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University of Central Florida
The Genocide Awareness Project was on campus at the University of Central Florida from January 25 to 28, 1999.
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 A female student circled the exhibit and groaned audibly in front of each photo. Many students were so engrossed in what Gregg had to say about abortion and genocide that they opted to sit down. Who says students don't want to learn? The UCF police force was a very helpful presence all week long, making sure that pro-aborts never got out of hand. A black female student demanded that we explain the concept of the exhibit and then refused to let us speak.
 Toward the end of our first day at UCF, the gray-haired on the right (in blue) shrieked insults at us. She soon attracted crowds which enabled us to reach an even greater audience. A Campus Crusade staff member expressed frustration with timidity of colleagues over issues like abortion.  As is often the case with GAP, groups of students are forced to weigh the facts of baby-killing against the propaganda of choice. 
8. A student who approached one of our volunteers with skepticism over the authenticity of our photos later admitted she was pregnant and considering abortion. She finally agreed to an appointment at a local crisis pregnancy center.
The student at right directs a question to Lois Cunningham while a local TV station films the exchange. It is always sad to see how some students celebrate death. It is reminiscent of the racist crowds pictured in our lynching photos, who likewise celebrated murder. Todd Beauchamp (left), CBR staff, films student response. The reaction becomes so intense that he must frequently stop to wipe saliva from the camera lens. David Lee talks to African-American student who believed that it was as important for the pro-life movement to use gastly images as it had been for civil rights activists.
Gregg talks to a crowd of students about the importance of distinguishing between the science of abortion (when does biological life begin) and the politics (when will society call that life a person). An apparent professor scoffed at one of our breast cancer signs but refused to take a copy of a recent medical journal study linking abortion with breast cancer. Baptist and Catholic student groups who wished to sponsor CBR's exhibit were over-ruled by staff. The students displayed more spiritual maturity than their adult leaders and are forming a pro-life group Many students tried to associate CBR with abortion violence, just as racists blamed Martin Luther King for Black Panther violence.

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CBR condemns all abortion related violence and will not associate with groups or individuals who fail to condemn such violence.
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