NOVEMBER 2000

BOMBMAKER'S CONSCIENCE FINALLY FORCED HIM TO DEFECT
COMPLETE STORY

One of Florida State's physics grads lived a hellish, though luxurious, life in Iraq until he decided he was no longer willing to make bombs for Saddam Hussein.
Khidhir Hamza, a top student and grad assistant in FSU's physics department from 1965 to 1969, had been ordered back to his homeland of Iraq and put to work creating the big bomb for Saddam Hussein. 

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40,000 YEARS OF HISTORY TO DISCOVER IN CETAMURA, ITALY
COMPLETE STORY

It's midsummer in Central Italy, and a Florida State University student is squatting in the dirt, carefully, slowly chipping with a trowel to reveal whatever is there - just soil, or a tool, a jewel, a kiln or a wall from 40,000, 2,500 or just 1,000 years ago.
For the last 25 years, the finds at the site, Cetamura, have been exciting enough to interest the Italian government in a public exhibition at the nearby town of Gaiole-in-Chianti

MIAMI ARTIST CREDITS FSU PROFESSORS WITH HIS SUCCESS
COMPLETE STORY

Like many incoming freshmen, Robert Flynn wasn't sure what career he wanted. Now he knows. He is a painter and art professor living in South Beach Miami; his work has been shown around the world; and he gives credit to two "incredible" professors at FSU.
"When I went to Florida State, I initially wanted to go into architecture," said Flynn, 32. "And then I thought engineering. After that I wanted landscape architecture."
His wandering course track quickly found a groove after he registered for art classes.

GRADS GIVE TIME AND MONEY TO FSU
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Mark Hillis tells a great story that sounds like pure Seminole romance. And it's all true.
He was a banker at SunTrust in Atlanta in 1976 and was tied up with work when Nan Casper, who also worked at SunTrust, called him. A recent graduate of Florida State, she was calling all the other alums she could find at SunTrust to come to a meeting of the Atlanta Seminole Club.

 
FSU PRESIDENT SPELLS OUT HIS VISION FOR THE UNIVERITY'S FUTURE
COMPLETE STORY

FSU President Sandy D'Alemberte, in a message Oct. 4 to the faculty Senate, laid out his vision of the future of the university, based on his own thinking during seven years in the office and on recommendations of two Commissions on the Future.
He made these predictions:

 
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