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Central Florida Future, Vol. 40 No. 47, May 15, 2008

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\o ROCK ON! Fla. Music Festival will make you blue in the face with glee -SEE VARIE_TY,A9 RELIGION Colbourn burglarized on exam week department were graduate "change your passwords of Students' personal information among stolen items students. your e-mail accounts, as well Andrew Kinsell, a gradu­ as your bank passwords." STEPHANJE DE SOUSA bers, a projector and several are not aware of any of the ate history. student and grad­ Binette also said that stu­ Contributing Writer sets of keys were stolen. data being used inappropri­ uate assistant, said he did not dents should monitor their "One of the items taken ately." receive the e-mail from the credit reports regularly, and The UCF Police Depart­ was a flash drive that con­ Departments across the graduate history department that the university will be ment is investigating two tained student information, fourth floor and fifth floor of until days after the thefts sending them a follow-up e­ burglaries, both involving including Social Security Colbourn Hall were broken were reported. mail about how to protect grand thefts in Colbourn numbers for about 50 stu­ into, including history, Eng­ "I'm upset that it took themselves from identity Hall, occurring between dents," said Chad 'Binette, lish, women's studies and them four days to tell me that theft. April 24 and 28. assistant director of UCF. African American studies. my Social Security number Anjella Warnshuis, pro­ Faculty and staff said that News and Information. "All All of the students whose was stolen," Kinsell said. gram assistant for African laptops, flash drives with stu­ of the students were notified information was on the drive The e-mail, sent May 1, dents' Social Security num-. of the incident, and police stolen from the history encouraged students to PLEASE SEE UCF ON AS Medical school PARENTHOOD BEER: IT'S makes AUSTRALIAN FOR NEGLE history An Australian man has been fined after Full scholarships he was pulled over in the city of Alice Springs. The police officer discovered that offered to students the man had buckled in a 3Ckan case of beer with a seat belt, but had left his 5- ROBYN SIDERSKY year-old child sitting in the floorboard of Staff Writer the back seat The officer said he had AColorado forest will bear the UCF name never before seen a case where beer The UCF College of Medi­ ERIC WOODARD cine made history this year - took the priority over a child. Contributing Writer each of the 4-0 students in its UCF will be named in association with a forest of 100,000 inaugural class will receive trees, thanks to the sales of used textbooks. full scholarships for their UCF was awarded the privilege in April after students sub­ medical school career. mitted the most votes during a contest as part ofthe "Buy a Book, "It gives them tremendous Build a Forest" campaign sponsored by College Book & Supply options to practice areas and in conjunction with the Arbor Day Foundation. specialties that they might not On April 25, Alaina Bernard, assistant director of the UCF have ifthey had the debt," said Arboretum, accepted a check for $100,000 from the Nebraska Chip Roberts, vice president Book Company, the parent company of CB&S, on behalf of the of development for the Col­ Arbor Day Foundation, the organization planting the forest. lege of Medicine. "I was accepting it on behalf of Mother Earth," Bernard said. The past year has been a , Martin Qµigley, director ofthe UCF Arboretum, said $100,000 busy one for the College of is a significant amount of money for a tree planting effort. Medicine - from gaining pre­ AROUND CAMPUS, A2 "Tree seedlings are cheap,'' Quigley said. "It costs pennies per liminary accreditation from GAPS TO BE BRIDGED pine seedling to actually produce the tree, which means you the Liaison Committee of could spend a lot of money on other things that have to be done Medical Education to finding BETWEEN CHRISTIANITY that are less tangible than the trees themselves." donors to support its entire AND HOMOSEXUALITY Qµigley said a thorough planting effort involves land prepara­ first class. tion, machine rentals, fertilizing and weeding expenses in order Dean Deborah German The Office of Diversity Initiatives is to be restorative to the natural habitat. has led the way, breaking hosting a workshop of discussions to Last fall, Michael Garmon, a UCF 'alumnus, started the ground on many new projects bridge the gap between modem Facebook group "UCF Needs a Forest Named After with the medical school Christian denominations and those ·Them" when the voting contest began last October. Each student in the first who are homosexual.The meeting will Everybody in the group rallying anyone and every­ class will receive a scholar­ be today at 1:30 p.m in Classroom I. one to vote for UCF on www.buildaforest.com ship that entitles them to made it possible, he said $40,000 per year, - $20,000 ''When we started out we weren't even in the for tuition and $20,000 for liv­ LOCAL & STATE, A2 • top 10," Garmon said "A week later, after every­ ing expenses - for four years. ARREST MADE IN PALM body voting ... we caught up pretty quick and The first major task, ended up with a couple hundred thousand earning preliminary accredi­ t BAY ARSON CASE AS votes, so we were pretty far ahead of every- tation, was accomplished in FIRES BLAZE NEARBY body else." . February, which allowed the During the contest, UCF, along with other medical school to move for­ Police say they've arrested a man who schools across the country, voted to plant the ward with all of its plans. was seen sparking a small blaze in a new trees in one of three national forests: "I am totally and complete­ town on Florida's Atlantic coast where Flathead National Forest in Northwest Mon­ ly delighted by our success,'' wildfires have already gutted homes. tana, Huron-Manistee National Forest in Map of the 2002 German said in February. Police say a man threw a glass bottle Northern Michigan or Pike and San Isabel Hayman Fire.A "Last month, we were build­ containing an accelerant into the portion of ing a medical school. This National Forest in Central Colorado. rehabilitated forest woods early Wednesday. Pike and San Isabel National Forest, which will be named month, we are a medical needs more than 130,000 acres replanted after the after UCF. school" Hayman Fire of 2002, won with 52 percent of the The success was celebrat­ ed at a themed party, where all NATION & WORLD, A4 who attended toasted to the

l DAMAGE TO CRUCIAL PLEASE SEE DONORS ON A6 DAM COULD STOP EARTHQUAKE AID Thousands of Chinese soldiers rushed on Wednesday to repair a dam badly cracked by the country's massive earthquake, while rescuers arrived for the first time in the epicenter of the disaster. Nearly 15,000 have • already died in the earthquake. INDEX TODAY'S • Around Campus 2 WEATHER •. . Weather 2 • Local & State 2 Nation & Wor1d 4 Sports 7 Variety 9 MOSTLY Oassifieds 11 SUNNY Sudoku 11 Crossword 11 89° 68° HIGH LOW A2 www. Centra/FloridaFuture. com May 15, 2008 • Centtal '1oriba :future AROUND Meet the FUTURE (ttltral • CAMPUS We are pleased to introduce you to the new summer 2008 Central Florida Future staff editors. Some of us are new-faces,and some of us have been around the office for awhile. You can expect to find us on newsstands every Monday and Thursday during the summer News and notices for semester. It is our collective goal to bring to you, our readers, the most timely and accurate information from the UCF area. Enjoy! • the UCF community 11oriba Bridging gap in modem Christianity The Office of Diversity Ini­ • tiatives is hosting a workshop of 1uturt discussions to bridge the gap The Student Newspaper at UCF si,;,e 1968 between modem Christianity and homosexuality. May 15, 2008 ' The emphasis is on the Vol 40, Issue 47 • 12 Pages many denominations of the Christian faith. It takes place The Central Florida Future Is the independent student­ written newspaper at the University of Central Rorida. today in Room 316C of the Stu­ Opinions in the Future are those of the Individual ' dent Union from 1:30 p.m. to columnist and notnecessarily those of the_edltorial staff or the University administratiO!l. All content is property of 4:30 p.m. the Central Rarida Future and may not be reprinted In part For more information, call or inwholewithout pennission from the publ~her. 407-823-6479. POSITION: Editor-in-Chief POSITION: News Editor POSITION: News Editor NEWSROOMI ' Evaluation meetings for teachers NAME:Jeffrey Riley NAME: Tara Young NAME:Jessica Saggio 407-447-4558:lf. The Faculty Center for MAJOR,MINOR, YEAR:Joumalism / political MAJOR, MINOR, YEAR:Joumalism / interpersonal MAJOR, MINOR, YEAR: Journalism major, Editor-in-Chief Teaching and Learning is help­ science double major, junior and organizational communication double major, business minor,senior Jeffrey Riley x213 ing evaluate teaching strategies EXPERIENCE: CFF staff writer, opinions editor environmental studies minor, senior EXPERIENCE: CFF staff writer,Seminole Chronicle editor@(entro/FloridoFuture.com in courses. DESTINATION: Washington, D.C. Florida Today EXPERIENCE: CFF staff writer, Opinions Editor reporter, reporter News Editors The meeting is today in HOBBY: Cooking DESTINATION: Finland or Colorado DESTINATION: The Smokey Mountains Classroom Building 1 Room 207 Jessica Saggio and IN YOUR IPOD: Streetlight Manifesto's HOBBY: Reading, playing with my dogs, laying HOBBY: GuffarHero,event planning and eating Tara Young x213 from 10 am. to 11 am. Somewhere in the Between outside, braiding my hair, loving, living life IN YOUR IPOD: Bon Jovi News.CFF@gmoilrom For more information, call 407-823-3544. PERSONAL MOTTO:'Toe dude abides." IN YOUR IPOD: Mum, Radiohead, Bright Eyes PERSONAL MOTTO:"Dance like no one's Opinions Editors PERSONAL MOTTO:"Disobedience is the true watching, work like you don't need the money, Nathan Christopher and CREOL science summer camp starts foundation ofliberty.The obedient must be slaves." love like you've never been hurt and frat hard!" Natalie Costa x213 The College of Optics and Opinions.(FF@gmoilcom Photonics' yearly summer Sports Editor camp for youngsters is about to Brian Murphy x215 begin. Sports. CFF@gmailcom The camp, which · has themed groups like Myth Bust­ Variety Editor ing, focuses on science, math­ Whitney Hamrick x214 matics and technology. It offers Voriety.CFF@gmailcom courses for grades three Photo Editor through 12. Amanda Moore €rotral [email protected] For more information, call 407-823-6890. Staff Writers William Goss, Jennifer Larino, Lauren 11oii~a Paulauskas, Shahdai Richardson, Zailee Roach, Kelda Senior, Amanda K. Shap· , LOCAL POSITION: Opinions Editor POSITION: Opinions Editor Robyn Sidersky, Keith Spencer, Kari Wi erg NAME: Natalie Costa NAME: Nathan Christopher ' &STATE MAJOR, MINOR, YEAR: Interpersonal and MAJOR, MINOR, YEAR: Political science major, Copy Editors organizational communication major,political Jutuit mass communication and marketing minor, Billie Hartl, Zach Pardes, Keep local with headlines Ashley lnguanta you may have missed science and Spanish minor,sopohmore senior EXPERIENCE: CFF staff writer The student newspaper at UCF, EXPERIENCE: Public relations internships Staff Photographers Man seen starting a small fire in DESTINATION: Greece published twice-weekly. DESTINATION: Cabo, San Lucas Vanessa Ezeta, area already suffering from flames HOBBY: Reading, working out, laughing HOBBY: Scuba diving and golf Shanna Fortier, Rayma Jenkins, Corey Maynard, Sarah Rogers, PALM BAY - Police said IN YOUR IPOD: Frank Sinatra IN YOUR IPOD: Dragonforce they've arrested a man who was Gregory Territo seen sparking a small blaze in a PERSONAL MOTTO:''You've got to screw up to PERSONAL MOTTO:"Work hard, play hard." town on Florida's Atlantic coast move up." Columnists • where wildfires have gutted Benjamin Badio, Daniel Valencia homes. Graphic Artists Palm Bay Police Chief Bill Maya Borenstien, Cara Cooper, Berger said 31-year-old Brian Joseph Mangabat, Brad Walkover Crowder threw a glass bottle containing an accelerant into Eattorial Adviser Abraham Aboraya the woods early Wednesday. 4 odviser@(entra/FloridoFuture.com Berger said officers tracked Berger through the woods with the help of residents who spot­ ted him running past their BUSINESS homes. 407-447-4555 Crowder has been charged Advertising Sales Director with six probation violations Marklanaris x204 and authorities are waiting to [email protected] question hini about the wild­ fires that have ravaged Brevard POSITION: Variety Editor University Sales Director POSITION: Photo Editor POSITION: Sports Editor Heissam Jebailey x201 County since the weekend The NAME: Whitney Hamrick NAME: Amanda Moore Heissam)@KnightNewspapers.com fires have burned 40 homes and MAJOR, MINOR, YEAR:Joumalism major, NAME: Brian Murphy MAJOR, MINOR, YEAR: Journalism major, French MAJOR, MINOR, YEAR: Journalism major, an area of roughly 15 square literature minor,senior minor,junior Business Manager miles. psychology minor,senior Trisha Irwin x212 EXPERIENCE: CFF staff writer,Seminole Chronicle EXPERIENCE: CFF staff writer, Orlando Business Officials said efforts to con­ EXPERIENCE: CFF staff writer,sports intern at the [email protected] intern Journal intem,Zephyrhills News intern tain the blaze are improving. Long Beach Press-Telegram Distribution Manager DESTINATION: Mars (or Ireland) DESTINATION: Morocco or Thailand HOBBY: Reading and watching Food Network DESTINATION: Los Angeles, Calif. Ryan McDonald x211 Fifth arrest in the case of NFL star HOBBY: Scrapbooking and belly dancing HOBBY: Watching, reading, breathing sports [email protected] IN YOUR IPOD: Dresden Dolls, Co heed and IN YOUR IPOD: Ladytron, Radiohead, VNV Nation Sean Taylor's murder in Miami IN YOUR IPOD: Nirvana General Manager MIAMI - A fifth person Cambria PERSONAL MOTTO:''! work from awkwardness PERSONAL MOTTO:"Honesty's more fun than PERSONAL MOTTO:"Peace, love,empathy." Raymond G. Bush x220 was charged Wednesday in the . . .. If Istand in front of something, instead of [email protected] slaying ofWashington Redskins lying." arranging it, Iarrange myself." star Sean Taylor, an official with the prosecutor's office said Fax: 407-447-4556 Miami-Dade County State LOCAL WEATHER Published by Knight Newspapers Attorney's Office spokesman 3361 Rouse Rd. Ste. 200 , Ed Griffith said Timothy Orlando, FL32817 Brown, 16, was charged with Today TODAY IN DETAIL Friday High:90° first-degree murder under a Today: South southeast wind JC.... One free copy of the Central CHANCE SHOWE1lS Low:69° .,UC F Rarida Future permitted per sealed warrant. MOSTLY between 5 and 15 mph...... ,,M._"""'" issue. If available, additional Brown was arrested in Lee SUNNY Tonight: Partly cloudy. South wind ffi Ap O copies may be purchased from County · around 2:30 a.m. = "=" ouroffice with priorapprovalfor between 10 and 15 mph, with gusts Saturday High:87° ~ $1 each. Newspaper theft is a Wednesday while standing near High:89° as high as 20 mph. crime. Violators may be MOSTLY SUNNY Low:67° subject to civil and criminal PLEASE SEE ON A4 Low:68° prosecution and/or University LOCAL disdpline. NOW HIRING PART TIME •

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an intersection, Sheriff's Office spokesman Tony Schall said. He was awaiting transport to Miami-Dade County, where police said they would issue a statement later Wednesday. Court documents and police reports had previously suggested five people were involved in Taylor's death, but only four were originally charged. Taylor, 24, died of massive blood loss after he was shot at his Miami-area home in November during a botched CHEN FALIANG / XINHUA NEWS AGENCY robbery. A trial for the four Firemen carry a student who was buried at a school building in Beichuan County, Fort Myers-area suspects is northeast of the epicenter, near Sichuan. The official death toll is at 12,000. scheduled for Aug. 25. Take I Tour Todavl Richard Sharpstein, a Damages to dam worry rescue Tomados have caused lasting And Enter To WIN One Of SUMMER SPECIAL! Miami defense attorney who workers after China earthquake damage in Oklahoma town has acted as spokesman for HANWANG, China - PICHER, Okla. - State our Weeklv Prize orawinusl $545/DI0. the Taylor family, expressed Thousands of Chinese sol­ and federal officials toured limited AvallabllllV gratitude Wednesday for diers rushed on Wednesday this tornado-ravaged town authorities' work on the case. to repair a dam badly and essentially drilled the "The family is thankful cracked by the country's final nail into its coffin. that the investigation contin­ massive earthquake, while Any financial aid sent to ues and that all individuals rescuers arrived for the first the 800-person community, responsible for Sean's death time in the epicenter of the · they said, will only help peo­ meet harsh justice," he said disaster. ple relocate, not rebuild in Sharpstein smd he could China's top economic the same area where a gov­ not speak about the facts of planning body said that the ernment buyout of homes is the case because of a gag quake had damaged 391 already under way. order. mostly small dams. It l~ft "Rebuilding here is not "extremely dangerous" going to be a real option," Alafaya Trail E Grandfather arrested for alleged cracks in the Zipingpu Dam Gov. Brad Henry said Tues­ sexual assault of granddaughter upriver from the earthquake­ day. The storm will likely CITRA - Authorities say hit city of Dujiangyan and hasten, rather than delay; the • LARGEST BEDROOMS 1 a 63-year-old central Florida some 2,000 soldiers were buyout process, he said • LARGEST LIVING AREAS f' .\ man forced his granddaugh­ sent to repair the damage, Saturday's tornado lev­ • PRIVATE BATHROOMS w the official Xinhua News eled 114 homes and was ·+· ter to have sex with him in a cemetery. Agency said responsible for seven deaths Obie Robinson is charged Xinhua said Dujiangyan in Picher, a fading lead and with domestic sexual battery. would be "swamped" if zinc mining town in far Investigators believe he had major problems emerged at northeastern Oklahoma. been sexually assaulting the the dam. The severe weather killed girl since she was seven years Rescuers who hiked in to another 20 people in the old. Her current age is not the epicenter scoured flat­ Plains and the Southeast. known. tened mountain villages for The tornado struck the Robinson also allegedly thousands of missing and heart of a federal Superfund told the girl on the drive home buried victims, and the death site, an area beset with mine he needed her help to stop. toll of nearly 15,000 appeared collapses, open shafts, acid He's being held in the Mar­ likely to soar far higher. water and mountains of ion County Jail. Jail officials Help also began to arrive lead-contaminated waste. have no information on a by helicopter in some of the The government has been lawyer for him. hardest-to-reach areas, buying out residents' homes. 100 Riverwind Way where some victims trapped The Environmental Pro­ for more than two days tection Agency has begun Game Room - ASSOCIATED PRESS under collapsed buildings testing to determine Oviedo, FL 32765· were still being pulled out whether the tornado scat­ rve Your Salte 1odayl alive. But the enormous scale tered enough mining waste ~~ ofthe devastation meant that to raise lead levels in the air Movie Theater HIGHER resources were stretched and soil in the 800-person eaLL 7-359-2815 thin, and makeshift aid sta­ town, which was once a tions and refugee centers thriving hub of 20,000 peo­ EDUCATION were springing up over the ple in Ottawa County. What's in the news at disaster area the size of Bel­ The tornado damage also colleges around the country gium. ultimately could hurry the Leveled hospitals forced closure of the region's $47 million budget cuts leads to doctors and nurses to treat school district, where enroll­ layoffs at University of Florida survivors in the street. Heli­ ment has dropped precipi­ GAINESVILLE - The copters dropped food and tously in recent years. The University of Florida's govern­ medicine to isolated towns. Picher-Cardin district, ing body unanimously Mourners burned money which has 99 students in approved $47 million in budg­ before rows of bodies, kindergarten through 12th et cuts Wednesday that will believing their lost relatives grade, nearly closed before result in reducing enrollment could use it in the afterlife. this school year. and laying off some faculty. The Board of Trustees Study shows growing number Another storm moves toward largely approved the plan of people only use cell phones an already hurt Myanmar released last week by Presi­ WASHINGTON - For YANGON, Myanmar - dent Bernie Machen and made nearly three in 10 house­ Another powerful storm only minor changes during a holds, don't even bother try­ headed toward Myanmar's telephone conference call ing to call them on a landline cyclone-devastated delta on meeting. phone. They either only have Wednesday and the U.N. The proposal calls for lay­ a cell phone or seldom ifever warned that inadequate ing off about 20 faculty mem­ take calls on their traditional relief efforts could lead to a bers and 118 staffers, leaving phone. second wave of deaths 290 empty positions unfilled, The . federal figures, among the estimated 2 mil­ reducing research and reduc­ released · Wedr).esday, lion survivors. ing enrollment by 1,000 stu­ showed that reliance on cells The country's junta told dents a year for four years. is continuing to rise at the visiting Thai Prime Minister At Machen's request, the expense ofwired telephones. Samak Sundaravej, however, trustees made some changes In the second half of last that it is in control of the to the $5.9 million reduction to year, 16 percent of house­ relief operations and does­ the College ofLiberal Arts and holds only had cell phones, n't need foreign experts. Sciences. Instead of eliminat­ while 13 percent also had Samak visited a govern­ ing some doctoral programs·, landlines but got all or nearly ment relief center in Yangon the university will prevent all their calls on their cells. and told reporters after new admissions in the next The number of wireless­ returning to Bangkok that three years. It also reduces the only households grew by 2 the junta has given him the number oflayoffs from 17 staff percent since the first half of "guarantee" that there are and 16 faculty to 13 staff and 10 last year. Underscoring the no disease outbreaks and no faculty, two of whom are visit­ rapid growth, in early 2004 starvation among the ing professors. just 5 percent had only cell cyclone survivors. None ofthose being laid off phones. International agencies are tenured faculty members. Households with cell say bottlenecks, poor logis­ The resolution approved phones who rarely ifever use tics, limited infrastructure Wednesday allows Machen to their landlines grew by 1 per­ and the military govern­ make some changes to the cent since the first half oflast ment's refusal to allow for­ proposal over the next 60 days year. eign aid workers have left as long as they don't affect rev­ Such families often either most of the delta's survivors enue. have their landline hooked living in miserable condi­ UF's general revenue budg­ exclusively to a computer or tions without food or clean et is $69 million less than it rely so heavily on their cells water. The government's was a year ago. That includes that they ignore landline efforts have been criticized $22 million in cuts made in calls because they are proba­ as woefully slow. -.4lllr. October by the Legislature bly from telephone solici­ The U.S. military's Joint and $47 million made by law­ tors, said Stephen :Blumberg, Typhoon Warning Center {\ttent/011 stuaentsl makers for the coming year. senior scientist at the Cen­ said there is a good chance Student Carlos Torres com­ ters for Disease Control and that "a significant tropical •• plained to the trustees during Prevention and an author of cyclone" will form within Wednesday's meeting about the report. the next 24 hours and head ,. . the decision to eliminate The trends have an across the Irrawaddy delta $580,000 in funding for the UF important impact on polling area. •• Documentary Institute in the organizations, which rely The area was pulverized •• College of Journalism and chiefly on calls to random by Cyclone Nargis on May 3, Communications. School offi­ landline phone numbers. leaving at least 34,273 dead cials have said they hope to Calling cell phone users can and 27,838 missing, accord­ fund it through private dona­ be more costly for pollsters, ing to the government. The tions. The institute is a two­ in part because federal law U.N. says the death toll year graduate program to forbids unsolicited calls to could exceed ioo,ooo. SWlmmlng teach students to produce cell phones made by com­ Pool films. puterized dialing systems used heavily by pollsters. - ASSOCIATED PRESS - ASSOCIATED PRESS Call Today For Rates and .Sp~cfals ': 407-384-8626 - ' • , -~ -:• • <

J (tn1taf '1oriba 1uture • May 15, 2008 www.CentrafFforidaFuture.com AS • 800 acres ofnatural wetlands call UCF their home CHRISTINE HARPER close to becoming endan­ • Contributing Writer gered. In addition to the animals, Rex Menor jumps from there are 800 acres of pre­ the old, wooden boardwalk served, natural wetlands and • behind the Student Union to forests on campus, which the the soft, earthy ground of the 12-member staff of the Envi­ cypress dome. Menor a ronmental Center is in criminal justice sophom~re charge of maintaining. The feels at home among the 100~ cypress dome behind the year-old cypress trees and Student Union is one of two ferns. cypress domes the campus • . . Menor said he enjoys vis- has vowed to protect. It is 1tmg cypress domes and perhaps the best known other types of swamps because of the wooden because it reminds him ofhis boardwalk that juts across it, ~ast summers when he spent offering students an alterna­ time as a camp counselor tive way to travel from the teaching children about union to other facilities. wildlife in the Everglades. He "I love walking through also enjoys the visits because [the cypress dome] on my of his love for the environ­ way to class," political sci­ ment. ence senior Shay Kearney On this quiet Sunday said. "It's the most beautiful afternoon, Menor watches as place on campus." two white ibises dive their Other swamps on campus heads into the retention are not as frequented as the • pond as the soft-shell turtles Union's cypress dome. Hid­ swim past. He listens as the den away in the northwest­ bullfrogs croak loudly in the ern parcel on campus is a distance. He laughs as the large marsh surrounded by a eastern grey squirrels scurry titi strand. Titi strands are past him and rummage not commonly found as far through garbage cans, hop­ south as Central Florida. ing to fmd the remnants of a This marsh is so well hidden half-eaten sandwich or by vegetation that only the CHRISTINE HARPER / CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE cheeseburger that students residents of the nearby CREOL Pond shines in the sunlight on the northern part of the UCF campus. The water from the pond may soon become drinking water for Central Florida, if lawmakers tap into the St. Johns. passing through the swamp Tower apartments may be might have left behind. able to see it from the top and shelter to several bad stuff." have very specific species - don't take care of our water "I just love the squirrels floors. endemic plant and animal But these wetlands face the such as pitcher plants, sala­ now, we won't be able to take on campus," Menor said. Overall, there are current­ species, but they also man­ possible danger of being manders and orchids - that care of it in the future." ''They're extra aggressive." ly 17 different types of eco­ age storm water run-off and destroyed by man-made build­ would perish if wetlands were Students hoping to become • 1 But eastern grey squirrels logical habitats on campus. filter pollutants and other ings. destroyed," Bernard said. better acquainted with the are not the only animals liv­ Some of the most common hazardous chemicals out of The prime land to build on The water in the natural campus' natural wetlands and ing on UCF's campus. There types are basin swamps, the water. at UCF is called scrub land. areas is of great importance as forests can start by visiting the • are more than 45 species liv­ cypress domes, scrub lands, "That's the cool thing And because scrub land is well. Water found in the Environmental Center and in& on campus and some, like mesic flat woods and sink­ about wetlands," Lisa upland habitat, it is prime land swamps may soon become the their botanical gardens. the gopher tortoise, which is hole lakes. These natural McCauley, UCF's Environ­ to develop, making it one of the water that the UCF population A lesser-known nature trail, currently listed as a threat­ areas contribute greatly to mental Center's geographic most endangered habitats. On will drink. Seventy-five per­ located in the northeastern ened species west of the the environment at UCF. Not information systems special­ campus today there are only cent of storm water runoff on part of campus, is also provid­ Mobile River in Alabama, are only do they provide food ist said. "They suck up all the three parcels of scrub land left. campus drains directly into the ed by the Environmental Cen­ "Uplands are the most tar­ wetlands, then into the CREOL ter and is available for students geted habitat for development pond, then travels to the Econ­ to hike or ride bikes on. The since they are high and dry. lockhatchee River before final­ nature trail, which is surround­ Once developed, the hydrolo­ ly flowing into the St. Johns ed by several pond pine trees, gy usually changes, altering the River. is called home by many native UCF PD still investigating water levels in According to an Orlando animals, including the elusive marshes/ swamps, forcing Sentinel article, there has been wild deer. FROM Al metal plates had been could re-key the whole species to die and be replaced recent debate over whether or Weaved throughout the ordered for the doors to building," said Amelia by upland species," Alaina not to tap the St. Johns River as nature trail is a disc-golf American studies and prevent someone from pry­ Lyons, assistant professor Bernard, the Environmental a source of drinking water in course, which gives students a women's studies, said she ing them open. of history. She said she Center's assistant director, the future due to Central Flori­ chance to learn about the envi­ first heard about the thefts "It takes away that sense understands that it's a little said. da's growing demand on water. ronment w ith informational when she received a call of security," said Sharon difficult with the budget According to Bernard, pre­ But if lawmakers decide to tap signs provided at each hole on from her boss on Saturday, Body, program assistant for cuts. serving the protected land is into its resources, the water in the course. Disc-golf is played April 26, asking Warnshuis the English department Lyons had a laptop and a extremely beneficial. Bernard the CREOL pond could ulti­ by throwing a frisbee-like disc if she had a laptop that was down the hall from Warn­ projector, similar to those thinks that every student mately become the water that into a metal basket. missing. shuis. mounted on the ceilings of should care about preserving students and faculty drink, All ofthe campus' protected When Warnshuis went Body walked in Monday, classrooms, stolen from her these habitats because of the although there has been strong lands are free and open to the to return the power supply April 28, and noticed the office. strong, positive impact they opposition to the plan by envi­ public. The Environmental for another laptop to its main door to the English Since UCF PD is still have on the environment. ronmentalists. Center encourages students ,~ bag, she noticed that the department had been bro­ investigating, it is unknown "We should care about 'We are connected to a lot and faculty to enjoy the natural computer was not in the ken into, as well as the file how much property was these habitats because they are of things," Orlando Genao, the habitats as much as possible. bag and had also been cabinets in the lobby. Her taken, or how much it was vital in holding water runoff Environmental Center's assis­ For more information, visit stolen, along with the key keys were missing as well. all worth. It is also from nearby habitats and they tant land manager said. "If we UCF's Environmental Center. ,,• to her office. Since the incidents, unknown if any major "I thought it was odd. Body has hidden her keys, changes have been made to The materials that were and would like to see other the building's security. stolen were old," she said, changes made in the build- For more information • describing the laptops as ing. . about identity theft and 2001 and 2004 models. "I'd like a different kind protection, UCF PD "We've learned a lot about of lock system on these encourages any students, • locking stuff away now." doors, maybe even metal faculty or staff to visit their Warnshuis said the locks doors. I think they're hard­ Web site, Chicken Caesar $5.95 Garden on her office door were er to break into," Body said. www.police.ucf.edu, and Ch icken Crave $5.95 Falafel Chicken Breast $S.75 Babaganoush changed the next day and "It'd be great if they- click on Crime Prevention. Turkey $5.75 Hummus Club S5.95 Feta Philly Steak $5.95 Swiss Roast Beef 55.75 Cheddar Black Forest Ham $5.75 Assorted $5.75 (Ham with R~st Beef orTurkey) Souvlakl Gyro Tuna • B.L.T.

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I I Comprehensive Invisalign Treatment " L------~~:--~-~-J Dr. David R. Lach, DDS, MS, PA Specialist in Invisible Orthodontics www.Lach-Ortho.com 407 ... 359... 1960 • ' • • May 15, 2008 • (entnf :.Jlodba '1rture A6 www.CentralFloridaFuture.com Condom-access program in works Used textbooks go FROM A1 In the past, confidentiality has been a source ofdisinclina­ easier on the Earth • in the last school year, com­ tion; students avoid seeking 1 pared to a national study con­ medical attention for fear that ~M ~~~. ·-·1~~ ducted by the NCHA, in the visits will appear on insur­ e which 74 percent had one or ance statements or medical vote, weighted as a percentage no sexual partners. bills sent to their parents. More of each school's enrollment. The birth control pill, for often, students simply can't The best time to plant the instance, has been proven clin­ afford the medical bills for test­ trees, Quigley said, woul~ be ically to be more than 99 per­ ing and treatment of an SID, in late fall or early next sprmg. cent effective in preventing especially if their insurance is David Fox, general manager unwanted pregnancy. Howev­ inadequate. of CB&S, who presented the er, many sexually-active "Some of the procedures or check to Bernard, said that female students are not com­ treatments can certainly be used textbooks make life easi­ pletely comfortable with tam­ costly almost anywhere you er not only for students and pering with their hormones, as go," Mastroianni said, "So we professors, but for booksellers birth control has also been tied try to keep prices lower at the likeCB&S. to weight gain, sporadic peri­ UCF health services and we "That's part of the corpo­ ods and mood swings. try to direct students to the rate philosophy and part ofthe "More importantly;" said AMANDA MOORE/ CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE best places for inexpensive local store philosophy to do COURTESY OF USDA FOREST SERVICE I Mastroianni, ''birth control ANational College Health Association study found that the number of UCF students medical care." whatever we can to help Here's a map of the 2002 Hayman Fire, the doesn't protect against the using condoms was low. UCF plans to implement a condom-access program this year. For instance, students can stretch the resources we have,'' largest in Colorado history, the USDA Forest spread of infection. Whether get most common SID testing, Fox said Service has said. UCF's trees will go here. or not you and your partner are places where you can get free Then they tend to let down such as testing for chlamydia, The future of the "Buy a using birth control, consider condoms already. We would their guard and not use barrier gonorrhea and syphilis, for free Book, Build a Forest" cam­ environment. The GPI has using male 'condoms as a pre­ also like to start a system ·methods." at government health clinics. paign and the forest will be done research to show that 42 ventative measure from SIDs, where we could sell packs of With such practices also Also, the health center at UCF known by the end of summer, percent of readers would pay a otherwise you're not even cov­ condoms - brand name con­ comes the enormously high offers HIV testing for $15, but Fox said dollar more to have books • ering half ofthe dangers." doms - at cost with no profit." risk for women of contracting won't turn students away who The contest capitalizes on printed on environmentally­ To that end, the health Another of the concerns the human papillomavirus, or can't afford it. the fact that students are more responsible paper. department has been working among health officials is the HPV, a sexually transmitted With a large-scale study likely to buy used textbooks Erin Johnson, associate on a campus-wide ad cam­ common and dangerous sexu­ virus easily contracted by sim­ planned for fall 2008, prompt­ instead of new editions. To director of the GPI, said at this ' paign to promote condom use, al habit, which is practiced by a ple skin-to-skin contact. ed by the pilot study reported raise awareness, a portion of stage in policy development using posters placed through­ large number of students, that "Up to 50 percent of last year, UCF health officials the money used to buy or sell and implementation within out the university, offering edu­ Health Director Dr. Michael women may become infected hope to gain a better under­ used textbooks is donated to the industry, most revenue cational workshops and pro­ Deichen has dubbed "serial with HPY," Deichen said ''For standing of the overall sexual the Arbor Day Foundation. gains are in savings. viding free condoms. monogamy." women, it's what can lead to health of UCF students. Such "The idea is that if you're "Making money would But, when compared to the Obviously; it is important, if cervical cancer, and for men an understanding would give going to produce new books come as a result of growing results of the NCHA national only for health's sake, to be and women it can lead to vene­ them clear-cut areas of focus all the time, you've got to cut awareness by readers that • study; using the same criteria with only one partner, but stu­ real warts. for future sexual health cam­ down an enormous amount of book pricing must reflect tru~ as the UCF pilot study, it was dents often jump from rela­ "Fortunately; Gardasil paigns, as well as highlight resources to get the paper and use of resources and pay fot found that the average number tionship to relationship multi­ works well in preventing the effective practices already in it," Johnson said in an e-mail the cardboard to print those 0 of students using condoms at ple times in a single year, two common strains that lead place. books," Fox said "I think the interview. UCF fell surprisingly short of which increases the risk of to cancer or warts. We ask ''But regardless ofwhat's on students are already aware of Qµigley would like to p - the national average. catching and spreading an every new patient yearly if charts or in survey results," it; we need to make the faculty ner with the university's busi­ Whether this is simply the infection. they've had the vaccine or Mastroianni said, ''you need to aware of it." ness, economics and socio gy result of a small sample ''I think a lot oftimes there's would be interested in it." use condoms every time, John Meyer, textbook man­ departments sometime next remains unclear. Nevertheless, a certain naivete that their Many students utilize the even if you are using another ager for CB&S, said that fre­ year to organize a curriculum health officials are pushing for boyfriend or girlfriend won't health center for pregnancy form of birth control. So quent rollover to new editions for a multi-disciplinary course greater condom promotion in give them a STD," Deichen and STD testing, but health many students make the mis­ by publishers can have a nega­ on resource management at • the coming academic year. said. "Often they think that professionals agree that there take of protecting themselves tive effect on business. UCF. 'We are hoping to create an they're monogamous when in is certain reluctance for a lot of from pregnancy but not dis­ "I know that when people "You can talk about the expanded condom access pro­ fact it's really serial monogamy students in using the center, ease, or vice versa, so make come in and all they see is biology and ecology all you gram this year," Mastroianni they're practicing, having a and it's not always out of sure to protect yourself from 'new,' people are going to shop want, but people have to want said. "Obviously there are series ofpartners one at a time. embarrassment. it all." around and they probably to do it and somebody has to won't find it locally," Meyer come up with the money," said Quigley said. "It has to be a One ofthe tricks ofthe text­ perceived social need before book publishing industry is it's going to happen." Donors to participate in white coat ceremony known as ''built-in obsoles­ At a minimum, 100,000 cence,'' a method ofensuring a trees will replenish 746 of Pike FROM A1 for its "medical city." encourage lots of student The College of Medicine zero buy-back value for bun­ and San Isabel's missing acres, The Burnham Institute for careers in research." can now start recruiting stu­ dles of textbooks and materi­ but David Fox said the biggest achievement with test tubes Medical Research, Nemours The Burnett School of Bio­ dents for its first class, who als. Books such as these come goal of the campaign is getting that served as wine glasses. Children's Hospital, a Veter­ medical Sciences will also be will begin their medical edu­ with quiz pages and work­ the message to the people with • Each donor to the inaugu­ an's Administration Hospital in the medical city, in a five­ cation in fall 2009. The school sheets to be tom out, one-time the most power to change. ral class will have the special and M.D. Anderson Cancer story, 195,000-square-foot will begin accepting applica­ use Web access discs and cov­ 'We don't pick the books, privilege of participating in Research Institute will also be building. The College of Med­ tions for admission on June 1. ers with school-personalized the professors do," Fox said. "If the white coat ceremony with in Lake Nona as part of the icine will be in a 173,000- "I think from the med embossments. we can get the message the College of Medicine. The medical city, spanning more square-foot, four-story build­ sc!'lool to this point has been "The whole reason that's in through to just one professor white coat ceremony is signif­ than 50 acres. ing with a state-of-the-art so focused and so careful to there is to make it harder for us to please stop adopting new icant because it takes place on The Burnham Institute will · medical library. give attention to the needs of to buy it back and harder for us editions or, maybe if you're in the first day of medical school have a 175,000-square-foot "When the biomedical col­ the students," Roberts said. to sell it," Meyer said the habit of adopting a new • when the students receive building that will have a two­ lege was conceived in "Just to see the amount of However, the success of the one every year, maybe skip their white doctor's coats. · story administrative wing and response to the gift from the detail and how to make the "Buy a Book, Build a Forest" and do it every other year." 'We hope the donors and a three-story research wing, Burnetts, it was envisioned as time in medical school memo­ campaign is an indication of Quigley said that in his students will have a nice which will seek Leadership in being a building block for the rable, and also to make it as hope for business models teaching experience, updating amount of interaction,'' Energy and Environmental medical school," said Terry proJuctive as possible, to aimed at protecting the envi­ textbooks every year is gener­ Roberts said Design certification. Hickey; provost and executive make it the best possible ronment as well as turning a ally unnecessary, even in the The College of Medicine ''For one thing, those inter­ vice president of Academic future physicians." profit in the publishing indus­ study of biology. will sit on 50 acres of land in ested in life sciences or medi­ Affairs. The UCF College of Medi­ try. "There is almost no need Lake Nona, southwest of cine, the building is going to The land was donated by cine is the first school in histo­ The Green Press Initiative for any textbook to be rewrit­ UCF's main campus. create enormous opportuni­ Rasesh Thakkar and Tavis­ ry to offer an entire class of is a nonprofit organization that ten within five years," Quigley The medical school has ties,'' said John Reed, presi­ tock Group, one ofthe College students scholarships, accord­ works to reduce the negative said, "unless something radi­ • teamed up with several major dent and CEO ofthe Burnham of Medicine's major founders. ing to the American Associa­ impact the printing and pub­ cally changes; something real­ forces in the medical world Institute. "Hopefully, we'll Thakkar is a UCF alumnus. tion of Medical Schools. lishing industry have on the ly fundamental shifts."

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~ ' NATIONAL Softball SPORTS TAKING WRAP headsto BASEBALL NCAA tourney ZACH PARDES Staff Writer , The UCF Softball team is demanding respect, and respect is what it is getting. After defeating No. 9 Houston 4-2 to claim a Con­ ference USA Championship title on Saturday, the Knights , are receiving some national recognition, acquiring a pro­ gram-record 14 votes in the , USA Today National Fastpitch Coaches' Associa­ tion Division I Top-25 Poll. That number of votes put UCF at No. 29 in the nation. Fifteen felonies is the Along with the new poll rankings, the Knights learned new count on Bonds that they will face rival South , Barry Bonds was charged in a new Florida in the opening round indictmentTuesday with 15 felony of the NCAA Tournament at counts alleging he lied to a grand jury the Gainesville Regional on when he denied knowingly using Friday. performance-enhancing drugs and Host and No. I overall seed that he hampered the federal Florida and Georgia Tech will government's doping investigation. also be making an appearance Major League Baseball's career home at the Gainesville Regional. run leader originally was indicted in "It's exciting," UCF Soft­ November by a federal grand jury on ball head coach Renee Luers­ four counts of perjury and one count of SARAH ROGERS/ CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE Gillispie said. "I wish we had obstruction of justice. UCF Baseball interim head coach Craig Cozart just wants to look forward and focus on the rest of the season, not the controversy that surrounds his mentor and former UCF coach. been sent someplace else On Tuesday,a grand jury handed up a besides going back up to superseding indictment charging Gainesville, though. But we Bonds with 14 counts of making false haven't been able to play declarations to a grand jury in 2003 and GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT South Florida or Florida this one count of obstruction of justice. IN HIS PREVIOUS LIFE year, so it's kind of a good set­ "Barry Bonds is innocent,"the J Before being a part of the UCF Baseball coaching staff, he was a ting for us to knock those two player's lead attorney, Allen Ruby, said. MEET BASEB teams off." pitcher for the program from 1993-1996. He finished his career Ruby said Bonds will appear in court to with the second-most wins and fourth-most strikeouts in the UCF is 1-8 all-time against plead not guilty to the new charges. history of UCF. the Bulls, who knocked the Knights out of the 2005 NEW PREPPING FOR THE PROS Gainesville Regional. Cozart has been the Knights' pitching coach since 1998 and has The Knights secured its BRIAN MURPHY seen 21 pitchers that he coached end up as draft picks by Major lone victory of the all-time Sports Editor League Baseball. In 2004, former Knight Matt Fox was drafted in series between the two teams in 2006 on a two-hit, ll­ n May 1, Craig Cozart was named UCF Baseball's head the first round by the Minnesota Twins. strikeout performance by coach. It had been a moment that he had strived for MORE FROM 2004 pitcher Allison Kime. She Under Cozart's guidance, Fox and Kyle Bono helped the Knights will start against the Bulls. since graduating from the university in 1996. He has end the season with the nations 10th-best earned run average. "I think the girls will be spent his entire adult life as a part ofthe Knights - four ready for [USF] just because FIRST OF MANY? we haven't seen them in two years as a player and 12 more as a coach. Now, he had finally Cozart got his first win as a Division I head coach on May 4 with PLEASE SEE UCF ON A8 gotten his chance to lead them. It should have been a day to a 12-1 UCF victory at No. 27 Tulane. With the help of six runs in each of the first two innings, the Knights locked up their third cherish, celebrate and remember. win against a ranked opponent this season. Instead, it was just a footnote to one of the most controversial stories in UCF Athletics. Cozart was named the Knights' interim head coach the same day that former head coach Jay Bergman was fired due to accu­ sations of sexual harassment on baseball equipment manager Chris Ryhce. Immediately, Cozart was handed the responsibility of replacing bis mentor, a man whose name is attached to the stadium that the Knights call home.and <;ine of the most succe~s­ Henin retires from ful baseball coaches in NCAA Division I history. Also, he needed to find a way to focus a team which still had 10 games remain­ ing in its regular season and the goal of a conference championship. women's tennis "The weirdest thing was [May 5] walking in here and seeing Coach Bergman's door was open, but bis furnitur: wru: gone," Justine Henin retired from tennis Cozart said. ''You can imagine what effect that has. It's tough... But, you've got to focus on what you can control at this pomt, and Wednesday, an abrupt ending to a the only thing we can control is what happens on the baseball ~ield.:' . . short and successful career in which she As a pitcher for the Knights from 1993-1996, Cozart led UCF m wms for two consecutive seasons m 1995 ~d 1996. Cozart fm­ • won seven Grand Slam singles titles ished bis career second all-time in school history with 24 wins. He was drafted in the 45th round of the MaJor League Baseball and leaves while ranked No.1. draft by the Atlanta Braves in 1995, and again in the 28th round by the San Francisco Giants in 1996, yet Cozart decided to forego "I thought long about this," Henin the professional ranks to begin bis coaching career...... said, her voice cracking and eyes He was a student assistant coach in 1997 before bemg given the role of full-time ass1Stant coach m 1998. More specifically, watering."! started thinking about it Cozart was handed the duties of pitching coach. In that time, he has seen 21 pitchers whom he coached on the Knights drafted GREGORY TERRITO/ CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE late last year. I was at the end of the by Major League Baseball. The UCF Softball team will begin play in road Ileave with my head held high." Cozart said that when word began to spread that something might happen to Bergman, he got very nervous due to the uncer- its first NCAA Tournament since 2005 on Henin has been ranked No. 1 since Friday. The Knights will begin tournament Nov.13,2006,exceptfor a seven-week PLEASE SEE COZART ON AS play against the South Florida Bulls. period last year when Maria Sharapova held the top spot. UCF takes on Tigers in regular-season finale • Annika Sorenstam also RYAN BASS 'We stressed [finishing the calls it quits Staff Writer NEXT GAME season strong] a lot," Cozart Calling her decision one she'd"been said. "The emphasis is defmite­ Coming into the final home­ ••4f thinking about for a while," Annika ly to continue to build. Even stand of the regular season, """"~vs. though it's the last series of the Sorenstam, whom many consider to be opposing scenarios lie on the the greatest golfer in LPGA history, said UCF Clemson year, that doesn't mean you line for the UCF Baseball team can't improve, and that's what Tuesday she will retire after the season. and its opponent, Clemson. Tonight, 6:30 IJay Bergman Field The 37-year-old Swede ends an LPGA we want to do. We want to be Toe Knights (31-22 overall, hitting on all cylinders, be con­ Tour career in which she has won 72 8-16 in Conference USA) will tournaments to date and delivered a the final three games. UCF will fident and be feeling good." open the weeke~d s~ries look­ need quality starts out of pro­ In order to go into the con­ defining moment when she teed it up ing to start a wmrung streak ference tournament on a roll, against the men on the PGA Tour. jected starters Kyle Sweat, heading into next week's C­ Mitch Houck and Mitch the pitching staff will have to "I have made a decision to step away USA tournament while the contain the Tigers' offense, from competitive golf after this Herold. Tigers look to keep an impor­ In his last two starts against which has averaged 14 runs season," she safd."Obviouslythis was a tant streak alive. over its last two ball games. very difficult decision for me to make Tulane and UAB, Sweat Clemson, 27-25-1, needs to allowed 13 runs on 24 hits in Part of that containment because I love this game so much. But GREGORYTERRITO / CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE win the series, which takes UCF pitcher Mitch Houck had a rough Sunday against UAB. He allowed six runs in 1.2 eight innings of work will have to include slowing it's the right one." place Thursday through innings. The Knights hope for less outings like Houck's this weekend versus Oemson. down shortstop Stan Wid­ Her final event will be the Dubai Houck has also been incon­ Saturday at Jay Bergman Field, sistent over bis last two starts, mann, who is hitting .500 with Ladies Masters after the LPGA Tour in order extend its consecutive put up a good game, just like we but were blown out in the third throwing a complete game six RBIs over bis last two con­ season ends. NCAA tournament appear­ did against Rice [on April 25]. game. That lackluster play car­ with no earned runs against tests, including a multi-homer liger Woods called Sorenstam "the ances to 22 straight seasons. We're just going to come out ried into the tournament. Tulane and then giving up six game bis last time out against greatest female golfer of all time." Toe Knights know that it's and give it our best shot and see 'We're not going to do what runs and walking three batters the College of Charleston. Sorenstam hinted at retirement the going to be a challenge if they what we can do." we did last year," interim head in an inning and two-thirds Ben Paulsen, Wtlson Boyd past several seasons,saying she wanted want to be the ones that put an The Knights know they can­ coach Craig Cozart said. 'We're against UAB. and Doug Hogan also need to to devote more time to her growing end to that streak. not afford to lose a game· in the going to continue this momen­ Herold, on the other hand, be kept in check, as they have business and to start a family. "It's good that we get an fmal series of regular season twn." allowed only three runs in two been the heart of the Tigers "rve done a lot,and I am satisfied in a opportunity to face a power play. Last year, the Knights In order for UCF to go into starts against Tulane and UAB, lineup this season. Paulsen, lot of things," Sorenstam said."l've team like that," outfielder picked up two wins against the tournament on a winning including a two-hit shutout Boyd and Hogan have hit a achieved so much more than Iever Chadd Hartman said. 'We feel Marshall during the last three streak, the starting rotation has over seven innings against the thought Icould." we have a good chance and can games of the regular season, to show some consistency over Blazers last weekend. -ASSOCIATED PRESS PLEASE SEE KNIGHTS ON A8 --- ~------AB www.CentralFloridaFuture.com May 15, 2008 • (entraJ '1otiba 1uturt UCF's success to hinge on star pitcher Cozart concerned ,,., FROM A7 "She wants the ball, and for wins in a season. 'the she wants to put the pressure record was set in 2005, the years," Luers-Gillispie said. on her shoulders," Luers­ first and only other year UCF • "But I think it's just going to Gillispie said. "She wants to earned a bid to the NCAA with just baseball be a good tournament. I think be the one on that mound Tournament. that all four teams are going and the one to beat these Houston, Tulsa and East FROM • to have to have a dogfight out Dominance: teams. I wouldn't want any­ Carolina also earned bids to A7 there to win it because every­ One of Conference one else out there." the NCAA tournament out of "This team is body wants to go on." USA top pitchers, Throughout the three­ Conference USA. But the tainty of his own situation. Now, as the Knights head into The Knights earned an Kime allowed only game trip through the C-USA Knights expect.to go a long capable of • automatic bid into the post­ three earned runs Championship, the Knights way in the tournament, and their final regular-season season tournament after stel­ and recorded 24 hit for a .342 team batting their coach is expecting the series of 2008, he has tried to winning the lar performances by Kime strikeouts in 21 average, a high mark they will most. become accustomed to his and freshman Tiffany Lane innings in the C­ have to try to replicate at the "I think [ the team] can go new role quickly. conference against Houston. USA Championship. regional tournament if they all the way,'' Luers-Gillispie "Obviously, we miss Lane, who earned C-USA are to be successful against said. "It's going to be really [Bergman]," catcher Robert championship, Tournament MVP, went 3- offensive powerhouses, such tough getting past Florida Lara said. "I love him to death, for-4 at the plate with a home here and there," Luers­ as Florida. because of their offensive but [Cozart] is getting his shot. there is no run, two runs scored and two Gillispie said. "But she's got 'We're not a high-percent­ strength. They're a very He's doing an excellent job. RBIs in the championship the mentality where she loves age hitting team," Luers­ ·good-hitting team. He's leading us, he's keeping doubt about it game. Her sixth inning, two­ that pressure. When the Gillispie said. "If you look "You've got to play this us motivated" run shot helped secure the stakes are highest, she wants across the board, we don't go game for the love of the The players have noticed a in my mind," • victory for UCF. to be in that position. She's with a lot ofhome runs. We're game, and we did that against change in the dugout with the 34-year-old Cozart in charge. - CRAIG COZART Luers-Gillispie said Lane definitely a competitor." not a big, solid hitting team, Houston. They need to go INTERIM HEAD COACH could be an important player Kime is perfectly suited to and we've kind of joked about into this weekend with that Even he will say that even in the upcoming NCAA handle the pressure against this all year, but we're going same mentality, that same though he was around better for the job. I don't care Tournament. USF, Luers-Gillispie said. Her to make things happen." mindset of just having a blast Bergman for 16 years, their "Home runs are not what work in the circle led to seven The Knights, who cur­ out there, putting everything outlooks differ. He is not as who's out there because they don't know what's invested in she usually does, but she'll strikeouts and only one rently have a record of 46-18, on the field and playing old-school as the 69-year-old • put the ball in play, she'll get earned run against Houston need only one more win to everything for what it's former coach. here. They don't know the things that we've done here to on base, she'll get a base hit in the championship game. match the program record worth." "Myself and the remainder of our staff included were lay the foundation. There are much more upbeat and opti­ too many positive things mistic," Cozart said. "Even going on here to say there when things go bad, I think we needs to be a change in this try to set a new goal for our staff." Knights will battle strong Tiger pitching team that inning or the very But Cozart just concerns • FROM A7 nity to play a quality opponent five ofits last eight and 17 ofits USA regular season game on next pitch or the very next himself with the present and with three good starters to get last 27 contests.' Despite the Sunday, the Knights failed to play and keep them moving what he can do to help his combined 32 homers and have us ready for the conference record, Cozart knows that any secure the final out of the forward." team win. He said he enjoys driven in 135 runs. tournament," junior Mitch team from the ACC is a formi­ inning in the second frame On May 4, three days after every day he spends on the "It is nice to play a big­ Herold said in a press release. dable opponent and that it will against UAB as they scored Bergman's firing, the Knights baseball field, and now it name school out of the ACC," "I am sure that their starters be a tough series to sweep, seven two-out runs en route to kept moving forward as they serves a double purpose as a outfielder Matt Lambert said are as good as Conference even though the Knights have a 14-3 victory. went on the road and beat sanctuary from the controver­ ., "We have been looking for­ USA starters." a 3-2 all-time series lead With a little help from Tulane 12-1. Volunteer assis­ sy surrounding the program. ward to it for a while." Overall, the Knights are "Honestly, any time you Southern Miss, the Knights tant coach Rich Wallace gave Through it all, the Knights On the other side ofthe dia­ looking forward to a match up play a team from another were able to secure the No. 7 Cozart the game ball to signify still have that one goal of ., mond, the Knights will have to with one ofthe toughest teams major conference, you always spot in the C-USA tournament his first win as a head coach, being champions. They will focus on scoring runs against in the country over the last 13 like to get some comparison next weekend. The Golden but Cozart said it wasn't some­ head into next week's Confer­ Clemson's projected starters years. The Tigers are the and see what things are like in Eagles stomped Memphis 13-0 thing he thought about. He ence USA Championship as believes there will be a lot of the No. 7 seed. But seeding D.J. Mitchell, Graham Stoneb­ fourth-winningest program other leagues," Cozart said. to help UCF take sole posses­ 4 urner and Ryan Hinson. over the span of 1994-2007 'We've known the coaching sion ofthe seventh seed game balls in his future as the doesn't automatically deter­ Mitchell comes in with a with 649 wins. staff at Clemson for a long 'We know that if we do let Knights' head coach, even if mine a team's fate. Cozart record of5-4 while boasting an However, this season has time. We've obviously played up against Clemson, we're just the phrase "interim head firmly believes that he can ERA of3.26 with 86 strikeouts, been a struggle for the Tigers them and had success against going to get destroyed:' Hart­ coach" doesn't hold any job take this program from what while Stoneburner brings a compared to their last. After them in the past. So, that's man said. "I think this will be a security beyond this season. may be its lowest point to a record of 5-4 to the mound. winning 41 games in their 2007 going to make it an interesting really good shot to get us "In my mind, I'm going to seat high atop one of the Hinson carries a mark of 2-5. campaign, Clemson has only match up." tuned up for [the C-USA Tour­ be here next year," Cozart said strongest baseball confer­ 'We have a good opportu- 27 wins this year and has lost In their final Conference nament]." "I don't think there is anybody ences in the nation. •·

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--,\ • USIC est to rock r an 0 Downtown venues feature 250 bands • AMANDA SHAPIRO Staff Writer

Nothing kicks off summer better than a festival packed with music, art and film. What's even better is a festival that doesn't require driving a mil­ lion miles to stand in some desolate field for a concert where your seats make the performers look like ants. The seventh annual Florida Music Festival starts today and runs until Saturday, bringing you three nights ofthe most eclectic combina­ tion of various art mediums. ''You've seen four insane shows, fell in love with an indie rock chick. danced on stage with a country metal band and had enough Miller Lite to flood three blocks of downtown Orlando. And this is just the first night of FMF!" states the FMF Web site. With a bill of 250 bands featuring Blue Man Group and Pras of The Fugees, this year's lineup won't disappoint. The participating venues span the length of downtown Orlando's stretch of bars and clubs, placing talented musicians and artists from every genre on the stages. For those who have never experienced an FMF weekend, here's how it works. A wrist band can be purchased at any of the venues, which will get you into any of the participating locations. You only pay once for admission, then hop from place to place. For the most part, the festival caters to the legal crowd, offering entrance to those 21 and up. However, there are select venues that welcome the 18-and-up crowd with warm, open arms. As an added bonus, this year's festi­ val will make history by featuring an all-ages event at Wall Street Plaza. At this all-ages event, the Blue Man Group performs the music portion of their theatrical get-up. "Keeping with the eclectic nature of the summer festival circuit," states the FMF Web site, ''the seventh annual Florida Music Festival announces the sensory overload of the Blue Man Group in a spe,cial, never-seen-before outdoor headlining performance." The Blue Man Group's resident music dire<;tor, Dave Traver, said he is excited about the FMF setup. Traver has overseen both the music at the Blue Man Group show at CityWalk and the music being per­ formed at this year's festival When asked if he had any worries about the smaller stage for their show at Wall Street Plaza, Traver dismissed the idea, noting that he thinks there will be "more fun and energy from practically being on t9P of each other." For those who are familiar with the typical high-energy Blue Man Group setup, Traver assures that the Wall Street performance · will offer a new crowd dynamic, using improvisation to create what he calls a "more exciting and more organic" experience. While you're racing from venue to venue 1.'o catch your favorite band, try to allot some time to visit Rock Walk at the CityArts Factory. The gallery will feature the work of visual artists whose work has been inspired by music. Rock Walk will showcase a vari­ ety of visual art forms, including mixed media, acrylic paintings, live band photography and ink print. FMF is also home to the Indie Film Jam. This year, FMF atten­ dees have a new wave of features, shorts and music videos to sift through. The screenings are usually followed by a Q-and-A ses­ sion, inviting festival-goers to interact. Put on your best "I'm not socially awkward" face and head downtown for a mind-blowing, thought-inspiring festival fueled by Orlando's local talent. It's pretty rare to find concert tickets that don't cost an arm and a leg once you tack on all of the "look • at it, smell it and touch it" fees that ticket sellers attach for the supposed trouble they had to go through to print your ticket. FMF is close, it's affordable and it's got something to offer everyone. The event costs $10 to $15 for a day and $25 for the full three days. For the official schedule of events, head over to www.fmf2008.com.

PHOTOS COURTESY FLORIDA MUSIC FESTIVAL AND BLUE MAN GROUPORLAN DO For the first time, Blue Man Group and Pras from the Fugees will open and dose the Florida Music Festival spanning from today until Saturday; cost is $15 a day, $25 for 3 ~ays.

Blood art: a living positive WHITNEY HAMRICK Theriot said. "That's outra­ tion of life and that's where the Variety Editor geous. We battle between sec­ blood painting came from," ond and third as highest state Theriot said Orlando artist Keith Theriot .and this area is second Some­ He got the idea to use blood paints expressionist stream-of­ times, we tie with Miami" in his artwork after pricking his consciousness art using his own Theriot got tested in 1989 finger on a staple while HIV-positive blood to create when he went with a a promis­ unstretching a canvas. form and perspective. cuous friend as moral support. ''I was getting pretty sick at He uses his personal experi­ When the test results came the time, and that's when I had ence and his experience as a back, Theriot was HIV positive the epiphany that it's killing, but social worker in charge ofhous­ and his friend wasn't. it's keeping me alive and so I did ing and case management for "After getting over the fact this rather dramatic thing with people with HIV and AIDS as that AIDS was going to kill me blood in 1992," Theriot said inspiration and it became manageable like Theriot created a studio in SARAH ROGERS / CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE 'We have about 16, 000 new diabetes, I decided to create a Keith Theriot sits on the paint-splattered floor of his home studio. lheriot's recent collection exhibits women in inkwash, charcoal, and lheriot's HIV positive blood. cases in a four-county area," series of paintings' as a celebra- PLEASE SEE VESTA ON A10 AlO www.CentralFloridaFuture.com May 15, 2008 • c!enttal jforiba 1utuu ()

An Afro-urban mix of music J.. AMANDA K. SHAPIRO show up with 10 people or two the zoo. I am very urbanized I a nonprofit UCF student-based Staff Writer people. I just want commit­ have political messages that I organization dedicated to fight­ ment. That way, when we need to get out about love, ing poverty in Orlando. Creating music is a tangible show up, people are not wor­ peace, the plight of mankind, '"The same thing I was try­ form of self expression that ried about who is in the band, women and children." ing to do for Kenya I can now grants musicians the freedom but what the band stands for." K-G grew up in Kenya, leav­ do in Orlando;' K-G said ''Rock to exercise their passion. For K­ Each member adds some­ ing in 2001 when his family for Hunger is so close to me. I G and The Band, their music is thing crucial to the group decided to move to America to lmow how it feels to go without the all-encompassing culmina­ dynamic, helping to create the be closer to relatives. K-G and food for days, no clean water, tion of each member's life ''.Afro-urban" genre that K-G The Band started as a new no electricity. I've seen it. I've experiences and diverse cul­ coined project when K-G and his lived it I would not be able to ture is strung together by notes "I came up with the term brother Phillip came down bring out something different and words, creating powerful Afro-urban because I'm an from Rhode Island to attend in my music. I can't not sing and poetic melodies. African in an urban setting," K­ Full Sail. There, in the depths about what I lmow. I can only PHOTO COURTESY CHUCK KONEFES AND CHRIS MAGRUDER K-G's seemingly unoriginal G said ''What is coming out is ofAfrica, K-G worked diligent­ K-G sings his Afro;collabrative sounds with his ensemble bandmates in downtown Orlando, _sing what I've lived What you utilizing the experience and musical inspiration of his fellows to express his groove. use of 'The Band" to describe what I listened to as an African ly to bring music to Kenya experience is what you need to his accompanying musicians child, and now rm an African while he sang with an a express, and nothing less." was fully intentional. "The man. I grew up in an urban set­ cappella style doo-wop group. K-G does not view himself on being able to sing each instru­ Still, it makes the music worldly band refers to anyone who ting in Kenya. Most people K-G and The Band use their as good an instrumentalist as ment's melody as it would sound and eclectic - a little bit of rock, plays with me on stage," K-G think I climb trees and grew up performances to bring aware­ anyone in his band, but he when it's being played His goal is a little bit of funk. The secret is said ''It can be anywhere, any­ around lions. rd never seen a ness to issues. For example, looks at each instrument as if to be able to write lyrics !mowing the blending of diverse cultures time. K-G and The Band can lion in my life unless I went to they promote Rock for Hunger, they are vocal parts. He insists that the melody is backing him within the band" up as a vocalist . K-G and The Band have two ------"I wanted a situation where I releases available for purchase could mix my heritage· and way on iTunes. The band is currently of living in my musiC:' K-G said working on an album that will be "I try to instill that in K-G and released in 2009. Be sure to catch Metal heads find metal dead in Orlando The Band, but the band is not the band live at The Social with ( from Kenya so they do not play LauraReedand G-ROonJuly5 at LINDSEY TURNBULL band like Dimmu." countless sound techs tried to crowd as a bald man in a black ·as· a Kenyan musician would. 9p.m. Contributing Writer kinnell and her partner perfect the · sound. jersey checked each , Rob Gallagher own Cen­ Multicolored lights flickered bass, drum kit and vocal Lines of black-and-denim tralfuge, a metal store based as the stage hands set the microphone. clad metal heads wrapped out of Sanford Flea World. mood Images of graveyards and around the small St Petersburg Kinnell grew up in Orlando Images flashed across a "LEGIONS OF THE CHO­ block. There I stood, at the loving metal, making het an projection screen, the crowd SEN FEW'' flashed across the gates ofJannus Landing, await­ authority of Orlando metal erupted in cheers and horns projection screen, and as the ing the Legions of the Chosen 'We travel to shows a lot," flew into the air as 's anticipation swelled, the Few Tour outdoor show - my Gallagher said 'We traveled to Keep of Kalessin took the crowd begged for the sym­ <, fourth metal show in three Dimmu, Symphony X [and] stage. The mosh pits began as phonic ofDimmu. days. Doro in St Pete. Next week we Keep hammered through , , , That night, Keep of will go to Vrrginia for Candle­ "Crown of the Kings" and a Tony; ICS Vortex and Kalessin, Behemoth and mass and Seminole for Death new .song off of their upcom­ took the stage, and the crowd < Dimmu Borgir took the stage. Angel" ing album, "Kolossus." responded favorably. In order to find this jackpot Three of the four shows "Keep of Kalessin was my Moshers and head-bangers of a metal bender, I needed to were held in Tampa; however, favorite band of the night," collided as soon as Dimmu's leave Orlando. Finding metal in standing at the gates ofJannus Kinnell said · set kicked oft: Orlando is hard work, accord­ Landing, seeing the lights dim Chants of "One more!" '"A Succubus in Rapture' is ing to Laura Kinnell, who saw made me feel like the road trip rang out as techs tore down dedicated to all the pretty the show in Fort was all worth it. Keep's drum kit and amps, but women in the crowd," said A 407 .847.2453 Lauderdale. diverse crowd of people Keep's time expired singer Shagrath ofDimmu. All PERFORMANCE FIRST- "Most bands skip Orlando from Orlando, Tampa and as As Nergal of Behemoth the pretty women screamed www.mypowersports.com kada.com N.WAYS W!ARA HELMET, EYE PROTECTION AHO PROTECTIVE ct.OJHING tEVER RIOEUNOeft THE,m..uENCZO, DRUGS OR ALCOHOi. AHO NEVSl USE SlRf£TASAIUCEJRACK.OOEYTH!lAWA.HORfADY0Uftt:JMOSMiUft.lAL THOROUGK.Y. ,..ndW ..img MJformlllonor toloeN•t'id«~COl#Mllftf~ due to lack of turnout," Kin­ far as Port St. Lucie milled stepped on the stage, the · "I stood by the speaker; it ~tt,ectlc,torqodes.fetyFoun!Sation• 1~·ffl7.A:ud:w"'~~Fnt'-.~ofHondllMo.-Co-.L1d. l1Cl'OS)OIS-01&1 nell said. "If they can't make around crowd erupted in cheers. Dur­ was loud, but I could under­ gas money, it's not worth the ''It was an even mix of peo­ ing the set, the crowd moved stand it," said Richard Coun­ drive. Plus there's no venue ple, different ages, different forward, trying to catch the tryside, a student at Valencia that's the right size for a styles;' said Ashiq Ricker, a 20- fake blood Nergal spit out. Community College. year-old Brandon resident. "I ''Behemoth is amazing, so 'We had a three-hour trip, have never seen so many peo­ powerful, so brutal," Ricker but it was definitely worth it," ple at a show, except Ozzfest" said. "They're intense, like said Countryside. 'Tm driving ONLINE COVERAGEC No venue in Orlando could they gathered us there to start the same distance to see Death house a show of this magni-· a war for them. They took the Angel Wednesday. It'd be a lot and Race Book Quick Flix by William Goss tude. This show required three cake by playing 'Conquer All' easier if the shows were in Get reviews for this weekend's things: a big stage, a projection and 'Slaves Shall Serve."' Orlando." movies, including The Visitor, Prince screen and a huge floor space. The crowd waited 30 min­ The show made the $24 MEMIRIAl DAY ~. Caspian, Son ofRambow, and more. Chords reverberated off utes for Dimmu. It seemed as ticket price and the across­ the surrounding buildings as if the sound techs teased the state drive worthwhile. MONDAY- MIY-2611 Dryer Side by Grant lowther FREE 11.ISSIIN Check out Lowther's witticisms as he expresses the dryer side of college life. 50C 111 1111, 50C son lrinlls · .Vesta prioritizes HIV & Go to www.CentralFloridaFuture.com 50C 111,1 FROM A9 Theriot said "It's the kind of & paint that replenishes itsel£" Pr111111i1ns load 111 Night his Brigadoon Loop home The month-old blood con­ College Students Always Free l ) BIG SCREEN after tearing down a wall. geals, clinging to the vial's (With Valid 1.D.) Peaking through the stripped glass, reflecting no light. TbisAdGood bare wooden frame, splatter ''I usually keep the blood in trails of blood and paint drip the refrigerator," Theriot said For 1 Free Program down the for.merly white "Once the virus is outside of (Any Performance) walls to the mock Jaclcson Pol­ the body for more than 24 lock coverlet on the floor. hours, it dies." Nearby, a hip-high shelf is To use the blood, Theriot SARAH R()(jERS / CENTRAL FLORIDA FUTURE filled with different-sized adds water to the vial. dips a Keith Theriot holds a vile of his blood that COURTESY WALTDISNEY PICTURES cans of_paint. paintbrush and splatters the he keeps in the back of his refrigerator. • <, THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: ''When I paint, I paint a lot, blood across a piece of paper HWY 17•92 & 436 Call (407) 339•6221 PRINCE CASPIAN (PG) probably 15 to 20 pieces at a pinned to the wall "Prince Caspian" finds the Pevensie siblings time," Theriot said "Paint is '"Ibis is how the paintings pulled back into the land of Namia, where a very expensive. I buy good start," Theriot said "There's thousand years have passed since they left. paint sparingly, but most of really not that much to it and The children are once again enlisted to join the colorful creatures of Namia in combating this comes from Home Depot then I'll add something and an evil villain who prevents the rightful or Lowe's, what I call 'oops then it will start to come out Prince from ruling the land. paint,' the paint people return as what it is ... The paint defi­ because it's not the right color. nitely tells me what to do ... I Donate Plasma! Directed by: Andrew Adamson You get these really bizarre don't try to make it anything. Sometimes a Band-Aid is not enough · Starring: Georgie Henley, Skandar Keynes, colors. I can buy four to five The thing about when you do William Moseley, Anna Popplewell, Ben Barnes, Peter Dinklage, Warwick Davis, Vincent Grass, cans of paint for $25. Other­ a stream ofconsciousness, it's ( J Ken Stott, Pierfrancesco Favino, Sergio Castellit­ wise I could not afford to going to tell stories hidden to, Liam Neeson, Eddie Izzard paint as much as I do." back there somewhere. It's an J'J~ Resting in the spotlight sits amalgamation of everything 's:-----· \.__-1 Vesta Prioritizes, from his lat­ from my past from wherever q est exhibition New Blood, my experiences are ... None which focuses on the issue of of it is intentional, you can J Earnupto)> women with Hiv. Vesta, a think of it in however way vestal virgin goddess protect­ you want, but that's how I got The Chronides of Namia: Prince Caspian ing households and families, the title, Vesta Prioritizes, ) $180/m~, (PG) 9:15a, 9:45a, 12:30, 1:00, 3:45, 4:lS, 7:00, 7:30, stands with her back arched because if she's going to 10:15, 10:4S OLP (Digital Projection) Showtimes to the right as a stork delivers remain a virgin, the baby can ~v~ 10:15a, 1:30,4:45,8:00, 11:lS an unborn child He decided be nothing more than an to create a · series about idea." Iron Man women because he feels soci­ Theriot enjoys the reac­ (PG-13)9:SSa, 10:lSa, 11:00a, 12:25, 12:55, 1:25, 2:05, 2:55, 4:00, 4:30, 5:0S, 6:45, 7:lS, 7:40, 8:05, ety is very close-minded tions people have toward his ( r 9:50, 10:00, 10:10, 10:50, 11:25, 12:40a, 1:00a when it comes to AIDS and art. During his first exhibit, Open Captioned Showtimes: 11:55a who has it. titled Bio-hazardous Material. 'Women have always had Made of Honor all the paintings rested behind (PG-13) 9".25a, 12:05, 2:25, 4:40, 7:10, 9:5S, 12:25a AIDS," Theriot said 'Women .glass. When- people would generally don't infect other find out how the paintings BabyMama women with AIDS; usually it's were made, they would jump (PG-13) 10:lOa, 12:40, 4:05, 7:15, 9:40, 12:lOa from trusting partners. I have back away from the piece as if SpeedRaa!r witnessed a lot of domestic it were exuding AIDS. (PG) 9:SOa, 10:lOa, 11:4Sa,'12:50, 1:20, 2:50, 4:20, violence issues related to it "You can touch AIDS­ • 4:50, 7:20,7:50, 8:20, 10:55, 11 :20 because when a woman may painted blood, it's not going to Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo suspect that a partner is not hurt you," Theriot said 'The .....~------~ ·- -~ -··- · ·-- Bay faithful or not monogamous, term AIDS stands for Find out how thousands of people save lives and earn extra CA$H by donating plasma • (R) 11:SOa,2:20,4:55, 7:25, 10:35, 12:55a, you get into the argument Acquired Immune Deficiency when you demand they use a Disorder, acquired meaning Redbelt regularly. Plasma is used to make manufacture injectable products for people, including (R) 10:20, 12:45a condom. It's almost like they you have to do something in • can't protect themselves ... It order to get it. It doesn't jump children, with serious illneses. The Forbidden Kingdom was just something that was off of people. You have to (PG-13) 9:20a, 3:30, 7:05 heavy on my mind, so the acquire it to get it ... When you DCI Biologicals 1900 Alafaya Trail Suite 500 Orlando 321-235-9100 Forgetting Sarah Matshall theme became women." meet people that are HIV pos­ (R) 10:35a, 1:154:257:45, 11:00 Theriot pulls a vial of itive, you learn that they are * $10 Special-New and Return (not donated in the last 6 months) What Happens in Vegas blood with the purpie tip from still people. There is nothing (PG·13) 9:30a, 10:30a, 12:10, 1:10, 2:3S, 3:55, 5:00 the pinky finger of a latex different about them." Bring this ad and receive an extra $5 on your 2nd and 4th donation. 7:35,8:10, 10:05, 10:40, 12:30a ' ; glove. ''I get blood work done To view his art, go to: \V\Vw.dciplasma.com -listingsforFnday, May16 every three to six months," www.keiththeriot.com.

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f A12 www.Centra/FloridaFuture.com May 15, 2008 • «entnl ,Wriba '1tture ~;

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