SEPTEMBER 2000

ANCIENT HISTORY UNDER THE SEA
COMPLETE STORY

Four long, thin yellow hoses descend into the Gulf of Mexico from the anchored research vessel, Mr. Tom. The hoses carry air to FSU students who are 15 feet below, searching for evidence of life on land 12,000 calendar years ago.
And they're finding it. Some of the artifacts - Clovis Points for example - even suggest settlers may have come by boat from Europe via South America, a different group from the better known immigrants who came across the Bering Strait.


Stories/September
Charlie Barnes
News Notes
Compression
In Memoriam
Favorite Prof
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U.S NAVY'S FUTURE IS ELECTRIC
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Florida State is planning the energy systems for an all-electric fleet fÓor the U.S. Navy, using a three-year, $10.9-million grant.
The electric ships promise to be cleaner, more efficient, cheaper to run and more combat-ready than today's steam- and fuel-powered ships. The first is scheduled for about 2010, and the entire fleet is expected to be electric in 30 years.
FSU and engineers will design integrated electrical systems at the FSU Center for Advanced Power Systems, housed at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Tallahassee.


 
GIFTS CREATE SCHOLARSHIPS
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Retired FSU professor Lou Bender and his wife Betty have given $1.35 million to establish two endowed funds, one to benefit blind students and the other for the School of Visual Arts and Dance.
The Elizabeth Plescia Bender Endowed Fund for Blind Students will provide support for readers, note takers and library assistance and will eventually support scholarships for blind students.


 
 
DOCTOR TO BE IS ALREADY SERVING
COMPLETE STORY

As a little boy, Richard Vidal tagged along when his doctor dad did rounds at a Miami hospital. Hanging out at the nurses' station, the younger Vidal was enlisted to cheer up sick children on the pediatric cancer ward.
But it wasn't until he came to Florida State, founded the Inter-national Medical Outreach Pro-gram and organized the first trip to help poor people in Jamaica in 1999 that he knew he had doctoring in his heart, too.


 
 
CHILDREN IN LOS ANGELES ARE LEARNING THE SIR CHARLES BLUES
COMPLETE STORY

Dane Gille-brand knew zilch about the blues and philanthropy when he left South Africa for college in America in 1993, when his life plan seemed so simple: He would graduate from film school at Florida State University, move to Holly-wood and make great movies to entertain humanity.
Real life intervened. The lanky young man couldn't have known he'd be lonely at Florida State. Or that a blind blues musician would become a kind of surrogate father. Or that he would come to love the blues. Or that his greatest goals would be fulfilled - graduation magna cum laude, a job in L.A. helping produce films - and he would suddenly find it all meaningless.


 
 
GENETICS - TECHNOLOGY IS RACING, ETHICS NEEDS TO CATCH UP
COMPLETE STORY

Who should be born? How intelligent should they be? How strong, healthy and socially adept? Should other species' parts or traits be introduced into humans?
Such fantastic questions are becoming more real. Genetic research is giving us biological options radically different from those of the present day.
In the way that physics was for the last 10 decades, and chemistry for the 10 before that, genetics is poised to be the most crucial branch of science in the 21st century. And a growing crowd of thinkers wonders if the safety valve of ethics is not a little weak.


 
 
ORIGINAL SEMINOLES
COMPLETE STORY

When a U.S. military officer seized hundreds of Seminoles in 1838 near Jupiter, he reported to the U.S. Secretary of War that 513 of the prisoners were "Indians" and 165 were "negroes."
Gen. Thomas Jesup didn't make a mistake in his report referring to blacks as Seminoles.
Blacks were part of the Seminole villages almost as early as Creek Indians moved into Florida in the 18th century. They were first welcomed by the Indians as runaway slaves and were later embraced as kin and allies.


 
 
GRAD IS TOP HURICANNE FORECASTER
COMPLETE STORY

With 30 years of weather forecasting and a degree from Florida State in meteorology, Max Mayfield is ready to lead the nation's defense against hurricanes.
His job, as the director of the National Hurricane Center, is to improve the warning lead times and increase the center's understanding of the tracks and intensity of hurricanes.
"The important thing for us is the hurricanes that make landfall and the severity of that," Mayfield said. "We are fortunate to have excellent technology such as satellites, aircraft reconnaissance, radars and computer models to help us predict the path of a hurricane.


 
 
LAB SCHOOL TO BUILD ON NEW SITE
COMPLETE STORY

When the students at Florida High School return next year in search of their new homerooms, they may have a hard time finding them. They will be clear across town.
The Florida State University School (formerly named the FSU Developmental Research School and always known as Florida High) will leave its longtime campus home and move to the new South-wood development in southeast Tallahassee.


 
 
WANT SOMETHING TO READ?
COMPLETE STORY
NEW BOOKS BY FLORIDA STATE GRADUATES AND FACULTY

 
ALEXANDERS AND CHILLINGWORTH GIFTS
COMPLETE STORY
THE ALEXANDERS GIFTS TO FSU
CHILLINGWORTH MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP

3 FSU ALUMS NAMED THIS YEARS GRADS MADE GOOD
COMPLETE STORIES
LARRY CROW
CAROLYN GRINER
Lt. Gen. KENNETH MINIHAN

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