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VOLUME 2 FEBRUARY/MARCH 1997
FRONT «
FEATURED STORIES ¬
NEWS NOTES ¬
CHARLIE BARNES ¬
COMPRESSION ¬
IN MEMORIAM ¬
LETTERS to the EDITOR ¬
Styron, Vonnegut, Heller to join FSU celebration
 Three of the major chroniclers -- and participants -- in the American era that created FSU will come to campus in March to help celebrate the transformation of Florida State College for Women into Florida State University.
 Joseph Heller, William Styron and Kurt Vonnegut -- authors of some of the most powerful works of the second half of the 20th century -- are scheduled to speak in Tallahassee March 20 - 22.

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Art Lover Enriches University
 When Arthur I. Appleton's children would spy an antique shop on family vacations, they got scared. They would point out horses, or anything on the other side of the road, to distract him.
 "They thought I'd be there for hours," Appleton remembers.
 But his love of art, not always appreciated by his children, has brought FSU and Central Florida Community College the biggest gift they have ever received - The Appleton Museum, valued at $42 million, in Ocala.
 Appleton's philosophy on buying art is a simple one - he collects what he likes.
 The result is a range of art that reflects the eclecticism of the 81-year-old Appleton.

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German Wives Stood Up To Nazi's - and Won
 Before dawn on Feb. 27, 1943, Gestapo agents and other Nazi police officers descended upon 10,000 of Berlin's remaining Jews and bludgeoned them into 300 trucks. It was called The Final Roundup.
 Most of them - old people, children, working men and pregnant women, battered and bleeding, without their winter coats - died within days in the gas chambers of Auschwitz. But 2,000 of these Jews who had non-Jewish, German wives, husbands and children were spirited off to a collection center on a street called Rosenstrasse in the heart of Berlin.

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Campus Life Transformed by Internet
When FSU President Sandy D'Alemberte learned he had cancer, he and his wife turned to the Internet for information.
 "We were amazed at how much very useful information one could pick up in a short period of time -- hospitals, doctors, details of procedures," D'Alemberte said. "We actually decided the doctor, the hospital and the procedure by reviewing this information."
 For D'Alemberte and thousands of others at Florida State, the Internet is changing campus life forever.

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FSU's Stress Expert Helps South Africia Heal Wounds
For millions of black South Africans, the end of apartheid marked the end of a brutal era of racial discrimination and violence. It also signaled the beginning of a new life, one of freedom, equality and, it is hoped, peace.
 But the years of brutiolence. It also signaled the beginning of a new life, one of freedom, equality and, it is hoped, peace.
 But the years of brutal racist treatment at the hands of the former government left deep wounds in the hearts and minds of many, black and white, wounds that will be hard to forgive and even harder to forget.

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What Makes Art Awesome?
One of the most extraordinary professors of the 20th century will take FSU art history students to strange lands and far away places this semester.
 Oleg Grabar, respected across the world for his research on Islamic art and architecture, will bring the holy lands to Tallahassee. Grabar will introduce the history of Islamic art to students, and try to help them understand "why people say 'wow' " when they look at a piece of art.

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