723ee8f11f3593238d47298c
describe
'43136308' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPJ' 'sip-files00007.tif'
e9147acaefab06acf5e09246b280f7e8
765491823bde0d8dd3be96651c601eebd1a537d2
describe
'4278' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPK' 'sip-files00007.txt'
93f59d932c35f90618587ea4f8934c95
195ecf0b865e31f036f9e6b150f12303c57c3431
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'11356' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPL' 'sip-files00007thm.jpg'
6d60c8f2e4a90df9d926d07bc707f989
703cff970616cb5dbb353b66a7f42af03a7ac697
describe
'1786743' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPM' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
bd45f3ed9aca87ca8ae4a791df7d392e
44f6eee963881c46c1585744b0ebbce5ad334976
describe
'356858' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPN' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
fe39c8cab28a563188bec873ef2c1bca
11e6744baa2385d581fef0a744de2e49ec126e48
describe
'174000' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPO' 'sip-files00008.pro'
7ebc485795a1f1d0bd6d10bcf56045c7
692c7ff1b58cc444b686903eba7755b3bd7556fd
describe
'42419' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPP' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
1105adcb0eb6cafadc79b0ae14f44807
e78bb3b3ff545d9e2bf35d66e0ecc98f357319d8
describe
'14308868' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPQ' 'sip-files00008.tif'
39137f9d9fd68ec2a3bf24709eb99a82
ed2708a4d93f1b95ae20dc2d0951c5d3ae5fbec4
describe
'7245' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPR' 'sip-files00008.txt'
0993c7339adb35e9a1e514b275c2e2dd
cda6bd3591b810b19dc0ae59ba526a3497dc36ca
describe
'9877' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPS' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
1f132275fe9733b3770fd9618c7bddb6
a630501429260a3a900c6e86052d73859900f507
describe
'1764864' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPT' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
b057759a72e1e4b0f9322662707050fa
5173095d494c038597da419fd36d9b7d9419161d
describe
'339010' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPU' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
325fecd65c547037c71840d087259f5a
8313204b0585c04db759fcc8a953d299e5bdacbc
describe
'142948' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPV' 'sip-files00009.pro'
013ef37e8c73116f9645b887bc3d4404
fae74a470be920746d99d83d2e5adc486656aa15
describe
'39794' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPW' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
6ad75c0543ca620f797395aa74b5fe30
6a0f17a469dcdb662beb8b6b203b94f8745cd9f9
describe
'14133748' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPX' 'sip-files00009.tif'
bbb49cf21b304cc82d83fe55d2d1e0f7
b63eac31f2c4f7b4700a4107c0a7586b6fc98686
describe
'5684' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPY' 'sip-files00009.txt'
284a345d6fd491951dad6c0a70637c03
5cb9bfd9356617b4ba4687505eba0705c7385353
describe
'9925' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYPZ' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
7a1c39e4d6f56d343a035d6a17ecbb82
abc45008d2d55a6b54879a11b8b6f43a6f0b8ffb
describe
'1765480' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQA' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
160fd78e69bc108e301970d0133217dd
97ae6b8038537304911d15ec5e5ef1418af567c7
describe
'367960' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQB' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
e64ebf7b21a1cb443e93b2c2ec67deb8
9e9cf66a8baf9059d124f0c594fd55fad74d2b91
describe
'87289' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQC' 'sip-files00010.pro'
870bc6feb1b8f65cbd4dda4a794ef346
086ecf1c89f6861d0e3310bfa70b2a86b70550e1
describe
'42999' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQD' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
2446539ddcdf6f23eb41e512ec8efcc3
3e41d5dcd9132204dc1a244186e58b7a7b39c4cf
describe
'42386368' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQE' 'sip-files00010.tif'
7412f703ef80a60dcc06bff952ed119c
e2f5c47acdf47818ba2f24c00b29cc581c224297
'2017-12-04T10:26:41-05:00'
describe
'3689' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQF' 'sip-files00010.txt'
36c13c253dc53df79e58e9054f8253a3
dea61d3384fe643fba3183508fa126cbe690518b
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'11039' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQG' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
9060250a438dc138a4c3475d27169ebd
3f8b8c652b2ffac8865caa10fa4c1b0589f3dfe3
describe
'1786704' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQH' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
8b683ecf069e0619b9d2ecd70941a694
ebc5e0f2f3790ff6e9ae481077b10830904d5135
describe
'309034' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQI' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
62c43cb5030bd6ba07de7722d529c4c4
a450a0c50cef0e19fcb32dc92ecf76574df35256
describe
'25365' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQJ' 'sip-files00011.pro'
0b6fd04152020ea01fabfceab57ce78e
dac0f1e10131469d5024d35543c01042147ed505
describe
'33525' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQK' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
06f1794a6aceaa54239d921f50ae9759
68766b44174e39bd9816ee3276904710536b0d76
describe
'14307636' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQL' 'sip-files00011.tif'
3aa3f815417014871443a6624b9b2dc9
d6027a255234c3206e8451050fdc02b3eb897842
describe
'1143' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQM' 'sip-files00011.txt'
61e6fc9310e3463a57600d818c44fa77
9f1307adb3dc8f30a0c93dc6adc38b37a616867e
describe
'8651' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQN' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
25cd1b17971d2181aa22108d79a654e5
d4c1069940d46be3fb21e7c5502f44ad477705fd
describe
'1786990' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQO' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
e362ac13a97cf3b07fff883124641a63
96c9d2faab452cfc3e045a30d08f06db29dd4e04
describe
'442949' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQP' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
fa11235f442bed2fe297ecc5b48a3272
cd9460ab6b0f24a267b5fe5ca5f60115acb33cf9
describe
'103570' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQQ' 'sip-files00012.pro'
3f8ac0bc8d207aef3012515b82e25894
ce072d154115167f7d87c6dc73b03b7fe5317081
describe
'46544' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQR' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
d796b0c08d5c6e32c6ccfc78ac352ba2
b4175e03317f8db839e1978ff465bf667e494e7d
describe
'42902452' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQS' 'sip-files00012.tif'
48c327009035384d27031cbc4b971d5d
d5be0b84d5ef76cf6553397e2f04a6e8027cde3f
describe
'4280' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQT' 'sip-files00012.txt'
117c00cc05e62199da7d3737a7d9ee2e
bd09492a2d5f03d37d06dd1396ac1a4948461b1f
describe
'10884' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQU' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
b63701ff41103baa377b830f1b3eacc2
b74fa19ab2d662e6433fb80b2f962abe643eaf74
describe
'27675' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQV' 'sip-filesUF00073858_00027.mets'
2aa6147596d9d97da3f35494cab207e2
5969e2dd59b9651b3418d343db81086dfc3678d4
describe
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'2017-12-04T10:26:46-05:00' 'mixed'
xml resolution
http://www.loc.gov/standards/xlink.xsd
BROKEN_LINK schema http://www.loc.gov/standards/xlink.xsd
TargetNamespace.1: Expecting namespace 'http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/digital/metadata/ufdc2/', but the target namespace of the schema document is 'http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/metadata/ufdc2/'.
'31598' 'info:fdaE20080606_AAAALKfileF20080607_AAAYQY' 'sip-filesUF00073858_00027.xml'
e10d83b5f107bbfbce1b9e59fd5de3bc
1820f487a66e9cb99a5918bd82e746fb81496daf
describe
'2017-12-04T10:26:47-05:00'
xml resolution
http://www.loc.gov/standards/xlink.xsd
http://www.loc.gov/standards/xlink.xsd


xml version 1.0 encoding UTF-8
REPORT xmlns http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss xmlns:xsi http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance xsi:schemaLocation http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitssReport.xsd
INGEST IEID EBC1L49HQ_PPI3R0 INGEST_TIME 2017-12-13T20:01:57Z PACKAGE UF00073858_00027
AGREEMENT_INFO ACCOUNT UF PROJECT UFDC
FILES