Pubdate: Fri, 04 Feb 2000 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2000, The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Forum: http://tampabayonline.net/interact/welcome.htm Author: Deborah Bacon of Hernando Today (FL) Note: Marcia Crowley of WFLA, Channel 8, contributed to this report. DRUG WARNING HITS HOME AT GIRL'S FUNERAL She was well-liked, pretty and the kind of person who was always there for her friends, they said. Friends were there for 13-year-old Shauna Ulman at her funeral Thursday. More than 100 young people at Spring Hill Baptist Church mourned the girl who went to a party, took a pill and died sometime Sunday night. The teenagers came by themselves and in groups. Some wept, others remained silent and still others embraced or held hands. Several brought bouquets to place beside her casket. Shauna's body was discovered Sunday night at a friend's house where Shauna had been taking a nap. A pill containing a potent painkiller was found beside her bed. An autopsy found what might have been another pill, but it couldn't be positively identified, according to Hernando County Sheriff's Office. The death remains under investigation, authorities said. Sheriff's deputies said they think the tablet was among 130 to 200 oxycodone hydrochloride pills missing from a prescription that belonged to a cancer patient who died last year. The pills have not been recovered, law enforcement officials said. Some of Shauna's classmates said they saw her death as a wake-up call. ``If you don't know what it is, don't take it,'' said Saralynn Roush, 15. At the funeral, a sheriff's deputy who is a family friend spoke briefly. He called the girl's death unacceptable. ``Anybody dying on drugs is a tragedy. A child dying on drugs is unacceptable,'' Sgt. Craig Baxley told the young mourners. Preventing drug abuse ``starts here and now, with each and every one of you sitting here,'' Baxley added. ``Drugs kill. It's a price I don't want to pay. It's a price I don't want any of you to pay,'' he said as the song ``A Candle in the Wind'' faded into the background. Several of Shauna's friends said they couldn't believe she had paid that price. ``She was just trying to have little fun,'' said Devona Covington. ``A little fun can kill you,'' said Emily Smith, another friend. Shauna was not a regular drug user, said classmates at Parrott Middle School, but was a popular girl who liked to have a good time. ``She was pretty, nice and good fun. She was there for everybody,'' said Rebecca Rodriguez, 14, who called Shauna her best friend. Parent Lisa Roush said the death was a ``reality check.'' ``These kids think they're invincible. But God puts everyone here to teach a lesson or learn a lesson,'' she said. ``Shauna is teaching us a lesson.'' Shauna's friends said prescription drugs, mainly pills, are easily available in the community. Although drug education is given in the schools, the consequences of drug misuse are not stressed enough, Rodriguez said. ``Many of us don't listen until something like this happens,'' a teary Rodriguez said. A nine-week health course provides information about drug and substance abuse to sixth-, seventh- and eighth-graders in Hernando County. Parrott Middle Principal Marvin Gordon said Thursday that more education is needed about misuse of prescriptions and over-the- counter drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake