Most Popular
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Kill Gus Boulis's Killer?
Paul Brandreth didn't want to murder anybody. Or did he?
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City Hall Stinks
There's a war on Dinner Key, and Marc Sarnoff is a bomb-thrower.
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Mayor of the Nude Beach
So he's naked and in his seventies. He's still the coolest guy you'll ever meet.
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I Have HIV
But I'm not telling you, babe. Happy Valentine's Day!
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Vamos a Cuba!
Join us as we try to hitch a ride to the island before the gold rush strikes.
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City Hall Stinks (58)
There's a war on Dinner Key, and Marc Sarnoff is a bomb-thrower.
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Sarnoff Turns His Back on Blacks (20)
Coconut Grove's other half feels left out.
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Sarnoff Shmarnoff (14)
Commissioner Marc's claim to a famous bloodline just might be fiction.
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Jumping the Snapper (5)
Brosia boards the Mediterranean bandwagon, with mixed results.
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Cyclists Court Death Daily (55)
It's dangerous, but Miami is getting friendlier to bikes.
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Kill Gus Boulis's Killer?
Paul Brandreth didn't want to murder anybody. Or did he?
-
City Hall Stinks
There's a war on Dinner Key, and Marc Sarnoff is a bomb-thrower.
-
Mayor of the Nude Beach
So he's naked and in his seventies. He's still the coolest guy you'll ever meet.
-
I Have HIV
But I'm not telling you, babe. Happy Valentine's Day!
-
Vamos a Cuba!
Join us as we try to hitch a ride to the island before the gold rush strikes.
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Over The Weekend - Bikes, Blue Men, Teen Rock Idols and A Film Festival
08:57AM 03/10/08 -
The Little Film Festival That Could
08:04AM 03/10/08 -
DQ Trumps blissberry on the Beach
08:02AM 03/10/08 -
G. Love and the Special Sauce Hit Langerado
08:55PM 03/09/08 -
Langerado Last Night: Matt Pond PA and the Walkmen
04:50PM 03/08/08 -
Langerado: No Vampire! Denied!
04:43PM 03/08/08
What we are writing about
- Art Basel
- Arturo Sandoval Jazz Club
- Carnival Center
- Coconut Grove
- Coral Gables
- downtown Miami
- Fillmore Miami Beach
- Fort Lauderdale
- Francisco Goya
- Freedom Tower
- Hugo Chávez
- In the Continuum
- John Timoney
- Julia Tuttle Causeway
- Karen Kilimnik
- Marc Sarnoff
- Miami-Dade County Library
- Miami-Dade County...
- Miami Beach
- Miami local art
- Miami local music
- Miami local theater
- Museum of Contemporary...
- Patrick Williams
- sex offenders
- South Beach
- South Miami
- Studio A
- Wii
- Xbox
Recent Articles By Chuck Strouse
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A Reporter on the Lam in Latin America
El Nuevo Herald’s Gonzalo Guillén is the latest victim of Bush buddy Álvaro Uribe
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Buzz Kill
Whacking all feral hives will keep ’em out, or at least delay their takeover
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The Doctor, Part 1
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National Features
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"It Was Like an Armageddon Movie"
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By Michael Musto
Pay off Your Loans
Gabe Pendas wants to save college kids a bundle. And this brawler might just do it.
By Chuck Strouse
Published: September 20, 2007
Gabe Pendas decked a guy that cool March evening seven years ago. Fractured his jaw. It was in front of the Starbucks on Kendall Drive, not far from Jamba Juice. "We had a beef. He provoked it, and he lost," Pendas says. "Two or three punches and he went down."
The hard-partying high school dropout with a white-hot temper vowed to change. This past July he was elected president of the United States Student Association, the nation's oldest and largest student advocacy group. Almost immediately he scored a stunning victory — nudging Congress September 7 to snatch $21 billion from banks and give it to college students.
Now it's time for the 25-year-old Pendas to turn his brawler's attention to Florida.
"I don't understand why lawmakers think it is okay to not fund higher education in the state," he says. "They're shifting the cost to you and me. That's absurd."
When you consider the Sunshine State's higher ed morass, Pendas's story is a revelation. Born in Queens in 1982 to Cuban émigré parents, he moved to Miami at age two. His parents divorced when he was 10 years old. In the years that followed, his mother, Carmen, was sometimes ill and unemployed. Money was tight.
A big kid, six feet three inches tall and 220 pounds, Gabe fell in with the wrong crowd during high school. He first attended G. Holmes Braddock in Kendall, "but then my mom felt it would be better if I didn't go there anymore. I hung out with the wrong crowd." He flunked every class his freshman year. Then he transferred to Sunset Senior High, where he would often play hooky to swill beer at Coconut Grove's now-defunct Hungry Sailor.
He had a passion for punk rock. Alana Rodriguez, a friend, recalls, "We'd always go to concerts, and he'd be right in the middle of the mosh pit, dancing all crazy ... running around, bumping into people. He has a very commanding presence ... not just because of his size. He's pretty intense."
Then, at age 17, Gabe dropped out. He tried plumbing, selling toys, working as a host at IHOP — "a shitty job," he says. Finally Carmen coaxed him into attending an alternative program in Coral Gables called the Academy for Community Education (ACE), where an ambitious then-28-year-old teacher named Kelly Felipe began Gabe's resurrection. "He's a genius, brilliant," Felipe says. "But he had an anger problem."
Something clicked the day Felipe introduced Shakespeare's Hamlet. "Gabe lit up. He understood something about himself — the balance of passion versus reason. He got it like nobody's business."
Gabe spent two years at ACE, a program that has suffered budget cuts (which she says is okay "because it's not about the money, man, it's about the kids"). Next, under a program called CARE — the Center for Academic Retention and Enhancement — he visited Florida State University in Tallahassee for two weeks.
At age 18, Gabe earned his GED and began studying at Miami Dade College. After eight months in the honors program, he applied to FSU and was accepted. Then came the punch and a run-in with the law. It ended when he completed community service and prosecutors dropped charges.
Like many FSU classmates, he took out loans for supplies and living expenses. He majored in physics and helped support his family by working 20 hours a week. He rocketed to statewide fame in April 2006 after being elected president of the student senate and leading rabble-rousers who staged a sit-in at then-Gov. Jeb Bush's office. Gabe protested the "systematic coverup" of 14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson's brutal beating and death at a juvenile delinquent boot camp. "We started with about 35 people the first day, had 90 the second, and a rally the third day of about 3000 students," he says. "We forced resignation of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement chief and helped close boot camps. Not bad."
When he graduated, he was $45,000 in debt. Some people would have taken corporate jobs. Gabe headed for Washington, D.C., where he was elected vice president of the United States Student Association. The pay wasn't enough to cover his loans.
When Democrats took control of Congress in fall 2006, Gabe and his USSA compadres began lobbying for debt relief. The kid who barely escaped hard time sat down with Sens. Edward Kennedy, Bill Nelson, and Mel Martinez, as well as Reps. Ileana Ros Lehtinen and Allen Boyd. Kennedy even greeted him in the Capitol's hallway. "Cool as hell," Pendas says.
The federal law he helped push through, which awaits the President's signature, is the biggest boon to students nationwide since the 1944 GI Bill. The numbers: $20.9 billion taken from banks and given to students at lower interest rates; Pell Grants boosted by about $1000, to $5400; and more than seven million students given various forms of help to pay college costs, which have increased by almost 40 percent in the past five years.
Compare that to Florida, where Gov. Charlie Crist and the legislature are determined to fleece parents and pare college budgets. Crist recently agreed to let three universities — the University of Florida, Florida State, and the University of South Florida — increase tuition by 30 or 40 percent. Then he suggested eliminating $45 million of a $55 million increase that community colleges recently received. And he proposed delaying $38 million in construction.
Florida higher ed stinks. The state is 49th in the nation in student-instructor ratio. Schools regularly rate among the best in the country for parties, not academics. Top faculty members often head to more prestigious New England addresses.









