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Far more than 200 guys and ladies with ties to Florida have presented their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan. Photographs By Eloïsa Ruano Gonzalez Orlando Sentinel A gun instructor accidently shot a student in the foot Saturday during an NRA class to receive certification to carry a concealed weapon, Orlando police said. Robert Frauman Jr., 50,
microsoft office Home And Student 2010 32 bit, was taken to Florida Hospital after instructor Michael Phillips' firearm discharged about 11:45 a.m., police said. Phillips, 32, could not be reached for comment. The accident happened at Summit Church, located in a former movie theater near the Fashion Square mall. The bullet went through a table before it hit Frauman, said Kristy-Lee Lawley, the church's communications director. She said Frauman, a member with the church,
office 2007 Professional serial, was "recovering well" and the bullet didn't break any bones. Frauman was one of three students in the class, which was not a church-sponsored event,
microsoft office pro, Lawley said. She said the church offered an upstairs conference room for free after some church members requested to have the class there. Lawley said the church is empty on Saturdays and this was the first class of its kind there. "We won't be having anything like that in our church in the future," Lawley said. The church with 2,500 members is headed by Pastor Isaac Hunter, son on the Rev. Joel Hunter,
microsoft office 2010 Home And Student keygen, senior pastor from the Longwood-based megachurch Northland, A Church Distributed. The churches are not affiliated. The NRA has a rule against bringing ammunition into a class, said Tom Wagner,
office Home And Business 2010, a NRA instructor in Orlando who was not involved in Saturday's shooting. He said the association has "no problem yanking a certification if the rules are being broken." This was not the first time something's gone wrong during a gun demonstration in Orlando. In 2004, a special agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration shot himself in the thigh with a .40-caliber Glock pistol while talking to schoolchildren about gun safety.