NOVEMBER 1999

MARK BIRD
FSU'S NEW MAGNET IS THE BIGGEST EVER
COMPLETE STORY

What's 22 feet tall, weighs 34 tons and has world-wide attention?
It's not Godzilla. It's a monster-sized magnet, the latest addition to FSU's Magnet Lab.

Called the "45-T Hybrid," the $14-million magnet is a combination of two types of magnet designs which, when fully operational, will together generate a world-record DC magnetic field of at least 45 tesla (T) - the standard measure of the strength of a magnetic field.

Stories/November
Charlie Barnes
News Notes
Compression
In Memoriam
Favorite Prof
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HARRY SINGLETARY
FLORIDA PRISONS CHIEF MOVES INTO CLASSROOM
COMPLETE STORY

Harry Singletary has been in one spotlight or another most of his life.

At school, he was an all-star basketball player - the first black to integrate his team - and such a talent that his college retired his number when he left.
At work, he became the secretary of Florida's Department of Corrections - the first black to head the prison system - and expanded it under intense media scrutiny to double its size.

And this year, bright lights are focused on Singletary still; but this time it's the bright lights of the classroom where he is Florida State's newest criminology instructor.

ACCURATE FORECASTS CAN SAVE LIVES AND FORTUNES
COMPLETE STORY

The day before hurricane Floyd blasted North Carolina, Susan Schiller, a producer from CBS Evening News, was on the phone to ask FSU meteorologists where Floyd was going to make landfall.
The FSU researchers mentioned Wilmington, N.C., and the next day, Dan Rather was on a plane to Wilmington, just a few miles north of where Floyd hit land. That night, people across the country saw his broadcast from that city.

The team at FSU's Real Time Hurricane Forecast Center had predicted, five days before Floyd landed, that it would miss Florida and hit the southeastern part of North Carolina, while other forecasters predicted the storm would hit the east coast of Florida.

TEN FLORIDA SHERIFFS ARE FSU GRADUATES
COMPLETE STORY

Among Florida's 67 sheriffs, 25 are not college graduates. But the next biggest group is the FSU contingent, whose numbers and prominence suggest that Florida State's School of Criminology and Criminal Justice is having the impact it wants - professionalizing the work of law enforcement, particularly the intensely political and powerful job of sheriff.

Ten Florida sheriffs are FSU grads, nine from the School of Criminology and one from the College of Law.

OBITUARIES
Werner Baum and Richard Smith
COMPLETE STORIES

 
A DANCE OF DIVERSE VIEWS
COMPLETE STORY

The first Hoffman Symposium, an examination of the liberal arts issues in the modern political climate, will bring two of America's best known political orators - former U.S. Congresswoman Pat Schroeder and political satirist Arianna Huffington - to the same stage at FSU Jan. 22.

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