making his play - Andrew Ba Tran
Transcription
making his play - Andrew Ba Tran
SB 07-11-2008 A-1 CMYK SB Broward County Edition WWW.SUN-SENTINEL.COM FRIDAY, JULY 11, 2008 MAKING HIS PLAY College dropout’s last-ditch attempt to hit video game big time 50¢ We’re sorry for racism, AMA says Black doctors call apology from medical group progress BY LINDSEY TANNER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VIDEO TIME: Felix Marrufo warms up before competing in a CoD4 tournament at Flipper’s Hollywood Cinema 10 movie theater. He makes about $500 a month at tournaments and dreams of winning much more. Staff photo/Carey Wagner BY ANDREW BA TRAN STAFF WRITER He’s 24. Sleeps on mom’s couch. Walks to his part-time restaurant job because his 1989 compact needs repair. But Felix Marrufo dreams of making it big as a professional video gamer, and he’s got lightning-quick fingers, eagle-sharp vision and a game controller with custom rubber thumb grips to help him get there. He says he wins about $500 a month at tournaments. As a pro, he could make tens of thousands. What the Plantation college dropout doesn’t have is time. Marrufo feels he’s ancient compared with the energy drink-chugging teens who make up most of the pro video gaming ranks. That’s why he’s given himself a year to make it to the top. “I have to give it one last-ditch effort,” said Marrufo. “If it doesn’t work out, I’ve got to buck up and be a man and go back to school and start doing something with my life.” In the subculture of competitive video gaming, pros as old as Marrufo are a rarity, says Mike Sepso, president of Major League Gaming, which hosts tournaments online and pro circuit games in cities across the country with cash prizes. The average age for a MLG pro gamer is 18, with the youngest 15, Sepso said. The organization has about 250 professionals who have placed in the top 16 at pro tournaments. It also represents 20,000 amateur competitors. Part of the reason behind competitive video gaming’s growing popularity is any casual gamer, with enough practice, can turn pro, Sepso said. Online global video gaming sales are expected to grow from $6.6 billion in 2007 to $14.4 billion in 2012, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers. “People would argue 20 years ago if NASCAR was a sport or not,” Sepso � VIDEO GAMER CONTINUES ON 6A HOW TO BE A GAMING PRO Can you make money playing video games? Computer and video game tournaments offer thousands of dollars in prize money for top players. Tournaments are sponsored by companies that want to target young males. As with professional athletes, the big money is made from endorsements, advertising and sponsors. NBA players get sneakers named after them; top cyber athletes can get their own brand of keyboard. How do you get sponsored? Local video game centers tend to sponsor teams or players. Some top pro gamers find agents. Others pitch themselves to companies by sending videos of how well they play games. Sponsors provide stipends for travel and competition registration in exchange for promoting their products. Any other perks? Matches have been broadcast on cable television and are now streamed on ESPN.com. What does it take? Hard work, dedication and desire. Players need to build up victories and a solid reputation at local tournaments and online. At national tournaments, gamers could gain the attention of players looking for a teammate. SOURCE: MLG AND ASSORTED PROFESSIONAL GAMERS Watch Felix Marrufo in action and learn more about professional video gaming. Sun-Sentinel.com/videogamers DAILY DIGEST INDEX Lottery: 2A SUN-SENTINEL WEATHER Nation & World: 3A People: 4A Editorials: 18A ORANGE BOWL MEMORIES Today, 89 Obituaries: 12B of American Medical Association members are black. Less than 3 percent of the nation’s 1 million medical students and physicians are black. About 13 percent of the U.S. population is black. — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lauderdale chief’s wife got special treatment after arrest, critics say BY BRIAN HAAS STAFF WRITER The wife of Fort Lauderdale’s police chief waited only 12 hours after being booked on charges of shooting at her husband to see a judge and get permission to go home. While she went home, at least four people booked about the same time on lesser charges had to spend the night in a jail cell. A special hearing for Eleanor Adderley that allowed her to leave the Broward County Jail on $25,000 bond sparked complaints Thursday that she was given preferential treatment. Broward’s public defender said the Tomorrow, 88 Business: 1D Less than 2 percent � AMA CONTINUES ON 2A Eleanor Adderley Frank Adderley � ADDERLEY CONTINUES ON 2A Tonight, 78 Sports: 1C The American Medical Association formally apologized Thursday for more than a century of policies that excluded blacks from a group long considered the voice of American doctors. The nation’s largest physicians group also apologized for its “dishonorable” silence during the civil rights struggles of the 1960s. “The medical profession, which is based on a boundless respect for human life, had an obligation to lead society away from disrespect of so many lives,” the medical association’s immediate past president, Ronald M. Davis, said in a commentary to be published next week in its journal. “ The AMA failed to do so and has apologized for that failure.” Fair treatment of black doctors is a necessary step toward reconciliation that will help eliminate racial disparities in health status, the group said. The AMA, representing about onethird of more than 900,000 U.S. physicians, has increased efforts to recruit Complete weather on back page of BUSINESS Advice: Showtime TV: Showtime Classified: 1E LOCAL ONLINE Secondhand smoke waning Ex-senator ends election bid Livin’ for the weekend The percentage of nonsmoking Former state Sen. Skip Campbell has Get complete event and movie NATION 6A • SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • Friday, July 11, 2008 • SB Player on home system up to six hours a day � VIDEO GAMER CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A said. “You don’t hear that argument anymore.” M a r r u f o, w h o ’ s b e e n playing since he was a teen, has bills, insurance payments and work responsibilities. “I know it’s ridiculous for some people to get, but this is what I do, what I’m good at,” he said. He rolls off his couch after noon most days, and clocks in at his online-equipped television to play for up to six hours a day. Most weeks, Marrufo hops from match to match at the few video game centers in South Florida. Behind the storefronts: rows of networked game systems, meant to attract hardcore video gamers out of their parents’ garages. “He can play, he’s no joker,” said Manny Julve, the owner of Video Game Stadium in Davie, where Marrufo plays. Playing a lot and often can be the key to hitting it big. “It’s hard to find consistently good players online, since its saturated with people fooling around,” said Andrew Harris, the 24-year-old partowner of SubZero Video Gaming Center in Royal Palm Beach. “If they want to take it seriously, sometimes they need to come to a place to play face to face with people who can raise their level of playing.” Not so long ago, Marrufo used to prefer outdoor activities to gaming indoors. That changed when he was 13. He was skating fast across a parking lot at the Fashion Mall in Plantation when he tripped over a rock, landed on his right wrist and shattered several bones. The doctor almost had to amputate his hand, Marrufo recalls. For two months in the hospital, he played Sonic the Hedgehog, holding the controller above his head to keep the swelling in his wrist down. “I think playing video games while my hand was healing actually helped, because they told me I was going to have nerve damage and limited use of my hand,” he said. Marrufo spent the summer confined at home with a doting mother. She threw out his inline skates. She replaced them with a new video game system every few years so he would stay inside and away from riskier outdoor pursuits. Today, his hand is fully functional, although he carries an 8-inch scar along his arm. His thumb sometimes goes numb at the height of competition. At a recent Call of Duty 4 tournament at Video Game Stadium one Saturday night, he wipes his thumb on his pants to help regain feeling as he plays the final bracket. He’s stressed and sweaty. He’s failing to the teenage competition. Marrufo’s team loses by seven kills and takes second place. He shrugs. He fingers through his share of the prize money, $40. Not winning first place means extra shifts at work at Boston Market the next week. Before he leaves, Julve calls Marrufo over to exchange phone numbers. The 36-year-old video game entrepreneur asks Marrufo and his teammate, Marcel Martorana, if they want to join the first place winners and play as a team representing the store. Marrufo agrees. Sponsorship is a significant step toward going pro, but as he leaves with his girlfriend, Felice Spataro, Marrufo can only dwell on his team’s recent loss. Spataro, 22, hugs him before getting in the car. They have a unique journey ahead of them. “Sometimes people don’t GETTING ENERGY: Felix Marrufo eats a late lunch with his girlfriend, Felice Spataro, before going to practice video games in Davie. get it. He’s so smart and has so many other talents, but he chooses this path,” Spataro says. “He wants to see how far he can take it.” Staff photo/ Carey Wagner Andrew Ba Tran can be reached at atran@sunsentinel.com or 954-356-4543. SALE 9.99 SALE 29.99 twin Only at Macy’s Martha Stewart Collection 360-thread count pima cotton sheet, flat or fitted. Imported. Reg. $15. Twin XLking. Reg. $40-$70, sale 29.99-49.99. SALE 49.99 any size set Only at Macy’s Dobby Collection 350-thread count cotton dobby dot or woven stripe sateen sheet set*. Imported. Full-king. Reg. $90-$115. twin set Only at Macy’s Martha Stewart Collection 300-thread count cotton stripe sheet set*. Imported. Reg. $50. Full-king. Reg. $85-$120, sale 49.99 each. SALE 69.99 QUEEN OR KING SET Only at Macy’s Dillon Stripe 7-pc.comforter set includes jacquard comforter, bedskirt, shams and three decorative pillows. Polyester/cotton. Imported. Reg. $200. Shop Preview Day Today One Day Sale is Tomorrow don’t miss it! EXTRA 10% OFF sale prices All bath towels and bath rugs from Hotel Collection, Charter Club, Lauren Ralph Lauren, Style&co, Martha Stewart Collection and others. Reg. $5-$145, sale 3.99-119.99, final cost 3.59-107.99. 50% OFF PLUS EXTRA 10% OFF SALE PRICES Travelpro WalkAbout™ Lite 2. Reg. $100-$360, sale 49.99-179.99, final cost 44.99-161.99. SALE 99.99 SAVINGS STOREWIDE 25%65% OFF KITCHEN, BATH AND BED MUSTHAVES spin nner 50% OFF PLUS EXTRA 10% OFF SALE PRICES Samsonite X’ion 2 spinner collection. Reg. $180-$440, sale 89.99-219.99, final cost 80.99-197.99. SALE 44.99 SALE 39.99 Only at Macy’s Tools of the Trade Basics Essential 12-pc. stainless steel cookware set with phenolic handles. Reg. $100, previously 59.99. Only at Macy’s Tools of the Trade 22pc. cutlery set includes kitchen knives, steak knives, sharpening steel, block, more. Reg. 79.99, previously 49.99. SALE 19.99 Presto 22" jumbo electric griddle with nonstick cooking surface. #703. Reg. $40, previously 29.99. SALE 29.99 Oster 14-speed blender with powerful 450-watt motor and 5-cup glass jar. #6608. your choice Expanded flatware service for 12 by Gorham and Reed & Barton with twelve 5-pc. place settings, serving pieces and storage. Reg. $200-$285, previously 119.99-129.99. SALE 89.99 EXTRA Cuisinart 7-cup food processor with slicing/ shredding disc and chopping/ TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2009 BROWARD COUNTY EDITION » 50¢ * OBAMA WARNS BIG BANKS The government is ready to take greater control of them if necessary, says the president. YOUR MONEY, PAGE 1 friendor faux? Hit-run car owner jailed over probation Chicago judge finds he violated terms of earlier plea deal By Stacy St. Clair CHICAGO TRIBUNE and Jon Burstein STAFF WRITER To his evident surprise, the owner of a Porsche linked to the hit-andrun deaths of two pedestrians in Fort Lauderdale was ordered jailed Monday in Illinois for violating his terms of probation for a high-speed car chase in Chicago. Ryan LeVin, 34, was taken into custody at a court hearing in suburban Chicago after a judge found he had failed to complete a drug treatment program. LeVin had agreed to attend drug counseling as part of a plea deal for a July 2006 chase that injured one Chicago police officer and two motorists. LeVin, who comes from a wellto-do Chicago-area family, was ordered held at the Cook County Jail without bail. He has another court hearing scheduled Thursday to see whether he meets the eligibility requirements to get into the jail’s drug treatment program. Fort Lauderdale police have not named LeVin or anyone else as a suspect in the Feb. 13 accident that killed British business- Facebook’s power and reach force users to think about who their real friends are By Andrew Ba Tran STAFF WRITER Shannon Bowman, a 27-year-old culinary student from Dania Beach, has 124 friends listed on Facebook, and she says that’s plenty. Chloe Dolandis, a 23-year-old musician from Boca Raton, has more than 1,500 friends listed and says she’s ready for many more. How many friends are enough, and who among them should get access to all one’s personal information and pictures? That’s the debate raging among users of Facebook, the online social network that started five years ago for college students and has since expanded to parents and grandparents. For Bowman, the answer is simple: “It has to be someone I know in real life or know so well from Let’s be friends On Facebook? Head over to SunSentinel. com/facebook and add us as a friend. (The people you see pictured above and on Page 12 are our friends already.) somewhere else.” That’s what Facebook administrators say they had in mind when they imposed a cap of 5,000 friends. But thousands of others say 5,000 is not enough. They formed online groups to protest a limit they say is unfair because they use the site to market themselves as well as for social connections. In the online world, friends are anyone allowed access to your social network profile, which can include personal photos, videos and status updates on what you had for lunch. With 175 million members around the world, it can be easy to amass large numbers of people asking to be your friends, even if they have never met you. » FACEBOOK PAGE 12 Status updates Photos Links Live feed » PROBATION PAGE 12 What is Facebook? Closer look » A free social networking Web site. » It started at Harvard and spread to other colleges in 2004. For the latest developments in this case, or to make a comment, go to SunSentinel.com/hitandrun » Users join networks based on location, work and school. » There are more than 175 million members. » Members share status updates, pictures, files and links. » Users can set privacy levels to limit what’s visible on profiles. 12A » SUN SENTINEL » SUNSENTINEL.COM » TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2009 » PN » VERDICT PAGE 1 Priest guilty of grand theft » FACEBOOK PAGE 1 5 friends or 5,000? Site users differ Those who want huge numbers of such friends are collecting people as a game, said Bernie Hogan, a social networking researcher at the University of Oxford in England. In general, people cannot have more than 100 to 150 active relationships, he said. “There’s only so much time in the day to sustain emotionally rewarding relationships,” Hogan said. Overdo it, and that leads to individuals suffering to what he described as “social information overload.” “They get on a site and aggregate a number of friends, collect a bunch and realize there’s too much information on a day-to-day basis to adequately keep up with them,” Hogan said. That leads to a tipping point. “Most of the time, instead of being careful and whittling down the friends, a lot of people will simply get rid of their network on their site, start fresh or move on to another social networking site,” Hogan said. Who exactly is a friend? The standards are different for online and. offline relationships. Dean Bairaktaris, 36, a Web designer in Fort Lauderdale, has more than 300 friends on Facebook, several of whom he has never met. He says he accepts anyone who wants to connect as long as they are not spammers. “I don’t want to be elitist or snooty,” he said. “If you’re on Facebook or Twitter, you’re there to be social. It doesn’t make sense not to be.” Dolandis signed up for Facebook in 2006 after she got fed up with too many strangers trying to meet her on MySpace, an alternate social networking site that started out for band promotion and young adults. She wanted to start over and liked Facebook’s stricter sense of privacy. Still, she said, most of the friends listed on her Facebook page are acquaintances, not friends. Want more friends? Go for it The Sun Sentinel guide to getting 5,000 “friends” on Facebook Create 4,999 fake identities on Facebook and friend yourself. Put your Facebook profile Web address on your business cards. Create a Facebook group announcing that if you reach 5,000 friends you promise to commit some sort of humiliating act in public, like shave your head or make out with a manatee. Be a celebrity or self-proclaimed social media expert. Impersonate a celebrity. Lower your standards on what you consider a friend. A good majority of the 5,000 friends will not invite you to their weekend barbecue. Learn more Need to learn more about Facebook? Video tutorials show you everything you need to know, including how to set up limited profiles. SunSentinel.com/ facebook “I’m a musician, so adding more people is going to be great marketing for me,” she said. Even so, she has 24 friend requests pending that she hasn’t made up her mind about. She’s had privacy issues in the past and had friend requests from strangers along with messages hitting on her. “People can be so creepy! Leave me alone,” she said. She doesn’t list her personal phone number, address or e-mail on her page. Dolandis said her next step is to figure out the privacy settings on Facebook. Users can customize which friends are allowed to see which information in their profile, sort of mirroring offline relationships. At a bar, we behave differently than we do at the workplace, Hogan said. Online, people have multiple identities that reflect their multiple identities offline. “The idea that online life should be separate from offline life kind of assumes we have one way we behave offline, which isn’t true,” Hogan said. A person’s personality is flexible and plastic, he said. “It is contextual. Your identity is tied to the room or environment you find yourself in. The challenge with online is there’s no definite sense of context.” Have a friend who barely touches or updates Facebook? Take a look at the person’s friend feed and you might see a dearth of activity, he said. Know someone on Facebook who over-shares? Take a glimpse at that person’s friend feed and you might see the majority of his or her friends have created list after list of 25 random facts. “What’s funny is that people used to think the big part of the Internet was isolation,” Hogan said. “Now the problem is the opposite. We’re overloaded with social information. Too much to do with it.” Andrew Ba Tran can be reached at atran@SunSentinel.com or 954-385-7912. money. Clergy said in court that slush funds to hide money are common in the Catholic Church. And St. Vincent Ferrer’s bookkeepers were told to shred accurate bookkeeping records, hand over wads of cash from the offertory and cook the books that were sent back to the diocese — as they testified was church policy for years. Guinan’s defense attorney and the prosecutor said it wasn’t a full victory or a full defeat. “They were certainly not happy with the expenditures of Father Guinan, but they recognized that the state could not prove certain elements,” defense attorney Richard Barlow said. “They reached a compromise somewhere between not guilty and the maximum sentence.” Prosecutor Preston Mighdoll accepted the jury’s decision but had no comment on the lesser charge. “We’re glad that they found the defendant accountable for his actions,” he said. Efforts to reach officials at St. Vincent Ferrer for comment were unsuccessful. Instead of going to trial, Guinan’s predecessor, the Rev. John Skehan, last month pleaded guilty to the harsher charge of grand theft of more than $100,000 on similar allegations. A judge will make the decision on his punishment; sentencing guidelines indicate a term of 22 months to 30 years in prison. Skehan’s attorney, Scott Richardson, didn’t regret the plea. “We felt that we made the right decision and we are going to present all of Father Skehan’s good works to the court at the appropriate time,” Richardson said. Guinan admitted he used church funds to repay personal credit card bills, allowed bookkeeping records to be faked while the real ones were shredded and took 12 trips in the 15 months he was pastor at the church ending in 2005, including six visits to Las Vegas and three to his native Ireland. But Guinan, supported by some other priests, asserted that the diocese gave priests free rein to spend sums under $50,000. This “right of discretion,” Barlow said, meant Guinan could spend those sums as he wanted, no matter how reprehensible it looked. “No one here will disagree ... that it shouldn’t have been done, it wasn’t right, it was for personal use, you can’t do it,” Barlow told jurors in his closing arguments. “But legally? Yes he could.” The trial also exposed the diocese’s past short- Ralph De La Cruz Catholic Church looked the other way when priest went on gambling trips. Local, Page 1 comings in keeping reins on its local parishes. Ambiguous rules, lax auditing and widely accepted hiding of cash were the rule before 2005, according to trial testimony. Michael Brough, spokesman for the National Leadership Roundtable on Church Management, an organization devoted to improving the church’s business practices, said parishioners must be assured that their donations are going to a church’s mission. “Parishes depend on the generosity of parishioners to support their work,” he wrote in an email. “Parishes need to be truthful in solicitation of donations and then use the funds for their intended use.” Officials from the Diocese of Palm Beach released a statement Monday saying they now require parish audits every two years and have new systems for handling church money. The statement also said the diocese plans to seek restitution of the stolen money, calling Guinan’s and Skehan’s actions a “grave aberration from the upright conduct of the majority of the good priests of our diocese.” Brian Haas can be reached at bhaas@SunSentinel.com or 561-243-6633. SAVE YOUR HOME! • HELP STOP FORECLOSURE • HELP AVOID BANKRUPTCY • HELP MODIFY YOUR CURRENT LOAN TERMS • ATTEMPT TO LOWER YOUR PAYMENTS • ASSIST WITH SHORT SALE CONTRACTS • ASSIST WITH DEED IN LIEU OF FORECLOSURE • LOW FEES, EASY PAYMENT PLANS FREE IMMEDIATE CONSULTATION ATTORNEY STUART M. SMITH, P.A. 633 SE 3RD AVENUE, SUITE 203 FT LAUDERDALE, FL 33301 Office located across from Court House CALL 24 HOURS (954) 858-5399 HABLAMOS ESPAÑOL SERVING MIAMI/DADE-BROWARD-PALM BEACH COUNTIES THE HIRING OF A LAWYER IS AN IMPORTANT DECISION THAT SHOULD NOT BE BASED SOLELY ON ADVERTISEMENTS. SB 06-30-2008 A-1 CMYK SB Broward County Edition WWW.SUN-SENTINEL.COM MONDAY, JUNE 30, 2008 50¢ College BERRY INTERESTING tuition Demand is rising for ‘miracle fruit’ that makes sour taste sweet going up State’s universities to charge 6% - 15% more than last year BY SCOTT TRAVIS STAFF WRITER The days of rock-bottom tuition may be ending for some of Florida’s universities. When school starts this fall, students will pay from 6 percent to 15 percent more in tuition than they did last year. The University of Florida, Florida State University and the University of South Florida plan to charge 15 percent more than last year. Florida International University hopes to join that group; its board of trustees will consider a 15 percent increase at a July 7 meeting. The University of Central Florida plans to raise its tuition 9 percent this fall. All other state universities, including Florida Atlantic University, plan to go up 6 percent as approved by the state Legislature. This tuition mixed bag is the result of “differential tuition” created by a new state law that allows universities � TUITION CONTINUES ON 2A COMPARE SCHOOL COSTS See how much tuition will go up for selected schools, 2A FRUITS OF HIS LABOR: Starting with a single tree in his backyard more than 12 years ago, Curtis Mozie, 64, now has an orchard of more than a thousand miracle fruit trees. He sells the red berries, above, for $3 each. Staff photos/Mike Stocker BY ANDREW BA TRAN STAFF WRITER FORT LAUDERDALE It was counterintuitive — a lime with no pucker. “Tastes like candy, doesn’t it?” says Curtis Mozie, his eyes wide as a mad scientist’s. Wowzers. Suck a while on one of Mozie’s homegrown red berries, which are nicknamed “miracle fruit,” and everything sour that follows turns sweet. “Wait, you’ve got to try one more thing,” the 64-year-old says as he gets a jug of vinegar. Mozie pours the pungent liquid into two small cups. He hands them out like shots at a bar. “Cheers,” he says. Like Tang with a kick. It’s the sweet taste of success. Starting with one tree in his backyard more than 12 years ago, Mozie today has an orchard of more than a thousand that has let him carve out a DAILY DIGEST INDEX Lottery: 2A Pop a red berry but don’t swallow. Peel off the skin and roll the pulp back and forth on the tongue for as long as possible, or a few minutes, until the seed remains. GET A TASTE . ABOUT THE MIRACLE FRUIT Watch a video of Andrew Tran putting the miracle fruit to the test at Sun-Sentinel.com/miraclefruit successful niche market catering mainly to people intrigued by the berry’s taste magic. The red berry is mostly seed, but the scant amount of slightly sweet pulp changes taste for up to two hours. He says he ships 3,000 berries a week, mostly to distributors and other customers in New York but also to Finland, France and Montreal. Cancer treatment centers have contacted him, wondering if the fruit might help induce appetite in chemotherapy patients, Mozie says. Picky eaters and diabetics are also possible beneficiaries, he adds. Last month, The New York Times mentioned Mozie’s business in an ar- Now, chomp a lime. Tastes like candy. Swig a beer. Yup, almost like cream soda. The effects linger for up to two hours. How does miracle fruit, or a magical berry, work? Scientists say the berries have a glycoprotein, called miraculin, that twists the taste. While scientists in Japan have published studies on the fruit and managed to replicate the protein in tomatoes, there is little research found in the United States. Some companies in the 1970s tried to isolate miraculin for use as a natural sweetener, but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration refused to approve the substance, said agriculturalist Billy Hopkins. “They were afraid kids wouldn’t be able to taste poison or battery acid or something ridiculous like that,” Hopkins said. � BERRIES CONTINUES ON 2A SUN-SENTINEL WEATHER Nation & World: 3A People: 4A BY MARK MAZZETTI AND DAVID ROHDE THE NEW YORK TIMES WASHINGTON . Late last year, top Bush administration officials decided to take a step they had long resisted. They drafted a secret plan to authorize the Pentagon’s Special Operations forces to launch missions into the snow-capped mountains of Pakistan to capture or kill top leaders of al-Qaida. Intelligence reports for more than a year had been streaming in about Osama bin Laden’s terror network rebuilding in the Pakistani tribal areas, a problem that had been exacerbated by years of missteps in Washington and the Pakistani capital, Islamabad; sharp policy disagreements; and turf battles between U.S. counterterrorism agencies. � BIN LADEN CONTINUES ON 2A Today, 88 Editorials: 18A Tonight, 76 Obituaries: 9B WORLD SPORTS Prisoner deal roils Israel S. Florida runner is bound The Israeli Cabinet’s deal with Hezbollah to exchange prisoners for the bodies of two soldiers whose capture sparked a Infighting hinders secret plan by U.S. to hunt bin Laden Tomorrow, 87 Sports: 1C Your Business: 1D Complete weather on back page of BUSINESS Advice: 2E SPORTS On TV: 3E Classified: 1F THE HELP TEAM After 44 years, Viva España Repair or disrepair? A rampant Spain claimed its first trophy since 1964, putting the mighty Germany to the sword 1-0 in the Euro 2008 soccer Tempted to hire that roving worker to fix a car dent or make a home repair at a steep discount? Buyer A SUN-SENTINEL • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • Monday, June 30, 2008 • SB E paper fore 10 11 a.m. EWS such as very call or 7:30 SROOM 6-4178 ditor ditor Editor ector itor NG m ach, TION ach, OTOS OLICY entinel accuracy ha n whent we ublished Correcwill h some ns and on munity appear in which s pub- l.com ** Universities hope to offset cuts � TUITION CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A with at least $100 million in research money to charge more than others in the state. If FIU’s trustees approve the request, freshmen and sophomores taking 15 hours a semester will pay $3,861 for tuition and required fees, up from $3,460 this past year. The FIU increase would come a month after the university made $32 million in statemandated budget reductions. FIU cut degree programs, closed academic centers and announced about 200 layoffs. “ With all the budget cuts we’ve received, this at least adds a little bit of funding in areas we badly need it,” said Sandra Gonzalez-Levy, an FIU vice president. Under state law, universities that charge the higher rate must use the extra money to enhance academics. FIU plans to hire more faculty and counselors, Gonzalez-Levy said. Historically, public universities in Florida have had among COMPARING THE SCHOOLS The following is a comparison of tuition at selected public universities in Florida for 2007-08 and projected for 2008-09 based on a 30-hour schedule per year* University 2007-08 2008-09 University of Florida (freshmen/sophomores) $3,372 $3,788 University of Florida (juniors/seniors) $3,372 $3,568 Florida International University (freshmen and sophomores) $3,460 $3,861 Florida International University (juniors and seniors) $3,460 $3,653 Florida State University (freshmen/sophomores) $3,470 $3,987 Florida State University (juniors/seniors) $3,470 $3,778 Florida Atlantic University (all students) $3,600 $3,721 University of Central Florida (freshmen/sophomores) $3,677 $3,947 University of Central Florida (juniors/seniors) $3,677 $3,877 *Some universities charge additional fees that may not be included in this table. SOURCES: FLORIDA BOARD OF GOVERNORS; UNIVERSITIES the lowest tuition in the nation. In 2007-08, Florida universities charged about $3,500 a year, the third-lowest in the nation, according to a report compiled by the higher education governing board for the state of Washington. The national average was $5,526. But legislators changed the law this year to allow high-re- search universities to charge more than other universities. Those schools, UF, FSU, USF, UCF and FIU, can charge up to 15 percent more each year. The increases must be phased in and be no more than 40 percent above schools without the differential. Only students who enrolled after July 1, 2007 — mostly freshmen, sophomores and some transfer students — have to pay the extra amount. Anyone who bought a prepaid tuition plan before July 1, 2007, is also exempt. Bright Futures scholarship recipients will have their basic tuition covered, but not the differential. A.J. Meyer, 22, student government president at FIU, said he supports the extra charge, especially because most current students are exempt. “When you look at the economy, we could use as much funds as possible,” he said. “We’re looking at cuts for the next two or three years, maybe longer. This will help divert some of them.” Florida Atlantic University, which has about $70 million in research funds, can’t charge differential tuition yet. Ken Jessell, vice president for financial affairs for FAU, said the university would probably reach the required $100 million mark in two or three years. The board may consider charging the higher tuition then. “It doesn’t mean our board would approve it, but certainly we’d want to look at how much money could be raised and how it could be used,” he said. UF has also been discussing another possible change in tuition. Some administrators have discussed charging “block tuition” for full-time students. Under this plan, fulltime students would pay for 15 hours a semester, regardless if they took 12, 15, 18 or more hours. UF spokesman Steve Orlando said most students take less than 15 hours a semester, so the university could make some money under such a change. The move would require state approval. “But the real benefit for us would be getting students to take more classes and graduate on time, so we could keep room open for other students,” he said. “It’s an option we’re considering.” Scott Travis can be reached at stravis@sun-sentinel.com or 561-243-6637. Demand for miracle fruit skyrockets � BERRIES CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A ticle on taste-tripping parties where attendants munch berries and then see how different foods taste. Two days after the article’s publication, the former postal and Broward elections worker says he received $60,000 worth of orders — four times his profit from last year. It’s a lot of attention for what was once considered an obscure novelty fruit. The berry, whose scientific name is Synsepalum dulcificum, has a glycoprotein called miraculin that changes taste, scientists say. The bush or tree grows up to 5 feet tall and is native to West Africa. Billy Hopkins, whose Tropical Fruit Nursery in Davie sold Mozie his first miracle fruit tree more than a decade ago, said he has seen no negative “We’ve probably sold 10 times more miracle fruit plants this year than in years past.” Billy Hopkins Tropical Fruit Nursery in Davie health effects from eating the berries, except for a few people who experienced slight nausea or an allergic reaction. Chugging a gallon of vinegar is not a good idea, no matter how sweet. “Demand is rising for the trees. We’ve probably sold 10 times more miracle fruit plants this year than in years past,” Hopkins said. Business has been so good for Mozie that he had to sus- pend orders after demand grew too quickly. He’s contacted a grower in Ghana to ship him 50,000 frozen berries. Mozie sells his berries for $3 each. More than a year ago, he charged only a dollar. Today, prices can reach $5 on eBay. Locally, unless you have your own tree or know someone who does, there’s only one way to get the fruit: Mozie’s Web site, www.miraclefruit man.com. Hopkins, 44, said the fruit has been available in the country for more than three decades but bounded into the spotlight last February when Martha Stewart featured it on one of her shows. A m o n t h l a t e r, T h e Wa l l Street Journal highlighted Mozie in a front-page article. Hopkins and other nurseries across the country now face a shortage of miracle fruit plants, which sell for $40 to $75. “There’s been a run on them, and it takes a good while for them to grow, four-five years,” said Adam Shafran, a miracle fruit seller in Orlando. A single full-grown tree can yield 1,000 berries each time it blooms, which occurs twice a year in Africa but three times a year in Florida. Federal and state agriculture officials don’t keep statistics on how many miracle fruit growers there are. The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services says there are no restrictions on the growing and selling of the fruit. Mozie grows his berries at a farm at an undisclosed location west of Fort Lauderdale. “He’s been at this for so long, he saw this coming,” said Shafran, 27. “He’s got the world; he is the biggest supplier out there.” Mozie’s success has bewildered his wife, Pearl. Pearl Mozie said she shook her head when she saw her husband come home with another tree more than a decade ago. “Just another tree he was going to obsess over,” she recalled. But one miracle fruit tree turned into hundreds, and the plants took over the Mozie backyard. One day, worried about expenses, she asked her husband why he didn’t sell a few of the trees. He told her it would be like a dairy farmer selling his calves. “I’m glad he stuck with it,” she said. Andrew Ba Tran can be reached at atran@sunsentinel.com or 954-356-4543. Secret plan would send missions into Pakistan � BIN LADEN CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A The new plan, outlined in a highly classified Pentagon order, was designed to eliminate some of those battles. And it was meant to pave an easier path into the tribal areas for U.S. commandos, who for years have bristled at what they see as Washington’s risk-averse atti- also argue that catching bin Laden will come only by capturing some of his senior lieutenants alive. But more than six months later, the Special Operations forces are still waiting for the green light. The plan has been held up in Washington by the very disagreements it was meant to eliminate. After the Sept. 11 attacks, smaller than the ones the group used prior to 2001. However, despite dozens of U.S. missile strikes in Pakistan since 2002, one retired CIA officer estimated that the makeshift training compounds have as many as 2,000 Arab and Pakistani militants, up from several hundred three years ago. Publicly, senior U.S. and Pakistani officials have said that Just as it had on Sept. 10, 2001, alQaida now has a band of terror camps from which to plan and train Intragovernmental battles raged over the plan in early 2005 for a Special Operations mission intended to capture Ayman al-Zawahri, bin Laden’s top deputy, in what would have been the most aggressive use of U.S. ground troops inside Pakistan. The New York Times disclosed the aborted operation in a 2007 article, but interviews since then have produced new SB • Thursday, April 17, 2008 • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • SOUTH FLORIDA • 3B TRAIN FATALLY STRIKES TEEN Father, son were walking along CSX tracks in Fort Lauderdale BY ANDREW BA TRAN STAFF WRITER FORT LAUDERDALE John Davis says he saw the Amtrak train strike his 16-year-old son while they were walking near the tracks Wednesday afternoon, but did not see where the boy landed. For the next five minutes, Davis, 43, said he frantically searched the weeds by the CSX tracks west of Interstate 95 near Northwest Seventh Street, calling his son’s name, “Connor ... Connor!” He found him just west of the tracks. “I tried, I tried to give him mouth to mouth, but he wasn’t responding at all,” Davis said outside his home in Fort Lauderdale. “He wasn’t breathing.” Officials arrived minutes after the 11 a.m. accident and pronounced Connor Davis dead at the scene. Police spokeswoman Detective Kathy Collins said the pair were trespassing in the area. No charges have been filed. “Although the investigation is continuing, this incident appears to be nothing more than a terrible accident,” said Collins. Silver Star Train 92 was bound for New York from Miami at the time, said Amtrak spokeswoman Karina Romero. The accident occurred on a level stretch of rail bordered by a chain-link fence. The train, which stopped after the accident, had been running on time and had just left the Fort Lauderdale station. None of the 89 passengers onboard were injured, Romero said. The track speed for the area was 45 mph. Investigators will determine how fast the train was going and if the conductor tried to warn the victim, Romero said. John Davis said he and his son were walking home along the tracks to save the $5 they would have had to spend taking a bus. Davis said he just made $20 from the Continental Blood Bank on Broward Boulevard, and his son wanted to tag along. Connor Davis did not donate blood, according to his father and the blood bank. FATAL SCENE: Two conductors and police officers confer after Connor Davis was killed Wednesday afternoon by a northbound Amtrak train in Fort Lauderdale. The train, which stopped after the crash, had been running on time and had just left the Fort Lauderdale station. Staff photos/Lou Toman “He just wanted to go with me. He’s my best friend, I don’t know. I still got his blood on my hands.” John Davis Father of Connor Davis, 16 ONLINE Fort Lauderdale Police Department Detective Kathy Collins talks about what happened in a video report at Sun-Sentinel.com/traindeath The father said he was walking about 50 feet ahead of the teen when the train struck. Davis said he didn’t hear any horns, and said neither he nor his son was wearing headphones. Connor Davis loved video games, and his father described him as a “good kid who didn’t get in any trouble.” His mother, Carol New, 43, had trouble accepting what happened. “He’s coming home,” she wailed from behind her front door. “He’s j u s t l a t e c o m i n g h o m e , I d o n’ t know, just late coming, he’s just late.” Connor Davis was set to enroll in GED classes so he could join the Army. Money was tight, his father said. “He just wanted to go with me. He’s my best friend, I don’t know,” the father said, starting to sob. “I still got his blood on my hands.” Andrew Ba Tran can be reached at atran@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4543. INTERVIEW: John Davis talks to police investigators after his son, Connor, was hit by a train as the pair were walking along the CSX tracks. Police spokeswoman Detective Kathy Collins said they were trespassing in the area. $1 million worth of marijuana found on disabled boat BY MACOLLVIE JEAN-FRANÇOIS STAFF WRITER James Edward White, left, is charged with drug trafficking. Marvin Rohan Mogg, center, and Leonardo Davenci Kelley are charged with re-entry of a deported alien. . Fe d e r a l agents arrested two deportees trying to get back into the country and a third man suspected of trafficking about 300 pounds of marijuana after the trio’s boat broke down, authorities said Wednesday. Marvin Rohan Mogg, 32, a Jamaican, and Leonardo Davenci Kelley, 27, a Bahamian, were both convicted of aggravated felonies and removed from the United States years ago, acFORT LAUDERDALE The boat was about six miles east of Port Everglades, DEA Special Agent Sandra M. Speck wrote in a complaint. When four people seen at searched the boat further and found a fifth man. They also found 322 pounds of marijuana, Speck said. Drug Enforce- Speck said. Mogg at first gave agents a different name, but a check of his fingerprints in FBI and Department of Homeland Security databases revealed his identity and history, Speck said. Florida records show Kelley had a conviction in 1998 for armed carjacking. Speck said he was deported in 2000. “Although what he did wasn’t completely on the up-and-up, he wasn’t coming here with any improper moti- second may have been turned over to immigration officials. Ke l l e y a n d M o g g e a c h f a c e a charge of re-entry of a deported alien. White is being held on conspiracy to possess, with intent to distribute, more than 100 kilograms of marijuana. All were being held at the Broward County Jail. Hearings are set for April 21 and April 29. Staff Researcher Barbara Hijek contributed to this report. NB 06-20-2007 A-1 CMYK NB Broward County Edition WWW.SUN-SENTINEL.COM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 2007 35¢ Is hospital’s expansion necessary? Medical center, neighbors at odds over growth BY IHOSVANI RODRIGUEZ S TA F F W R I T E R PRECAUTION: Steven Lazatte, left, and John Tymms apply mosquito repellent as they work in a swamp area between Hollywood-Fort Lauderdale International Airport and Port Everglades. Staff photo/Joe Cavaretta HOLLYWOOD . A decades-long turf battle between Memorial Regional Hospital and its neighbors in Hollywood Hills will resurface tonight as the hospital seeks permission for a major expansion.Administrators at the public hospital want city officials to let them turn a five-acre area currently zoned for offices and residences into a hospital district without displacing people or property. They say the new zone would allow them to build two medical facilities that are crucial to the re- OUR WAR ON BUGS Rain makes S. Florida a mosquito breeding ground How typical mosquitoes are born ANDREW TRAN S TA F F W R I T E R DANIA BEACH . Their generator is broken, so the men wait, sticky with sweat and insect repellent, by a ditch teeming with the spawn of their tiny enemies. “They’re killing me,” says Steven Lazette, scratching his neck as the crew awaits a supervisor. “About 80 bites a day, that’s my limit.” Slap. “But I can get that in five minutes here,” he says, laughing. “Welcome to Mosquito Control.” Slap. With Florida’s record drought finally easing and the rainy season under way, counties in South Florida and statewide have mobilized workers like Lazette to check vacant fields, roadside ditches and other typical mosquito breeding sites. It can be a frustrating battle, but it will be an important one this year. Mosquitoes hatch in puddles, birdbaths and other sources of stagnant water which are ideal places for eggs. An adult female’s life span lasts from three weeks Vatican ‘Commandments’ won’t tame our road rage Breathing tube 1 Eggs are laid on standing water in rafts of 200 or more. The eggs usually hatch within 48 hours. 2 A larva can live in the water for up to two weeks as it grows. It breathes through a tube at the water’s surface. SOURCE: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention State Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson warned recently to expect a “mosquito population explosion” as the rains return after months of drought. 3 The pupa takes several days to develop into an adult. It does not eat during this time and continues breathing through tubes. 4 The adult emerges from the pupal shell and rests to allow its body parts to harden. We’ve always known: The outrage you see day-today on South Florida roads should be a sin. Now it just might be. On Tuesday, the Vatican’s Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People issued an amazing document called “Guidelines for the Pastoral Care of the Road.” It addresses how folks should behave while driving. Talk about taking on a challenge. I mean, Pope John Paul II’s historic apologies and outreach to other religions were impressive. But this truly takes Pope Benedict XVI’s papacy to a whole new level. So much for all the complaints that the guys with the pointy hats were out of touch with real Americans. OK. So they might be a tiny bit out of step on stuff such as the pedophilia scandal and priests marrying. But this shows they truly have their finger on the American pulse, which everyone knows runs on Staff graphic/ Jonathan Boho, Hiram Henriquez Some species of mosquitoes — there are may be 40 varieties in Broward and Palm Beach counties � MOSQUITOES CONTINUES ON 16A Ways to avoid mosquito-borne disease Wear long-sleeve shirts and pants to cover skin and reduce the chance of being bitten. Eliminate standing water in yards, such as in birdbaths, kiddie pools and old tires. Stagnant water is an excellent breeding ground for mosquitoes. Use insect repellent that contains DEET. DAILY DIGEST INDEX Lottery: 2A � HOSPITAL CONTINUES ON 8A to several months. In that time, she’ll lay as many as 500 eggs. ONLINE: WATCH A MOSQUITO PATROL IN ACTION AT SUN-SENTINEL.COM/BROWARD Limit time outside during dusk and dawn when mosquitoes are most active. gion’s growing needs. The rezoning would allow two new buildings now and pave the way for future expansion: A new, four-story Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital. A new, four-story cancer treatment facility with its own parking garage. Flexibility to plan for longterm growth, for example, by adding onto the children’s hospital. At a public hearing set for 7 p.m. today in City Hall, residents are expected to argue their quality-of-life issues against the hospital’s need to serve a larger population. “If you want to go to the grocery store in the afternoon after work, forget it,” said Nicholas Segal, who lives on Arthur Street, a few blocks from where the hospital plans to Nation: 3A SUN-SENTINEL WEATHER People: 4A World: 10A Ten Commandments for drivers No. 5 Source: Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Editorials: 14A COLUMNIST � COMMANDMENTS CONTINUES ON 16A Horse owners should check with veterinarians to make sure their animals have current vaccinations. Today, 87 Tonight, 75 Obituaries: 10B Ralph De La Cruz Tomorrow, 87 Sports: 1C Business: 1D Cars shall not be for you an expression of power and domination, and an occasion of sin. See other Commandments, 16A Complete weather on back page of LOCAL Advice: 2E TV Tonight: 3E Classified: 1F COMMUNITY NEWS ROUNDUP, 4B-5B Art of Asia exhibit opens in Coral Springs . Security, safety expo today in Deerfield Beach . Learn the history of gay rights at the Main Library NATION LOCAL WATER RESTRICTIONS SUN-SENTINEL • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • Wednesday, June 20, 2007 • NB will pave way mpics’ torch D S lans to e side of ase the ey to the tallest 008 Beiedia re- e road, million, e rough of the amp at acktop dulating a News uction, t week, months. uld betourists id. Secregovernproject used to and Nemmonly ntain. s for the pics anans for elay in — an y route that would cross five continents and reach the 29,035-foot summit of Everest. Taking the Olympic torch to the top of the mountain, seen by some as a way for Beijing to underscore its claims to Tibet, is expected to be one of the relay’s highlights. China says it has ruled Tibet for centuries, although many Tibetans say their homeland was essentially an independent state for most of that time. Chinese communist troops occupied Tibet in 1951, and Beijing continues to rule the region with a heavy hand. The day before the route of the torch relay was announced by the Beijing organizers of the Olympics, five Americans unfurled banners at a base camp calling for an independent Tibet. The five, from the Students for a Free Tibet group, were briefly held and then expelled from China. Ed Viesturs, one of the most accomplished American climbers, said he thought a paved road, as opposed to the current dirt one, might make access to base camp easier for tour groups, but he did not think it would affect climbers significantly. Teams in full force against pests � MOSQUITOES CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 — lay eggs that can wait several years to hatch, depending on how much rain falls, said Joe Marhefka, manager for the Broward County Mosquito Control. Teams monitor population, check larva sightings, and then destroy the progeny with a mixture of pesticide and growth inhibitors. Although some spraying was done during the drought in areas of standing water, heavy rains mean crews will have to work longer and cover more ground. “It’s just frustrating for us just trying to keep up with the rain we have,” Marhefka said. “At some point, the saturation gets overwhelming.” Broward’s three mosquito control teams have seven days after it rains to prevent the larvae from turning into adults, he said. But South Florida’s humidity and ultraviolet rays can shrink the hatching time to four days. Mosquito activity is sporadic so far in Palm Beach County, said Ed Bradford, director of the county’s mosquito control. “We’re just now starting to see standing water in some of the developments,” he said. “People with containers, buck- “It’s just frustrating for us just trying to keep up with the rain we have.” Joe Marhefka Manager for the Broward County Mosquito Control ets, tires — they don’t know they’ve been breeding their own mosquitoes.” Teams drive three trucks around Broward starting at 4 a.m. on weekdays to combat adult mosquitoes, spraying a fine mist of chemicals as they pass. Four trucks travel across Palm Beach County on weekday evenings. The teams also respond to requests from neighborhoods for help. When truck-spraying isn’t enough, Broward, Palm Beach and other counties bring out aircraft to bomb the mosquitoes with pesticide. A plane or a helicopter can drop about half an ounce of chemicals per acre, which doesn’t affect humans, but devastates mosquitoes, officials say. If Florida isn’t burning, it’s getting bitten, said Terence McElroy, spokesman for the Florida Depart- FIGHTING PESTS: John Tymms, of Broward County Mosquito Control, sprays pesticide in a swamp area in Dania Beach between the Hollywood-Fort Lauderdale International Airport and Port Everglades. Recent rains have left standing water throughout South Florida. Staff photo/Joe Cavaretta ment of Agriculture and Consumer Services. “If we have a dry spring, we have a terrible wildfire problem,” he said. “If it’s a wet spring, we have to deal with mosquito infestation.” Though there are 56 mosquito control agencies in Florida, the state will hire contractors to assist during a bad season, like after a hurricane, McElroy said. Mosquitoes are more than a nuisance because they pose a health danger. Some species could carry diseases such as West Nile or Malaria, he said. “I use insect repellent cause otherwise they’re gonna come get you. I don’t care how fast you are,” said Lazette, a mosquito control inspector for Broward. He looks like he is hugging himself as he slaps one arm and scratches the other. “It used to be an annoyance, but now I take it personally.” Andrew Tran can be reached at atran@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4543 rivers need ntervention TS E1 enerally ver the nes en Comke: You eople, nd dn’t be lp peo- he ve preperately fter all, holy wo s taken st drivinction of our offer d guidthis npike’s e Plaza. would ires,” Orlando, THE VATICAN’S TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR DRIVERS 1. You shall not kill. 2. The road shall be for you a means of communion between people and not of mortal harm. 3. Courtesy, uprightness and prudence will help you deal with unforeseen events. 4. Be charitable and help your neighbor in need, especially victims of accidents. 5. Cars shall not be for you an expression of power and domination, and an occasion of sin. 6. Charitably convince the young and not so young not to drive when they are not in a fitting condition to do so. 7. Support the families of accident victims. 8. Bring guilty motorists and their victims together, at the appropriate time, so that they can undergo the Knowing what time the bank closes. Not caring what time the bank closes. SB 07-19-2007 B-3 SB • Thursday, July 19, 2007 • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • SOUTH FLORIDA • 3B Woman found dead in motel Hollywood police call death suspicious after also finding an unconscious man BY ANDREW TRAN S TA F F W R I T E R . Two weeks ago, the yelling stopped and the room began to reek. Neighbors wondered if it was because the woman in apartment 7 had left and was no longer cleaning up after the older man. The question was answered HOLLYWOOD Cooper City OKs disaster measure Wednesday when officers responded to a call about an unconscious man in the room at the Wilkirk motel at 1718 Fillmore St. The odor came from a woman’s decomposing body. Police say the woman was in her early 30s. The man, in his 50s, was taken to Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood, said Capt. Tony Rode, a police spokesman. The man did not respond to police and was clearly incoherent, Rode said. Police consider the man a person of interest. The names are being withheld pending family notification. Police did not find any signs of forced entry or any initial indication of homicide, but investigators still called the death suspicious. Police had twice visited the motel during the past two weeks, responding to complaints about the smell in the apartment from neighbors and management. On Tuesday, the man living in the apartment told officers the smell was from rotting fruit, Rode said. The man also told police he had just vomited. Police did not have enough probable cause to search the entire apartment, Rode said. After police left Tuesday, Richard Hill, the motel manager, said he told the man he had an hour to pack his things and leave. The man begged to be able to stay 24 hours more, Hill said. Early Wednesday, Hill went inside the apartment and found the man Firefighters honor fallen hero Archdiocese settles sexual abuse lawsuit BY MADELINE BARÓ DIAZ MIAMI BUREAU BY GEORGIA EAST S TA F F W R I T E R Georgia East can be reached at geast@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7921. Andrew Tran can be reached at atran@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4543. 2 new allegations filed in Miami-Dade court Wording tweaked on taking property COOPER CITY . The third time was the charm. After trying twice to soften a controversial law that allows the city to take personal property in an emergency, commissioners voted 3-2 to replace the word “seized” with “acquired” on Tuesday night. And they pointed out that property could only be taken after an order by the governor. However, some say the changes don’t go far enough to restore property owner rights. Commissioner John Sims voted against the change, saying no matter what the wording, the law was “a miscarriage of justice.” Last year, in anticipation of hurricane season, the city passed a measure giving it the right during a disaster to seize vehicles and equipment belonging to residents, so it could quickly assist others in need. City officials said that it piggy-backed off a state ordinance and that the city’s intent was to ensure the health and safety of all residents. With the law, the city can declare private roads public in an emergency, a necessary step to aid people who live in homeowners associations, commissioners said. Commissioners didn’t begin discussing the issue until after 11 p.m. Tuesday. In addition, about a dozen parents came out to protest a proposal by City Manager Christopher Farrell to cut a school resource deputy as a budgettrimming measure. Although some city leaders said they would not support such a cut, they said it would be discussed more thoroughly during the city’s first budget hearing Sept. 17 at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall. In a separate matter, longtime residents said they were concerned about a plan to develop Cooper Colony Golf Course into single-family homes. City leaders assured the residents the land is deeded to remain open space and they had informed the developer. sprawled on the floor. He called 911. Police came to the apartment for a third time and found the decomposing body, Rode said. He wouldn’t say where in the apartment the body was found. “It could be domestic related, could be a drug overdose, could be a murder, attempted suicide — we don’t know. It’s too soon to tell,” Rode said. SOLEMN PROCESSION: Pallbearers carry the casket of veteran Broward Sheriff’s Office firefighter Michael Douthitt out of the First Baptist Church of Fort Lauderdale at the end of the funeral for him Wednesday. Douthitt, 48, of Wellington, died Friday, just days after he underwent emergency heart surgery to clear a blocked artery. Broward Sheriff’s Office Fire-Rescue Chief Joseph Lello presented Douthitt’s helmet, below, to Douthitt’s son, Andy. Staff photo/Colleen K. Cummins The Archdiocese of Miami reached a settlement with a man who filed a sexual abuse lawsuit involving the priest accused of fondling former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, the man’s attorney said Wednesday. The details of the settlement reached last week are confidential, attorney Jeffrey Herman said. The man, who was not identified, sued the archdiocese in October, saying the Rev. Anthony Mercieca fondled and performed oral sex on him when he was 12 or 13 years old, about 30 years ago. At the time, Mercieca was assigned to St. James Church in North Miami, where the alleged victim was an altar boy. Foley, who resigned from Congress last year over the discovery of sexually explicit Internet exchanges with young male pages, also accused Mercieca of sexually abusing him when he was a 13-year-old altar boy at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Lake Worth. Mercieca told reporters he fondled, skinny-dipped and sat naked with the young Foley, but denied they had sex. Herman on Wednesday also announced the filing of two new sexual abuse lawsuits against the archdiocese in Miami-Dade County Circuit Court, including one involving allegations against retired Broward County priest Neil Doherty. The accuser in that case, identified as John Doe No. 39, said in the lawsuit the abuse happened when he was about 12 years old. The man met Doherty in 1974 at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church in Fort Lauderdale, where the man and his family worshiped. According to the lawsuit, Doherty gained his family’s trust before abusing him. The lawsuit claims the archdiocese knew Doherty was abusing boys, but covered up allegations and did not report them to the police. Doherty, 64, who also served at St. Vincent’s Catholic Church, in Margate, is awaiting trial in Broward on multiple counts of sexual battery, lewd and lascivious acts and molestation in a separate case. At least 10 lawsuits have been filed involving Doherty. Two of Herman’s clients, including one at the center of the criminal case, have settled in the past few weeks. Doherty pleaded not guilty and is free on $70,000 bond. Doherty retired in 2002 and is not assigned to a church or allowed to wear clerical garb or celebrate the sacraments, according to the archdiocese. The other lawsuit was brought by a man identified as John Doe No. 38, who said the Rev. Joseph Calamari sexually abused him from the time he was about 2 or 3 years old until he was 4. The archdiocese released a statement saying it had not seen the latest lawsuits. The statement did not address the Mercieca settlement. “It is a sad day for the Catholic Church when we receive an allegation of sexual abuse by a member of the clergy,” the statement read. “Every accusation is taken seriously by the Archdiocese of Miami.” Madeline Baró Diaz can be reached at mbaro@sunsentinel.com or 305-810-5007. NB • Saturday, July 21, 2007 • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • SOUTH FLORIDA • 3B Woman’s life DOCKED AND READY a struggle with TO ROCK S. FLORIDA mental issues U.S. WARSHIPS AT PORT EVERGLADES BY ROBERT NOLIN S TA F F W R I T E R She was found dead in Hollywood motel room BY ANDREW TRAN S TA F F W R I T E R . “I love you.” They were the last words Marilyn Davis of Hollywood heard from her daughter Deane. The aspiring writer had moved out weeks before, but she called home every night so her mother wouldn’t worry. But a month ago, the calls stopped. The next time Davis heard about her 37-year-old daughter was when police called Wednesday to tell her they found Deane Nandi Davis’ body — badly decomposing in a motel room in a rundown part of town, along with an older man they described as “incoherent.” How Davis died is under investigation, but police call her death suspicious. The man, in his 50s, was taken to Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood. Police have not identified him but consider him a person of interest. Marilyn Davis had gone to the police a week after Deane stopped calling. She had reasons to worry. Her daughter had a history of psychiatric problems, Davis said, and had been drinking heavily. She made posters. “Have you seen her?” pleaded the handwriting underneath a laminated printout of her daughter’s face. Two weeks ago, she pounded on the door of Apartment 7 of the Wilkirk motel at 1718 Fillmore St., across from where she found her daughter’s abandoned car. A man who neighbors said was Deane’s roommate answered the door. Davis showed him a year-old picture of her smiling daughter. The man said she was no longer there and shook his head. “She doesn’t look like that anymore.” Police say they found Deane’s body after the motel manager discovered a man he said was her roommate unconscious on the floor and called them. They refused to say where in the apartment the body was found. Officers had visited the man at the motel twice within two weeks, responding to complaints from neighbors of a foul odor. But officers did not think they had enough cause to search his room because he told them the smell was because of rotting fruit and from his recent vomiting, police said. From what her mother and friends say, the man appears to be the latest in a string of unhelpful people in Deane’s tumultuous life. It wasn’t always like that. HOLLYWOOD Deane Nandi Davis’ mother moved her to Florida last year to take care of her. Deane grew up in Rock Hill, S.C. She graduated with an English degree f r o m Wi n t h r o p U n i v e r s i t y. S h e wanted to become a writer. “She could go into any room and be able to captivate an audience,” said friend Susie Richards, from Rock Hill. But Deane was troubled. She was sexually abused at a young age and never seemed to recover, her mother said. She found solace in alcohol from her various mental health issues. She suffered from an anxiety disorder that made her afraid of experiencing embarrassing situations. She also was obsessive-compulsive and classified under Medicaid as bipolar, according to Marilyn Davis. On Friday morning, Davis found an undated five-page letter from her daughter. “I drank too much today. I’m tired of it all. I’m tired of the shame,” Deane wrote. “There are ebbs and flows, ups and downs . . . and for whatever time I have left on this earth, this no doubt will be my life’s patterns.” Marilyn moved Deane from South Carolina to Hollywood in July 2006 to take care of her. The mother sought out programs and counseling. The family didn’t have medical insurance. She called the police when Deane started pulling knives from drawers and threatened harm to herself in November. She said she filed legal paperwork to get Deane enrolled into programs at the Broward Addiction Recovery Centers. But Deane wasn’t a child, so her mother couldn’t force her to get help. A counselor warned Marilyn Davis that Deane’s self-destructive tendencies might get worse before things get better. “She’s going to have to bottom out before she can get help,” the counselor said. “What if that means she’ll die?” Marilyn asked. “That may be the case.” Andrew Tran can be reached at atran@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4543. Thousands of sailors traded bellbottomed whites and flip-brim caps for shorts and T-shirts Friday as they disembarked from five warships visiting Port Everglades after weeks of training at sea. “They’re all over the port,” said Ellen Kennedy, port spokeswoman. “They’ve got on their beach clothes and look like they’re ready to enjoy South Florida.” “For many of these sailors, it’s their first liberty call.” Ellen Kennedy Port Everglades spokeswoman The sailors numbered more than 5,000, and are serving aboard an aircraft carrier, the USS Harry S. Truman; two destroyers, the USS Oscar Austin and USS Winston S. Churchill; a nuclear-powered submarine, the USS Montpelier; and a British Royal Navy destroyer, the HMS Manchester. The vessels left Norfolk, Va., on July 2 and have been on training maneuvers required before their certification for deployment to a war zone. The Truman, anchored about two miles offshore, can be seen from the south end of Fort Lauderdale’s beach. Because of security concerns over the complement of fighting aircraft it carries, the 1,092-foot-long behemoth isn’t allowed in port. The British are well represented on the visit: There’s the U.S. Navy’s Churchill, named after the famous World War II prime minister; the Royal Navy officer who as a courtesy is always aboard the Churchill; and the Manchester, one of Britain’s more powerful destroyers. As sailors swarmed into town by shuttle and taxi, many carried maps distributed by the Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau. Some slung golf clubs over shoulders. “For many of these sailors, it’s their first liberty call,” Kennedy said. “They’re real eager to come landside.” Parents too were eager. Tom Cobble drove from Melbourne to see his son, Daniel. “I’m down here to take my son off the ship for a little bit and get him away from the Navy,” Cobble said. He plans to take his son swimming, see the latest Harry Potter movie “and just hang out with the kid.” Still on the water working, how- LINING UP: Sailors man the rail on the USS Oscar Austin, one of five warships visiting Port Everglades after completing training. Staff photo/Lou Toman ever, were Coast Guardsmen patrolling the area to make sure local boaters come no closer than 100 yards of the Navy ships and operate at minimum speed when within 500 yards. “ We h a v e s e c u r i t y b o a t s o u t there,” said Coast Guard Petty Offi- cer James Judge. “We’ll mark the zones and guide people away.” Robert Nolin can be reached at rnolin@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4525. Sprinkler system helps suppress small fire at Swap Shop BY ANDREW TRAN S TA F F W R I T E R . The sprinkler system at the Swap Shop kept an early morning fire Friday from spreading through the building, a Lauderhill Fire-Rescue spokesman said. Firefighters had to contend with limited visibility from heavy smoke after responding to a 7:08 a.m. emerLAUDERHILL Jeff Levy. By the time the fire was extinguished 32 minutes later, 60 firefighters from Lauderhill, Fort Lauderdale, Oakland Park, Plantation and the Broward Sheriff’s Office were on the scene. No one was injured. The cause of the fire, which was confined to Sunshine Discounts on the second floor, accidental, Levy said. The Swap Shop estimated the cost of damage from heat, smoke and water at about $500,000, he said. “This fire call is a perfect example that fire sprinkler systems help to contain fires and save lives,” Levy said in a statement. “Because the fire sprinkler system functioned properly, the fire was con- ture and there were no injuries,” he said. Had the sprinkler system not worked properly, the damage could have been extensive because of the Swap Shop’s aluminum and steel construction, the wide-open spaces and the merchandise, Levy said. Westbound Sunrise Boulevard between Northwest 31st Avenue and four hours because of the fire. The Swap Shop was closed for the entire day. The fact the fire occurred when it did might have prevented worse damage. “Other than Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays, we open at 8,” said Bob Druckman, a booth operator. “So I guess it’s a good thing it’s Fri- NB 07-28-2007 B-3 NB • Saturday, July 28, 2007 • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • SOUTH FLORIDA • 3B Warrant issued in Springs killing Charges Police seek Miami resident in connection with fatal shooting BY SALLIE JAMES S TA F F W R I T E R . Police have issued a warrant for the arrest of a 21-year-old Miami man on a murder charge in connection with the July 22 shooting death of a Coral Springs resident. Adam Jacobs, 23, was fatally shot in the head inside a house in CORAL SPRINGS the 2500 block of Northwest 121st Drive after an argument broke out among at least five men in the home, police said. Markinsey Metayer is being sought on one count of murder, two counts of attempted murder and two counts of armed robbery, according to police. The warrant was issued Thursday. Two other men were wounded: Gregory Hunt, 47, of Fort Lauderdale, was shot in the chest; and Jason Operle, 24, of Coral Springs, had a gunshot wound to his right shoulder. Police have declined to say exactly what led to the shooting. None of the victims lived in the house in the Westchester neighborhood north of Royal Palm Boulevard and east of Northwest 123rd Avenue. O n We d n e s d a y, P a t r i c k E . Young, 28, was charged with mur- der, attempted murder and two counts of armed robbery in connection with the shootings. He is being held without bail at the Miami-Dade County Jail. Metayer is described as 5 feet 6 inches tall, 150 pounds, with gold upper and lower teeth, and a tattoo on the right side of his neck of fancy, script writing. Anyone with information is asked to call Detective Ryan Gallagher at 954-346-1214 or Crime Stoppers at 954-493-TIPS (8477). filed in killing Police say man, 51, suffocated girlfriend in Hollywood motel BY ANDREW TRAN S TA F F W R I T E R HEADS UP: Fashion designer and volunteer Lawrence Capdeville, 16, of Davie, waits to walk down the runway in his scarecrow design at the Young At Art Museum’s teen volunteer fashion show, “Got Trash?” Capdeville entered his creation in the country & western and freestyle categories. Organizers said Friday’s event was designed to build awareness about protecting the environment. Photo/Rhonda Vanover What’s old is the new you Davie fashion show features designs made of recycled materials BY GEORGIA EAST S TA F F W R I T E R DAVIE . One man’s trash is another man’s trousers. Just ask the 60 teens who spent weeks converting gum wrappers into garments and electrical tape into tube tops for Friday night’s fashion show at the Young at Art Museum in Davie. “ We made a dress out of old blinds and pinned inspirational words from newspapers in the middle,’ said Rachel Cushanick, 14, of Sunrise. “For accessories I’m using soda can tabs.’’ About 50 fashions were modeled in front of a crowd of about 150 people, with prizes awarded for best design in four categories: hip hop, punk rock, freestyle and country & western. DIGEST Staff reports To make their outfits, teens rummaged through barrels of donated recyclables and used paper clips, safety pins, glue or tape to hold the material together. “At first, things kept coming undone,’’ Cushanick said. Cassie Haley, 14, of Weston, sewed 600 dog tags together to create a collar for one of the dresses she entered in the show. “I want people to know that you can make beautiful things out of stuff that you wouldn’t normally use,’’ she said. One teen glued candy wrappers to a dress from Goodwill. Another glued egg crates together and painted them rainbow colors for a belt. Then there was the vest made entirely of playing cards. “These are the things that I usually put in the garbage and forget they existed,’’ said Shannon Leibowitz, 15, of Cooper City. Sandra Trinidad, Young At Art’s marketing coordinator, said the event’s main purpose is to build awareness about protecting the environment. The museum is constantly seeking donated recycled materials such as plastic bottles, fabrics, baskets, milk jugs and metals, to use for various projects throughout the year. For the fashion show, “We let [the teens] be a little more free this year in choosing what they wanted to do,’’ she said. The models strutted down the runway to music played by a live DJ, wearing their environmentally friendly designs. “I think it’s nice for them to learn not to be wasteful,’’ said parent Cindy O’Neil, of Plantation, who said her daughter worked hard alongside her best friend to come up with their creation made of garbage. Some parents sat anxiously waiting to see designs because they said their children wouldn’t let them sneak a peek before the show. “Their talent and creativity with recycling is amazing,’’ said parent Robin Kessler, of Coral Springs, during the intermission. Nearby, Jewel Bent watched closely as her daughter Amanda, 16, took to the runway wearing an outfit with a belt she made out of old compact discs tied together by a string. “I’m so proud of her,’’ Bent said. “It’s excellent.’’ Georgia East can be reached at geast@sunsentinel.com or 954-385-7921. HOLLYWOOD . He didn’t want her to go. So to stop her, police say, Thomas Tuer pinned his girlfriend down, suffocated her, and then wrapped her in a blanket before stuffing her in his motel room closet. Her decomposing body remained there for almost a month before police found it. Tuer, 51, was arrested Thursday night and charged with the murder of Deane Nandi Davis, 37. He was being held at the Broward County Jail in lieu of $750,000 bond Friday. On July 18, a manager who was about to evict Tuer from his Wilkirk Motel apartment because of foul odors coming from the place found Tuer unconscious and called police. Officers found Davis’ body in the closet. Police took Tuer to Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood, where he told investigators that Davis died a month earlier as he was trying to stop her from leaving, said Capt. Tony Rode, a police spokesman. The couple had an argument on June 22 and Tuer told detectives that he wrapped his arms around Davis’ body, pinning her to Tuer the floor, police said. Tuer stopped her from screaming by laying his body over her face, authorities said. Tuer told police he attempted to resuscitate Davis minutes after realizing she was not breathing. It didn’t work. Tuer admitted that he dug a hole behind the motel where he had intended to Davis bury Davis’ body hours before officers made the discovery, police said. “He took the manager’s wheelbarrow and went out back to the alley and started digging a shallow grave,” Rode said. “He says that it started to get daylight and he stopped because he thought someone might see him.” Tuer had been charged Monday with false imprisonment of an adult and for failing to report a death. Detectives had been waiting for results of Davis’ toxicology report before filing additional charges, Rode said. Though the medical examiner noted alcohol and barbiturates in Davis’ system, the dosage wasn’t enough to lead to her death, he said. Tuer has a long criminal record, including convictions for selling and possessing cocaine in 1990, burglary and battery in 1993, trespassing in 2000 and cocaine possession again in 2004. While Davis’ body was in the closet, police visited the apartment twice in two weeks to investigate reports of foul odors. Tuer told them he had vomited and there was rotting fruit in his room. Officers did not tell Tuer to let them search the room because they felt there wasn’t enough legal cause, Rode said. Davis’ mother, Marilyn, also stopped by Tuer’s apartment on July 5 after seeing her car in a parking lot nearby. Marilyn Davis had been searching for her daughter since June. “I think she had hope before she died — that’s why she wanted to leave,” said Marilyn Davis. “She thought she could start over again.” Deane Davis’ memorial is scheduled for 2 p.m. today at Fred Hunter’s Funeral Home at 6301 Taft St. in Hollywood. Andrew Tran can be reached at atran@sunsentinel.com or 954-356-4543. SB 02-12-2008 A-1 CMYK SB Broward County Edition WWW.SUN-SENTINEL.COM TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2008 DANGEROUS CURRENTS Offshore winds create rough conditions at S. Florida beaches 50¢ U.S. Latino population could triple by 2050 Iimmigration trends show a future much like Florida BY RUTH MORRIS STAFF WRITER CLOSE TO THE SHORE: Mike Mainella, 17, of Lake Worth, skimboards in the surf along Boynton Beach on Monday. Conditions were ripe for rip currents along South Florida’s beaches on Monday, and the risk for today is forecast as moderate to high. Photo/Josh Ritchie BY ANDREW BA TRAN STAFF WRITER Rip current safety Robert Koehler stepped into the ocean for the last time on the morning of Jan. 3, 2007. H i s b r o t h e r, R i c h a r d , glanced up from playing in the sand at the unguarded beach along Galt Ocean Mile and saw Robert, 70, bobbing in the ocean. When he looked up again, Robert was gone. Fifteen minutes later, Robert’s body washed onto the Fort Lauderdale sand. Authorities said Robert, who was visiting South Florida from Pennsylvania, had been swept up by a rip current and drowned after becoming exhausted from fighting the pull. “He was a great swimmer,” Richard said. “It just shows it can happen to anyone.” Rip currents can occur anyplace that has a shoreline, from the Indian Ocean to the Great Lakes. But in Florida, experts Rip currents can occur anywhere there’s a shoreline, from the Indian Ocean to the Great Lakes. In Florida, experts are at the forefront of current safety. � RIP CURRENTS CONTINUES ON 12A SOURCE: Florida Department of Environmental Protection, South Florida Sun-Sentinel staff research � IMMIGRATION CONTINUES ON 8A BEACH WARNING FLAGS HOW RIP CURRENTS FORM 1 After waves crash onto the beach, water flows to a narrow channel between sandbars. Sa Single red flag means hazardous waters, high surf and/or strong rip currents. To escape a rip current, swim parallel to the shore. nd ba r 2 A rip current occurs when the water rushes through the channel and out to the ocean. Rip cu rre Sa Look for a channel of churning, choppy water moving away from shore. Watch for seaweed or other debris moving with the current. Ch an Be ne Two flags means water closed to public. nt nd ba Stresses caution; moderate surf and/or rip currrents. r ac Dangerous marine life such as sea lice and jellyfish present. l h Signals calm waters. Staff graphic/Belinda Long-Ivey See what rip currents look like in a video at Sun-Sentinel.com/ripcurrents How to stay safe in water where there might be rip currents, 12A DAILY DIGEST INDEX Lottery: 2A Nation: 3A SUN-SENTINEL WEATHER People: 4A If current trends continue, immigrants and their descendants will account for 82 percent of the U.S. population increase by mid-century, driving shifts that will make the United States look a bit like, well, South Florida. Released Monday, a Pew Research Center study projected the nation’s Latino population would triple in size by 2050, to 29 percent of the U.S. population. Broward County is already well on its way to that marker, with a Hispanic population of 22.8 percent. In Palm Beach County, the percentage of Latinos stands at 16.7 percent, according to census data, and is rising. Miami-Dade surpasses both, with a Hispanic population of 61.3 percent of the county’s residents. “It’s not like this is new for us. We’ve been living this reality for many years now,” said Richard Ogburn, of the South Florida Regional Planning Council. He pointed out that he’s married to a Brazilian and works in an office where many of his colleagues come from the Caribbean. “I’m in it, for whatever comes,” he said. The study’s authors stressed their projections depend on several factors holding steady, including market forces World: 16A Today, 79 Editorials: 22A ANALYSIS Charging detainees in line with Bush’s unbending stance BY STEVEN LEE MYERS THE NEW YORK TIMES WASHINGTON . Harsh interrogations and Guantanamo Bay, secret prisons and warrantless eavesdropping, the war against al-Qaida and the one in Iraq. On issue after issue, President Bush has showed little indication that he will shrink from the most controversial decisions of his tenure. With the decision to charge six Guantanamo detainees with the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and to seek the death penalty for the crimes, many of those issues will now be back in the spotlight. In an election year, that appears to be exactly where Bush wants the focus to be. The White House said Monday that Bush had no role in the decision to file charges now against the six detainees, leaving the strategy for prosecuting them to the military. � POLICIES CONTINUES ON 9A Tonight, 72 Obituaries: 8B Tomorrow, 82 Sports: 1C Business: 1D Complete weather on back page of LOCAL Advice: 2E On TV: 3E Classified: 1F COMMUNITY NEWS ROUNDUP, 5B Ocean-themed art show in Lauderdale • Parkland animal-tethering law moves closer • Plantation Midtown Trolley expands NATION LOCAL SB 02-12-2008 A-12 CMYK 12A • SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • Tuesday, February 12, 2008 • SB Key to survival: Don’t panic � RIP CURRENTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A have been at the forefront of rip current safety, including creation of a rip current forecast system and a unified state beach flag program. Conditions were ripe for rip currents along South Florida beaches Monday, and the risk for Tuesday was forecast as moderate to high, said National Weather Service meteorologist Andy Tingler. The currents tend to form when the winds are coming in from the east: the more perpendicular to the shore, the greater the risk of formation. A break in a sandbar under the water creates a channel where the water moves out to sea more rapidly and forcefully. Surfers and lifeguards use rip currents to get to deeper water more quickly, but to an unsuspecting swimmer the sudden pull away from shore and apparent loss of control can be deadly. The key to survival is not to panic, said Eric Feld, a Delray Beach Ocean Rescue supervisor. He advises those who get caught up to swim parallel to the shore until they are outside the current, then swim back or yell for help. Deaths related to rip currents are rare in South Florida. Officials linked two Broward County drownings in 2007 to rip currents, three in Palm Beach County and one in Miami-Dade County, according to the National Weather Service. There were 22 such deaths in the region in 1988. But starting the next year, the figures began to drop. That was when two swimmers drowned at Miami Beach, catching the attention of Weather Service meteorologist Jim Lushine. “I wondered what the heck happened to them,” said Lushine, now retired. Lushine pored over weather data and noticed patterns. There were strong winds coming in from the east on the days people had drowned, as well as high tides and large swells. Prior to Lushine, rip currents and how they formed had been studied by geologists investigating how sand moved on and off beaches, but not by forecasters. “He’s the one who started looking at basically the weather conditions that create rip currents, not just recognizing they exist,” said Robert Molleda, the warning coordination meteorologist at the National Weather Service. Lushine created a scale that is in use today in Florida and across the country, according to the Weather Service. Based on wind direction, speed, swell, tide and recurrence, rip current danger is rated between 1 and 5, with five being the most dangerous. Forecasters calculate the rating before 6 a.m. every day, which helps lifeguards determine what color flag to post at their stations: green for clear, yellow for moderate danger and red for high risk. Hollywood lifeguards created their own flag scheme in the mid-1980s, said Capt. Pat Hendrick of the Hollywood Fire Rescue Beach Safety Division. “We started with colors associated with a traffic light to indicate the level of water danger,” he said. But the flag scheme differed from those used on other beaches around the state. In 2002, Florida became the first state to pass a law creating a uniform flag warning program that could be used on its state-run beaches, according to the Florida Coastal Management Program, a part of the state’s Department of Environmental Protection. The law was updated in 2005 to cover all public beaches, including those overseen by cities and towns. As of last February, 69 communities in Florida were using state-issued signs and flags. A new total will be tallied at the end of this month. Researchers aren’t stopping at warning systems. The Weather Service developed a radar prototype for the Army at a base in North Carolina, said Chung-hseng Wu, a coastal wave scientist for the National Weather Service. The radar could analyze the weather, waves and the ocean floor to predict where and when a rip current would form. It could also measure the force of the current. The technology was advanced but not practical for public use, Wu said. GOING AWAY? Read up. Speak out. MERRYFIELD MOTEL FOR PETS 954-771-4030 RIP CURRENT SAFETY TIPS FREE DAY - NEW CLIENTS Advice from the National Weather Service and South Florida lifeguards: FDIC-INSURED 5.01%* 4.57%* APY If you are caught in a rip current: Don’t fight the pull. Swim out of the rip current (parallel to the shore), float or tread water until help arrives. The current will eventually expire. Swim to shore then. Wave your arms, yell for help, but conserve energy. APY 1-YEAR CD 6-MONTH CD Currently offering 5%-10% BONUS on IRA, 401(K) & ANNUITIES** AVG. APY 8.38% If you see someone swept up in a rip current: Throw the victim something that floats. Yell instructions on how to escape. Be careful attempting to save the victim. People have drowned while trying to save someone else from a rip current. Call for an appt. today! Mon-Fri 9AM-5PM Plantation Hollywood Boynton Miramar Naples (954) 727-8257 (954) 961-2177 (561) 536-0505 (954) 874-2902 (239) 352-1004 Bonita Springs (239) 992-1320 Miami+ (305) 718-3450 General advice: Never swim alone. Be cautious, especially when swimming at unguarded beaches. Listen to orders from lifeguards. SE HABLA ESPANOL + Offices throughout Florida! The radar cost $25,000 and could only cover three miles of a stretch of beach. But tools and toys can’t beat a diligent lifeguard, Wu said. Staff Writer Joel Marino contributed to this report. Annual Percentage Yield (APY): $20,000 minimum deposit. Yield and deposit amount subject to availability. Penalty for early withdrawal. Deposits exceeding $50,000 may be eligible for yield other than advertised. 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Rated for SprintSpeed.™ Limited time only for your business account. Phone offer requires eligible upgrade (or new line activation) and two-year agreement. 1-800-SPRINT-1 sprint.com/nextel AVENTURA BOCA RATON BOYNTON BEACH CORAL SPRINGS DELRAY BEACH FT. LAUDERDALE MIRAMAR N. MIAMI BEACH PALM BEACH GARDENS PEMBROKE PINES PLANTATION POMPANO BEACH SUNRISE WELLINGTON WEST PALM BEACH PREFERRED DEALERS BOCA RATON BOYNTON BEACH CORAL SPRINGS DEERFIELD BEACH FT. LAUDERDALE HOLLYWOOD PEMBROKE PINES PLANTATION POMPANO BEACH SUNRISE WESTON ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� http://www.sun-sentinel.com/broadband/theedge/sfl-edge-n-ripcurrents,0,287974.flash • Tuesday, May 20, 2008 • SB www.sun-sentinel.com/features E LIFESTYLE MOVIEMAGIC WHERE‘SONOFRAMBOW’GOTITSSENSEOFWONDER.3E PL@Y ADVICE 2 • ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT 3 • TV 3 • MOVIES 4 • COMICS & PUZZLES 5-6 SECTION EDITOR GRETCHEN DAY BRYANT, 954-356-4718, gbryant@sun-sentinel.com YOUR GUIDE TO NEW MUSIC, DVDs, GAMES, SITES, DOWNLOADS . . . This year’s Florida SuperCon features an intergalactic smackdown as Batman, Trekkies and anime warriors go up against the stars of the Harry Potter films. Game on! BEST.CONVENTION. EVER. BY ANDREW BA TRAN STAFF WRITER H arry Potter, “the Boy Who Lived,” vs. Lion-O, the leader of the ThunderCats. “Two words and he’s dead: Avada Kedavra,” says Daniel Lewis, 24, referring to the killing curse that could take down the Sword of Omens-wielding feline. “Yeah, but Harry Potter never says that,” argues Nakia Mann, 32, noting the boy wizard would be morally against such curses, leaving him open to an attack. “He’ll tie Harry Potter up and punch him in his face. The owl’s going to come in and try to stop him, but Lion-O’s a cat, and he eats birds, so the owl is dead.” The pair argued loudly in War & Pieces, a comics and gaming store in Davie. Put enough fanboys (or girls) in one location and such fantastical arguments emerge — the kind that might be heard at the Florida SuperCon this Memorial Day weekend. The multi-genre convention is set in Weston, where so many different fans — anime, fantasy, comic books and cartoons — can show off their � SUPERCON CONTINUES ON 4E NEW THIS WEEK DVDs National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets Cranford The Muppet Show (season 3) JAG (season 6) Company WWE WrestleMania 24 Square Pegs (complete series) CDs “Harry Potter, please. It’s Batman. Dude took out Superman. Superman could break Harry Potter in half.” Warner Bros. photos 3 Doors Down, 3 Doors Down IF YOU GO What: Florida SuperCon Where: Hyatt Regency Bonaventure, 250 Racquet Club Road, Weston When: 5 p.m.-2 a.m. Friday; 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Saturday; 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday Ticket: Three-day pass, $30; single-day pass, $20 Information: floridasupercon.com Guests include: Brian O’Halloran (Dante Hicks from the Clerks movies); Natalia Tena (Nymphadora Tonks), Devon Murray (Seamus Finnegan) and Stanislav Ianevski (Viktor Krum) from the Harry Potter films; Larry Kenney, Lion-O from the ThunderCats cartoon; Dana Snyder, Master Shake from Aqua Teen Hunger Force cartoon; Georges Jeanty, artist for Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Season 8 comic; Dan Slott, writer for Amazing Spider-Man and She-Hulk The great debate: In Batman vs. Ironman who would win? Find out which superheros would triumph in the great comic-book geek debate. Sun-Sentinel.com/supercon TUNES SITE Birds do it, bees do it, slugs do it . . . bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/ lifeintheundergrowth s u n d a n c ec h a n n e l. c o m /g r e e n porno BY JAKE COYLE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Online video might still be relegated to relatively small screens, but the size is just right for bugs. No, we’re not talking about software bugs (though those viruses can indeed still rear their heads), but good ol’ insects. There are, naturally, numerous scientifically minded sites like bugbios.com throughout the Web, but insects are also finding star- watched a YouTube video documenting the mating rituals of leopard slugs in which two entwined slugs suspend themselves from a branch and fertilize each other in midair. Titled Slug Sex, the video was lifted from the thoroughly impressive BBC documentary series Life in the Undergrowth, hosted by David Attenborough. On YouTube, where so often the most popular videos tease sex or skin, the success of these slugs in love is both odd and perfectly fitting. Commenters have variously called it the “No. 1 love scene” and sarcastically wondered why YouTube would Donna Summer, Crayons Julianne Hough, Julianne Hough The Foxboro Hot Tubs, Stop Drop and Roll Flobots, Fight With Tools King’s X, XV Sonny Landreth, From the Reach Jesse McCartney, Departure GAMES Scarlett, baby, keep your day job Scarlett Johansson, Anywhere I Lay My Head (Atco) BY ANN POWERS LOS ANGELES TIMES Movie and TV stars have always made music — whether as a legitimate career stream (Rick Springfield), a relaxing side project (Kevin Bacon) or a presumably self-aware joke (William Shatner). But only rarely do thespian efforts in the recording studio make an impact on the shape of pop on a more grass-roots level. Right now, though, musically savvy ingenues are becoming a real force in the micro-universe of supergroovy music. The young actresses proving that they can define trends as skillfully as any blogging boy — Scarlett Johansson is the latest — embody new values for an unstable time. Ingenues such as Johansson rely more heavily on Age of Conan: Hyborian Adventures (Windows) Haze (Ubisoft) Top Spin 3 (Nintendo Wii, Nintendo DS, Xbox 360) SingStar (PlayStation 3) UEFA Euro 2008 (PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, Xbox 360, Windows, Sony PSP) Theatre of War SB 05-20-2008 E-4 ORIDA SUN-SENTINEL • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • Tuesday, May 20, 2008 • SB VIETIMES Times in bold e shows. Please e to confirm ules subject to dale E 10, 3401 NE auderdale ONLINE Read the latest movie reviews at Sun-Sentinel.com/ moviereviews, and go to Sun-Sentinel.com/ myreview to post your own. arnia: Prince 3:15, 4:20, 6:30, 40, 3:30, 4:40, gas (PG-13) 2:50, 0, 3, 4, 6:15, 7, 13) 3:10, 5:40, 2:35, 5, 7:20, 9:45 rshall (R) 4:50, X, 401 SW Lauderdale D: Safari in the 5 a.m., 2:45, 4:45 nture: River at , 1:45, 3:45, 5:45 AX Experience Prehistoric 45 O, 503 SE Sixth dale S GATEWAY, Blvd., Fort -763-7994) 13) 1:40, 3:40, 30, 3:20, 5:10, 7 U) 2, 5, 8 :50, 4:50, 7:20 M 15 AT LAS NT, 300 SW auderdale arnia: Prince , 2:15, 4:30, 5:15, gas (PG-13) 1:50, 5:50, 7:20, 8, 30, 2:10, 2:50, 45, 7:30, 8:20, 8 40, 2:20, 4:30, 13) 2:15, 4:45, 2:10, 4:20, 6:45 rshall (R) 1:45, 0, 7:40 dom (PG-13) 2:30, ape From Guan30 E-IN, 3291 W. ort Lauderdale 30, 9, 10:30 rshall (R) 8:30, ape From Guan30 13) 10:30 8:30, 10:20 gas (PG-13) 8:30, arnia: Prince 9, 11:05, 11:35 0, 9, 10:50, 11:20 10:45 dom (PG-13) 8:30, ears a Who! (G) ard O 18, 2315 N. y, Pompano 6008) arnia: Prince 0, 1:10, 2, 2:50, 6:50, 7:30, 8:20, 35 :40, 1:45, 2:30, 55, 7:45, 8:50, 9:35 REGAL MAGNOLIA STADIUM 16, 9645 Westview Drive, Coral Springs (954-345-4114) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) noon, 12:30, 1, 1:30, 2, 3:15, 3:45, 4:15, 4:45, 5:15, 6:30, 7, 7:30, 8, 8:30, 9:45, 10:15, 10:45 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:15, 2:15, 2:45, 4:35, 5:10, 7:10, 7:40, 9:40, 10:10 Speed Racer (PG) 12:20, 12:45, 3:15, 3:50, 7:15, 7:45, 10:25, 10:50 Iron Man (PG-13) 12:55, 1:25, 1:55, 4, 4:30, 5, 7:20, 7:50, 8:20, 10:20, 10:50 Made of Honor (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:05, 4:40, 7:05, 9:50 Baby Mama (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:30, 5:05, 7:55, 10:30 Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (R) 11:50 a.m., 2:20, 4:55, 8:05, 10:40 Forgetting Sarah Marshall (R) 12:50, 4:10, 7:25, 10:10 SUNRISE CINEMAS AT DEERFIELD MALL, 3984 W. Hillsboro Blvd., Deerfield Beach (954-571-2445) Paranoid Park (R) 1:50, 3:50, 5:50, 7:50 Young@Heart (PG) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15 Jellyfish (U) 1:10, 3:10, 7:10 Speed Racer (PG) 1, 4, 7 Then She Found Me (R) 1:20, 4:20, 7:20 Iron Man (PG-13) 1:30, 2:10, 4:30, 5:10, 7:30, 8:10 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1:40, 4:40, 7:40 Redbelt (R) 5:10 DEERFIELD CINEMAS 5, 2205 W. Hillsboro Blvd., Deerfield Beach (954-725-4402) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 1, 4, 7 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 88 Minutes (R) 1, 4, 7 Married Life (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 Deception (R) 1, 4, 7 West-Central Broward DAVIE, PLANTATION, SUNRISE, TAMARAC SUNRISE CINEMAS AT SUNRISE 11, 4321 Pine Island Road, Sunrise (954-748-0333) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 1:15, 2, 4:15, 5, 7:15, 8 Fugitive Pieces (R) 1:20, 4:20, 7:20 Speed Racer (PG) 12:55, 3:55, 7:05 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1:10, 3:20, 5:30, 7:40 Then She Found Me (R) 1:05, 3:10, 5:15, 7:20 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1:35, 4:35, 7:35 Iron Man (PG-13) 1, 1:30, 4, 4:30, 7, 7:30 Baby Mama (PG-13) 1:50, 4:50, 7:50 The Visitor (PG-13) 1:45, 4:45, 7:10 SUNRISE CINEMAS PLANTATION CROSS ROADS, 1870 N. University Drive, Plantation (954-473-6700) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 4:30, 7:30 Speed Racer (PG) 4:20, 7:15 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 4:50, 7 Iron Man (PG-13) 4:40, 7:45 AMC RIDGE PLAZA 8, 9200 State Road 84, Davie (954-475-8407) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 1:40, 2:10, 4:50, 5:15, 8, 8:20 Speed Racer (PG) 1:30, 2, 5:05, 8:10 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1:50, 4:20, 6:50 Iron Man (PG-13) 2:20, 4:30, 5:10, 7:20, 8:05 Made of Honor (PG-13) 2:30, 5, 7:30 Baby Mama (PG-13) 2:40, 5:15, 7:40 South Broward HOLLYWOOD, PEMBROKE PINES MUVICO PARADISE 24, 15601 Sheridan St., Davie (954-680-0171) How the Garcia Girls Spent Their Summer (R) 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 10:30 The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 11:05 a.m., 11:50 a.m., 12:40, 1:10, 1:50, 2:30, 3:15, 4, 4:35, 5:15, 5:55, 6:40, 7:20, 8, 8:40, 9:20, 10:05, 10:35 Redbelt (R) 8:10, 10:35 Speed Racer (PG) noon, 12:35, 1:15, 1:50, 3:05, 3:50, 4:25, 5, 6:25, 7, 7:35, 9:35, 10:15, 10:35 Then She Found Me (R) 11 a.m., 1:20, 3:40, 6, 8:15, 10:30 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 12:10, 1:05, 1:55, 2:45, 3:30, 4:30, 5:25, 6:15, 7:05, 7:55, 8:50, 9:40, 10:35 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1, 3:35, 6:10, 8:45 Iron Man (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 11:55 a.m., 12:45, 1:10, 1:45, 2:20, 2:55, 3:35, 4:10, 4:45, 5:20, 5:50, 6:25, 7:10, 7:45, 8:20, 8:55, 9:15, 10:10, 10:35 Baby Mama (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:25, 10 Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (R) 12:05, 2:40, 5:10, 7:50, 10:25 Forgetting Sarah Marshall (R) 12:25, 3:10, 6:05, 8:40 The Forbidden Kingdom (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:30, 5:20, 8, 10:30 REGAL OAKWOOD STADIUM 18, 2800 Oakwood Blvd., Hollywood (954-923-7777) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) noon, 12:30, 1, 1:30, 2, 3:15, 3:45, 4:15, 4:45, 5:15, 6:30, 7, 7:30, 8, 8:30, 9:45, 10:15 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 12:10, 12:45, 2:45, 3:20, 5:20, 7, 7:45, 9:40, 10:10 Speed Racer (PG) 11:55 a.m., 12:25, 3:25, 3:55, 6:55, 7:20, 10:15, 10:35 Iron Man (PG-13) 5 Redbelt (R) 12:15, 5:10, 10:10 Iron Man (PG-13) 12:05, 12:55, 1:25, 1:55, 3:05, 4, 4:30, 6:10, 7:05, 7:35, 8:05, 9:10, 10, 10:30 Made of Honor (PG-13) 12:35, 3:10, 7:10, 9:35 Baby Mama (PG-13) 11:55 a.m., 2:30, 5:15, 7:40, 10:05 The Forbidden Kingdom (PG-13) 2:35, 7:35 88 Minutes (R) 1:05, 4:05, 6:50, 9:25 Forgetting Sarah Marshall (R) 1:20, 4, 6:55, 9:30 FLIPPER’S HOLLYWOOD CINEMA 10, 7001 Taft St., Hollywood (954-981-5443) The Forbidden Kingdom (PG-13) 12:25, 2:45, 4:55, 7:10, 9:20, 11:30 Baby Mama (PG-13) 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15, 11:15 Iron Man (PG-13) 12:40, 1:45, 3:05, 4:05, 5:30, 6:45, 8, 9:30, 10:30, 11:55 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1:25, 3:25, 5:25, 7:25, 9:35, 11:45 Speed Racer (PG) 1:05, 2, 3:45, 4:45, 6:25, 7:30, 9:05, 10:05, 11:40 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1:20, 3:20, 5:20, 7:20, 9:20, 11:20 The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 12:05, 1:35, 2:50, 4:20, 5:45, 7:05, 8:30, 9:50, 11:15 REGAL WESTFORK STADIUM 13, 15977 W. Pines Blvd., Pembroke Pines (954-430-5505) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) noon, 12:30, 1, 1:30, 3:15, 3:45, 4:15, 4:45, 6:30, 7, 7:30, 8, 9:45, 10:15, 10:45 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 12:50, 2:15, 3:25, 4:50, 6, 7:25, 8:35, 10 Speed Racer (PG) 11:45 a.m., 1:15, 2:55, 4:30, 6:10, 7:45, 9:25 Iron Man (PG-13) 12:05, 1:05, 2:05, 3:10, 4:10, 5:10, 6:15, 7:15, 8:15, 9:20, 10:20 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1:25, 4:05, 6:45, 9:30 Baby Mama (PG-13) 1:10, 3:40, 6:20, 8:55 North Dade AMC AVENTURA 24, 19501 Biscayne Blvd., Aventura Iron Man (PG-13) 12:40, 1:20, 2, 2:55, 3:35, 4:20, 5, 5:55, 6:25, 7:20, 8, 9, 9:15 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1, 4, 7, 9:25 Baby Mama (PG-13) 3:10, 5:35, 7:55 Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (R) 4:40 The Forbidden Kingdom (PG-13) 12:35, 3:25, 6:55, 9:30 Prom Night (PG-13) 1:25, 4:45, 7:45 Street Kings (R) 1:35, 7:15 Meet the Browns (PG-13) 1:10, 4:35, 7:10 SUNRISE CINEMAS INTRACOASTAL MALL, 3701 NE 163rd St, North Miami Beach (305-949-0064) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 1:20, 4:20, 7:20 Speed Racer (PG) 1, 4, 7 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1:15, 3:15, 5:25, 7:40 Then She Found Me (R) 1:10, 3:15, 5:20, 7:30 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1:50, 4:40, 7 Iron Man (PG-13) 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 Fugitive Pieces (R) 12:55, 3, 5:15, 7:25 The Visitor (PG-13) 1:10, 3:10, 5:10, 7:20 South Palm BOCA RATON, DELRAY BEACH SUNRISE CINEMAS MIZNER PARK, 301 Plaza Real, Boca Raton (561-368-7744) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 1:20, 4:20, 7:20 Son of Rambow (PG-13) 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40 Speed Racer (PG) 1, 4, 7 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1:10, 3:20, 5:30, 7:40 Then She Found Me (R) 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1:15, 3:30, 5:35, 7:50 Iron Man (PG-13) 1:30, 4:30, 7:20 Forgetting Sarah Marshall (R) 2, 5, 8 MOVIES OF DELRAY, 7421 W. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561-638-0020) What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1, 4, 7, 9:05 The Counterfeiters (R) 1, 4, 7, 9:05 Iron Man (PG-13) 1, 4, 7, 9:10 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1, 4, 7, 9:05 Married Life (PG-13) 1, 4, 7, 9:05 MUVICO PALACE 20, 3200 Airport Road, Boca Raton (561-395-9009) Hats Off (U) 12:05, 2:10, 4:15, 6:20, 8:20, 10:30 The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 12:20, 1:10, 2, 2:45, 3:40, 4:30, 5:20, 6, 7, 7:50, 8:40, 9:15, 10:20 Redbelt (R) 6, 8:20, 10:35 Speed Racer (PG) noon, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10 Then She Found Me (R) 1:20, 3:30, 5:45, 7:55, 10:15 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 12:10, 1:15, 1:55, 2:45, 3:45, 4:20, 5:10, 6:15, 7:15, 7:40, 8:45, 9:45, 10:30 Made of Honor (PG-13) noon, 2:25, 3:10, 4:50, 7:30, 8:05, 10:05 Iron Man (PG-13) 12:30, 1:05, 2:05, 2:50, 3:25, 4:15, 5, 5:45, 6:30, 7:20, 8, 8:45, 9:30, 10:15 Baby Mama (PG-13) 12:30, 3, 5:30, 7:55, 10:25 Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (R) 12:45, 5:35, 10:35 Forgetting Sarah Marshall (R) 1:50, 4:25, 7:10, 9:55 PREMIER AT MUVICO PALACE 20, 3200 Airport Road, Boca Raton (561-395-6516) The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (PG) 12:20, 1:10, 2, 2:45, 3:40, 4:30, 5:20, 6, 7, 7:50, 8:40, 9:15, 10:20 What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1:55, 4:20, 7:15, 9:45 Iron Man (PG-13) 12:30, 3:25, 6:30, 9:30 DELRAY SQUARE CINEMAS, 4809 W. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach (561-499-9022) What Happens in Vegas (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 The Counterfeiters (R) 1, 4, 7 Jellyfish (U) 1, 4, 7 Made of Honor (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 Deception (R) 1, 4, 7 REGAL DELRAY BEACH 18, 1660 Such matchups are not unprecedented � SUPERCON CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1E costumes, buy replica memorabilia, or meet actors from assorted cartoons or movies. The voice actor behind Lion-O, a character in a cartoon from the ’80s, and several actors from the Harry Potter film series are scheduled to appear — which prompted the discussion on what would happen if the characters ever met. Such matchups are not unprecedented: A d a m We s t ’ s B a t m a n once teamed with ScoobyDoo to take down a pack of thieves. Mork without Mindy perplexed Richie in Happy Days, and arcade game p l a y e r s p i t S p i d e r- M a n against Street Fighter’s Ryu. An X-Men character once rammed the Starship Enterprise. “Did he just . . . punch my ship?” asked a confused Captain James T. Kirk in a one-issue comic book. Batman once beat Predator and Alien, but could he wallop Harry Potter? “Batman would win because he is the knight,” said JoAnn Minieri, a 25-year-old employee at Tate’s Comics store in Lauderhill. “Harry Potter!” called out customer Ben Cherniachovsky, 24, of Sunrise. “Harry Potter, please. It’s Batman. Dude took out Superman. Superman could break Harry Potter in half.” “Harry Potter wouldn’t give him the chance to get near him.” “Dude, Harry Potter would see him and pee his pants. Harry Potter ’s like half his size.” “So what? He beat Voldemort. And Voldemort, you know, would take down Batman in two seconds.” “Are you serious? Are you seriously having this conversation?” SuperCon organizer Mike Broder said maybe as many as 4,500 visitors will attend the third annual gathering. This is the first year the convention has branched out to Harry Potter fans. “ When I asked the kids Brian O’Halloran, (Dante Hicks) of the Clerks films, and Natalia Tena (Nymphadora Tonks), of the Harry Potter movies, are set to attend. who they wanted to see, they were always asking me to bring in Harry Potter-esque attractions,” he said. “It’s the most recent mythology and everyone’s read those books and seen those movies.” Visitors will get to watch The Wizard Rockumentary: A Movie About Rocking and Rowling, a documentary featuring Harry Potter fandom and the rise of Wizard rock. Live bands such as the Gryffindor Common Room Rejects also are slated to play. Broder said fans can still look forward to typical events: the costume contests, the comic book artists and writers, the anime discussion panels. Superheroes aside, who has the hardest core following? Anime, Trekkie, Comic or Harry Potter. “Comic book fan,” said Lewis, with a few people in the War & Pieces store nodding in agreement. “A r e y o u g u y s c r a z y ? Trekkies are insane. He’ll be in real Klingon garb with a real weapon. He will kill someone,” said Mann. “The typical comic book fan, he’s 250 pounds, he can absorb blows, but he can’t absorb a killing blow,” he said. “He’ll be cut in the stomach, gravy’s gonna come out, he’s gonna be ‘Awwww, worst fight ever.’ ” Andrew Ba Tran can be reached at atran@sunsentinel.com or 954-356-4543. Tom Waits reimagined with very mixed results � SCARLETT CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1E avant-garde and the commercial sphere where redcarpet shots define one’s value. SB » WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2009 » SUNSENTINEL.COM » SUN SENTINEL » 3B South Florida For continuous updates and more local news, go online to SunSentinel.com AIRPORT RUNWAY BATTLE ROLLS ON Dania to challenge expansion By Andrew Ba Tran STAFF WRITER DANIA BEACH » The City Commis- sion voted unanimously Tuesday night to legally challenge the expansion of the Fort LauderdaleHollywood International Airport. The vote was in response to the Federal Aviation Administration’s decision last month supporting a $810 million plan backed by Broward County commissioners. The project, set for completion in 2014, would expand the southern runway above Federal Highway into the wetlands next to Port Everglades. City officials have opposed the expansion for almost two decades, arguing that noise and pollution would adversely affect 2,500 residents of the city’s north side. They also say it would have a negative impact on the environment. "We’ll ask a federal court to remove the FAA decision, which we believe is profoundly flawed," said special legal counsel Neil McAliley. A rejected north runway option was admittedly "the environmentally preferred option," according to the FAA decision, but the ex- Dania is the last city standing after Davie, Hollywood bow out tended south runway best met its goal to "provide a safe, efficient and integrated system of publicuse airports." Dania Beach is the last city challenging the runway expansion after Davie and Hollywood recently announced they would not consider legal options. Several people at the commission meeting voiced their approval for the legal action and applauded after the unanimous vote. "We feel good, we feel confident," said Rae Sandler, president of the Melaleuca Gardens Home- owner’s Association. One resident who declined to clap was Vic Lohman, 45, a home builder who asked the commission what the legal cost versus benefit was for the city. "I’m just trying to be practical," he said after the meeting. "I’m not saying I don’t support the lawsuit. But I just want to have a discussion on how much this could cost us down the line and whether it’s worth it." Andrew Ba Tran can be reached at atran@SunSentinel.com or 954-385-7912. DISTANT STRUGGLE DIVIDES US AT HOME Budget cuts kill housing project Hollywood senior complex has longshot last hope By Josh Hafenbrack TALLAHASSEE BUREAU Mike Stocker, Sun Sentinel Hundreds of pro-Israel and pro-Palestine demonstrators gathered Tuesday at the corner of Broward Boulevard and Third Avenue to scream and threaten each other from behind police barricades. In the Gaza Strip, fighting between Israeli troops and Hamas fighters continued for a 19th day. TALLAHASSEE » A 120-unit senior rental complex in Hollywood will be canceled as a result of state budget cuts being finalized in the state capital today, the project developer said. Crews were scheduled to begin construction in May on The Gardens at Driftwood, a 55-and-older rental complex with one- and twobedroom units ranging from $346 to $898 a month, developer Marc Plonskier said. But without $8 million in state funding from an affordable-housing trust fund legislators are expected to eliminate today, the project can’t go forward, Plonskier said. The project’s longshot last hope is Gov. Charlie Crist, who could use his line-item veto power to restore funding to this development and others contained in the $190 million trust fund set aside to build moderately priced apartments and houses. Product: FLSUN PubDate: 07-11-2007 SB 07-11-2007 Zone: SB Edition: 1 Page: LOCALF@1 User: twheatley Time: 07-10-2007 23:59 Color: C K Y M B-1 CMYK • Wednesday, July 11, 2007 • SB LOCAL www.sun-sentinel.com/broward BE COMMUNITYNEWSROUNDUP INSIDE,4-5B BULLETIN BOARD 2 • COMMUNITY NEWS 4-5 • OBITUARIES 8-9 • WEATHER 10 SECTION EDITOR DANA BANKER, 954-356-4681, dbanker@sun-sentinel.com Woman charged in newborn death Deputies find body in trash outside Oakland Park home BY SOFIA SANTANA AND MACOLLVIE JEAN-FRANCOIS S TA F F W R I T E R S OAKLAND PARK . A young woman who apparently hid her pregnancy was charged Tuesday with first-degree murder in the suffocation death of her newborn, found Saturday in a trash can outside the mother’s North Andrews Gardens home. Investigators say Lindsey Christine Scott, 22, placed the live, unwanted baby in a plastic trash bag, tied it and put it in the garbage can, where the baby died. Scott was arrested as she was discharged from Holy Cross Hospital in Fort Lauderdale, where she was taken Saturday after collapsing at her home during a bout of vomiting and heavy bleeding following the birth, the Broward Sheriff’s Office said. At the hospital, Scott said she had given birth, prompting the staff to notify the Sheriff’s Office, whose deputies found the dead baby, officials said. Only after investigators pulled the tiny, bloodied body out of the trash did neighbors realize someone at the home in the 300 block of Northwest 46th Court had been pregnant. A career of loving care Longtime groundskeeper helps preserve Stranahan House with meticulous cleaning. CLEANING UP: John Della-Cerra, a groundskeeper for the historic Stranahan House in Fort Lauderdale, scrubs a railing on the home’s porch. “Between the moisture and the dust blowing around, it gets dirty quickly,” Della-Cerra said. Photos/Rhonda Vanover ONLINE Go to Sun-Sentinel.com/Broward for a video report on the groundskeeper’s labor of love at the 106-year-old landmark building. Scott’s parents, Charles and Kristin Scott, could not be reached for comment Tuesday night. “They’re very quiet people,” longtime neighbor Errol Silpat, 48, said earlier this week of the Scott family, echoing several other neighbors who said they were saddened by the � SCOTT CONTINUES ON 2B A flip decision? Well, yes and no Davie officials say it’s legal to toss a coin to award a contract BY SUSANNAH BRYAN S TA F F W R I T E R enough concrete around here.” Della-Cerra seems to consider his responsibilities beyond that of a job, said Barbara Keith, executive director of the Stranahan House Inc., which has run the property since 1981. “He loves this house and it shows in the way it looks,” she said. “It’s a labor of love for him.” Keith said she has had to chide Della-Cerra occasionally to make sure he puts in for all the over- DAVIE . The flip of a coin can swing the fate of so many things. A childhood bet. Who kicks off the game on Super Bowl Sunday. And in Davie, it can determine who wins town business. A selection committee of town staff resorted to a coin toss to break a 3-3 tie over which vendor would win a one-year contract to run the town’s aquatics program. The deadlock was between the Boca Swim Academy, which had offered to pay $18,000 a year for exclusive use of town pools, and the Florida Swim Academy, which had offered to pay $14,400. Contract price was not driving the decision, but rather which company was better qualified. The Florida Swim Academy lost. Company owner Karen King has vowed to complain to council members before they approve the contract on July 18. Her Coral Springs company, whose contract ends Sept. 30, has provided swim lessons at Davie’s two pools for more than a decade. “I’m so stunned,” King said. “Thirteen years of work went to a coin toss.” Gayle Frechette, vice president of the Boca Swim Academy in Coconut Creek, thought the whole thing quite fair. “It certainly could have gone either way,” she said. Leaders in other cities were both amused and astounded over the coin toss decision. “That’s Davie,” quipped Deerfield Beach Mayor Al Capellini. Weston has never flipped a coin — or had a tie, sniffed city spokeswoman Denise Barrett. “ You’re kidding,” Lauderhill Mayor Richard Kaplan said between hee-haws. “They did a coin toss?” With the selection committee’s seventh member absent on June 22, and no one to break the tie after a second vote failed to � STRANAHAN CONTINUES ON 2B � TOSS CONTINUES ON 6B JOB PRESSURE: Water restrictions now require Della-Cerra to use a high-pressure hose when washing Stranahan House, which he fears will damage the paint. Frequent cleanings are necessary because of saltwater, mold and the oil from boats passing by on the New River in Fort Lauderdale. BY ANDREW TRAN S TA F F W R I T E R Washing the Stranahan House with a pressure cleaner might seem like washing a tea cup with a fire hose. Water restrictions instituted earlier this year require John Della-Cerra to clean the historic building with an electric-powered high-pressure hose, which could damage the paint if he’s not careful. For the past 17 years, the soft-spoken groundskeeper had used a regular hose when he soaped and scrubbed the exterior every three weeks or so. “A filthy house is disgusting,” Della-Cerra, 67, said Tuesday. The house sits at a unique location, soaking fuel fumes from passing boats on the New River and from cars driving through the Federal Highway tunnel below. Plus, the 106-year-old building that serves as a museum is surrounded by constant construction projects. “Between the moisture and the dust blowing around, it gets dirty quickly,” Della-Cerra said. Della-Cerra was a teenager when he first visited the Stranahan House in 1957, when it was a restaurant. Now, the Fort Lauderdale native is helping preserve it and tell its stories. “The Seminoles used to sleep up here on the balcony when they came to trade. They’d park their canoes right over there,” he said, pointing to the gravel lot of a future high-rise condominium building. “I don’t know why they don’t make that a park. We’ve got Law puts property rights at risk Suit filed over cockfights You have lived in your waterfront condo for 20 years. You paid compara- ONLINE Webcast company because cockfights are an accepted and legal part of Puerto cal or artistic value.” David O. Markus, a Miami SB 07-11-2007 B-2 CMYK 2B • SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL • SUN-SENTINEL.COM • Wednesday, July 11, 2007 • SB Groundskeeper loves keeping house clean � STRANAHAN CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B time he works. “I’m very slow, no doubt about it,” said the Army veteran with close-cropped brown-gray hair. “But it’s a fun job and I like to go my own pace.” The Stranahan House is a sturdy building that was built to last. “It’s made from Dade County pine — impervious to termites,” he says proudly, giving a tour of the building in his rubber cleaning gloves and boots. He shows the closets built into the wall, which enabled the residents to avoid having to pay extra taxes. When the house was built, people were taxed per room. Here are the steep stairs that the late Ivy Stranahan would climb to get to her living space in the attic well into her 80s, after her husband Frank died and she rented out the other rooms in the 1960s. The couple built the house in 1901 and for a while it was a trading post for settlers and Seminoles. There is the bed that somehow gets sat on in the middle of the night even though the building is locked, DellaCerra said. “Some people say the place is haunted,” he says, shrug- HANDS-ON WORK: John Della-Cerra washes Stranahan House by hand and with the use of a power-washer twice a month. “I’m very slow, no doubt about it,” Della-Cerra said. “But it’s a fun job and I like to go my own pace.” Photo/Rhonda Vanover ging. “I try not to think about it.” Things that people do at the Stranahan home that bothers him: track in dirt, sit on the furniture, smoke inside, or try to break in. “I had to put in a trapdoor to the balcony because homeless people would try to climb up to the balcony and sleep.” he said. Della-Cerra understands the temptation. His favorite part of the house is out on the balcony. Sometimes, late at night, after he’s cleaned up after some get-together, he’ll climb up and stare at the river. It’ll be quiet, just him and the ghosts of Fort Lauderdale. For a few moments, he can imagine what the city was like before it was a city. “It’s so peaceful,” he said. “I think to myself what a little jewel this is in this big town.” Andrew Tran can be reached at atran@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4543. 90 percent of unit owners can force sale of building � CONDO CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B anything so drastic. Lawmakers this year resurrected the measure but added what sponsors call a safety net: if 10 percent or more of owners object, the building can’t be sold. Still, one person could no longer block the sale. “People all over the state might be out of their homes,” said Gayle Wardner of Sarasota, who crusaded against passage of the law. “When the market turns, we’ll all be sitting ducks.” Jan Bergemann, president of Cyber Citizens for Justice, said it is “amazing that the Legislature, after making such a fuss [in opposition to] eminent domain last year, now passes a bill that allows a majority to kick a minority out of their homes for plain greed and profit!” But should one person have the right to stand in the way? It depends on your perspective, said Donna Berger, executive director of the Community Advocacy Network. “Some longtime residents who don’t wish to be displaced from their units may see this bill solely as a benefit for developers, while other common interest owners will applaud the fact that they are now more empowered to freely convey their real property interests.” Crist also signed into law bills that, among other things, let at least three condo and co-op buildings join in selfinsurance pools to save on insurance (HB 7031); let a homeowner association whose documents expired again become a homeowner association, even if residents bought there during the lull specifically because there was no association (CS/SB 902); and requires homeowner association boards to give owners 90 days to pay any unpaid assessments before foreclosing—but also, as in condos, makes owners responsible for interest, late fees and attorneys’ fees (CS/SB 1844). Q&A Q. Parking spaces are always an issue in associationrun communities, but here’s an unusual one described by a disabled reader in Pembroke Pines. Her assigned spot is far from her apartment. Two neighbors who don’t drive offered to let her park briefly once or twice a week in their spaces so she can unload groceries. The board, however, says she can’t use their spots. Is this legal, she asks. A. David Harris, a Miami attorney involved in condo issues since 1997, said that “unless specifically disallowed in the documents, there is likely no restriction on one unit owner consenting to another unit owner’s [very] temporary use of a parking space, and it would likely be an improper use of the association’s resources to attempt to restrict such activity.” Owners should be aware, however, he adds, that “spaceswapping,” “space-renting” or use of guest spaces may violate an association rule. Staff Writer Joe Kollin discusses condo and homeowner association issues in this space every other Wednesday. Please let us know those issues that concern you. E-mail jkollin@ sun-sentinel.com or call 954-385-7913 in Broward or 561-243-6503 in Palm Beach County. Kollin has been covering association issues in the Sun-Sentinel since 1986. Deputy arrived in nick of time, tapes say BY BRIAN HAAS S TA F F W R I T E R By the time Deputy Gregory Stanley arrived at the Tamarac home, a knife-wielding man had already stabbed two people. Stanley had been praised by his superiors at the Sheriff’s Office in mostly above-average yearly reviews for his cool u n d e r f i r e . O n S u n d a y, h e needed it. That morning, Stanley shot and killed Mario Cruz, 27, after authorities say Cruz attacked his ex-girlfriend and her roommate before charging the deputy with knives. Stanley, 34, has a clean record at the Sheriff’s Office, according to his personnel file. He is on paid leave, as is routine when deputies are involved in shootings. The dispute began about 6 a.m. when Maria Borrero, 21, called 911 to complain that Cruz, her former boyfriend, was outside her home in the 7100 block of Southgate Boulevard, banging on windows and refus- ing to leave. Borrero was calm at first, the 911 recording shows. “He’s not welcome to my house and he knows that. He was trying to get into my house and he’s not letting me or my roommates sleep,” Borrero told a dispatcher. “He’s knocking on my windows. I’ve been telling him to leave for the past hour and he hasn’t been listening.” Borrero then calmly added, “And I’m sure he might be violent.” As the call went on, the noise in the background intensified. The dispatcher asked if it was Cruz making the noise. Then there was a huge crash. “Oh my God, he just broke my window!” Borrero yelled. The recording becomes chaotic as Borrero can be heard yelling at Cruz to leave. She screamed. “He has a knife, he has a knife and he’s just stabbing me!” Borrero yelled to the disp a t c h e r. “ M a ’ a m , h e j u s t stabbed us.” Her last words to the dispatcher were pleas for help: “Oh my God, help, help ... please we need help! Help!” When Stanley arrived, authorities say Cruz was chasing Borrero with two knives in his hands. The Sheriff’s Office said Stanley ordered Cruz to stop and drop the weapons, but he ignored the order and charged at the deputy. Stanley fired, killing Cruz. Borrero and her roommate, Kavon Lee Nikfar, 29, were critically wounded. Borrero has since been released from the hospital. Officials at North Broward Medical Center had no information on Nikfar’s status. The shooting of Cruz was the fourth fatal police shooting in Broward County this year, all of which have involved the Sheriff’s Office. Brian Haas can be reached at bhaas@Sun-Sentinel.com or 954-356-4597. BULLETIN BOARD COMPILED BY ANNA BEACH Today’s highlights ENTERTAINMENT No Reservations, sneak preview of the movie starring Catherine ZetaJones, 6 p.m. at Cinema Paradiso, 503 SE Sixth St., Fort Lauderdale. $5; FLIFF members free. Seating first-come, first-served. Call 954-525-3456. On the Broadwalk series, featuring country music with Gone South, 7:30-9 p.m. at Hollywood Beach Theater, Johnson Street and the Broadwalk. Free. Call 954-921-3404. SENIORS Sing-a-long with Myra Wells and Friends, 10-11:30 a.m. at Northeast Focal Point Senior Center, 227 NW Second St., Deerfield Beach. Call 954-480-4449. KIDS/FAMILIES Digital photography for teens, workshop with photographer Steve Vinik, 2-4 p.m. at the Main Library, 100 S. Andrews Ave., eighth floor/8C, Fort Lauderdale. Ages 13 and older. Free. Call 954-357-5589. Craft Attack! 2-3:30 p.m. at Imperial Point Branch Library, 5985 N. Federal Highway, Fort Lauderdale. Ages 12-18. Free. Call 954-492-1881. Harry Potter movie, for ages 13 and older, 6-8 p.m. at Northwest Regional Library, 3151 University Drive, Coral Springs. Call 954-341-3900. LECTURES “Women’s Back Basics: Achieving a Healthier Spine,” in the Women’s Health Summer Lecture Series, 7-8 p.m. at Cleveland Clinic, Jagelman Conference Center, 2950 Cleveland Clinic Blvd., Weston. Free. Register by calling 800-691-6555. WATER RESTRICTIONS Strict water rules are in effect. YARD-WATERING ONE DAY A WEEK Odd-numbered addresses: 4 to 8 a.m. Saturdays Even-numbered addresses: 4 to 8 a.m. Sundays Watering by hand with one hose and an automatic shut-off nozzle: 5 to 7 p.m. the same day. WASHING CARS, BOATS: Allowed 4 to 8 a.m. and 5 to 7 p.m. on same day allowed for watering the yard. Must use a hose with an automatic shut-off nozzle and drain to a surface where the ground can absorb the water. Rinsing of boats after saltwater use limited to 15 minutes a day per boat. Rinsing of salt spray from vehicles in coastal areas limited to 2 minutes a day per vehicle. For information, call the Water Management District’s water conservation hotline at 800-662-8876. S O U R C E : S O U T H F L O R I D A WA T E R MANAGEMENT DISTRICT IN THE PAPER South Florida Skin Care Local skin care companies sound off on protecting your skin in our sub-tropical climate. TODAY IN LIFESTYLE