"I don't care about her luggage, I just care about her medicine," Mindy Hochfelsen said. "I am so nervous she will run out of insulin. This is her lifeline."

Hopes are for a relief-filled homecoming today at Miami International Airport for the tour group, which includes 14 Spanish River students and Spanish teacher Dawn Russell.

Their $2,000, 10-day Spring Break vacation turned to misery when the Sea Diamond struck a volcanic reef off the island of Santorini. As the 469-foot vessel took on water, nearly 1,200 passengers and about 390 crew members were rescued by Greece's military, commercial ships and local fishermen.

After the ship lurched during contact, the students, sitting for afternoon tea, at first thought little of it, said Suzy Chevrier of Boca Raton, whose daughter Claire, 17, was aboard.

Their smiles quickly faded when crew members rounded up everyone for lifejackets and the hasty evacuation. They were forced to leave behind all of their personal belongings, including cameras with vacation photos, iPods with thousands of songs, money, cell phones and clothes.

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