Every year, UCF's students and faculty get more diverse. One of UCF's top-five goals is to become more inclusive and diverse, and the university's leaders are trying to make strides in that direction. The Student Government Association and the Office of Diversity Initiatives have joined together to instruct all members of SGA in diversity training.
On March 29, the Campus Freethought Alliance will sponsor a debate about the existence of God, which will pit Edward Tabash of the Center for Inquiry against Rev. Joel A. Reif from the First United Church of Christ of Orlando. The debate will be a five-part question-and-answer format, with the speakers fielding questions from each other and audience members.
UCF and University of California Riverside professors are a little closer to having the ability to solve numerous biological and environmental problems after their latest molecular discovery. Talat Rahman, the chair of the physics department at UCF, worked on the project with Sergei Stolbov, also of UCF, and University of California Riverside professor Ludwig Bartels, as well as others.
Cpl. Carlos Maxwell with the UCF police sat restlessly in front of his office computer working on his latest sketch profile. Sketching had become a second nature to him. Beginning with the basics, he asked questions like 'What race or background is he' and 'What is his height and weight.
SGA elections end today Today is the last chance for students to vote for the next president and vice president of the Student Government Association, unless there is a runoff. If no ticket obtains at least 50 percent of the vote, there will be a runoff election between the tickets with the highest vote totals.
NEW DELHI - Indian police released sketches Tuesday of two men suspected of planting the bombs that sparked a fire on a train to Pakistan, killing 68 people in an attack officials said was intended to disrupt the steadily improving ties between the longtime rival countries.
Editor's Note: Due to the language used in the play The Vagina Monologues, this article has language that some readers may find objectionable and that the Future would not normally print. However, the Future decided to include the language in the article to keep the message of the play intact.