2-11-15

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The Oracle WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015 I VOL. 52 NO. 79

Inside this Issue

classifieds..............................................7 Crossword.........................................7 sports............................................................8

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA

Chance of Bright(er) Futures

Bright Futures for summer courses proposal could accelerate learning.

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LI F E STYLE

The UnBULLievable Race returns with a chance to win big. Page 4

www.usforacle.com

The Index

News.................................................................1 Lifestyle......................................................4 Opinion.......................................................6

By Zach Leete S T A F F

W R I T E R

Montage

Taking the summer off to work or travel is a current trend among many USF students, but that may be changing soon.

Students currently qualifying for Bright Futures Scholarships will be able to advance their degree more quickly if Gov. Rick Scott’s proposal to extend scholarship eligibility into the summer semester is accepted. Though the proposal doesn’t plan to appropriate additional scholarship funds to students, it does allow students more flexibility in the way they choose to expend the 120 semester hours accounted for by Bright Futures. USF’s director of financial aid, Billie Jo Hamilton, said the inclu-

sion of summer hours would accelerate learning and offer students more flexibility in graduating early. Enacting the proposal would partially alleviate students with Bright Futures of the costly summer semester requirement. General student requirements mandated by the state and Bright Futures requirements meet at a perilous crossroad when discussing the summer term. “The state of Florida mandates that all students are required to take summer classes,” Hamilton

said. “If we make that a requirement, students should be able to use their Bright Futures during the summer.” The academic bar has been sharply raised for students hoping to attain Bright Futures. Maintaining the scholarship is equally difficult. With recent shifts in the last two years for ACT/SAT requirements, Hamilton estimates that 40 percent of students eligible in the 2012-13 school year would no longer remain eligible under the

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S PORTS Little league legend looks to make immediate impact for USF. BACK

ORACLE PHOTO/SEBASTIAN CONTENTO

Researchers see weakness in MRSA’s resilience By Zach Lowie S T A F F

W R I T E R

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more MRSA-related bacterial infections are occurring every year, resulting in over 75,000 cases in the U.S., causing around 10,000 deaths annually. What begins as a pink bump, often mistaken for a pimple, turns into a sore that resembles a red crater of blackened puss. Left untreated, MRSA can spread into the body and infect the organs, ultimately resulting in death. What makes MRSA scary to doctors, however, is that treat-

ment options are dwindling and the increasingly drug-resistant bacteria has evolved against antibiotic vancomycin — long considered the best treatment against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, better known as MRSA. “It’s a very serious problem,” said USF microbiologist Lindsey “Les” Shaw. “The issue that we’re having is that bacteria like MRSA are extremely drug resistant. If you check the medicine counter it’s pretty bare at the moment.” Nearly five years of research is beginning to come together for Shaw, who has helped develop a potential antibiotic to fight MRSA. Since their research started,

Shaw and his team have tested millions of compounds in search of the three to five containing antibiotic activity against MRSA that earned them a patent late last year. Besides lectures at USF, Shaw presents his research in both the local area and around the world. At the conclusion of each discussion, individuals affected by MRSA bacteria approach Shaw to thank him for the work he is doing toward a cure. “When I talk to people that have been touched by MRSA it’s sobering because I spend so much time thinking about this bacteria,” Shaw said. “You really get a sense of perspective about

the serious nature of the problem, and it kind of re-energizes and renews the need for you to keep striving toward making a difference and developing treatments.” Many of these individuals have no idea that when Shaw was 13 years old, he too suffered from a MRSA infection. The main infected area surrounded Shaw’s hip, so much so that he was forced to get hip pins. Doctors told him that he would have to undergo more treatment for the rest of his life. “To me this is very personal,” Shaw said. “I really care about the lack of therapeutics and want

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