6-25-15

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The Oracle THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 2015 I VOL. 52 NO. 129

Inside this Issue

www.usforacle.com

The Index

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

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

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA

Students display unity after USF projects survive vetoes Charleston attack in final budget By Russell Nay A S S T .

N E W S

E D I T O R

LI F E STYLE

The best and the worst of this summer’s hit songs. Page 4

Montage

S PORTS O’Neal makes U.S. national team. BACK ORACLE PHOTO/CHRISTOPHER COLLIER

n Ionia Knott recited her poem, titled “The Other Child,” to the crowd of more than 125 people in the SVC breezeway Wednesday evening, coming together with students for a vigil in memory of the nine victims of last week’s shooting in Charleston, South Carolina. See PAGE 3 for full story.

Researchers rescue missing boater By Russell Nay A S S T .

N E W S

E D I T O R

The crew and some of the students aboard a Florida Institute of Oceanography (FIO) research vessel likely had no idea they would help save a man’s life on the last day of their research cruise. Around 9 p.m. on Saturday night, the U.S. Coast Guard issued an urgency broadcast signal indicating there were three boaters separated from their boat in the Gulf of Mexico between Egmont and Passage Keys, which is one to two miles from the closest coastline. While the Coast Guard was able to quickly rescue two of the three boaters, the third remained separated from the others and adrift in the dark waters of the Gulf. Realizing the man was near-

n See RESCUE on PAGE 2

Researchers from the Florida Institute of Oceanography housed at USF assisted the U.S. Coast Guard to save a man from the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday night. PHOTO PROVIDED BY MARK COLLINS

While Gov. Rick Scott signed the largest state budget in Florida’s history of $78.2 billion on Tuesday morning, Scott also made the most expensive vetoes of any Florida governor, amounting to approximately $461 million in cut projects and programs from the Legislature’s approved budget. The final budget includes no increases to tuition rates and a historic level of funding for state universities totaling $4.5 billion, a $178.2 million increase from last year. New tax cuts include a firstever elimination of sales tax on the purchase of college textbooks for one year, which is expected to save Florida’s students $43.7 million according to the governor’s transmittal letter. The budget also provides for a 10-day back to school sales tax holiday Aug. 7-16 this year, which will allow for tax-free purchases on school supplies and is projected to save Floridians $67.8 million. Performance-based funding, money awarded to colleges and universities based on mutually agreed upon metrics of student success, has grown to $400 million for the State University System (SUS), marking a $100 million increase in new state revenue. For individual state universities and colleges, the new budget has likely garnered mixed reactions, and while some schools’ projects were funded in full, others did not survive Scott’s veto pen. USF’s two largest funding requests, $17 million for building the Morsani College of Medicine downtown and $12.3 million for finishing the construction of the USF St. Petersburg’s Kate

n See VETOES on PAGE 3


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6-25-15 by USF Oracle - Issuu