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Elliot taylor resume

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what i’m good at adobe photoshop adobe illustrator adobe indesign adobe bridge lightroom microsoft word microsoft powerpoint microsoft excel garageband propellerhead reason 8 digital photography typing both mac and windows operating systems cci layout champ where i’ve worked JTAA - youth soccer/volleyball referee (2005-2007) Eagle News - production manager (2009-2013) FGCU mac lab - student assistant (2011-2013) Metromix - photographer (2011-2012) Sun Sentinel - Page Design (Intern) (June - August, 2013) Florida Weekly - Graphic Designer (Sept. 2013 - Present) education Jupiter High School Bachelor of Art at Florida Gulf Coast University ACP college newspaper convention 2010 Louisville and 2012 Chicago elliot taylor graphic design/artist/photographer
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Page 1: Elliot taylor resume

what i’m good at adobe photoshop adobe illustrator adobe indesign adobe bridge lightroom microsoft word microsoft powerpoint microsoft excel garageband propellerhead reason 8 digital photography typing both mac and windows operating systems cci layout champ where i’ve worked JTAA - youth soccer/volleyball referee (2005-2007) Eagle News - production manager (2009-2013) FGCU mac lab - student assistant (2011-2013) Metromix - photographer (2011-2012) Sun Sentinel - Page Design (Intern) (June - August, 2013)

Florida Weekly - Graphic Designer (Sept. 2013 - Present)

education Jupiter High School Bachelor of Art at Florida Gulf Coast University ACP college newspaper convention 2010 Louisville and 2012 Chicago

elliot taylorgraphic design/artist/photographer

Page 2: Elliot taylor resume

Layout & graphicelements

Layout & graphicelements

Illustration

Outside Inside

Associated Press honorable mention for college newspaper advertising 2011

page design

These are my favorite samples from my work with Eagle News, the student newspaper at FGCU. The top is an advertising booklet detailing dates, demographics, rates, sizes, packages, and guidelines. All of the information was given as raw data. The bottom three pages consist of two special sections that required a large illustration and one advertisement for our iPad app.

Page 3: Elliot taylor resume

A

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Mike Wallace

Dolphins

Meet the Super 11

Get to know the Sun Sentinel’s top 11 players who are expected to make head-

lines this season. Also, see what lcoal players make the state’s Super 11 Group

Meet the Super 11

Get to know the Sun Sentinel’s top 11 players who are expected to make head-

lines this season. Also, see what lcoal players make the state’s Super 11 Group

Meet the Super 11

Get to know the Sun Sentinel’s top 11 players who are expected to make head-

lines this season. Also, see what lcoal players make the state’s Super 11 Group

Page 56 Page 56 Page 56

2013FootballPreviewSUNSENTINEL.COM

Full House

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This page is part of an unfinished series of covers for a football preview section for the Sun Sentinel set to be published August 30th. I created the playing card template from scratch using Illustrator and images imported from Photoshop. The header and footer pieces were created in Illustrator and the page was assembled using Indesign.

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Page 4: Elliot taylor resume

There probably aren’t too many people whodon’t love to eat lobster, which is why so manyFloridians love lobsterminiseason.

Theannualhunt for the tasty crustaceans,whichis Wednesday and Thursday, attracts tens of thou-sands of divers fromthroughout the stateto South Florida andtheKeys,where lobstersare abundant and ac-cess to them is easy.

There are sev-eral reasons forminiseason’spopularity:

It gives recreational diversthe first crack at lobsterssince the recreational andcommercial seasons closedon April 1 and beforethose seasons reopenonAug. 6.

Because lobstershavenot been harassed forfour months, they havegrown bigger and lesswary, so legal-sized lob-sters should be morenumerous and easier to catch.

Outside of the Keys and Biscayne National Park,the daily bag limit is 12 lobsters. The regular seasonlimit is six.

“We can get double our limit, so that makes itkindofexciting,” saidJim“Chiefy”Mathie,ofDeer-fieldBeach,who saidhis bestminiseasonproduced48 lobsters in one dive for him and his three divebuddies. “We get the opportunity to get a jump onthe commercial guys sowe can get a little stockpilegoing.”

The downside of miniseason is that it attractspeople who, caught up in the thrill of catching adelicious dinner, forget or ignore essential divingsafety rules.

Have fun,but be safeduringminiseason

Please turn to LOBSTER, 8C

By SteveWatersStaff writer

OUTDOORS

LobsterminiseasonThe two-dayminiseason runs from12:01 a.m. Wednesdayto midnight Thursday.

PN Sunday, July 21, 2013 SunSentinel.com Sun Sentinel | 1C

Sports

The Ski Club of the PalmBeaches is headed toTuscaloosa, Ala., for the 2013Water Ski SouthernRegionals.

Wellington residents SamanthaDumala,MarkBozicevic and John Shealy,andPhil Brodt of BocaRaton, four skierswho recently set state records at a local tour-nament,will anchor the16-member teamcompeting at the regionals beginningWednesday.

The skiers are preparing to host theGoodeWater SkiNationals for a second year fromAug.13-17 out of theirOkeeheelee Park location.

— Erica A. Hernandez

Ski club to compete in Southern RegionalsThe15 football-playingACC schoolswill contend for seven spots in bowl

games starting in 2014 under a newplan.TheOrangeBowlwill continue to play host to the league champion unless

itmakes the new four-teamplayoff. That contractwill span the next12 sea-sons.

Additional partnerships are expected to be finalized soon,but theACC released the list of seven that’ll be in effect next

season. TheACCbowl options include: OrangeBowl,Russell Athletic Bowl (Orlando), SunBowl (El Paso), BelkBowl (Charlotte),MusicCity Bowl (Nashville), GatorBowl (Jacksonville) andPinstripeBowl (NewYorkCity).

— Michael Casagrande

Changes loom in 2014 for ACC bowlsOnlinetoday

@8 a.m.: TheMiami Dolphinskick off theirtraining camppractices.Follow theminute-by-minute reportsfrom beatwriters on thescene, atSunSentinel.com/dolphins

Chris Bosh’s summer of celebration tookan exotic detour last week from a familyexcursion to France and Italy.

TheMiamiHeat center, fresh off helpingwin a repeat championship, couldn’t passup a chance to lend his talents to anotherformidable conquest: India. The nation of1.2 billion is the next international frontierfor theNBA, which has already establisheditself as a force in China and other foreignmarkets.

Bosh has been to China several times, asan Olympian and with the Heat, as well ason promotional tours. A renaissance man

whose curiosity ranges far from the court,he was intrigued by the prospect of experi-encing the otherAsian giant.

“I’m always interested in traveling theworld, and any opportunity that comes upto spread the game of basketball and travel,I think that is the best of both,” Bosh said ina phone interview with the Sun Sentinelduring his four days in Mumbai as specialemissary of theNBA.

“People are aware [of basketball.] Not asaware as China, but I think the love of thegame is growing here. A lot of people hereare interested in basketball. There are a lotof Heat fans. They were watching the Fi-

Chris Bosh explores Mumbai during his trip to India this month. Thenation of 1.2 billion is the next international frontier for the NBA.

NBA ENTERTAINMENT PHOTO

Bosh helps build interest inNBABy Craig DavisStaff writer

InsideHeat President PatRiley and ownerMicky Arison couldeventually disagreeon how Miamishould handle itsroster in regard tothe NBA’s punitiveluxury tax goingforward. Page 3C

HEAT

See BOSH, 2C

The begin-ning of anNFLseason repre-sents optimism,and shouldpossess excite-ment and re-newedhope.

There’susually play-off talk and

aspirations for a divisiontitle.Maybe someonewillwhisper those twowordsfewdare speak of in July ...Super Bowl.

As South Floridianswe’ve been on thismerry-go-round before, but it hasbeen awhile since the ridehas spun this fast. Theintensity has been turnedup on theDolphins cour-tesy of the $150million-plusmake-over SteveRoss’ checkbookhasprovided.

A free agent spending spree isn’ttheway to build a franchise, but itcertainly does help one plug holesfast, creating excitement.

“They’re trying to definitelyimprove the team, and I’m surethat everybody that’s involved is inagreementwith the course ofaction that they’re taking, so hope-fully itwillwork out for them,”said formerDolphins czar BillParcells, who laid a fragile founda-

See KELLY, 6C

Omar Kelly

15, 2013.August

TRAINING

SEASONTop50players on theDolphins’ training camproster,whichwill have tobe trimmed to 53 in September.

5. SS Reshad JonesJones had a breakout

season in 2012, contrib-uting 91 tackles, four inter-ceptions, two forced fum-bles and one sack. Can hedo it again?

4. C Mike PounceyThis former Gator,

who is entering his thirdseason with the Dolphins,is developing into one ofthe NFL’s premiere cen-ters.

3. CB Brent GrimesGrimes appears to be

fully recovered from theAchilles tendon injury thatlimited him to one gamelast season for the Falcons.

2.WR Mike WallaceThis speedster has ac-

counted for 32 touchdownsin his four seasonswith theSteelers, but he’ll need tosettle into his new situa-tion.

1. DE Cameron WakeThis two-time Pro

Bowl selection has tallied43 sacks in his four NFLseasons, and despite being31 there’s no sign he’s slow-ing down.

By Omar KellyStaff wrier

CONTINUED ON PAGE 6

Time forDolphins’mediocrityto end

Kelly Leary, M.S. www.PrecisionDating.com

Members Are Pre-Screened • Ages 35-78

Co-Founder of Precision Dating Call: 954-421-2000

Call beforeMonday for acomplimentaryconsultation.

PN Sunday, July 14, 2013 SunSentinel.com Sun Sentinel | 1C

Sports

Two former PalmBeachCounty kicking standouts are in the run-ning for one of college football’s premier postseason awards.

Earlier thisweek,Michigan’s BrendanGibbons, a CardinalNew-man alum, andAuburn’s CodyParkey, a Jupiter grad,were named totheLouGroza award preseasonwatch list.

Gibbonswas a 2012Groza semifinalist.He converted16 of18 fieldgoals last season,while Parkeywas11of14 and set a career longwith a pair of 46-yarders.

Bothwonhonors as PBC’s Place-kicker of theYearwhilein high school.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Gibbons, Parkey on Groza watch list

Professionalwrestler “Showtime”Eric Young goes spearfishing for lionfishoff Fort Lauderdale in Sunday’s episodeof “Off TheHook: ExtremeCatches,”which airs at 8 p.m. onAnimal Planet.

Young also catches a 250-pound goliath grouper using a handline off BocaGrande.

Scuba divingwith instructorWesGruver, Young shoots sixlionfish using a pole spear. The underwater footage is excellentand educational.

— Steve Waters

Lionfish on the menufor extreme TV show

Onlinetoday

@7 a.m.:Check out thevideohighlights fromthe MiamiMarlins’ gameagainst thevisitingWashingtonNationals, atSunSentinel.com/marlins

HALLANDALEBEACH—Thepastyearwas full of mixed blessings for Davin Jo-seph.

Starting with a major knee injury in apreseason game last summer, the Pro Bowloffensive lineman found a few fulfilling off-field activities. His expanded communityservice role continued Saturday at Hallan-daleHigh School for a second annual youthfootball camp at his almamater.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneer hopes to beback at full strength when training campbegins later thismonthandhe’ll returnwithadded perspective. He saw every one of his9-year-old sonAli’s baseball games—some-thing he couldn’t have done normally.

But now, nearly a year after tearing hispatellar tendon, Joseph’s smile can’t hidehis excitement for a return to the footballfield.

“I need to get hit again,” he saidmatter offactly.

And he was never worried about theunfortunate circumstance ending hisdream. A typical day involved two hours ofrehab in the morning followed by anothertwo hours of cardio. About 90 minutes oftreatmentwrapped things up.

Washington Redskin Trent Williams, aformer star atOklahoma like Joseph,was atHallandaleHighSchool as a guest coach fortheclinic.HebelievesJosephwillbebacktohisoldself this fall, sayinghe’s still in the toptwo at his guard position.

“I think after seeing what AdrianPeterson did last year coming off totallytearing every ligament in his knee, thatshould just let you know how athletes canrecover now a days,” the No. 4 overall pickin the 2010 draft said.

And that doesn’t even account for theeasily recognizable spirit Joseph exudes.

Hewasamagnet foryouthcampersathisSaturday event and the smile rarely left his6-foot-3, 313-pound frame.

Hallandalealum readyfor returnto formByMichael CasagrandeStaff writer

NFL/DAVIN JOSEPH

See JOSEPH, 5C

GAINESVILLE — After missing hismark a couple of times, Jeff Driskel wasdiscouraged yet evenmore determined.

As the minutes ticked away and the sundipped below the horizon, the Florida Gat-ors quarterback had one more chance toredeem himself, spotting his target in thedistance.

Driskel’s opponent — in this case a160-poundwild hog—never had a chance.

“I was getting a little frustrated,” Driskelrecalled during a recent interview. “Wewere getting close to going in and it wasgetting dark. We saw one in an open field.We tried to sneakupon it and it heardus, so

I just ran as far as I could, waited for it tostop, kneeled down and I dropped it in thepuddle ofwater itwas running through.

“Thatwas real exciting.”The Gators hope Driskel is as focused,

unflappableandontarget this fallduringhissecond season under center. Too often lastseason Driskel looked more like a deercaught in the headlights.

This was not entirely unexpected. Lastspringandsummer,Driskel split snapswithJacoby Brissett until coaches decided dur-ing the season opener against BowlingGreen to name Driskel their startingquarterback.

To win 10 games — Driskel sat out Flori- “As I go into 2013, the most important player in the SEC is [UF QBJeff] Driskel,” CBS college football analyst Gary Danielson said.“... He must come through. He’s the key.”

JOSHUA C. CRUEY/STAFF FILE PHOTO

All eyes on QB DriskelBy Edgar ThompsonStaff writer

FergusontransfersFormer FlanaganHigh star widereceiver JustinFerguson transfersfrom Notre Dame toWestern Michigan.Story, 6C.

UF FOOTBALL

See UF, 6C

DanMarino isNo.1.LarryCsonka isNo.2.No questions, right?

They belong at the topof South Florida’sGreatest Athlete list,right? Marino cackledwith a football electric-ity thatwon games, soldtickets and defined anew city. Csonka was

the rugged face of the Glory Years ofthe ‘70s when the Dolphins put anational stampon the region.

DwyaneWade isNo. 3.LeBron James isNo. 4.Here the debate begins. And it be-

ginswith LeBron. Somewill say he’stoo high since he’s played with theHeat only three years. Some will sayhe’s low considering his formidablefeats in that time and the fact no onehas beenmore athletic.

Chris Evert isNo. 5.BobGriese isNo. 6.Let the debate runwild now.How

do youweigh individual athletes likeEvert, who belonged to the world,against team-sport Hall of Famers

best athletes

SOUTHFLORIDAof

See HYDE, 8C

1. Dan Marino. For 17 years, he lifted the Dol-phins with his Hall of Fame career. If youbelieve sports help define communities, his

electric passing game helped give South Florida avibrant feel in the 1980s and 1990s. His lastingtestament, however, might be his autism centerthat is considered the world’s best for helpingchildren.

2. Larry Csonka. His thick, mustachioed,broken-nosed face became the identityof the 1970s Dolphins’ Super Bowl runs.

He’s the franchise’s all-time rushing leader. Cson-ka’s physical running is understood by his two-touchdown, 33-carry, 145-yard effort in Super BowlVIII. Even Don Shula named his dog, “Zonk.”

3. Dwyane Wade. Three championships.One NBA Finals Most Valuable Playeraward. Nine times voted an All-Star. He

gave reasons to watch the team through somedark seasons and, these past two years, reasonsnever to dismiss him even through injury.

4. LeBron James. He’s only been in townthree years. But is he too low? Has anyother South Florida player ever been the

hands-down top athlete in their game? And maybethe world? James has driven the Heat to threeconsecutive NBA Finals, two titles and made thisfranchise the most-watched American franchise inthe world during this period.

5. Chris Evert. Before winning 18 GrandSlam titles, Evert was the Florida statehigh school champ for St. Thomas

Aquinas. Her roots are here. She learned to playfrom her father, Jimmy, a tennis instructor, atHoliday Park in Fort Lauderdale. No homegrownathlete did more in the broad world of sports than“Chris America.”

Dave Hyde

tion before leaving the team in 2010.All that’s left of the Parcells era is GeneralMan-

ager Jeff Ireland and a handful of starters likeCam-eronWake, BrianHartline, Reshad Jones, ChrisClemons, Randy Starks andRichie Incognito.

TheParcells era of theDolphins is long gone, andso are his influences. But his pupil, Ireland, remainsat the control of this carousel.

Whether that’s a good thing can be debated tillwe’re dizzy—and already has. But ultimately thisseasonwill provide us a definitive answer to thatquestion because ifMiami can’t produce awinningrecordwith this expensive, full-fledgedmakeover allhope is lost.

However, Parcells believes the turbulent off-season the Patriots had should bring themback tothe pack a little, providing awindowof opportunityforMiami.

“I think their division is such that they can becompetitive, and evenmaybe have a chance towinit, so I’mhopeful that goeswell for them,” Parcellssaid. “I do have a high regard for SteveRoss. I likehimverymuch. I talk to him from time to time, and Icertainlywish himwell.”

WhatRoss and SouthFlorida deserves iswhatParcells promised back in 2007,which is a franchiseon a solid foundation.

If onewas in place this head-to-toemakeoverwouldn’t be needed.

But last year’s 7-9 teamneededmore speed, so theDolphins gaveMikeWallace a $60million contract,andmadehimone of theNFL’s highest paid receiv-ers.

An offensive line that lost ProBowl left tackleJakeLong needed to be fortified so the front officesignedTyson Clabo andLanceLouis and draftedformerTennessee standoutDallas Thomas in thethird-round.

TheDolphins neededmore turnovers and game-altering plays so the franchise signed younger andmore athletic linebackers inDannell Ellerbe andPhilipWheeler and drafted Florida’s Jelani Jenkins.

Joe Philbin’s teamneeded to cover downfieldbetter soMiami added former ProBowl cornerbackBrentGrimes and drafted two rookie cornerbacks,JamarTaylor andWill Davis, early.

The defense neededmore pass rushing than the42 sacks recorded last season soMiami traded up toselectOregon linebackerDion Jordan third-overall,adding the prospect viewed as the 2013 draft’s topdefender.

DanCarpenter broke down at the end of theseason, so theDolphins got a younger and cheaperkicker, selecting former Florida standoutCalebSturgis in the fifth-round.

Everything thatwas perceived as a problemwiththe oldDolphins has supposedly been fixed. Therewere somany new faceswhen the teambegan prac-ticing back inApril name tagswere needed.

“I thinkwe’re confident, butwe’re hungry,” saidquarterbackRyanTannehill, who is entering hissecond season as theDolphins’ starter. “Weunder-stand that it’s not going to come together overnight,butwehave to put in the time during camp.”

Problem is the 2013 squadhas been built by thesame architect that built the rosters that turned infour straight losing seasons.

The true purpose of training camp and the exhi-bition seasonwill be identifyingwhat exactly, orwho exactlywillmake this season any different thanthe previous four?

Spending big doesn’t guaranteewins. Parcells didthat his first two season inMiamiwith little success.

What theDolphins, and their fan base need is away to get off thismerry-go-round ofmediocre.

Onlywins can do that.

KELLYContinued from Page 1C

6C | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, July 21, 2013 PN

7. OG Richie Incognito —Miami’s starting leftguard for the past three seasons finally got the

recognition he deserves, earning a Pro Bowl spot in‘12.

8. DT Paul Soliai — Soliai serves as a pillar ofgranite on the front line, helping the defense

hold opponents to 4.0 yards per carry or fewer thepast three years.

9. ILB Dannell Ellerbe—Ellerbehadabreakoutseason in his one year as a starter with the

Ravens. Miami gave him a $35 million contract toreplaceKarlosDansby.

10. WR Brian Hartline — He became theeighth player in Dolphins history to catch

1,000 yards worth of passes in a season. His intellectand savvywill help him continue to thrive.

11. TE Dustin Keller — When healthy Keller,who averages 48 receptions inhis previous five

seasons, is the type of tight end that gives linebackersnightmares.

12. RB Lamar Miller — This former UMstandout averaged 4.9 yards per carry in his

limitedopportunities last season.Nowhe’s the first inline to become the featured back.

13. P Brandon Fields —Fields, who averageda career-best 50.2 yards per punt and 41.2 net

yards, has spent the past two seasons winning fieldposition battles.

14. QB Ryan Tannehill —TheDolphins’ 2012first-roundpickwasdecentasa rookie starter

last season, butMiami’s offenseneedshim tobecomemore clutch in critical situations.

15. DT Jared Odrick — The Dolphins’ 2010first-round pick has contributed 11 sacks, one

interceptionandforcedonefumble inhis twohealthyseasons. This year he’ll play insidemore.

16.OLB Philip Wheeler—Miami signedWheeler to a lucrative free agent deal because

of the109 tackles and three sacks he tallied playingfor theRaiders. Canhe recreate those numbers?

17. OLB Koa Misi —Misi was one of the team’smost improve players last season, benefiting

from a switch from a 3-4 to a 4-3 scheme. Will thisthree-year starter continue to blossom?

18. CB Richard Marshall —Marshall startedfour games, contributing 17 tackles and one

interception before suffering a season-ending backinjury. If healthy he should retain his starting spot.

19. FS Chris Clemons—Clemons has started22 games in his four seasons with the

Dolphins, and is comingoff a breakout yearwherehetallied 98 tackles and two interceptions.

20. DE Dion Jordan—The thirdoverall pickinthe2013draftwillbeeased intohisroleas

a pass rushing specialist, but he needs to make somekind of impact in year one.

21. OT Tyson Clabo—This nine-year veteranhasbeenoneof theNFL’sbetter starting right

tackles for the past few seasons. His presence shouldhelp fortify the right side of theO-line.

22. QB Matt Moore — Moore’s impressive2011 stint as the Dolphins starter, which

featured an 87.7 passer rating, proved he’s one of theNFL’s better backups.

23. OT Jonathan Martin — Martin spenthis entire college career at Stanfordprotect-

ing Andrew Luck’s blindside. Now he’s responsibleforTannehill’s blindside as JakeLong’s replacement.

24. DE Olivier Vernon — This former UMstandout flashed at times in his rookie

season, contributing 32 tackles, 3.5 sacks and forcingone fumble. But he’ll need to become moreconsistent.

25. WR Brandon Gibson — Gibson caught51 passes for 691 yards and scored five

touchdowns for the Rams last season. Miami signedhim to replaceDavoneBess in the slot.

26. SS Jimmy Wilson — Wilson, a hard-hitting safety trapped in a cornerback’s

body,will push for a starting safety spot, and to retainhis nickel cornerback role.

27. RB Marcus Thigpen—This formerCFLstandout set Dolphins records as a returner

in his first NFL season. What will this speedyscatback do in his second act?

28. RB Daniel Thomas — Thomas hasrushed for 906 yards and scored four

touchdowns inhis first twoNFLseasons.But the2011second-round pick has a dismal 3.5 yards per carryaverage.

29. TE Charles Clay —When this H-back isplaying well he’s a dangerous seam threat,

who has scored five touchdowns in two seasons. ButClay’s consistency and blocking remain an issue.

30. WR Armon Binns — This third-yearreceiver the Dolphins found on the waiver

wire last year was one of the team’s top performersthis offseason.Will Binns keep it upwhenpads comeon?

31. FB Jorvorskie Lane — Lane was one ofcamp’s pleasant surprises last year, trans-

forming himself from a late signee to a starter. But heneeds to trimhiswaist line to keep his job.

32. K Dan Carpenter—Carpenter hashad arelatively solid five-year career with the

Dolphins, making 81.9 percent of his field goalattempts. But his $2.7 million salary puts him on thehot seat.

33. CB Dimitri Patterson — Pattersonstarted two games for the Dolphins late last

season, and played well in his brief tenure. But his$4.5 million salary is roughly seven times what hiscompetitorsmake.

34. CB Nolan Carroll—Carroll has ahistoryof being a strong practice performer. But at

times he’s been a liability in games, making it hard todecide if he is fool’s gold or not?

35. OG John Jerry — This 2010 third-roundpick has started 29 games in his three

seasons, but his constant battle with his weight, andlimited run blocking skillsmakes him a liability.

36. K Caleb Sturgis—TheDolphinsdraftedthis former Gators standout in the fifth-

round to replace Dan Carpenter, but the rookie willneed to outshine the veteran in camp and theexhibition season.

37. RB Mike Gillislee — Gillislee turned hisone promising season at the University of

Florida into an opportunity to earn a spot on the 53man roster. His skillset hints he could become astarter.

38. TE Dion Sims — The Dolphins hopeSims, a 2013 fourth-roundpick,will become

an effective in-line blocker who can be paired with apass catching specialist.

39. CB Jamar Taylor — Miami’s second-round pick missed most of the offseason

program because of a hernia injury, so the rookiecornerback has some catching up to do.

40. CB Will Davis — Davis has a ton of rawathleticism, but he struggled at times

during training camp. Maybe he’ll play better whenthe speed of the game slows down.

41. OG Lance Louis — Louis was signed tochallenge John Jerry for the starting right

guard spot, but he’s still rehabbing a torn ACL hesuffered in lateNovember.

42. OT Nate Garner — Garner’s versatilityhas kept him on the Dolphins since 2008,

and he’ll likely continue in his role as Miami’splug-and-play offensive lineman.

43. OLB Jason Trusnik — This NFLjourneyman is viewed as Miami’s special

teams leader, so his solid play as that unit’s leadersupersedes his impact as a linebacker.

44. OT Dallas Thomas — The Dolphinsselected Thomas in the third-round of the

‘13 draft to serve as the primary backup at left tackleand left guard.

45. DT Vaughn Martin — Martin, whostarted27gameswith theChargers thepast

two seasons, was signed this offseason to fortify thefront line’s depth.

46. WR Rishard Matthews — This sev-enth-round pick contributed 11 receptions

for 151 yards in the eight games he played as a rookie.ButMiami addedmore talented receivers.

47. C Josh Samuda — This former Holly-woodHills standoutmade the53-manroster

as an undrafted rookie free agent last year.He’ll needto playwell in camp to extendhis stay.

48. DE Derrick Shelby — Shelby, whosigned as an undrafted rookie free agent

last year,was oneof camp’s pleasant surprises. Buthebarelymade any impact in16 games last year.

49. TE Michael Egnew — Concerns abouthis toughness limited Egnew to two games

last season.This former third-roundpickwill need toexcel to keep his roster spot.

50. OLB Jelani Jenkins — The former UFstandout needs to stay healthy, and excel as

a special teams contributor to earn a spot on the53-man roster.

DOLPHINS’ TALENT HAS IMPROVED

6.DT Randy Starks—TheDolphinsplaced thefranchise tag on Starks this offseason to ensure

that the defensive line remains the strength of theteam.

If you goWhen: Through Aug. 15

Where: Nova Southeastern University, 7500 SW30th St., Davie

Parking: Free parking is available in garage to theeast of the practice fields.

Admission: Free with seating available for the first2,000 fans.

DOLPHINS TRAINING CAMP FAN SCHEDULE

July 21 8 a.m.

July 22 8 a.m.

July 23 8 a.m.

July 24 8 a.m.

July 26 8 a.m.

July 26 8 a.m.*

July 28 8 a.m.**

July 29 7 p.m.

July 31 6 p.m.

Aug. 1 1:30 p.m.

Aug. 2 11:30 a.m.

Aug. 6 11 a.m.

Aug. 7 1:30 p.m

Aug. 11 1 p.m.***

Aug. 12 8 a.m.

Aug. 14 8 a.m.

Aug. 15 8 a.m.

Note

All practices will be held at Doctors Hospital TrainingFacility in Davie.

All practice times and dates are subject to change.

Practice will begin in the bubble, which will not bevisible to the fans attending. However, the team willbegin drills on the two outside fields about 40minutes after the scheduled time.

* Exclusive season ticket members practice

** Exclusive Fin Club members practice

*** Exclusive rookie season ticket members practice

Dolphins’trainingcamp

1/4 MILE

Nova Dr.

SW 39 St.

Colle

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e.RayFerraroJr Blvd.

SW 30 St.

Davi

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SW 36 St. DaviePARKING

84 595595# Player, Pos. Height Weight Years60 Jeff Adams, T 6-7 305 162 Chris Barker, G 6-2 305 R65 SamBrenner, C 6-2 301 R16 ChadBumphis,WR 5-10 196 R63 Chandler Burden, G 6-4 313 R78 Chris Burnette, DT 6-2 285 R49 Michael Clay, LB 5-11 230 R83 JasperCollins,WR 5-10 180 R3 AaronCorp, QB 6-4 220 17 PatDevlin, QB 6-3 225 376 A.J. Francis, DT 6-5 309 R56 JonathanFreeny, LB 6-2 250 214 Jeff Fuller,WR 6-4 223 132 JonasGray, RB 5-9 225 145 AlonzoHighsmith, LB 6-0 234 R47 DavidHinds, LB 6-0 226 R40 Keelan Johnson, S 5-11 209 R36 Don Jones, CB 5-11 191 R

57 JoshKaddu, LB 6-3 242 244 JordanKovacs, S 5-10 205 R6 CameronMarshall, RB 5-9 211 R

37 KelcieMcCray, S 6-1 200 267 AndrewMcDonald, T 6-6 310 186 KyleMiller, TE 6-5 260 266 TristanOkpalaugo,DE 6-4 245 R69 EmekaOnyenekwu,DE 6-3 251 R38 Julian Posey, CB 5-11 187 223 De’Andre Presley, CB 5-10 185 197 KheestonRandall, DT 6-5 309 289 TracyRobertson,DT 6-4 280 158 LeeRobinson, LB 6-2 253 148 EvanRodriguez, RB 6-2 239 253 Austin Spitler, LB 6-2 250 425 R.J.Stanford, CB 5-10 185 373 BrianThomas, G 6-3 315 R85 BrianTyms,WR 6-3 210 172 Will Yeatman, T 6-6 270 3

THE REMAINING

8C | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, July 14, 2013 PN

likeGriese, who played on the definitive South Flori-da franchise?

The answer is simple. My column. My rules. Myfloating formula for grading this area’s greatest ath-letes involves talent, success, longevity, local impact, acup of historical perspective and maybe a pinch ofpersonal subjectivity.

VenusWilliams is13th.TedHendricks is14th.What? Hendricks is the first University of Miami

athlete on the list? A guy from the mid-1960s? Calmdown. He’s the only Miami player to be named All-America three straight years — in other words, everyyear hewas eligible.

This brings upwho isn’t on the list. Ray Lewis, forexample. He might be the best defensive player inNFL history. But the rule of the list is college playerswere graded only bywhat they did in college.

Lewis was great in college. A three-year starter.All-America his final, junior season. But he didn’tmake the cut. Who else didn’t? The Marlins’ JoshBeckett, the pitching hero of the 2003World Series.

There’s the other debate. But ignore your beatingheart and look at the cold, dry numbers. Beckettwonmore than nine games just once in his five seasonswith the Marlins. He was 2-2 that 2003 postseason(thoughwith a 2.11ERA).

He pitched a shutout in Yankee Stadium, his sec-ond win in the series, to seal the title. Does onelegendary moment get you in the room? Not whenI’m thedoorkeeper.Which tells how tough the cut is.

TimHardaway isNo. 21.Miguel Cabrera isNo. 22.Cabrera is the first Marlin on the list. John Van-

biesbrouck is the first Panther atNo. 27. Rick Barry isthe only University ofMiami basketball player at No.24.SanyaRichards-Ross is the topOlympianatNo.15.

And there’s a horse, Cigar, atNo. 38.Debating the greatest ever in a region is something

like figuring the greatest ever in a sport. It’s a fool’serrand. There is no greatest ever when you weigheras, positions, teams, opponents and changes to thegame. But it’s fun to debate.

TedWilliams, thegreatBostonbaseballplayer, saidhis one goal was to walk down the street and havepeople say, “There goes Ted Williams, the greatesthitterwho ever lived.”

Williams wasn’t better than Barry Bonds, was he?Sports sparks conversation like that. Sports is a con-versation, mainly, if you’re not on the field. Whatplayer is better? Which championship was moreexciting?Who are the Top 50 players in South Flori-da sports history?

DougBetters isNo. 49.Bennie Blades isNo. 50.Poor Udonis Haslem. The three-time NBA cham-

pion and part of the Heat’s fabric just misses the cut.He’sNo. 51. At least onmy list.

best athletes

SOUTHFLORIDAof

HYDEContinued from Page 1C

6. Bob Griese. His Hall of Famecareer includes two Super

Bowls, an NFL Player of the Yearaward and six Pro Bowls. TheThinking Man’s Quarterback isbest understood by two stats: (1)He passed seven times in the 1973Super Bowl when the runninggame dominated. (2) He led theNFL in TD passes in 1977 when hisarm was the best way to win.

7. Alonzo Mourning. He has allthe credentials — seven-time

All-Star, two-time DefensivePlayer of the Year, one champion-ship — and made a big impact inthe community with his Over-town Youth Center.

8. Dwight Stephenson. Hewas football’s dominant line-

man of the 1980s. In an injury-shortened career, he was a majorreason the Dolphins went to twoSuper Bowls and is consideredthe best center in NFL history.

9. Serena Williams. The onlyreason she’s not any higher is

her story starts and is defined onthe hard courts of Compton,Calif. That’s where her father,Richard, began teaching hisdaughters tennis. She’s won 16Grand Slams and been the domi-nant player in women’s tennis fora remarkable stretch.

10. Nick Buoniconti. The vet-eran leader of the Dolphins’

No-Name defense. His son, Marc,put it best in introducing Nick atthe Hall of Fame: Dad was toosmall, too slow and didn’t listentoo well to make that matter. Hiswork after football in foundingThe Miami Project to Cure Paraly-sis dwarfs anything he did insports.

11. Larry Little. Power, speedand toughness were the

hallmarks of Little, a five-time All-Pro selection who helped definethe Dolphins’ power runninggame of the 1970s. He’s com-pletely local, too, attending all-black Booker T. Washington Highin the segregated era of Miamibefore attending Bethune-Cook-man.

12. Jason Taylor. Thirteen Dol-phins seasons (15 total).

One NFL Defensive Player of theYear award. Surely, a Hall of Fameberth. From the late-1990s to,well, now, he was one of the fewbright spots in the franchise.

13. Venus Williams. Winner ofseven Grand Slam titles, Se-

rena’s older sister took over ten-nis when she burst on the sceneand, like her sister, managed hercareer in a way to enjoy longevitybeyond most tennis players.

14. Ted Hendricks. Universityof Miami players are judged

on their impact only at the schoolin this list. Hendricks is theschool’s lone three-time All-American — and he played in anera where freshmen were ineligi-ble. He leads the school in tacklesby a non-linebacker (227).

15. Sanya Richards-Ross.With her story still being

written, Richards-Ross won thegold medal at the 2012 LondonOlympics in the 400 meters. Shehas won three Olympic golds inthe 4x400-meter relay. The St.Thomas Aquinas alum wasnamed the National High SchoolFemale Athlete of the Year in2002.

16. Paul Warfield. If he playedmore than four Dolphins

seasons, he’d be much higher.The best pure athlete on the1970s Dolphins, Warfield broughtworld-class speed (he passed ona trip to the ’64 Olympics for theNFL) and such an intellectualview of football that he helped ayoung Bob Griese to read com-plex defensive coverages.

17. Jim Langer. Hall of Famecenter of the 1970s Dol-

phins. One interesting tidbit tohis career. Like Larry Little andBob Kuechenberg, Langer waspicked off the scrap heap afterbeing cut by Cleveland.

18. Zach Thomas. One of themost popular Dolphins,

Thomas was a seven-time ProBowl selection and the fran-chise’s all-time tackling leader.Not bad for a fifth-round pickwho was expected to help onspecial teams.

19. Vinny Testaverde. TheHeisman Trophy quarter-

back helped take Miami into thenational spotlight for good in theJimmy Johnson Era. Testaverdewas 21-1 as a starter and com-bined athleticism, size and talentto become the NFL’s top draftpick.

20. Bob Kuechenberg. NoDolphin started in more

big games than Kuechenberg, ashe played in four of the fran-chise’s five Super Bowl appear-ances. He played with a brokenarm in the 1974 Super Bowl, frus-trating Minnesota’s Alan Page tothe point Page was ejected fromthe game.

21. Tim Hardaway. From 1996to 2001, Hardaway was the

one who directed the Heat andtook the biggest shots in games.He left as the franchise’s all-timeassist leader, a position DwyaneWade passed.

22. Miguel Cabrera. One in themany what-could-have-

been Marlins, Cabrera hit .313 inhis Marlins career, tops of thefranchise. His .929 OPS (slugging-plus-on-base percentage) is sec-ond. A four-time All-Star, he alsohad four postseason home runsin 2003 when he was 20.

23. Ed Reed. He got the finalscholarship from Miami

coach Butch Davis in 1997 whenanother recruit backed out. Hewent on to start the second-most games (48) in school his-tory, lead the school in intercep-tions (21) and was a two-time All-American.

24. Rick Barry. The hands-down best player with the

University of Miami basketballprogram, Barry led the nationwith a 37.4-point scoring averagewhen named All-American in1965. The team didn’t play in theNCAA Tournament as it was onprobation.

25. Jack Nicklaus. You couldargue he should be off the

list as he attended high schooland college and has his golf tour-nament in Columbus, Ohio. Youcould argue he belongs to SouthFlorida as much as anyone as heraised his children and set upbusiness in Palm Beach. So it’s asplit vote. Which is why he’s half-way on the list.

26. Shaquille O’Neal. He arrived in South Floridafiring a water gun from the cab of a semi

truck, finished second in MVP voting in 2005 andhelped win a title in 2006. As good as that was, healso is known for being challenged to a fight by PatRiley, and for being in the middle of Stan Van Gun-dy’s departure.

27. John Vanbiesbrouck. The first pick of the ex-pansion draft, Vanbiesbrouck was a three-

time All-Star with the Panthers and most remem-bered as the backbone of the magical 1996 run tothe Stanley Cup Finals. In that year’s playoffs, he hada 2.25 goals-against average and a .932 save per-centage.

28. Luis Castillo. He played more games, scoredmore runs, had more hits, drew more walks,

stole more bases and had more multi-hit gamesthan any other Marlin. Part of that is him stayingaround long enough to amass the numbers. Hestarted for the 2003 World Series champions andwon three Gold Gloves at second base.

29. Mark Clayton. The eighth-round draft pickwent on to lead the Dolphins in receptions

(550), receiving yards (8,869) and touchdowns(82). A mix of quickness, toughness and feistiness,Clayton was a five-time All-Pro selection.

30. Mike Lowell. He ranks first on the Marlins forRBI and second in total bases, home runs and

extra-base hits. He also set a tone of professional-ism that helped a young team win the 2003 WorldSeries. A homegrown product in Miami, he also at-tended Florida International University.

31. Jennifer Rodriguez. A Cuban-American raisedin Miami, Rodriguez switched from inline to

speed skating and competed in four Winter Olym-pics. She won two bronze medals at Salt Lake in2004. She also won a gold medal at the 2005 WorldChampionships.

32. Sean Taylor. As a freshman, he played on Mi-ami’s 2001 championship team. As a sopho-

more, he starred on the team that lost to Ohio Statein the championship game. As a junior, his final sea-son, he led the team in tackles and tied for the na-tion’s lead with 10 interceptions in being namedfirst-team All-America and the Big East’s DefensivePlayer of the Year.

33. Gary Sheffield. The Marlins’ first major acqui-sition, Sheffield gave an expansion team a hit-

ting star and its first All-Star. He anchored the lineupfrom 1993 to 1998, including for the 1997 World Se-ries championship. His 1996 season of on-base per-centage (.465) and slugging percentage (.624) re-main franchise highs.

34. Dontrelle Willis. When Willis was called up tothe Marlins in the spring of 2003, the season

turned around and they began a march to the WorldSeries. He won 14 games that year, the first of fiveseasons of double-digit wins for the Marlins. Thehighlight was 2006 when he won 22 games and fin-ished second in Cy Young voting.

35. Jake Scott. A Pro Bowl selection from the mo-ment he arrived in 1970 through 1975, Scott

still leads the franchise in interceptions. Tough? Heplayed with two broken hands in Super Bowl VI.Clutch? He had two interceptions to seal the unde-feated season in Super Bowl VII.

36. Dick Anderson. In his nine years with the Dol-phins, Anderson had 34 interceptions, one

behind Jake Scott for the franchise lead. He wasnamed the NFL’s Defensive Player of the Year in 1973.

37. Hanley Ramirez. A three-time All-Star for theMarlins, Ramirez led the National League in

batting with a .342 average in 2009. He finished sec-ond in MVP voting that year.

38. Cigar. In becoming the first horse since Cita-tion in 1949 to win 16 consecutive races

against elite competition, Cigar took a place inSouth Florida history as the top race horse. Of those16 races, five came at Gulfstream and four were ma-jor stakes races.

39. Cristie Kerr. The Coral Gables native has 16wins on the LPGA tour, including two majors.

Kerr also was ranked No. 1 in the world three times in2010.

40. Dan Morgan. The Hurricanes’ all-time tackleleader, Morgan went right from Coral Springs

Taravella High to the starting lineup of Miami. As asenior, he was All-American, the Big East DefensivePlayer of the Year and won the Nagurski, Bednarikand Outland trophies.

41. Walter Dix. At Coral Springs High, Dix set thestate record in the 200 meters. That started a

career that included three indoor and six outdoorNCAA titles while at FSU. He also won bronze medalsin the 100 and 200 at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

42. Bob Baumhower. He was the anchor of theKiller B’s defense. A five-time Pro Bowl selec-

tion, Baumhower had 888 tackles and 39 1⁄2 sacks inhis career.

43. Michael Irvin. The Hurricanes’ career leaderin touchdown receptions (26) despite leaving

as a junior, "The Playmaker" was known for his bigplays. None were bigger than his long touchdowncatch at Florida State in 1986 that sparked perhapsthe biggest comeback in school history.

44. Pavel Bure. The lone, pure goal-scorer thePanthers have had in their history, the "Rus-

sian Rocket" scored 58 in 1999-2000 and 59 goals in2000-2001. Bure only lasted a little more than threeyears with team. He remains the single greatest tal-ent to play for the Panthers.

45. Joey. The first American-born superstar in jai-alai, Joey turned pro at 16, as a Miami Carol

City High student. Over the next 24 years, he revolu-tionized the game at South Florida’s jai-lai frontonswith his aggressive play and patented kill shot.

46. Jeff Conine. “Mr. Marlin” had four hits in theMarlins’ first game and ended his first stint

with the Marlins with the 1997 championship. He re-turned for a second stint to help the Marlins to theirsecond title in 2003. Only Luis Castillo played moregames for the franchise than Conine, who had a.290 batting average while with the Marlins.

47. Scott Mellanby. The team captain at the endof his Panthers years, Mellanby came to the

Panthers in the 1993 expansion draft and his eightseasons coincided with the best years in the fran-chise. He was a solid goal scorer — twice scoringmore than 30 for the Panthers — but was a stellartwo-way player who was a central piece to the 1996run to the Stanley Cup Finals.

48. Rony Seikaly. Balloons fell from the expan-sion Heat’s party when they won a coin toss

to take Seikaly with their opening, first-round pick.He led the team in rebounds and scoring in five of itsfirst six seasons.

49. Doug Betters. The Dolphins’ defensive endfinished his career with 43 1⁄2 sacks, including

16 sacks in 1983 when he was named the NFL’s De-fensive Player of the Year.

50. Bennie Blades. The winner of the Jim ThropeAward as a senior, the Hurricane safety is sec-

ond behind Ed Reed in career interceptions. ThePiper High graduate was such an impact player atMiami that he was taken third overall in the 1988 NFLDraft by Detroit.

Here are two Sunday section fronts for the Sports section of the Sun Sentinel. For both I was given a list of 50 athletes, an article explaining the list, and a space requirement. Using photoshop and illustrator I developed the graphic elements for both and combined them with a layout I designed in CCI Layout Champ.

page design

Page 5: Elliot taylor resume

2 | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, June 23, 2013 SPFR

Heat fans always knew LeBron James, DwyaneWade and Chris Bosh were cut out to be champi-

ons. Thursday night, Heat Nation showed theworld who their heroes are.

CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The real “Birdman” got his time with thechampionship hardware, too.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

NOT 1 ... AT LEAST 2

Proving the early “Bird” gets the trophy, ayoung Chris Andersen fan gets his chanceto hold the Larry O’Brien trophy in thecorridor outside the Heat locker roomThursday night.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Heat center Chris Bosh had difficulty scoring attimes, but he chipped in with defense and big

rebounds against the Spurs.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

If there’s a gleam in LeBron James’ eye, it might be thereflection off the two trophies he earned. Of course,

Dwyane Wade had a big hand in it, too.ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

NBA Champions

Bread $.99

Pasta Shells$1.00

OrangeJuice$1.99

Tortilla Shells$2.00

PeanutButter$2.50

PastaSauce$1.50

Coffee$6.99

Yams$.51

Chickpeas$2.19

Bananas$1.51

Cereal$2.50

Tomatoes$.90

Milk$1.25

Rice$1.99

Black Beans$2.19

$31.50One week in food stamps

Congressman Ted Deutch will join 25 other Dems ineating only what they could buy with food stamps.

Could you live for a week on thisgrocery list?

Beans and rice. Bread andpea-nut butter. Pasta and chick peas. Cerealandmilk. Yams, tomatoes andbananas. Alittle orange juice and some coffee.

Thirty-one dollars and fifty centsdoesn’t govery farwhenyouarebuyingaweek’s worth of groceries. But that’swhat the average food-stamp recipientgets.

And it’s what U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch,D-Boca Raton, spent Thursday whilebracing to eat on that kind of budget.With mounting anxiety, he watched therunning total at theWashingtonD.C. gro-cery checkout line come dangerouslyclose to the $4.50-a-day limit.

Deutch, who imposed the shoppinglimit on himself, took advantage of somesale prices for bread and yams.

But he still went over the limit. Gonewere the chips he hoped to snack on andthe soup he hoped to eat for dinner onenight. By the end, he walked out withthree plastic bags and$30.16 of groceries,including15 cents for the bags.

“When you walk up to the checkoutcounter with what really is a small num-ber of items in your shopping cart, youworry thatmaybe it’s going to cost more.And then it does, and you have to putsomething back,”Deutch said afterward.

“It was a challenge for me doing thisone time. I can’t imagine what this mustbe like every single week for people whoare on food stamps.”

ByWilliam E. GibsonWashington BureauDEUTCH’S

SHOPPINGLIST:

PN Saturday, June 15, 2013 SunSentinel.com Sun Sentinel | 1B

Local

WELLINGTON — It is very importantthat theCareys, a family split betweenWel-lington and Connecticut, reunite for Fa-ther’s Day this weekend. It could be theirlastwithDad.

Mark Carey, 45, has pancreatic cancer.His doctor told him most people in hissituation may live another year, but “I feellike ‘you’ve got a lot of fight left in you.’”

They never left.“Dehydration, I believe,” Carey said. His

temperature soared. He vomited. His doc-tor said he should not travel.

Laynewasdisappointed, so they flewherto Connecticut. Mason was circumspect:“As long asDaddy feels better, I don’t care.”

So it is with cancer and treatment. Careywasabigguy,buthe’s skinnynow.Hehasnoappetite anymore. He sips water to soothe

were all set to pile into the car on June 6after school.Theyweregoing todrive to seeMark Carey’s older children, Ryan, 23, andCarissa, 25,who live inNewEngland.

“Wekindofput everything into this trip,”Mark Carey said. “This was going to be ourlast hurrah, to make sure we do it as afamily.”

Before the diagnosis, he was a chef, andthey love the show “Diners, Drive-ins andDives” on the Food Network. They weregoing to stop at featured restaurants.

“I’m not ready to give up,” Carey saidFriday. His 4-year-old terrier, Couper,barked. His wife, Jodi, composed herselfbeside him.

As families assemble thisweekend to cel-ebrate their patriarchs, theCareyswill cele-brate under the pall of illness but with agreater appreciation for their bond. Cancermakes getting together more difficult, butalsomore imperative.

TheCareys and their twoyoung children— daughter Layne, 14, and sonMason, 10 —

Ailing Wellington man cherishes family as Father’s Day nearsBy BenWolfordStaff writer

See FATHER, 2B

Waiving library book late fees couldhelp keep more kids reading, accordingto a Palm Beach County proposal aimedat helping low-income families.

County officials this week agreed toexplore the idea of lifting the 10 cents-a-day late fees, at least for children.

The concern is that the fee — and thesuspended librarybookborrowingprivi-leges that can follow—mostly hurts thechildrenwho can least afford it.

Children shouldn’t be discouragedfromchecking out library books becauseof financial hardships, according toCommissioner Paulette Burdick, who

Commission hopes morekids will read without fines

By Andy ReidStaff writer

Librarylate feesmay end

See LIBRARY, 2B

“Peopleneed tostill beaccountable.We have tohave rules.”CountyCommissionerPriscilla Taylor

After losing bothhis hands and feet to abacterial infection, 13-year-old MichaelStolzenbergknows there’s a reasonhesur-vived.

And this week that reason was madeclear–byOprahWinfrey.

The talk show host and media mogulcalled Michael on Monday, pledging$100,000to thewebsitehestartedwithhisbrother, Harris, to raise money for theamputees injured in the Bostonmarathonbombings.

“Michael was beyond surprised,” saidhis mom, Laura. “If the reason he’s stillhere is to help others, he’ll take it. Andthat’swhatyoutrulywantforyourkids, forthemto inspireothers.”

Last month Winfrey told Michael’sstoryduringhercommencementspeechat

By Karen YiStaff writer

Michael Stolzen-berg, above, and hisbrother, Harris, areraising money foramputees injured inthe Boston mara-thon bombings.Oprah Winfreycalled Michael onMonday and saidshe wanted todonate $100,000 tothe cause.

Oprah gives tolocal fundraiser

See OPRAH, 2B

Statewildlife officerswill patrol PalmBeachCounty beaches thisweekend, after a high number of failed nesting attempts by seaturtles.

The officerswillwalk the beaches and educate the public aboutthe need to leave the giant reptiles alonewhile they lay eggs.

A higher number than average have emerged from the ocean andreturnedwithout lay-ing eggs this year. Evenshining a bright lighton a turtle can discour-age her fromnesting, aprocess that can takeup to twohours.

— David Fleshler

Turtles have trouble nesting this seasonExpect a hot, dry Father’s Day weekendDad can expect to get sweaty onhis special day, as it should be a

hot Father’sDayweekend,with afternoon tem-peratures in the low90s. Even the eveningsshould be fairlywarm,with readings in theupper 70s.

At least it should be relatively dry. Theforecast calls for little chance of rain onSaturday and isolated showers andstorms on Sunday. Both days should bemostly sunny.

Monday also should be on the dryside.

– Ken Kaye

Onlinetoday

@8 a.m.:Check outsome of thebest Instagramphotos fromour readers,and submityour own. SunSentinel.com/instagram

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Here are three examples of working with little space and a lot of content. The left and middle were both in the special section after the Heat won the NBA Championship. The right is a visualization of what one could buy using $31.50, which is one week of food stamps.

page design4 | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, June 23, 2013 SPFR

First roundvs.MilwaukeeThedefendingNBAchampions didn’t facemuch of a

test in their opening series of the 2013 playoffs. TheHeat earned double-digit victories in all four gamesagainst theBucks. Itwas the first postseason sweep intheBigThree era, and comfortablemargins enabled theHeat to giveDwyaneWade some rest.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,April 21:Heat110, Bucks 87Game2,April 23:Heat 98, Bucks 86Game3,April 25:Heat104, Bucks 91Game4,April 28:Heat 88, Bucks 77Heatwin, 4-0

Bucks just nomatch forHeatMILWAUKEE—Thiswas the preseason portion of

the playoffs.Itwas a challenge so soft that it did not even require

DwyaneWade or anything close to the best of theHeatfor the sweep-completing 88-77 victory.

Themeat of the playoffs arrived. “We’re going tostart to feel it,” forward ShaneBattier said.

But that doesn’tmean therewasn’tmeaning inGame4.

What this sweep showed, just as last season’s cham-pionship showed, is that you can never have toomuch.And that sometimes, toomuch is just enough, nomatterwhatDavid Stern seems to think.

No, this neverwas about overkill fromPatRiley andMickyArison, even if thatwas the outside impression.

It is how theHeat survivedChris Bosh’s absenceduring themiddle of last season’s playoffs, how theycould comfortably go intoGame4withoutWade.

“This iswhywe’re all here.Wewanted somethingdifferent for ourselves,”Wade said of feeling no pres-sure to push throughhis knee issue.

— Ira Winderman

EasternConference semifinals vs. ChicagoFor the first time this postseason, theHeatwere

dealt a loss asChicago opened the serieswith awin.But theHeat showed it could take a punch, dealing theBulls theirworst playoff loss in franchise history inGame2. The 37-pointmargin of victorywas aHeatpostseason high.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,May6:Bulls 93,Heat 86Game2,May8:Heat115, Chicago 78Game3,May10:Heat104, Chicago 94Game4,May13:Heat 88, Chicago 65Game5,May15:Heat 94, Chicago 91Heatwin, 4-1

Wade’s effort clinchesGame5winMIAMI—Always, for teams climbing themountain,

there are nights like this,when their breathing’s la-bored, and their opponent plays hard, and there arehealthy spasms of doubt aboutwhether they’rewhoeveryone thinks they are.

So itwas late intoGame 5 of theHeat’s 94-91win toclose out the playoff series against Chicago. You ex-pected easy? You got strenuous.

You expected a relaxed evening?You gotHeat fansjumping off their seatswhenNorris Cole hit a jumpshot, then ran down the lanewith a dunk.

You expected the tough question of the night to bewhether a hurtingWadewould play?

The real questionwas:Whatwould theHeat havedonewithoutWade?Hehad amore efficient shootingnight than James. And theHeat needed every bit ofWade’s two short floaters and slamdunk off an offen-sive rebound in the finalminutes to close out this game.

Finally, Chicago fell.“The toughest close-out game ofmy career,” said

James,whose 23-point night hid 5-for-14 shooting.— Dave Hyde

EasternConference finals vs. IndianaTheHeat’s biggest postseason test thus far came

from thePacers,whopushedMiami to a decidingGame 7. The serieswasmarked by physical play, thestruggles ofWade andBosh, and leagueMVPJamescommenting he’d reverted to his “Cleveland days.” ButtheHeatmade adjustments to advance.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,May 22:Heat103, Pacers102 (OT)Game2,May 24:Pacers 97,Heat 93Game3,May 26:Heat114, Pacers 96Game4,May 28:Pacers 99,Heat 92Game5,May30:Heat 90, Pacers 79Game6, June1:Pacers 91,Heat 77Game7, June 3:Heat 99, Pacers 76Heatwin, 4-3

Heat take big punches, surviveMIAMI—Itwas the finalminutes of the final game

and, as the crowd stood, as the applause rained, herecame one final surprise of theEasternConferencefinals. Jameswent to the bench.Hewasn’t neededanymore.

This difficult stepwas that easy by the end. Jameskissed his fingers and raised a fist to the crowd as theHeat rolled to a 99-76win inGame 7.

LeBronVoyage, Indiana.Hello, NBAFinals.And so it goes on. The quest. TheHeat spring. All the

intoxicating drama. It’sMiami against SanAntonio intheNBAFinals.

If a couple of days aren’tmuch time to prepare, thenews is theHeat survived to prepare. TheHeat tooksomebig punches from Indiana.

But they standwith the crown still on their head, thewords “defending champion” before their name, be-causewhen itmatteredmost they rememberedwhotheywere, and theBigThree did it right from tip-off.

— Dave Hyde

NBAFinals vs. SanAntonioFormuch of the series, theHeat faced scrutiny after

not being able towin back-to-back games in either theconference finals or theNBAFinals. The team lookedin trouble late inGame6, but the seasonwas salvagedafter RayAllen hit an improbable 3-pointer to forceovertime. Eventually,Miami picked up a pair ofwinsand became just the fourth team inFinals history torally froma 3-2 deficit. SeriesMVPJames averaged 25.3points, 10.9 rebounds, and 7.0 assists.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1, June6: Spurs 92,Heat 88Game2, June9:Heat103, Spurs 84Game3, June11: Spurs113,Heat 77Game4, June13:Heat109, Spurs 93Game5, June16: Spurs114,Heat104Game6, June18:Heat103, Spurs101(OT)Game7, June 20:Heat 95, Spurs 88Heatwin, 4-3

Lastmen standing once againMIAMI—The jump shot fromJameswent into the

netwith 27.9 seconds left, and, as soon as it did, hepumpedhis fistwith awinner’s look, a champion’slook, as the noise you’d only heard once before shookAmericanAirlinesArena.

SanAntonio’s seasonwas finally fading, and theHeat’s starwas rising, again, in this 95-88win inGame7 of theNBAFinals.

TheywonwithLeBron scoring 37 points. TheywonwithWade answering questionswith 23 points. They

wonwithBattiermaking six 3-point shots— asmanyshots as he’dmade in the previous six Finals games.

Theywon against a SanAntonio team full of deserv-ingHall of Famers,who keptmatching theHeat shotfor shot Thursday night,moment formoment, untilLeBron’s jumper provided a 4-point cushion.

Theywon.Those are the twowords thatmatter. Erik Spoelstra

said the two greatestwords in sportswere “Game 7”?WinningGame 7makes it all the sweeter, all the better,the entire night amemory to embrace.

Every time theHeat tried to pull away in the fourthquarter, the Spurs answered right back. A bounce here,amistake there. Thatwas the sliver of difference. That’showyouwant towin a championship, being asked to begreat and delivering greatness.

At one point late in the third quarter,Wade andJames had scored 38 of theHeat’s previous 43 points.That’s a good starting recipe for success. ButThursdayitwas the only recipe, and it put the season on the cliff.

They needed something froma supporting player?Here came a couple to help. Battiermade shots. ThentherewasChris “Birdman”Andersen.Hewas an ener-gy pill again this night. Rebounds. Blocks. Defense onTimDuncan.He even took a charge onManuGinobiliin the fourth quarter.

Do or be done, thatwas the drama of this night, in somanymoreways than just the scoreboard. In someway, the future of theBigThreewas at stake. Inmanyways, the legacy of thisHeat erawas.

This championshipwas harder.More taxing. Partwas Indiana and SanAntonio pushed them to themax-imumseven games,while only Boston did a year ago.Partwas repeating is alwaysmore difficult.

The regular season “just flewby,”Wade said. “Butthe playoffs have been likeGroundhogDay. Andwe’rehere until the last possible day in theNBA, until the lastpossible game.”

— Dave Hyde

Long, winding road

It wasn’t easy, but Heat rose to the challenge

Bulls present firstmountain to climb

Big Three producewith season on line

Tougher than 2012,but sweeter as well

Easy first round allowsWade to rest sore knee

NBA Champions

2 | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, June 23, 2013 SPFR

Heat fans always knew LeBron James, DwyaneWade and Chris Bosh were cut out to be champi-

ons. Thursday night, Heat Nation showed theworld who their heroes are.

CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The real “Birdman” got his time with thechampionship hardware, too.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

NOT 1 ... AT LEAST 2

Proving the early “Bird” gets the trophy, ayoung Chris Andersen fan gets his chanceto hold the Larry O’Brien trophy in thecorridor outside the Heat locker roomThursday night.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Heat center Chris Bosh had difficulty scoring attimes, but he chipped in with defense and big

rebounds against the Spurs.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

If there’s a gleam in LeBron James’ eye, it might be thereflection off the two trophies he earned. Of course,

Dwyane Wade had a big hand in it, too.ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

NBA Champions

Bread $.99

Pasta Shells$1.00

OrangeJuice$1.99

Tortilla Shells$2.00

PeanutButter$2.50

PastaSauce$1.50

Coffee$6.99

Yams$.51

Chickpeas$2.19

Bananas$1.51

Cereal$2.50

Tomatoes$.90

Milk$1.25

Rice$1.99

Black Beans$2.19

$31.50One week in food stamps

Congressman Ted Deutch will join 25 other Dems ineating only what they could buy with food stamps.

Could you live for a week on thisgrocery list?

Beans and rice. Bread andpea-nut butter. Pasta and chick peas. Cerealandmilk. Yams, tomatoes andbananas. Alittle orange juice and some coffee.

Thirty-one dollars and fifty centsdoesn’t govery farwhenyouarebuyingaweek’s worth of groceries. But that’swhat the average food-stamp recipientgets.

And it’s what U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch,D-Boca Raton, spent Thursday whilebracing to eat on that kind of budget.With mounting anxiety, he watched therunning total at theWashingtonD.C. gro-cery checkout line come dangerouslyclose to the $4.50-a-day limit.

Deutch, who imposed the shoppinglimit on himself, took advantage of somesale prices for bread and yams.

But he still went over the limit. Gonewere the chips he hoped to snack on andthe soup he hoped to eat for dinner onenight. By the end, he walked out withthree plastic bags and$30.16 of groceries,including15 cents for the bags.

“When you walk up to the checkoutcounter with what really is a small num-ber of items in your shopping cart, youworry thatmaybe it’s going to cost more.And then it does, and you have to putsomething back,”Deutch said afterward.

“It was a challenge for me doing thisone time. I can’t imagine what this mustbe like every single week for people whoare on food stamps.”

ByWilliam E. GibsonWashington BureauDEUTCH’S

SHOPPINGLIST:

PN Saturday, June 15, 2013 SunSentinel.com Sun Sentinel | 1B

Local

WELLINGTON — It is very importantthat theCareys, a family split betweenWel-lington and Connecticut, reunite for Fa-ther’s Day this weekend. It could be theirlastwithDad.

Mark Carey, 45, has pancreatic cancer.His doctor told him most people in hissituation may live another year, but “I feellike ‘you’ve got a lot of fight left in you.’”

They never left.“Dehydration, I believe,” Carey said. His

temperature soared. He vomited. His doc-tor said he should not travel.

Laynewasdisappointed, so they flewherto Connecticut. Mason was circumspect:“As long asDaddy feels better, I don’t care.”

So it is with cancer and treatment. Careywasabigguy,buthe’s skinnynow.Hehasnoappetite anymore. He sips water to soothe

were all set to pile into the car on June 6after school.Theyweregoing todrive to seeMark Carey’s older children, Ryan, 23, andCarissa, 25,who live inNewEngland.

“Wekindofput everything into this trip,”Mark Carey said. “This was going to be ourlast hurrah, to make sure we do it as afamily.”

Before the diagnosis, he was a chef, andthey love the show “Diners, Drive-ins andDives” on the Food Network. They weregoing to stop at featured restaurants.

“I’m not ready to give up,” Carey saidFriday. His 4-year-old terrier, Couper,barked. His wife, Jodi, composed herselfbeside him.

As families assemble thisweekend to cel-ebrate their patriarchs, theCareyswill cele-brate under the pall of illness but with agreater appreciation for their bond. Cancermakes getting together more difficult, butalsomore imperative.

TheCareys and their twoyoung children— daughter Layne, 14, and sonMason, 10 —

Ailing Wellington man cherishes family as Father’s Day nearsBy BenWolfordStaff writer

See FATHER, 2B

Waiving library book late fees couldhelp keep more kids reading, accordingto a Palm Beach County proposal aimedat helping low-income families.

County officials this week agreed toexplore the idea of lifting the 10 cents-a-day late fees, at least for children.

The concern is that the fee — and thesuspended librarybookborrowingprivi-leges that can follow—mostly hurts thechildrenwho can least afford it.

Children shouldn’t be discouragedfromchecking out library books becauseof financial hardships, according toCommissioner Paulette Burdick, who

Commission hopes morekids will read without fines

By Andy ReidStaff writer

Librarylate feesmay end

See LIBRARY, 2B

“Peopleneed tostill beaccountable.We have tohave rules.”CountyCommissionerPriscilla Taylor

After losing bothhis hands and feet to abacterial infection, 13-year-old MichaelStolzenbergknows there’s a reasonhesur-vived.

And this week that reason was madeclear–byOprahWinfrey.

The talk show host and media mogulcalled Michael on Monday, pledging$100,000to thewebsitehestartedwithhisbrother, Harris, to raise money for theamputees injured in the Bostonmarathonbombings.

“Michael was beyond surprised,” saidhis mom, Laura. “If the reason he’s stillhere is to help others, he’ll take it. Andthat’swhatyoutrulywantforyourkids, forthemto inspireothers.”

Last month Winfrey told Michael’sstoryduringhercommencementspeechat

By Karen YiStaff writer

Michael Stolzen-berg, above, and hisbrother, Harris, areraising money foramputees injured inthe Boston mara-thon bombings.Oprah Winfreycalled Michael onMonday and saidshe wanted todonate $100,000 tothe cause.

Oprah gives tolocal fundraiser

See OPRAH, 2B

Statewildlife officerswill patrol PalmBeachCounty beaches thisweekend, after a high number of failed nesting attempts by seaturtles.

The officerswillwalk the beaches and educate the public aboutthe need to leave the giant reptiles alonewhile they lay eggs.

A higher number than average have emerged from the ocean andreturnedwithout lay-ing eggs this year. Evenshining a bright lighton a turtle can discour-age her fromnesting, aprocess that can takeup to twohours.

— David Fleshler

Turtles have trouble nesting this seasonExpect a hot, dry Father’s Day weekendDad can expect to get sweaty onhis special day, as it should be a

hot Father’sDayweekend,with afternoon tem-peratures in the low90s. Even the eveningsshould be fairlywarm,with readings in theupper 70s.

At least it should be relatively dry. Theforecast calls for little chance of rain onSaturday and isolated showers andstorms on Sunday. Both days should bemostly sunny.

Monday also should be on the dryside.

– Ken Kaye

Onlinetoday

@8 a.m.:Check outsome of thebest Instagramphotos fromour readers,and submityour own. SunSentinel.com/instagram

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See FOOD, 2B

Here are three examples of working with little space and a lot of content. The left and middle were both in the special section after the Heat won the NBA Championship. The right is a visualization of what one could buy using $31.50, which is one week of food stamps.

page design4 | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, June 23, 2013 SPFR

First roundvs.MilwaukeeThedefendingNBAchampions didn’t facemuch of a

test in their opening series of the 2013 playoffs. TheHeat earned double-digit victories in all four gamesagainst theBucks. Itwas the first postseason sweep intheBigThree era, and comfortablemargins enabled theHeat to giveDwyaneWade some rest.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,April 21:Heat110, Bucks 87Game2,April 23:Heat 98, Bucks 86Game3,April 25:Heat104, Bucks 91Game4,April 28:Heat 88, Bucks 77Heatwin, 4-0

Bucks just nomatch forHeatMILWAUKEE—Thiswas the preseason portion of

the playoffs.Itwas a challenge so soft that it did not even require

DwyaneWade or anything close to the best of theHeatfor the sweep-completing 88-77 victory.

Themeat of the playoffs arrived. “We’re going tostart to feel it,” forward ShaneBattier said.

But that doesn’tmean therewasn’tmeaning inGame4.

What this sweep showed, just as last season’s cham-pionship showed, is that you can never have toomuch.And that sometimes, toomuch is just enough, nomatterwhatDavid Stern seems to think.

No, this neverwas about overkill fromPatRiley andMickyArison, even if thatwas the outside impression.

It is how theHeat survivedChris Bosh’s absenceduring themiddle of last season’s playoffs, how theycould comfortably go intoGame4withoutWade.

“This iswhywe’re all here.Wewanted somethingdifferent for ourselves,”Wade said of feeling no pres-sure to push throughhis knee issue.

— Ira Winderman

EasternConference semifinals vs. ChicagoFor the first time this postseason, theHeatwere

dealt a loss asChicago opened the serieswith awin.But theHeat showed it could take a punch, dealing theBulls theirworst playoff loss in franchise history inGame2. The 37-pointmargin of victorywas aHeatpostseason high.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,May6:Bulls 93,Heat 86Game2,May8:Heat115, Chicago 78Game3,May10:Heat104, Chicago 94Game4,May13:Heat 88, Chicago 65Game5,May15:Heat 94, Chicago 91Heatwin, 4-1

Wade’s effort clinchesGame5winMIAMI—Always, for teams climbing themountain,

there are nights like this,when their breathing’s la-bored, and their opponent plays hard, and there arehealthy spasms of doubt aboutwhether they’rewhoeveryone thinks they are.

So itwas late intoGame 5 of theHeat’s 94-91win toclose out the playoff series against Chicago. You ex-pected easy? You got strenuous.

You expected a relaxed evening?You gotHeat fansjumping off their seatswhenNorris Cole hit a jumpshot, then ran down the lanewith a dunk.

You expected the tough question of the night to bewhether a hurtingWadewould play?

The real questionwas:Whatwould theHeat havedonewithoutWade?Hehad amore efficient shootingnight than James. And theHeat needed every bit ofWade’s two short floaters and slamdunk off an offen-sive rebound in the finalminutes to close out this game.

Finally, Chicago fell.“The toughest close-out game ofmy career,” said

James,whose 23-point night hid 5-for-14 shooting.— Dave Hyde

EasternConference finals vs. IndianaTheHeat’s biggest postseason test thus far came

from thePacers,whopushedMiami to a decidingGame 7. The serieswasmarked by physical play, thestruggles ofWade andBosh, and leagueMVPJamescommenting he’d reverted to his “Cleveland days.” ButtheHeatmade adjustments to advance.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,May 22:Heat103, Pacers102 (OT)Game2,May 24:Pacers 97,Heat 93Game3,May 26:Heat114, Pacers 96Game4,May 28:Pacers 99,Heat 92Game5,May30:Heat 90, Pacers 79Game6, June1:Pacers 91,Heat 77Game7, June 3:Heat 99, Pacers 76Heatwin, 4-3

Heat take big punches, surviveMIAMI—Itwas the finalminutes of the final game

and, as the crowd stood, as the applause rained, herecame one final surprise of theEasternConferencefinals. Jameswent to the bench.Hewasn’t neededanymore.

This difficult stepwas that easy by the end. Jameskissed his fingers and raised a fist to the crowd as theHeat rolled to a 99-76win inGame 7.

LeBronVoyage, Indiana.Hello, NBAFinals.And so it goes on. The quest. TheHeat spring. All the

intoxicating drama. It’sMiami against SanAntonio intheNBAFinals.

If a couple of days aren’tmuch time to prepare, thenews is theHeat survived to prepare. TheHeat tooksomebig punches from Indiana.

But they standwith the crown still on their head, thewords “defending champion” before their name, be-causewhen itmatteredmost they rememberedwhotheywere, and theBigThree did it right from tip-off.

— Dave Hyde

NBAFinals vs. SanAntonioFormuch of the series, theHeat faced scrutiny after

not being able towin back-to-back games in either theconference finals or theNBAFinals. The team lookedin trouble late inGame6, but the seasonwas salvagedafter RayAllen hit an improbable 3-pointer to forceovertime. Eventually,Miami picked up a pair ofwinsand became just the fourth team inFinals history torally froma 3-2 deficit. SeriesMVPJames averaged 25.3points, 10.9 rebounds, and 7.0 assists.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1, June6: Spurs 92,Heat 88Game2, June9:Heat103, Spurs 84Game3, June11: Spurs113,Heat 77Game4, June13:Heat109, Spurs 93Game5, June16: Spurs114,Heat104Game6, June18:Heat103, Spurs101(OT)Game7, June 20:Heat 95, Spurs 88Heatwin, 4-3

Lastmen standing once againMIAMI—The jump shot fromJameswent into the

netwith 27.9 seconds left, and, as soon as it did, hepumpedhis fistwith awinner’s look, a champion’slook, as the noise you’d only heard once before shookAmericanAirlinesArena.

SanAntonio’s seasonwas finally fading, and theHeat’s starwas rising, again, in this 95-88win inGame7 of theNBAFinals.

TheywonwithLeBron scoring 37 points. TheywonwithWade answering questionswith 23 points. They

wonwithBattiermaking six 3-point shots— asmanyshots as he’dmade in the previous six Finals games.

Theywon against a SanAntonio team full of deserv-ingHall of Famers,who keptmatching theHeat shotfor shot Thursday night,moment formoment, untilLeBron’s jumper provided a 4-point cushion.

Theywon.Those are the twowords thatmatter. Erik Spoelstra

said the two greatestwords in sportswere “Game 7”?WinningGame 7makes it all the sweeter, all the better,the entire night amemory to embrace.

Every time theHeat tried to pull away in the fourthquarter, the Spurs answered right back. A bounce here,amistake there. Thatwas the sliver of difference. That’showyouwant towin a championship, being asked to begreat and delivering greatness.

At one point late in the third quarter,Wade andJames had scored 38 of theHeat’s previous 43 points.That’s a good starting recipe for success. ButThursdayitwas the only recipe, and it put the season on the cliff.

They needed something froma supporting player?Here came a couple to help. Battiermade shots. ThentherewasChris “Birdman”Andersen.Hewas an ener-gy pill again this night. Rebounds. Blocks. Defense onTimDuncan.He even took a charge onManuGinobiliin the fourth quarter.

Do or be done, thatwas the drama of this night, in somanymoreways than just the scoreboard. In someway, the future of theBigThreewas at stake. Inmanyways, the legacy of thisHeat erawas.

This championshipwas harder.More taxing. Partwas Indiana and SanAntonio pushed them to themax-imumseven games,while only Boston did a year ago.Partwas repeating is alwaysmore difficult.

The regular season “just flewby,”Wade said. “Butthe playoffs have been likeGroundhogDay. Andwe’rehere until the last possible day in theNBA, until the lastpossible game.”

— Dave Hyde

Long, winding road

It wasn’t easy, but Heat rose to the challenge

Bulls present firstmountain to climb

Big Three producewith season on line

Tougher than 2012,but sweeter as well

Easy first round allowsWade to rest sore knee

NBA Champions

There probably aren’t too many people whodon’t love to eat lobster, which is why so manyFloridians love lobsterminiseason.

Theannualhunt for the tasty crustaceans,whichis Wednesday and Thursday, attracts tens of thou-sands of divers fromthroughout the stateto South Florida andtheKeys,where lobstersare abundant and ac-cess to them is easy.

There are sev-eral reasons forminiseason’spopularity:

It gives recreational diversthe first crack at lobsterssince the recreational andcommercial seasons closedon April 1 and beforethose seasons reopenonAug. 6.

Because lobstershavenot been harassed forfour months, they havegrown bigger and lesswary, so legal-sized lob-sters should be morenumerous and easier to catch.

Outside of the Keys and Biscayne National Park,the daily bag limit is 12 lobsters. The regular seasonlimit is six.

“We can get double our limit, so that makes itkindofexciting,” saidJim“Chiefy”Mathie,ofDeer-fieldBeach,who saidhis bestminiseasonproduced48 lobsters in one dive for him and his three divebuddies. “We get the opportunity to get a jump onthe commercial guys sowe can get a little stockpilegoing.”

The downside of miniseason is that it attractspeople who, caught up in the thrill of catching adelicious dinner, forget or ignore essential divingsafety rules.

Have fun,but be safeduringminiseason

Please turn to LOBSTER, 8C

By SteveWatersStaff writer

OUTDOORS

LobsterminiseasonThe two-dayminiseason runs from12:01 a.m. Wednesdayto midnight Thursday.

PN Sunday, July 21, 2013 SunSentinel.com Sun Sentinel | 1C

Sports

The Ski Club of the PalmBeaches is headed toTuscaloosa, Ala., for the 2013Water Ski SouthernRegionals.

Wellington residents SamanthaDumala,MarkBozicevic and John Shealy,andPhil Brodt of BocaRaton, four skierswho recently set state records at a local tour-nament,will anchor the16-member teamcompeting at the regionals beginningWednesday.

The skiers are preparing to host theGoodeWater SkiNationals for a second year fromAug.13-17 out of theirOkeeheelee Park location.

— Erica A. Hernandez

Ski club to compete in Southern RegionalsThe15 football-playingACC schoolswill contend for seven spots in bowl

games starting in 2014 under a newplan.TheOrangeBowlwill continue to play host to the league champion unless

itmakes the new four-teamplayoff. That contractwill span the next12 sea-sons.

Additional partnerships are expected to be finalized soon,but theACC released the list of seven that’ll be in effect next

season. TheACCbowl options include: OrangeBowl,Russell Athletic Bowl (Orlando), SunBowl (El Paso), BelkBowl (Charlotte),MusicCity Bowl (Nashville), GatorBowl (Jacksonville) andPinstripeBowl (NewYorkCity).

— Michael Casagrande

Changes loom in 2014 for ACC bowlsOnlinetoday

@8 a.m.: TheMiami Dolphinskick off theirtraining camppractices.Follow theminute-by-minute reportsfrom beatwriters on thescene, atSunSentinel.com/dolphins

Chris Bosh’s summer of celebration tookan exotic detour last week from a familyexcursion to France and Italy.

TheMiamiHeat center, fresh off helpingwin a repeat championship, couldn’t passup a chance to lend his talents to anotherformidable conquest: India. The nation of1.2 billion is the next international frontierfor theNBA, which has already establisheditself as a force in China and other foreignmarkets.

Bosh has been to China several times, asan Olympian and with the Heat, as well ason promotional tours. A renaissance man

whose curiosity ranges far from the court,he was intrigued by the prospect of experi-encing the otherAsian giant.

“I’m always interested in traveling theworld, and any opportunity that comes upto spread the game of basketball and travel,I think that is the best of both,” Bosh said ina phone interview with the Sun Sentinelduring his four days in Mumbai as specialemissary of theNBA.

“People are aware [of basketball.] Not asaware as China, but I think the love of thegame is growing here. A lot of people hereare interested in basketball. There are a lotof Heat fans. They were watching the Fi-

Chris Bosh explores Mumbai during his trip to India this month. Thenation of 1.2 billion is the next international frontier for the NBA.

NBA ENTERTAINMENT PHOTO

Bosh helps build interest inNBABy Craig DavisStaff writer

InsideHeat President PatRiley and ownerMicky Arison couldeventually disagreeon how Miamishould handle itsroster in regard tothe NBA’s punitiveluxury tax goingforward. Page 3C

HEAT

See BOSH, 2C

The begin-ning of anNFLseason repre-sents optimism,and shouldpossess excite-ment and re-newedhope.

There’susually play-off talk and

aspirations for a divisiontitle.Maybe someonewillwhisper those twowordsfewdare speak of in July ...Super Bowl.

As South Floridianswe’ve been on thismerry-go-round before, but it hasbeen awhile since the ridehas spun this fast. Theintensity has been turnedup on theDolphins cour-tesy of the $150million-plusmake-over SteveRoss’ checkbookhasprovided.

A free agent spending spree isn’ttheway to build a franchise, but itcertainly does help one plug holesfast, creating excitement.

“They’re trying to definitelyimprove the team, and I’m surethat everybody that’s involved is inagreementwith the course ofaction that they’re taking, so hope-fully itwillwork out for them,”said formerDolphins czar BillParcells, who laid a fragile founda-

See KELLY, 6C

Omar Kelly

15, 2013.August

TRAINING

SEASONTop50players on theDolphins’ training camproster,whichwill have tobe trimmed to 53 in September.

5. SS Reshad JonesJones had a breakout

season in 2012, contrib-uting 91 tackles, four inter-ceptions, two forced fum-bles and one sack. Can hedo it again?

4. C Mike PounceyThis former Gator,

who is entering his thirdseason with the Dolphins,is developing into one ofthe NFL’s premiere cen-ters.

3. CB Brent GrimesGrimes appears to be

fully recovered from theAchilles tendon injury thatlimited him to one gamelast season for the Falcons.

2.WR Mike WallaceThis speedster has ac-

counted for 32 touchdownsin his four seasonswith theSteelers, but he’ll need tosettle into his new situa-tion.

1. DE Cameron WakeThis two-time Pro

Bowl selection has tallied43 sacks in his four NFLseasons, and despite being31 there’s no sign he’s slow-ing down.

By Omar KellyStaff wrier

CONTINUED ON PAGE 6

Time forDolphins’mediocrityto end

Kelly Leary, M.S. www.PrecisionDating.com

Members Are Pre-Screened • Ages 35-78

Co-Founder of Precision Dating Call: 954-421-2000

Call beforeMonday for acomplimentaryconsultation.

PN Sunday, July 14, 2013 SunSentinel.com Sun Sentinel | 1C

Sports

Two former PalmBeachCounty kicking standouts are in the run-ning for one of college football’s premier postseason awards.

Earlier thisweek,Michigan’s BrendanGibbons, a CardinalNew-man alum, andAuburn’s CodyParkey, a Jupiter grad,were named totheLouGroza award preseasonwatch list.

Gibbonswas a 2012Groza semifinalist.He converted16 of18 fieldgoals last season,while Parkeywas11of14 and set a career longwith a pair of 46-yarders.

Bothwonhonors as PBC’s Place-kicker of theYearwhilein high school.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Gibbons, Parkey on Groza watch list

Professionalwrestler “Showtime”Eric Young goes spearfishing for lionfishoff Fort Lauderdale in Sunday’s episodeof “Off TheHook: ExtremeCatches,”which airs at 8 p.m. onAnimal Planet.

Young also catches a 250-pound goliath grouper using a handline off BocaGrande.

Scuba divingwith instructorWesGruver, Young shoots sixlionfish using a pole spear. The underwater footage is excellentand educational.

— Steve Waters

Lionfish on the menufor extreme TV show

Onlinetoday

@7 a.m.:Check out thevideohighlights fromthe MiamiMarlins’ gameagainst thevisitingWashingtonNationals, atSunSentinel.com/marlins

HALLANDALEBEACH—Thepastyearwas full of mixed blessings for Davin Jo-seph.

Starting with a major knee injury in apreseason game last summer, the Pro Bowloffensive lineman found a few fulfilling off-field activities. His expanded communityservice role continued Saturday at Hallan-daleHigh School for a second annual youthfootball camp at his almamater.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneer hopes to beback at full strength when training campbegins later thismonthandhe’ll returnwithadded perspective. He saw every one of his9-year-old sonAli’s baseball games—some-thing he couldn’t have done normally.

But now, nearly a year after tearing hispatellar tendon, Joseph’s smile can’t hidehis excitement for a return to the footballfield.

“I need to get hit again,” he saidmatter offactly.

And he was never worried about theunfortunate circumstance ending hisdream. A typical day involved two hours ofrehab in the morning followed by anothertwo hours of cardio. About 90 minutes oftreatmentwrapped things up.

Washington Redskin Trent Williams, aformer star atOklahoma like Joseph,was atHallandaleHighSchool as a guest coach fortheclinic.HebelievesJosephwillbebacktohisoldself this fall, sayinghe’s still in the toptwo at his guard position.

“I think after seeing what AdrianPeterson did last year coming off totallytearing every ligament in his knee, thatshould just let you know how athletes canrecover now a days,” the No. 4 overall pickin the 2010 draft said.

And that doesn’t even account for theeasily recognizable spirit Joseph exudes.

Hewasamagnet foryouthcampersathisSaturday event and the smile rarely left his6-foot-3, 313-pound frame.

Hallandalealum readyfor returnto formByMichael CasagrandeStaff writer

NFL/DAVIN JOSEPH

See JOSEPH, 5C

GAINESVILLE — After missing hismark a couple of times, Jeff Driskel wasdiscouraged yet evenmore determined.

As the minutes ticked away and the sundipped below the horizon, the Florida Gat-ors quarterback had one more chance toredeem himself, spotting his target in thedistance.

Driskel’s opponent — in this case a160-poundwild hog—never had a chance.

“I was getting a little frustrated,” Driskelrecalled during a recent interview. “Wewere getting close to going in and it wasgetting dark. We saw one in an open field.We tried to sneakupon it and it heardus, so

I just ran as far as I could, waited for it tostop, kneeled down and I dropped it in thepuddle ofwater itwas running through.

“Thatwas real exciting.”The Gators hope Driskel is as focused,

unflappableandontarget this fallduringhissecond season under center. Too often lastseason Driskel looked more like a deercaught in the headlights.

This was not entirely unexpected. Lastspringandsummer,Driskel split snapswithJacoby Brissett until coaches decided dur-ing the season opener against BowlingGreen to name Driskel their startingquarterback.

To win 10 games — Driskel sat out Flori- “As I go into 2013, the most important player in the SEC is [UF QBJeff] Driskel,” CBS college football analyst Gary Danielson said.“... He must come through. He’s the key.”

JOSHUA C. CRUEY/STAFF FILE PHOTO

All eyes on QB DriskelBy Edgar ThompsonStaff writer

FergusontransfersFormer FlanaganHigh star widereceiver JustinFerguson transfersfrom Notre Dame toWestern Michigan.Story, 6C.

UF FOOTBALL

See UF, 6C

DanMarino isNo.1.LarryCsonka isNo.2.No questions, right?

They belong at the topof South Florida’sGreatest Athlete list,right? Marino cackledwith a football electric-ity thatwon games, soldtickets and defined anew city. Csonka was

the rugged face of the Glory Years ofthe ‘70s when the Dolphins put anational stampon the region.

DwyaneWade isNo. 3.LeBron James isNo. 4.Here the debate begins. And it be-

ginswith LeBron. Somewill say he’stoo high since he’s played with theHeat only three years. Some will sayhe’s low considering his formidablefeats in that time and the fact no onehas beenmore athletic.

Chris Evert isNo. 5.BobGriese isNo. 6.Let the debate runwild now.How

do youweigh individual athletes likeEvert, who belonged to the world,against team-sport Hall of Famers

best athletes

SOUTHFLORIDAof

See HYDE, 8C

1. Dan Marino. For 17 years, he lifted the Dol-phins with his Hall of Fame career. If youbelieve sports help define communities, his

electric passing game helped give South Florida avibrant feel in the 1980s and 1990s. His lastingtestament, however, might be his autism centerthat is considered the world’s best for helpingchildren.

2. Larry Csonka. His thick, mustachioed,broken-nosed face became the identityof the 1970s Dolphins’ Super Bowl runs.

He’s the franchise’s all-time rushing leader. Cson-ka’s physical running is understood by his two-touchdown, 33-carry, 145-yard effort in Super BowlVIII. Even Don Shula named his dog, “Zonk.”

3. Dwyane Wade. Three championships.One NBA Finals Most Valuable Playeraward. Nine times voted an All-Star. He

gave reasons to watch the team through somedark seasons and, these past two years, reasonsnever to dismiss him even through injury.

4. LeBron James. He’s only been in townthree years. But is he too low? Has anyother South Florida player ever been the

hands-down top athlete in their game? And maybethe world? James has driven the Heat to threeconsecutive NBA Finals, two titles and made thisfranchise the most-watched American franchise inthe world during this period.

5. Chris Evert. Before winning 18 GrandSlam titles, Evert was the Florida statehigh school champ for St. Thomas

Aquinas. Her roots are here. She learned to playfrom her father, Jimmy, a tennis instructor, atHoliday Park in Fort Lauderdale. No homegrownathlete did more in the broad world of sports than“Chris America.”

Dave Hyde

tion before leaving the team in 2010.All that’s left of the Parcells era is GeneralMan-

ager Jeff Ireland and a handful of starters likeCam-eronWake, BrianHartline, Reshad Jones, ChrisClemons, Randy Starks andRichie Incognito.

TheParcells era of theDolphins is long gone, andso are his influences. But his pupil, Ireland, remainsat the control of this carousel.

Whether that’s a good thing can be debated tillwe’re dizzy—and already has. But ultimately thisseasonwill provide us a definitive answer to thatquestion because ifMiami can’t produce awinningrecordwith this expensive, full-fledgedmakeover allhope is lost.

However, Parcells believes the turbulent off-season the Patriots had should bring themback tothe pack a little, providing awindowof opportunityforMiami.

“I think their division is such that they can becompetitive, and evenmaybe have a chance towinit, so I’mhopeful that goeswell for them,” Parcellssaid. “I do have a high regard for SteveRoss. I likehimverymuch. I talk to him from time to time, and Icertainlywish himwell.”

WhatRoss and SouthFlorida deserves iswhatParcells promised back in 2007,which is a franchiseon a solid foundation.

If onewas in place this head-to-toemakeoverwouldn’t be needed.

But last year’s 7-9 teamneededmore speed, so theDolphins gaveMikeWallace a $60million contract,andmadehimone of theNFL’s highest paid receiv-ers.

An offensive line that lost ProBowl left tackleJakeLong needed to be fortified so the front officesignedTyson Clabo andLanceLouis and draftedformerTennessee standoutDallas Thomas in thethird-round.

TheDolphins neededmore turnovers and game-altering plays so the franchise signed younger andmore athletic linebackers inDannell Ellerbe andPhilipWheeler and drafted Florida’s Jelani Jenkins.

Joe Philbin’s teamneeded to cover downfieldbetter soMiami added former ProBowl cornerbackBrentGrimes and drafted two rookie cornerbacks,JamarTaylor andWill Davis, early.

The defense neededmore pass rushing than the42 sacks recorded last season soMiami traded up toselectOregon linebackerDion Jordan third-overall,adding the prospect viewed as the 2013 draft’s topdefender.

DanCarpenter broke down at the end of theseason, so theDolphins got a younger and cheaperkicker, selecting former Florida standoutCalebSturgis in the fifth-round.

Everything thatwas perceived as a problemwiththe oldDolphins has supposedly been fixed. Therewere somany new faceswhen the teambegan prac-ticing back inApril name tagswere needed.

“I thinkwe’re confident, butwe’re hungry,” saidquarterbackRyanTannehill, who is entering hissecond season as theDolphins’ starter. “Weunder-stand that it’s not going to come together overnight,butwehave to put in the time during camp.”

Problem is the 2013 squadhas been built by thesame architect that built the rosters that turned infour straight losing seasons.

The true purpose of training camp and the exhi-bition seasonwill be identifyingwhat exactly, orwho exactlywillmake this season any different thanthe previous four?

Spending big doesn’t guaranteewins. Parcells didthat his first two season inMiamiwith little success.

What theDolphins, and their fan base need is away to get off thismerry-go-round ofmediocre.

Onlywins can do that.

KELLYContinued from Page 1C

6C | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, July 21, 2013 PN

7. OG Richie Incognito —Miami’s starting leftguard for the past three seasons finally got the

recognition he deserves, earning a Pro Bowl spot in‘12.

8. DT Paul Soliai — Soliai serves as a pillar ofgranite on the front line, helping the defense

hold opponents to 4.0 yards per carry or fewer thepast three years.

9. ILB Dannell Ellerbe—Ellerbehadabreakoutseason in his one year as a starter with the

Ravens. Miami gave him a $35 million contract toreplaceKarlosDansby.

10. WR Brian Hartline — He became theeighth player in Dolphins history to catch

1,000 yards worth of passes in a season. His intellectand savvywill help him continue to thrive.

11. TE Dustin Keller — When healthy Keller,who averages 48 receptions inhis previous five

seasons, is the type of tight end that gives linebackersnightmares.

12. RB Lamar Miller — This former UMstandout averaged 4.9 yards per carry in his

limitedopportunities last season.Nowhe’s the first inline to become the featured back.

13. P Brandon Fields —Fields, who averageda career-best 50.2 yards per punt and 41.2 net

yards, has spent the past two seasons winning fieldposition battles.

14. QB Ryan Tannehill —TheDolphins’ 2012first-roundpickwasdecentasa rookie starter

last season, butMiami’s offenseneedshim tobecomemore clutch in critical situations.

15. DT Jared Odrick — The Dolphins’ 2010first-round pick has contributed 11 sacks, one

interceptionandforcedonefumble inhis twohealthyseasons. This year he’ll play insidemore.

16.OLB Philip Wheeler—Miami signedWheeler to a lucrative free agent deal because

of the109 tackles and three sacks he tallied playingfor theRaiders. Canhe recreate those numbers?

17. OLB Koa Misi —Misi was one of the team’smost improve players last season, benefiting

from a switch from a 3-4 to a 4-3 scheme. Will thisthree-year starter continue to blossom?

18. CB Richard Marshall —Marshall startedfour games, contributing 17 tackles and one

interception before suffering a season-ending backinjury. If healthy he should retain his starting spot.

19. FS Chris Clemons—Clemons has started22 games in his four seasons with the

Dolphins, and is comingoff a breakout yearwherehetallied 98 tackles and two interceptions.

20. DE Dion Jordan—The thirdoverall pickinthe2013draftwillbeeased intohisroleas

a pass rushing specialist, but he needs to make somekind of impact in year one.

21. OT Tyson Clabo—This nine-year veteranhasbeenoneof theNFL’sbetter starting right

tackles for the past few seasons. His presence shouldhelp fortify the right side of theO-line.

22. QB Matt Moore — Moore’s impressive2011 stint as the Dolphins starter, which

featured an 87.7 passer rating, proved he’s one of theNFL’s better backups.

23. OT Jonathan Martin — Martin spenthis entire college career at Stanfordprotect-

ing Andrew Luck’s blindside. Now he’s responsibleforTannehill’s blindside as JakeLong’s replacement.

24. DE Olivier Vernon — This former UMstandout flashed at times in his rookie

season, contributing 32 tackles, 3.5 sacks and forcingone fumble. But he’ll need to become moreconsistent.

25. WR Brandon Gibson — Gibson caught51 passes for 691 yards and scored five

touchdowns for the Rams last season. Miami signedhim to replaceDavoneBess in the slot.

26. SS Jimmy Wilson — Wilson, a hard-hitting safety trapped in a cornerback’s

body,will push for a starting safety spot, and to retainhis nickel cornerback role.

27. RB Marcus Thigpen—This formerCFLstandout set Dolphins records as a returner

in his first NFL season. What will this speedyscatback do in his second act?

28. RB Daniel Thomas — Thomas hasrushed for 906 yards and scored four

touchdowns inhis first twoNFLseasons.But the2011second-round pick has a dismal 3.5 yards per carryaverage.

29. TE Charles Clay —When this H-back isplaying well he’s a dangerous seam threat,

who has scored five touchdowns in two seasons. ButClay’s consistency and blocking remain an issue.

30. WR Armon Binns — This third-yearreceiver the Dolphins found on the waiver

wire last year was one of the team’s top performersthis offseason.Will Binns keep it upwhenpads comeon?

31. FB Jorvorskie Lane — Lane was one ofcamp’s pleasant surprises last year, trans-

forming himself from a late signee to a starter. But heneeds to trimhiswaist line to keep his job.

32. K Dan Carpenter—Carpenter hashad arelatively solid five-year career with the

Dolphins, making 81.9 percent of his field goalattempts. But his $2.7 million salary puts him on thehot seat.

33. CB Dimitri Patterson — Pattersonstarted two games for the Dolphins late last

season, and played well in his brief tenure. But his$4.5 million salary is roughly seven times what hiscompetitorsmake.

34. CB Nolan Carroll—Carroll has ahistoryof being a strong practice performer. But at

times he’s been a liability in games, making it hard todecide if he is fool’s gold or not?

35. OG John Jerry — This 2010 third-roundpick has started 29 games in his three

seasons, but his constant battle with his weight, andlimited run blocking skillsmakes him a liability.

36. K Caleb Sturgis—TheDolphinsdraftedthis former Gators standout in the fifth-

round to replace Dan Carpenter, but the rookie willneed to outshine the veteran in camp and theexhibition season.

37. RB Mike Gillislee — Gillislee turned hisone promising season at the University of

Florida into an opportunity to earn a spot on the 53man roster. His skillset hints he could become astarter.

38. TE Dion Sims — The Dolphins hopeSims, a 2013 fourth-roundpick,will become

an effective in-line blocker who can be paired with apass catching specialist.

39. CB Jamar Taylor — Miami’s second-round pick missed most of the offseason

program because of a hernia injury, so the rookiecornerback has some catching up to do.

40. CB Will Davis — Davis has a ton of rawathleticism, but he struggled at times

during training camp. Maybe he’ll play better whenthe speed of the game slows down.

41. OG Lance Louis — Louis was signed tochallenge John Jerry for the starting right

guard spot, but he’s still rehabbing a torn ACL hesuffered in lateNovember.

42. OT Nate Garner — Garner’s versatilityhas kept him on the Dolphins since 2008,

and he’ll likely continue in his role as Miami’splug-and-play offensive lineman.

43. OLB Jason Trusnik — This NFLjourneyman is viewed as Miami’s special

teams leader, so his solid play as that unit’s leadersupersedes his impact as a linebacker.

44. OT Dallas Thomas — The Dolphinsselected Thomas in the third-round of the

‘13 draft to serve as the primary backup at left tackleand left guard.

45. DT Vaughn Martin — Martin, whostarted27gameswith theChargers thepast

two seasons, was signed this offseason to fortify thefront line’s depth.

46. WR Rishard Matthews — This sev-enth-round pick contributed 11 receptions

for 151 yards in the eight games he played as a rookie.ButMiami addedmore talented receivers.

47. C Josh Samuda — This former Holly-woodHills standoutmade the53-manroster

as an undrafted rookie free agent last year.He’ll needto playwell in camp to extendhis stay.

48. DE Derrick Shelby — Shelby, whosigned as an undrafted rookie free agent

last year,was oneof camp’s pleasant surprises. Buthebarelymade any impact in16 games last year.

49. TE Michael Egnew — Concerns abouthis toughness limited Egnew to two games

last season.This former third-roundpickwill need toexcel to keep his roster spot.

50. OLB Jelani Jenkins — The former UFstandout needs to stay healthy, and excel as

a special teams contributor to earn a spot on the53-man roster.

DOLPHINS’ TALENT HAS IMPROVED

6.DT Randy Starks—TheDolphinsplaced thefranchise tag on Starks this offseason to ensure

that the defensive line remains the strength of theteam.

If you goWhen: Through Aug. 15

Where: Nova Southeastern University, 7500 SW30th St., Davie

Parking: Free parking is available in garage to theeast of the practice fields.

Admission: Free with seating available for the first2,000 fans.

DOLPHINS TRAINING CAMP FAN SCHEDULE

July 21 8 a.m.

July 22 8 a.m.

July 23 8 a.m.

July 24 8 a.m.

July 26 8 a.m.

July 26 8 a.m.*

July 28 8 a.m.**

July 29 7 p.m.

July 31 6 p.m.

Aug. 1 1:30 p.m.

Aug. 2 11:30 a.m.

Aug. 6 11 a.m.

Aug. 7 1:30 p.m

Aug. 11 1 p.m.***

Aug. 12 8 a.m.

Aug. 14 8 a.m.

Aug. 15 8 a.m.

Note

All practices will be held at Doctors Hospital TrainingFacility in Davie.

All practice times and dates are subject to change.

Practice will begin in the bubble, which will not bevisible to the fans attending. However, the team willbegin drills on the two outside fields about 40minutes after the scheduled time.

* Exclusive season ticket members practice

** Exclusive Fin Club members practice

*** Exclusive rookie season ticket members practice

Dolphins’trainingcamp

1/4 MILE

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SW 39 St.

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SW 30 St.

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84 595595# Player, Pos. Height Weight Years60 Jeff Adams, T 6-7 305 162 Chris Barker, G 6-2 305 R65 SamBrenner, C 6-2 301 R16 ChadBumphis,WR 5-10 196 R63 Chandler Burden, G 6-4 313 R78 Chris Burnette, DT 6-2 285 R49 Michael Clay, LB 5-11 230 R83 JasperCollins,WR 5-10 180 R3 AaronCorp, QB 6-4 220 17 PatDevlin, QB 6-3 225 376 A.J. Francis, DT 6-5 309 R56 JonathanFreeny, LB 6-2 250 214 Jeff Fuller,WR 6-4 223 132 JonasGray, RB 5-9 225 145 AlonzoHighsmith, LB 6-0 234 R47 DavidHinds, LB 6-0 226 R40 Keelan Johnson, S 5-11 209 R36 Don Jones, CB 5-11 191 R

57 JoshKaddu, LB 6-3 242 244 JordanKovacs, S 5-10 205 R6 CameronMarshall, RB 5-9 211 R

37 KelcieMcCray, S 6-1 200 267 AndrewMcDonald, T 6-6 310 186 KyleMiller, TE 6-5 260 266 TristanOkpalaugo,DE 6-4 245 R69 EmekaOnyenekwu,DE 6-3 251 R38 Julian Posey, CB 5-11 187 223 De’Andre Presley, CB 5-10 185 197 KheestonRandall, DT 6-5 309 289 TracyRobertson,DT 6-4 280 158 LeeRobinson, LB 6-2 253 148 EvanRodriguez, RB 6-2 239 253 Austin Spitler, LB 6-2 250 425 R.J.Stanford, CB 5-10 185 373 BrianThomas, G 6-3 315 R85 BrianTyms,WR 6-3 210 172 Will Yeatman, T 6-6 270 3

THE REMAINING

8C | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, July 14, 2013 PN

likeGriese, who played on the definitive South Flori-da franchise?

The answer is simple. My column. My rules. Myfloating formula for grading this area’s greatest ath-letes involves talent, success, longevity, local impact, acup of historical perspective and maybe a pinch ofpersonal subjectivity.

VenusWilliams is13th.TedHendricks is14th.What? Hendricks is the first University of Miami

athlete on the list? A guy from the mid-1960s? Calmdown. He’s the only Miami player to be named All-America three straight years — in other words, everyyear hewas eligible.

This brings upwho isn’t on the list. Ray Lewis, forexample. He might be the best defensive player inNFL history. But the rule of the list is college playerswere graded only bywhat they did in college.

Lewis was great in college. A three-year starter.All-America his final, junior season. But he didn’tmake the cut. Who else didn’t? The Marlins’ JoshBeckett, the pitching hero of the 2003World Series.

There’s the other debate. But ignore your beatingheart and look at the cold, dry numbers. Beckettwonmore than nine games just once in his five seasonswith the Marlins. He was 2-2 that 2003 postseason(thoughwith a 2.11ERA).

He pitched a shutout in Yankee Stadium, his sec-ond win in the series, to seal the title. Does onelegendary moment get you in the room? Not whenI’m thedoorkeeper.Which tells how tough the cut is.

TimHardaway isNo. 21.Miguel Cabrera isNo. 22.Cabrera is the first Marlin on the list. John Van-

biesbrouck is the first Panther atNo. 27. Rick Barry isthe only University ofMiami basketball player at No.24.SanyaRichards-Ross is the topOlympianatNo.15.

And there’s a horse, Cigar, atNo. 38.Debating the greatest ever in a region is something

like figuring the greatest ever in a sport. It’s a fool’serrand. There is no greatest ever when you weigheras, positions, teams, opponents and changes to thegame. But it’s fun to debate.

TedWilliams, thegreatBostonbaseballplayer, saidhis one goal was to walk down the street and havepeople say, “There goes Ted Williams, the greatesthitterwho ever lived.”

Williams wasn’t better than Barry Bonds, was he?Sports sparks conversation like that. Sports is a con-versation, mainly, if you’re not on the field. Whatplayer is better? Which championship was moreexciting?Who are the Top 50 players in South Flori-da sports history?

DougBetters isNo. 49.Bennie Blades isNo. 50.Poor Udonis Haslem. The three-time NBA cham-

pion and part of the Heat’s fabric just misses the cut.He’sNo. 51. At least onmy list.

best athletes

SOUTHFLORIDAof

HYDEContinued from Page 1C

6. Bob Griese. His Hall of Famecareer includes two Super

Bowls, an NFL Player of the Yearaward and six Pro Bowls. TheThinking Man’s Quarterback isbest understood by two stats: (1)He passed seven times in the 1973Super Bowl when the runninggame dominated. (2) He led theNFL in TD passes in 1977 when hisarm was the best way to win.

7. Alonzo Mourning. He has allthe credentials — seven-time

All-Star, two-time DefensivePlayer of the Year, one champion-ship — and made a big impact inthe community with his Over-town Youth Center.

8. Dwight Stephenson. Hewas football’s dominant line-

man of the 1980s. In an injury-shortened career, he was a majorreason the Dolphins went to twoSuper Bowls and is consideredthe best center in NFL history.

9. Serena Williams. The onlyreason she’s not any higher is

her story starts and is defined onthe hard courts of Compton,Calif. That’s where her father,Richard, began teaching hisdaughters tennis. She’s won 16Grand Slams and been the domi-nant player in women’s tennis fora remarkable stretch.

10. Nick Buoniconti. The vet-eran leader of the Dolphins’

No-Name defense. His son, Marc,put it best in introducing Nick atthe Hall of Fame: Dad was toosmall, too slow and didn’t listentoo well to make that matter. Hiswork after football in foundingThe Miami Project to Cure Paraly-sis dwarfs anything he did insports.

11. Larry Little. Power, speedand toughness were the

hallmarks of Little, a five-time All-Pro selection who helped definethe Dolphins’ power runninggame of the 1970s. He’s com-pletely local, too, attending all-black Booker T. Washington Highin the segregated era of Miamibefore attending Bethune-Cook-man.

12. Jason Taylor. Thirteen Dol-phins seasons (15 total).

One NFL Defensive Player of theYear award. Surely, a Hall of Fameberth. From the late-1990s to,well, now, he was one of the fewbright spots in the franchise.

13. Venus Williams. Winner ofseven Grand Slam titles, Se-

rena’s older sister took over ten-nis when she burst on the sceneand, like her sister, managed hercareer in a way to enjoy longevitybeyond most tennis players.

14. Ted Hendricks. Universityof Miami players are judged

on their impact only at the schoolin this list. Hendricks is theschool’s lone three-time All-American — and he played in anera where freshmen were ineligi-ble. He leads the school in tacklesby a non-linebacker (227).

15. Sanya Richards-Ross.With her story still being

written, Richards-Ross won thegold medal at the 2012 LondonOlympics in the 400 meters. Shehas won three Olympic golds inthe 4x400-meter relay. The St.Thomas Aquinas alum wasnamed the National High SchoolFemale Athlete of the Year in2002.

16. Paul Warfield. If he playedmore than four Dolphins

seasons, he’d be much higher.The best pure athlete on the1970s Dolphins, Warfield broughtworld-class speed (he passed ona trip to the ’64 Olympics for theNFL) and such an intellectualview of football that he helped ayoung Bob Griese to read com-plex defensive coverages.

17. Jim Langer. Hall of Famecenter of the 1970s Dol-

phins. One interesting tidbit tohis career. Like Larry Little andBob Kuechenberg, Langer waspicked off the scrap heap afterbeing cut by Cleveland.

18. Zach Thomas. One of themost popular Dolphins,

Thomas was a seven-time ProBowl selection and the fran-chise’s all-time tackling leader.Not bad for a fifth-round pickwho was expected to help onspecial teams.

19. Vinny Testaverde. TheHeisman Trophy quarter-

back helped take Miami into thenational spotlight for good in theJimmy Johnson Era. Testaverdewas 21-1 as a starter and com-bined athleticism, size and talentto become the NFL’s top draftpick.

20. Bob Kuechenberg. NoDolphin started in more

big games than Kuechenberg, ashe played in four of the fran-chise’s five Super Bowl appear-ances. He played with a brokenarm in the 1974 Super Bowl, frus-trating Minnesota’s Alan Page tothe point Page was ejected fromthe game.

21. Tim Hardaway. From 1996to 2001, Hardaway was the

one who directed the Heat andtook the biggest shots in games.He left as the franchise’s all-timeassist leader, a position DwyaneWade passed.

22. Miguel Cabrera. One in themany what-could-have-

been Marlins, Cabrera hit .313 inhis Marlins career, tops of thefranchise. His .929 OPS (slugging-plus-on-base percentage) is sec-ond. A four-time All-Star, he alsohad four postseason home runsin 2003 when he was 20.

23. Ed Reed. He got the finalscholarship from Miami

coach Butch Davis in 1997 whenanother recruit backed out. Hewent on to start the second-most games (48) in school his-tory, lead the school in intercep-tions (21) and was a two-time All-American.

24. Rick Barry. The hands-down best player with the

University of Miami basketballprogram, Barry led the nationwith a 37.4-point scoring averagewhen named All-American in1965. The team didn’t play in theNCAA Tournament as it was onprobation.

25. Jack Nicklaus. You couldargue he should be off the

list as he attended high schooland college and has his golf tour-nament in Columbus, Ohio. Youcould argue he belongs to SouthFlorida as much as anyone as heraised his children and set upbusiness in Palm Beach. So it’s asplit vote. Which is why he’s half-way on the list.

26. Shaquille O’Neal. He arrived in South Floridafiring a water gun from the cab of a semi

truck, finished second in MVP voting in 2005 andhelped win a title in 2006. As good as that was, healso is known for being challenged to a fight by PatRiley, and for being in the middle of Stan Van Gun-dy’s departure.

27. John Vanbiesbrouck. The first pick of the ex-pansion draft, Vanbiesbrouck was a three-

time All-Star with the Panthers and most remem-bered as the backbone of the magical 1996 run tothe Stanley Cup Finals. In that year’s playoffs, he hada 2.25 goals-against average and a .932 save per-centage.

28. Luis Castillo. He played more games, scoredmore runs, had more hits, drew more walks,

stole more bases and had more multi-hit gamesthan any other Marlin. Part of that is him stayingaround long enough to amass the numbers. Hestarted for the 2003 World Series champions andwon three Gold Gloves at second base.

29. Mark Clayton. The eighth-round draft pickwent on to lead the Dolphins in receptions

(550), receiving yards (8,869) and touchdowns(82). A mix of quickness, toughness and feistiness,Clayton was a five-time All-Pro selection.

30. Mike Lowell. He ranks first on the Marlins forRBI and second in total bases, home runs and

extra-base hits. He also set a tone of professional-ism that helped a young team win the 2003 WorldSeries. A homegrown product in Miami, he also at-tended Florida International University.

31. Jennifer Rodriguez. A Cuban-American raisedin Miami, Rodriguez switched from inline to

speed skating and competed in four Winter Olym-pics. She won two bronze medals at Salt Lake in2004. She also won a gold medal at the 2005 WorldChampionships.

32. Sean Taylor. As a freshman, he played on Mi-ami’s 2001 championship team. As a sopho-

more, he starred on the team that lost to Ohio Statein the championship game. As a junior, his final sea-son, he led the team in tackles and tied for the na-tion’s lead with 10 interceptions in being namedfirst-team All-America and the Big East’s DefensivePlayer of the Year.

33. Gary Sheffield. The Marlins’ first major acqui-sition, Sheffield gave an expansion team a hit-

ting star and its first All-Star. He anchored the lineupfrom 1993 to 1998, including for the 1997 World Se-ries championship. His 1996 season of on-base per-centage (.465) and slugging percentage (.624) re-main franchise highs.

34. Dontrelle Willis. When Willis was called up tothe Marlins in the spring of 2003, the season

turned around and they began a march to the WorldSeries. He won 14 games that year, the first of fiveseasons of double-digit wins for the Marlins. Thehighlight was 2006 when he won 22 games and fin-ished second in Cy Young voting.

35. Jake Scott. A Pro Bowl selection from the mo-ment he arrived in 1970 through 1975, Scott

still leads the franchise in interceptions. Tough? Heplayed with two broken hands in Super Bowl VI.Clutch? He had two interceptions to seal the unde-feated season in Super Bowl VII.

36. Dick Anderson. In his nine years with the Dol-phins, Anderson had 34 interceptions, one

behind Jake Scott for the franchise lead. He wasnamed the NFL’s Defensive Player of the Year in 1973.

37. Hanley Ramirez. A three-time All-Star for theMarlins, Ramirez led the National League in

batting with a .342 average in 2009. He finished sec-ond in MVP voting that year.

38. Cigar. In becoming the first horse since Cita-tion in 1949 to win 16 consecutive races

against elite competition, Cigar took a place inSouth Florida history as the top race horse. Of those16 races, five came at Gulfstream and four were ma-jor stakes races.

39. Cristie Kerr. The Coral Gables native has 16wins on the LPGA tour, including two majors.

Kerr also was ranked No. 1 in the world three times in2010.

40. Dan Morgan. The Hurricanes’ all-time tackleleader, Morgan went right from Coral Springs

Taravella High to the starting lineup of Miami. As asenior, he was All-American, the Big East DefensivePlayer of the Year and won the Nagurski, Bednarikand Outland trophies.

41. Walter Dix. At Coral Springs High, Dix set thestate record in the 200 meters. That started a

career that included three indoor and six outdoorNCAA titles while at FSU. He also won bronze medalsin the 100 and 200 at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

42. Bob Baumhower. He was the anchor of theKiller B’s defense. A five-time Pro Bowl selec-

tion, Baumhower had 888 tackles and 39 1⁄2 sacks inhis career.

43. Michael Irvin. The Hurricanes’ career leaderin touchdown receptions (26) despite leaving

as a junior, "The Playmaker" was known for his bigplays. None were bigger than his long touchdowncatch at Florida State in 1986 that sparked perhapsthe biggest comeback in school history.

44. Pavel Bure. The lone, pure goal-scorer thePanthers have had in their history, the "Rus-

sian Rocket" scored 58 in 1999-2000 and 59 goals in2000-2001. Bure only lasted a little more than threeyears with team. He remains the single greatest tal-ent to play for the Panthers.

45. Joey. The first American-born superstar in jai-alai, Joey turned pro at 16, as a Miami Carol

City High student. Over the next 24 years, he revolu-tionized the game at South Florida’s jai-lai frontonswith his aggressive play and patented kill shot.

46. Jeff Conine. “Mr. Marlin” had four hits in theMarlins’ first game and ended his first stint

with the Marlins with the 1997 championship. He re-turned for a second stint to help the Marlins to theirsecond title in 2003. Only Luis Castillo played moregames for the franchise than Conine, who had a.290 batting average while with the Marlins.

47. Scott Mellanby. The team captain at the endof his Panthers years, Mellanby came to the

Panthers in the 1993 expansion draft and his eightseasons coincided with the best years in the fran-chise. He was a solid goal scorer — twice scoringmore than 30 for the Panthers — but was a stellartwo-way player who was a central piece to the 1996run to the Stanley Cup Finals.

48. Rony Seikaly. Balloons fell from the expan-sion Heat’s party when they won a coin toss

to take Seikaly with their opening, first-round pick.He led the team in rebounds and scoring in five of itsfirst six seasons.

49. Doug Betters. The Dolphins’ defensive endfinished his career with 43 1⁄2 sacks, including

16 sacks in 1983 when he was named the NFL’s De-fensive Player of the Year.

50. Bennie Blades. The winner of the Jim ThropeAward as a senior, the Hurricane safety is sec-

ond behind Ed Reed in career interceptions. ThePiper High graduate was such an impact player atMiami that he was taken third overall in the 1988 NFLDraft by Detroit.

Here are two Sunday section fronts for the Sports section of the Sun Sentinel. For both I was given a list of 50 athletes, an article explaining the list, and a space requirement. Using photoshop and illustrator I developed the graphic elements for both and combined them with a layout I designed in CCI Layout Champ.

page design

Page 6: Elliot taylor resume

page design

Food & WineThursday April 24, 2014

7pm - 9pm

Festival

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Legacy Place comes alive with food and drink samplings galore from

the area’s best restaurants, live music, entertainment, and more.

V.I.P. $75 (6:30PM-9:30PM)General $50 (7PM-9PM)

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7pm - 9pm

Festival

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Benefitting

Presented by

Legacy Place comes alive with food and drink samplings

galore from the area’s best restaurants, live music,

entertainment, and more.V.I.P. $75 (6:30PM-9:30PM)

General $50 (7PM-9PM)Tickets available online at

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An important part of my position at Florida Weekly was working with clients to develope successfuladvertisement campaigns. Here a few a examples.

Page 7: Elliot taylor resume

page design

TIM NORRIS A2

OPINION/C.B. HANIF A4

PETS A10

MUSINGS A16

BUSINESS A19

NETWORKING A22-24

REAL ESTATE A25

ARTS B1

EVENTS B8-11

FILM REVIEW B13

SOCIETY B15-17

CUISINE B19

PRSRT STDU.S. POSTAGE

PAIDFORT MYERS, FLPERMIT NO. 715

POSTAL CUSTOMER

DATED MATERIAL - REQUESTED IN-HOME DELIVERY DATE: MARCH 23, 2011

Accidental artistTransplanted sand sculptor enthralls beachgoers. A18

Madly matchless“Crazy for You” dishes classic Gershwin at the Maltz. B1

INSIDE

SocietySee who’s out and about in Palm Beach County. B15-17

www.FloridaWeekly.com Vol. I, No. 24 • FREEWEEK OF MARCH 24-30, 2011

Early birds get deals Restaurants offering discounts are packed. A19

A Palm Beach Gardens company says it has found a fresh-squeezed Florida formula for profit with vodka.

Imperial Brands Inc., a subsidiary of Belvédère S.A., launched its 4 Orange Pre-mium Vodka last year.

But this vodka is not like other orange-flavored spirits.

“An important part is that this is really the only orange vodka made from oranges,” says Timo Sutinen, vice president of market-ing and development for Imperial Brands. Other flavored vodkas are made of potatoes and such, and then have the flavors added.

The vodka is made from the juice of Flor-ida-grown Parson Brown, Temple, Valencia

Orange vodka holds local appeal for distributorBY SCOTT SIMMONSssimmons@fl oridaweekly.com

Timo Sutinen is vice president of marketing and development for Imperial Brands, which makes 4 Orange Premium Vodka and other brands of spirits.

SEE VODKA, A20

CO

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Y P

HO

TO

BY SCOTT SIMMONSssimmons@fl oridaweekly.com

THE PALM BEACH INTERNATIONAL BOAT SHOW HAS everything from yachts to paddleboards.

Organizers say they will have more than $350 million worth of vessels and accessories at the 26th annual event March 24-27 along Flagler Drive in downtown West Palm Beach.

“It is the best show we do. It is the best show in terms of atmosphere and its festiveness and its being easy to get to,” says Steve Sheer, director

of marketing for Show Management Inc., which produces the Palm Beach show and four oth-ers around the state. “There are plenty of great things to eat, and it’s great for people watching.”

Since last year’s show, the city of West Palm Beach has completed a major revamping of its waterfront, from Okeechobee Boulevard north to

Annual boat show expected

draw up to 50,000 people.

OUTD E C K E D

SEE BOAT SHOW, A8 & 9

Palm Beach International

Boat shop map.

A8&9

>>inside:

EVENTS B8-11

FILM REVIEW B13

SOCIETY B15-17

CUISINE B19

Accidental artistTransplanted sand sculptor enthralls beachgoers. A18

Madly matchless“Crazy for You” dishes classic Gershwin at the Maltz. B1

INSIDE

SocietySee who’s out and about in Palm Beach County. B15-17

Early birds get deals Restaurants offering discounts are packed. A19

Your Florida Weekly Ad willBe an opportunity to reach a new audience

Reach consumers in the market with disposable incomes

Publish during the week allowing promotion of weekend sales, open houses, events and test drives

Be with other credible advertising

Have a 7-Day shelf life which allows an opportunity to reach buyers everyday of the week

Be portable and passed

Include award winning creative services

Want to reach new customers?

“A quality productthat gets results.”– Dr. Michael Papa

For more information call 561.904.6470 or email: [email protected] www.floridaweekly.com

DATED MATERIAL - REQUESTED IN-HOME DELIVERY DATE: MARCH 23, 2011

CO

UR

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Y P

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Want to reach new customers?

WANT RESULTS?READ WHAT OUR ADVERTISERS ARE SAYING ABOUT FLORIDA WEEKLY:

Advertising with Florida Weekly puts your message in an environment where it will be respected and read. Your ad gets to a highly desirable audience who are infl uential, well-educated and have disposable incomes.

Whether you are interested in advertising in the print edition, online, tablet, or smartphone, Florida

Weekly combines newspaper ads, online banners, and digital applications all into one seamless transaction. With unique editions in several key Florida communities you have the ability to reach one or all our markets with a simple ad placement. Contact our experienced sales and marketing team to discuss the options that best fi t your needs.

“FLORIDA WEEKLY IS A VIABLE TOOL IN OUR MEDIA MIX TO REACH CONSUMERS WITH DISPOSABLE INCOME.”

— MICHELLE JACOBSTHE GARDENS MALL

“A QUALITY PRODUCT THAT GETS RESULTS”— DR. MICHAEL PAPA

PAPA CHIROPRACTIC AND PHYSICAL THERAPY

Contact us at

561-904-6456

13 Weeks 26 Weeks 52 Weeks

$290 $265 $235

$545 $495 $440

$1,030 $940 $845

$205 $180 $165

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$735 $660 $600

SWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALSWEET DEALHERE’S A

FROM FLORIDA WEEKLY

}}}

}}}

1/8 th

1/4 th

1/2 th

Page

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Special Summer Reduced Rates for Restaurants Both Markets

Season TicketsLoge Box .........................................308$Field Box ..........................................280$*Pricing for the Cardinals is based on 14 home games**Pricing for the Marlins is based on 14 home games and includes two FREE exhibition games*

Season Tickets

A16

A16 NEWS WEEK OF FEBRUARY 20-26, 2014 www.FloridaWeekly.com GARDENS/JUPITER FLORIDA WEEKLY

A15

GARDENS/JUPITER FLORIDA WEEKLY WEEK OF FEBRUARY 20-26, 2014 A15

FridaySundayWednesdayFridaySaturdayMondayTuesdayThursdaySundayWednesdayFridaySundayWednesdayThursday

February 28March 2March 5March 7March 8March 10March 11March 13March 16March 19March 21March 23March 26March 27

Miami MarlinsNew York MetsBoston Red SoxMiami MarlinsWashington NationalsDetroit TigersNew York MetsAtlanta BravesNew York MetsMinnesota TwinsWashington NationalsHouston AstrosWashington NationalsMiami Marlins

1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM

Friday February 28 Miami Marlins 1:05 PM

Sunday March 16 New York Mets 1:05 PM

Saturday March 8 Washington Nationals 1:05 PM

Wednesday March 26 Washington Nationals 1:05 PM

Wednesday March 5 Boston Red Sox 1:05 PM

Friday March 21 Washington Nationals 1:05 PM

Tuesday March 11 New York Mets 1:05 PM

WednesdayThursdaySaturdayMondayTuesdayThursdaySundayWednesdayFridaySaturdayMondayTuesday ThursdaySaturdayMondayTuesday

February 26February 27March 1March 3March 4March 6March 9March 12March 14March 15March 17March 18March 20March 22March 24March 25

U. of MiamiFlorida InternationalSt. Louis CardinalsHouston AstrosMinnesotaTwinsBoston Red SoxDetroit Tigers Atlanta BravesNew York MetsWashington NationalsNew York MetsHouston AstrosSt. Louis CardinalsNew York MetsWashington NationalsSt. Louis Cardinals

1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM7:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM1:05 PM

ST. LOUIS CARDINALSHome Schedule

MIAMI MARLINSHome Schedule

Field Box

Loge Box

Bleachers

Grass Berm

Cassidy Cool Zone

Overflow Parking

Preferred Parking Lots

Accessible Parking

Disabled Seating

Ticketing

Individual Game Tickets ............................ Start at $15

Group Tickets (15 or more) ...................... Start at $14

6+ Mini Plan (Pick 6 games to attend) ...... Start at $84

Special EventsMarch 6- Bank of America DayMarch 15- Palm Beach Zoo DayMarch 16- Celebrating 10 Years of Scripps FloridaMarch 17- Busch Media DayMarch 19- National Kick Butts Day, presented by Florida Health - Palm Beach CountyMarch 22- Tenet Health Care Day

Emergency AssistanceIn emergency situations guests are asked to seek assis-tance from the Palm Beach Post Information Booth.

Stadium RulesCARRY-IN ITEMS: Outside food, drink, and coolers are prohibited from being brought into the stadium.

AUTOGRAPHS: Fans can obtain autographs before and after games and workouts. Players and field staff do not sign during the game due to professional baseball rules.

BATTING PRACTICE: Fans are allowed into Roger Dean Stadium one and a half hours before the game to watch batting practice during Spring Training.

BAGS/BACKPACKS: For your safety, any and all bags will be subject to search by a Roger Dean Stadium employee prior to entrance to the facility.

GAME TIME: Fans are allowed into Roger Dean Stadium one and a half hours before the game to watch batting practice during Spring Training

Directions From Interstate 95

• Exit at Donald Ross Road (Exit 83) and travel east.

• Travel east ½ mile to Parkside Drive.

• Turn left onto Parkside Drive and travel north to first parking lot entrance (south side of parking lot).

From Florida’s Turnpike

• Exit at Jupiter-Indiantown Road (Exit 116) and enter Interstate 95 south. Follow directions “From Interstate 95”.

The StadiumRoger Dean Stadium is a baseball stadium located in the Abacoa community of the town of Jupiter, Florida. The stadium was built in 1998, holds 6,871 people, and features luxury sky-box seating, 2 levels of perma-nent seating, parking and concessions.

The Roger Dean Stadium Complex is the only stadium in the country to host four minor league teams:

• The Jupiter Hammerheads of the Class A-Advanced Baseball Florida State League

• The Palm Beach Cardinals of the Class A-Advanced Baseball Florida State League

• The Gulf Coast Marlins of the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League

• The Gulf Coast Cardinals of the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League

Roger Dean Stadium is the only stadium in Florida to host two Major League Baseball teams annually for spring training:

• The Miami Marlins

• The St. Louis Cardinals

ParkingSeason Parking Passes are available for $112. This grants access to the Abacoa parking garage (Lot B) located immediately to the West of Roger Dean Sta-dium. Please contact the Roger Dean Stadium Ticket Office at 561-630-1828.

Single-Game Parking Passes are available in the Abacoa parking garage (Lot B), and in three grass lots to the West and North of the stadium (Lots C, D & E). Parking in these areas is $10 per game. Individual parking passes may be purchased at the Roger Dean Stadium ticket office, online at Ticketmaster.com or by phone at (800) 745-3000.

Parking for guests with disabilities is avail-able on a first come, first served basis, on Main Street, located along the West side of the Stadium, and on Avenue A located along the North side of the stadium.

Parking Policies and Restrictions: • Tailgating is permitted in the grass parking lots only (Lots C, D & E).• No open-flame cooking is allowed.• Pop up tents are permitted in the grass parking lot as long as they are not staked into the ground and do not take up additional parking spaces.

• All vehicles parked at owner’s risk• Any articles left in vehicle are at owner’s risk.• No overnight parking is permitted in any of the parking lots.• Roger Dean Stadium reserves the right to have a vehicle moved to another section of the parking lot.• No attendants will be present after regular event hours.• No re-entry allowed.

Donald Ross Rd. Rive

rsid

e Dr

.

I-95

Here are a few examples of advertising materials as well as a special Spring Training section I created.

2 | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, June 23, 2013 SPFR

Heat fans always knew LeBron James, DwyaneWade and Chris Bosh were cut out to be champi-

ons. Thursday night, Heat Nation showed theworld who their heroes are.

CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The real “Birdman” got his time with thechampionship hardware, too.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

NOT 1 ... AT LEAST 2

Proving the early “Bird” gets the trophy, ayoung Chris Andersen fan gets his chanceto hold the Larry O’Brien trophy in thecorridor outside the Heat locker roomThursday night.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Heat center Chris Bosh had difficulty scoring attimes, but he chipped in with defense and big

rebounds against the Spurs.

ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

If there’s a gleam in LeBron James’ eye, it might be thereflection off the two trophies he earned. Of course,

Dwyane Wade had a big hand in it, too.ROBERT DUYOS/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

NBA Champions

Bread $.99

Pasta Shells$1.00

OrangeJuice$1.99

Tortilla Shells$2.00

PeanutButter$2.50

PastaSauce$1.50

Coffee$6.99

Yams$.51

Chickpeas$2.19

Bananas$1.51

Cereal$2.50

Tomatoes$.90

Milk$1.25

Rice$1.99

Black Beans$2.19

$31.50One week in food stamps

Congressman Ted Deutch will join 25 other Dems ineating only what they could buy with food stamps.

Could you live for a week on thisgrocery list?

Beans and rice. Bread andpea-nut butter. Pasta and chick peas. Cerealandmilk. Yams, tomatoes andbananas. Alittle orange juice and some coffee.

Thirty-one dollars and fifty centsdoesn’t govery farwhenyouarebuyingaweek’s worth of groceries. But that’swhat the average food-stamp recipientgets.

And it’s what U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch,D-Boca Raton, spent Thursday whilebracing to eat on that kind of budget.With mounting anxiety, he watched therunning total at theWashingtonD.C. gro-cery checkout line come dangerouslyclose to the $4.50-a-day limit.

Deutch, who imposed the shoppinglimit on himself, took advantage of somesale prices for bread and yams.

But he still went over the limit. Gonewere the chips he hoped to snack on andthe soup he hoped to eat for dinner onenight. By the end, he walked out withthree plastic bags and$30.16 of groceries,including15 cents for the bags.

“When you walk up to the checkoutcounter with what really is a small num-ber of items in your shopping cart, youworry thatmaybe it’s going to cost more.And then it does, and you have to putsomething back,”Deutch said afterward.

“It was a challenge for me doing thisone time. I can’t imagine what this mustbe like every single week for people whoare on food stamps.”

ByWilliam E. GibsonWashington BureauDEUTCH’S

SHOPPINGLIST:

PN Saturday, June 15, 2013 SunSentinel.com Sun Sentinel | 1B

Local

WELLINGTON — It is very importantthat theCareys, a family split betweenWel-lington and Connecticut, reunite for Fa-ther’s Day this weekend. It could be theirlastwithDad.

Mark Carey, 45, has pancreatic cancer.His doctor told him most people in hissituation may live another year, but “I feellike ‘you’ve got a lot of fight left in you.’”

They never left.“Dehydration, I believe,” Carey said. His

temperature soared. He vomited. His doc-tor said he should not travel.

Laynewasdisappointed, so they flewherto Connecticut. Mason was circumspect:“As long asDaddy feels better, I don’t care.”

So it is with cancer and treatment. Careywasabigguy,buthe’s skinnynow.Hehasnoappetite anymore. He sips water to soothe

were all set to pile into the car on June 6after school.Theyweregoing todrive to seeMark Carey’s older children, Ryan, 23, andCarissa, 25,who live inNewEngland.

“Wekindofput everything into this trip,”Mark Carey said. “This was going to be ourlast hurrah, to make sure we do it as afamily.”

Before the diagnosis, he was a chef, andthey love the show “Diners, Drive-ins andDives” on the Food Network. They weregoing to stop at featured restaurants.

“I’m not ready to give up,” Carey saidFriday. His 4-year-old terrier, Couper,barked. His wife, Jodi, composed herselfbeside him.

As families assemble thisweekend to cel-ebrate their patriarchs, theCareyswill cele-brate under the pall of illness but with agreater appreciation for their bond. Cancermakes getting together more difficult, butalsomore imperative.

TheCareys and their twoyoung children— daughter Layne, 14, and sonMason, 10 —

Ailing Wellington man cherishes family as Father’s Day nearsBy BenWolfordStaff writer

See FATHER, 2B

Waiving library book late fees couldhelp keep more kids reading, accordingto a Palm Beach County proposal aimedat helping low-income families.

County officials this week agreed toexplore the idea of lifting the 10 cents-a-day late fees, at least for children.

The concern is that the fee — and thesuspended librarybookborrowingprivi-leges that can follow—mostly hurts thechildrenwho can least afford it.

Children shouldn’t be discouragedfromchecking out library books becauseof financial hardships, according toCommissioner Paulette Burdick, who

Commission hopes morekids will read without fines

By Andy ReidStaff writer

Librarylate feesmay end

See LIBRARY, 2B

“Peopleneed tostill beaccountable.We have tohave rules.”CountyCommissionerPriscilla Taylor

After losing bothhis hands and feet to abacterial infection, 13-year-old MichaelStolzenbergknows there’s a reasonhesur-vived.

And this week that reason was madeclear–byOprahWinfrey.

The talk show host and media mogulcalled Michael on Monday, pledging$100,000to thewebsitehestartedwithhisbrother, Harris, to raise money for theamputees injured in the Bostonmarathonbombings.

“Michael was beyond surprised,” saidhis mom, Laura. “If the reason he’s stillhere is to help others, he’ll take it. Andthat’swhatyoutrulywantforyourkids, forthemto inspireothers.”

Last month Winfrey told Michael’sstoryduringhercommencementspeechat

By Karen YiStaff writer

Michael Stolzen-berg, above, and hisbrother, Harris, areraising money foramputees injured inthe Boston mara-thon bombings.Oprah Winfreycalled Michael onMonday and saidshe wanted todonate $100,000 tothe cause.

Oprah gives tolocal fundraiser

See OPRAH, 2B

Statewildlife officerswill patrol PalmBeachCounty beaches thisweekend, after a high number of failed nesting attempts by seaturtles.

The officerswillwalk the beaches and educate the public aboutthe need to leave the giant reptiles alonewhile they lay eggs.

A higher number than average have emerged from the ocean andreturnedwithout lay-ing eggs this year. Evenshining a bright lighton a turtle can discour-age her fromnesting, aprocess that can takeup to twohours.

— David Fleshler

Turtles have trouble nesting this seasonExpect a hot, dry Father’s Day weekendDad can expect to get sweaty onhis special day, as it should be a

hot Father’sDayweekend,with afternoon tem-peratures in the low90s. Even the eveningsshould be fairlywarm,with readings in theupper 70s.

At least it should be relatively dry. Theforecast calls for little chance of rain onSaturday and isolated showers andstorms on Sunday. Both days should bemostly sunny.

Monday also should be on the dryside.

– Ken Kaye

Onlinetoday

@8 a.m.:Check outsome of thebest Instagramphotos fromour readers,and submityour own. SunSentinel.com/instagram

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Here are three examples of working with little space and a lot of content. The left and middle were both in the special section after the Heat won the NBA Championship. The right is a visualization of what one could buy using $31.50, which is one week of food stamps.

page design4 | Sun Sentinel SunSentinel.com Sunday, June 23, 2013 SPFR

First roundvs.MilwaukeeThedefendingNBAchampions didn’t facemuch of a

test in their opening series of the 2013 playoffs. TheHeat earned double-digit victories in all four gamesagainst theBucks. Itwas the first postseason sweep intheBigThree era, and comfortablemargins enabled theHeat to giveDwyaneWade some rest.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,April 21:Heat110, Bucks 87Game2,April 23:Heat 98, Bucks 86Game3,April 25:Heat104, Bucks 91Game4,April 28:Heat 88, Bucks 77Heatwin, 4-0

Bucks just nomatch forHeatMILWAUKEE—Thiswas the preseason portion of

the playoffs.Itwas a challenge so soft that it did not even require

DwyaneWade or anything close to the best of theHeatfor the sweep-completing 88-77 victory.

Themeat of the playoffs arrived. “We’re going tostart to feel it,” forward ShaneBattier said.

But that doesn’tmean therewasn’tmeaning inGame4.

What this sweep showed, just as last season’s cham-pionship showed, is that you can never have toomuch.And that sometimes, toomuch is just enough, nomatterwhatDavid Stern seems to think.

No, this neverwas about overkill fromPatRiley andMickyArison, even if thatwas the outside impression.

It is how theHeat survivedChris Bosh’s absenceduring themiddle of last season’s playoffs, how theycould comfortably go intoGame4withoutWade.

“This iswhywe’re all here.Wewanted somethingdifferent for ourselves,”Wade said of feeling no pres-sure to push throughhis knee issue.

— Ira Winderman

EasternConference semifinals vs. ChicagoFor the first time this postseason, theHeatwere

dealt a loss asChicago opened the serieswith awin.But theHeat showed it could take a punch, dealing theBulls theirworst playoff loss in franchise history inGame2. The 37-pointmargin of victorywas aHeatpostseason high.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,May6:Bulls 93,Heat 86Game2,May8:Heat115, Chicago 78Game3,May10:Heat104, Chicago 94Game4,May13:Heat 88, Chicago 65Game5,May15:Heat 94, Chicago 91Heatwin, 4-1

Wade’s effort clinchesGame5winMIAMI—Always, for teams climbing themountain,

there are nights like this,when their breathing’s la-bored, and their opponent plays hard, and there arehealthy spasms of doubt aboutwhether they’rewhoeveryone thinks they are.

So itwas late intoGame 5 of theHeat’s 94-91win toclose out the playoff series against Chicago. You ex-pected easy? You got strenuous.

You expected a relaxed evening?You gotHeat fansjumping off their seatswhenNorris Cole hit a jumpshot, then ran down the lanewith a dunk.

You expected the tough question of the night to bewhether a hurtingWadewould play?

The real questionwas:Whatwould theHeat havedonewithoutWade?Hehad amore efficient shootingnight than James. And theHeat needed every bit ofWade’s two short floaters and slamdunk off an offen-sive rebound in the finalminutes to close out this game.

Finally, Chicago fell.“The toughest close-out game ofmy career,” said

James,whose 23-point night hid 5-for-14 shooting.— Dave Hyde

EasternConference finals vs. IndianaTheHeat’s biggest postseason test thus far came

from thePacers,whopushedMiami to a decidingGame 7. The serieswasmarked by physical play, thestruggles ofWade andBosh, and leagueMVPJamescommenting he’d reverted to his “Cleveland days.” ButtheHeatmade adjustments to advance.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1,May 22:Heat103, Pacers102 (OT)Game2,May 24:Pacers 97,Heat 93Game3,May 26:Heat114, Pacers 96Game4,May 28:Pacers 99,Heat 92Game5,May30:Heat 90, Pacers 79Game6, June1:Pacers 91,Heat 77Game7, June 3:Heat 99, Pacers 76Heatwin, 4-3

Heat take big punches, surviveMIAMI—Itwas the finalminutes of the final game

and, as the crowd stood, as the applause rained, herecame one final surprise of theEasternConferencefinals. Jameswent to the bench.Hewasn’t neededanymore.

This difficult stepwas that easy by the end. Jameskissed his fingers and raised a fist to the crowd as theHeat rolled to a 99-76win inGame 7.

LeBronVoyage, Indiana.Hello, NBAFinals.And so it goes on. The quest. TheHeat spring. All the

intoxicating drama. It’sMiami against SanAntonio intheNBAFinals.

If a couple of days aren’tmuch time to prepare, thenews is theHeat survived to prepare. TheHeat tooksomebig punches from Indiana.

But they standwith the crown still on their head, thewords “defending champion” before their name, be-causewhen itmatteredmost they rememberedwhotheywere, and theBigThree did it right from tip-off.

— Dave Hyde

NBAFinals vs. SanAntonioFormuch of the series, theHeat faced scrutiny after

not being able towin back-to-back games in either theconference finals or theNBAFinals. The team lookedin trouble late inGame6, but the seasonwas salvagedafter RayAllen hit an improbable 3-pointer to forceovertime. Eventually,Miami picked up a pair ofwinsand became just the fourth team inFinals history torally froma 3-2 deficit. SeriesMVPJames averaged 25.3points, 10.9 rebounds, and 7.0 assists.

— Christy Cabrera Chirinos

Game1, June6: Spurs 92,Heat 88Game2, June9:Heat103, Spurs 84Game3, June11: Spurs113,Heat 77Game4, June13:Heat109, Spurs 93Game5, June16: Spurs114,Heat104Game6, June18:Heat103, Spurs101(OT)Game7, June 20:Heat 95, Spurs 88Heatwin, 4-3

Lastmen standing once againMIAMI—The jump shot fromJameswent into the

netwith 27.9 seconds left, and, as soon as it did, hepumpedhis fistwith awinner’s look, a champion’slook, as the noise you’d only heard once before shookAmericanAirlinesArena.

SanAntonio’s seasonwas finally fading, and theHeat’s starwas rising, again, in this 95-88win inGame7 of theNBAFinals.

TheywonwithLeBron scoring 37 points. TheywonwithWade answering questionswith 23 points. They

wonwithBattiermaking six 3-point shots— asmanyshots as he’dmade in the previous six Finals games.

Theywon against a SanAntonio team full of deserv-ingHall of Famers,who keptmatching theHeat shotfor shot Thursday night,moment formoment, untilLeBron’s jumper provided a 4-point cushion.

Theywon.Those are the twowords thatmatter. Erik Spoelstra

said the two greatestwords in sportswere “Game 7”?WinningGame 7makes it all the sweeter, all the better,the entire night amemory to embrace.

Every time theHeat tried to pull away in the fourthquarter, the Spurs answered right back. A bounce here,amistake there. Thatwas the sliver of difference. That’showyouwant towin a championship, being asked to begreat and delivering greatness.

At one point late in the third quarter,Wade andJames had scored 38 of theHeat’s previous 43 points.That’s a good starting recipe for success. ButThursdayitwas the only recipe, and it put the season on the cliff.

They needed something froma supporting player?Here came a couple to help. Battiermade shots. ThentherewasChris “Birdman”Andersen.Hewas an ener-gy pill again this night. Rebounds. Blocks. Defense onTimDuncan.He even took a charge onManuGinobiliin the fourth quarter.

Do or be done, thatwas the drama of this night, in somanymoreways than just the scoreboard. In someway, the future of theBigThreewas at stake. Inmanyways, the legacy of thisHeat erawas.

This championshipwas harder.More taxing. Partwas Indiana and SanAntonio pushed them to themax-imumseven games,while only Boston did a year ago.Partwas repeating is alwaysmore difficult.

The regular season “just flewby,”Wade said. “Butthe playoffs have been likeGroundhogDay. Andwe’rehere until the last possible day in theNBA, until the lastpossible game.”

— Dave Hyde

Long, winding road

It wasn’t easy, but Heat rose to the challenge

Bulls present firstmountain to climb

Big Three producewith season on line

Tougher than 2012,but sweeter as well

Easy first round allowsWade to rest sore knee

NBA Champions

Page 8: Elliot taylor resume

KIDS 1. THE LAST TIME I FELT IT 2. SUNDAYS 3. PETROLEUM 4. THE NEW WEST 5. SIDEWAYS 6. GOSPEL 7. THE DEVIL IN GOLD 8. OUT 9.

Glue Tab

Glue Tab

Front

Back First Folds

Second Fold

FrontBackInside Inside

1 2 3

2010 RCA Records, a unit of Sony Music Entertainment. DIstributed by Sony Music Entertainment. All trademarks and logos are protected. RCA is a registered trademark of RCA Trademark Management S.A. Marca(s) Registrada(s) RCA Trademark Management S.A. Made in the EU. LC 00316

Foldout bookPoster

Album cover, back cover, and inside

Front (Lyrics) Back (Stand-up Cutout)

One of my class assignments was to create a full album design package for a randomly chosen band that would include album artwork, a poster, and a booklet. All of the elements shown above were designed for Kings of Leon. I created a fake whiskey logo, printed it, attached it to a real bottle and then photographed it.

photography & design

Page 9: Elliot taylor resume

The poster to the right was made for a class assignment for which we had to manipulate a photo. I took the photo in the woods using red paint and then manipulated it using Photoshop. The top left photo is of Wiz Khalifa as part of Eagle News’ coverage of his concert. The other three were class assignments.

photography & design

Page 10: Elliot taylor resume

Elliot Taylor

illustrations & logo design

The left design is something I created in my free time for use on my online portfolio. The right is an illustration I created for a sports section front. I was asked to replicate a scene from the classic video game Punch Out but with an injured Patriots player and a Dolphin’s player.

Page 11: Elliot taylor resume

illustrations & logo design

Here are samples of different illustrations and logo designs using Adobe Illustrator.

Artic

hoke & CompanyCATERING AT ITS FINEST

Artic

hoke & Company

CATERING AT ITS FINEST

illustrations & logo design

Here are samples of different illustrations and logo designs using Adobe Illustrator.

Artic

hoke & Company

CATERING AT ITS FINEST

Artic

hoke & Company

CATERING AT ITS FINEST

Page 12: Elliot taylor resume

illustrations & logo design

Here are samples of different illustrations and logo designs using Adobe Illustrator.

tournamentnovember 25th, 2012

volleyball

1st annual


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