Friday, September 29, 2017

FSU #76 in world most innovative universities



Domi Station @DomiStationTLH 5 minutes ago

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

FSU Facilities Design & Construction "quarterly" update



http://www.urbantallahassee.com/index.php/forums/viewtopic.php?p=37056#p37056

StrikerObi

Anyway, I was at yesterday's FSU Facilities Design & Construction "quarterly" update (it's actually held about twice a year). Nothing major to report since they are in the tail-end phase of lots of projects right now but here's what I got.

- FSU completed land swap with the city. FSU traded the Firestone/Bloxham properties for the empty land just south of the Civic Center (bounded by St Augustine, Macomb, Gaines, and Railroad). This allows the city to develop near Cascades, and gives FSU land for a future College of Business.

- FSU acquired a 40 acre property in Lynn Haven FL, an old fuel depot. It's right on the gulf, and they figure it may be used for research by the Panama City campus.

- FSU completed purchase of 2139 Maryland Court, and has also purchased a commercial condo in the basement level (directly on Bronough St) of Kleman Plaza.

- The Carraway building will need to lose it's lecture hall as a result of the Earth Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences building going up. There's just not enough room for it since it butts up to Woodward Ave and that corner will have drastically increased pedestrian traffic once EOAS is finished. Long-term, they want to demolish Carraway anyway since it's old - but that plan is maybe 20 years out right now.

- Moran School building downtown now has a Dec 15 finish date. It was pushed back by about a month because the roof needed to be redone which was not initially expected.

Apart from EOAS, the only other really major project on the table right now that actually has funding is the new student union. Here are some updates on that

- The new Oglesby Union project has architects! It's a collaboration between Lewis+Whitlock and a firm called Workshop out of Milwaukee that specializes in student unions. This is pretty exciting. You can see Workshop's previous works at http://www.workshoparchitects.com/projects/

- The new Union project is slated for $52M but they are starting to think that to do it right they'll actually need $100-$120M.

- Phase 1A of the new union puts a new building up where the current Union Green is, referred to as the "student life pavilion". This building would be four levels and would contain a new Club Downunder (lower level), student involvement space and CDU balcony (first level), more student involvement space (second level), and the art center, SGA senate chamber, and admin space (third level)

- Phase 1B is a new building that cuts across (running North-South) the current Union plaza, roughly where The Bridge Lounge is right now. It's referred to as "The Gathering". It contains: a sports grille (lower level), coffee lounge (first level), new Kretzman Lounge (second level), and rooftop garden space (third level).

- Future phases would sit on top of the current Union building parcel and contain a new Crenshaw Lanes, food court, ballroom space, retail, and more programming space.

- Moore Auditorium is staying for now. It just got retrofitted with new seats and finishings so it doesn't look like a total dump anymore.

As always, you can see the full powerpoint presentation from the meeting (all 86 slides) at https://www.facilities.fsu.edu/depts/designConstr/

EDIT: I forgot some stuff

- Suwanee Dining Hall is going down for refurb soon, I believe with plans to reopen in May.

- The other main dining hall, formerly known as Fresh Food Co and currently known as the Seminole Cafe, is going down for refurb this summer. When it re-opens it'll be known as the "Seminole Test Kitchen" and will be where they test out new recipes. The best dishes (as voted on by diners) will find their way to other locations on campus. The two dining hall refurbs total about $10M on a shared budget.

- Howser Stadium is getting a new giant video board which should hopefully be done by January in time for the start of baseball season.

Cascades Project

Another addition on Gaines Street.


https://cascadesproject.com/

http://www.tallahassee.com/picture-gallery/news/money/2017/09/26/photos-plans-and-renderings-for-new-cascades-park-development/106017168/


Architectural rendering of the proposed Cascades Project

Biggest STEM increase for women




Florida State Univ.Verified account @floridastate 23 hours ago
At , 42% of the nearly 2,200 STEM graduates from bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral programs were women, up from 33% in 2012!
 
 
 

Sunday, September 24, 2017

Factoid of the Day: UPDATED



Fisher 13-8 in last 21 games.  Starting in 2012, 51-6 first 57 games, 7-5 since.



And more:

@DavidHaleESPN
FSU ranks…
* 127th in RZ TD%
* 123rd in pts/drive that enters opp territory
* 98th in penalties/game
* 108th in sack rate allowed



No. 115 in total offense averaging 316 yards a game.

· No. 125 in rushing offense averaging 75 yards a game.

· No. 104 in pass efficiency offense.

· No. 121 in scoring offense averaging 14 points a game.

· No. 124 in turnover margin at -2.0 per game (FSU has not forced a turnover in two games).

· No. 117 in turnover margin converting just 29.6%.

· Red zone offense No. 101 (noted above) and No. 121 on red zone defense.

· No. 107 in time of possession (26:55 per game).

· No. 96 in penalties per game (7.5).

Saturday, September 23, 2017

FSU BOT Sept 22, 2017 meeting



Byron DobsonVerified account @byrondobson 4 minutes ago

Friday, September 22, 2017

Physics team nets $4.5M NSF grant to further nuclear physics research




http://news.fsu.edu/news/science-technology/2017/09/21/physics-team-nets-4-5m-nsf-grant-nuclear-physics-research/

A team of Florida State University physicists has won a $4.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation to probe deeper into the world of nuclear physics and nuclear astrophysics.
Physics Professors Ingo Wiedenhoever, Paul Cottle, Mark Riley, Samuel Tabor, Assistant Professor Sergio Almaraz-Calderon and research faculty Anthony Frawley operate the John D. Fox Superconducting Accelerator Laboratory at Florida State, which performs cutting-edge research in nuclear physics and nuclear astrophysics.
“This grant continues the fantastic tradition of this laboratory and brings it to the next level,” Wiedenhoever said. “We are so excited to continue our work, and the group keeps moving forward.”
In addition to funding the operational aspects of the laboratory and enabling the research of the experimental nuclear group at national laboratories, the funding will also support 12 graduate students and two research faculty. Having an on-site accelerator laboratory allows the faculty teach and train students and provide hands-on experience in a wide range of areas. In the past three years, nine students in the group have received doctoral degrees and immediate job offers.
The lab has been in existence at Florida State since 1958 when then-Gov. Leroy Collins established the university’s nuclear physics program. The program has become one of the top producers of doctoral degrees in nuclear physics in the country and hosts collaborators from a number of different institutions, including Louisiana State University, Indiana University, University of Catania (Italy), I-Themba Labs (South Africa), Argonne National Laboratory and Savannah River National Laboratory.
It has also been externally funded for nearly six decades with new faculty joining the team as more senior ones have retired. Almaraz-Calderon, a nuclear astrophysicist is the most recent addition to the group.
“The lab constantly reinvents itself as we get new people with different strengths,” Wiedenhoever said.
The lab has also made significant improvements in the past few years with the help of the National Science Foundation, the FSU Department of Physics, the College of Arts and Sciences and the Office of Research.
Most recently, a large magnetic spectrograph was added, which will allow scientists to get high-resolution spectral images of charged particles produced in a nuclear reaction. This new spectrograph will enable the FSU scientists to study important details of nuclear reactions that take place, for example, in stars and stellar explosions.
“Nuclear science is everywhere in the cosmos,” Wiedenhoever said. “This spectrograph will allow us to expand our horizon tremendously.”

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Officials meet to discuss plans for FSU "gateway district"

Exciting news for FSU.  Love this thinking.

http://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2017/05/13/florida-state-universitys-southwest-campus-focus-future-growth/101567286/

Squeezed on main campus, FSU seeks plenty of potential for its southwest location


While many may consider the impressive Doak Campbell Stadium, its expanded Champion’s Club and expectations of another football championship the future of Florida State, university planners offer an alternative vision.
Look southwest, they say. From the ramparts of Doak in the distance is sprawling university acreage that many believe offers the answer to the university’s core mission of providing high-quality academic and research programs.
As Florida State University builds on its quest in becoming one of the nation’s top 25 public universities, it also is keeping a laser focus on its future expansion.
For Tallahassee, that vision could lead to a dramatic change in the city’s southwest corridor where the university owns nearly twice as much land as its main campus occupies.
FSU officials soon will begin the process of updating the university’s master plan, which will serve as a campus-wide focus on plans for decades to come.
In the meantime, university planners are discussing how to prepare their southwest properties for development, which may be the key to the future of its landlocked main campus.
“At one time you couldn’t get anyone interested in the southwest campus,” said Mark Bertolami, director of planning and space management at FSU. “That is not true anymore. I can see the day the main campus and the southwest campus become one.
“We have to look at the southwest campus as an opportunity,” he said.
The university already has established its footprint on property it owns between Tallahassee International Airport to Gaines Street.
Today, there are 215 buildings on the main campus or a total of 6.2 million square feet. By comparison, there are 66 buildings on the southwest campus that total 1.4 million square feet.
Those properties include:

  • The FSU Reservation
  • The Don Veller Seminole Golf Course and Club
  • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory
  • Morcom Aquatics Center
  • The 100-plus acre FSU Sportsplex intramural fields
  • The FAMU-FSU College of Engineering
  • The vacant property that once housed the sprawling Alumni Village
  • Acreage between the golf course and Alumni Village
  • Property within Innovation Park
  • Various parcels along Lake Bradford Road.

Southwest campus

FSU's southwest campus roughly runs north of Orange Avenue, south of the CSX railroad tracks, east of Rankin Avenue and west of the Callen and Providence neighborhoods near Lake Bradford Road.
One current access starts at Levy Avenue, west of Lake Bradford, past the Providence neighborhood to the vast open space that once housed the sprawling Alumni Village housing complex, which was demolished two years ago.
Built about 1960, it included 96 buildings with nearly 800 apartments. Alumni Village was created to provide housing for older returning students, married couples and international students. Its two child care centers are still open but will soon be relocated closer to the main campus.
Another entry point is on Pottsdamer Street, off West Orange Avenue, where motorists are greeted by signs for The Don Veller Seminole Golf Course and Club, The FSU Broadcast Center and the engineering college.
FSU’s presence is almost immediate with the university’s tennis complex and the Morcom Aquatics Center.
For those venturing farther west on Orange Avenue onto Eisenhower Street, sits the FSU Sportsplex, a recreational campus in itself for intramural sports.
“It’s loosely defined," Bertolami said. “You won’t find a white picket fence around our property.”
Preliminary plans being considered include a third phase of the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering, a possible expansion of the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and the intramural fields.
A new Interdisciplinary Research and Commercialization Building at Levy Avenue and Engineering Drive is moving ahead, with legislators including $8 million in next year's budget toward construction.
Also housed on the southwest property is the Applied Superconductivity Center, the Aero-Propulsion, Mechatronics, & Energy Center, the Center for Advanced Power Systems and the High-Performance Materials Institute.
How the southwest property is further developed will be a key part of the discussions as the university deliberates on its master plan. That promises to be a huge undertaking involving academic programs, enrollment projections, research priorities and student needs.
Take Alumni Village, as an example.
“We never envisioned decommissioning Alumni Village,” Bertolami said. “We assumed it would be there forever. This (master planning) will give us an opportunity to determine the highest and best use for Alumni Village.”

Laying the groundwork

Meanwhile, FSU is taking steps to ensure its plans are in sync with the city and county's long-term vision. That means conversations with the intergovernmental agency overseeing the direction of Blueprint spending.
“This is planning the future of the FSU campus,” said Kevin Graham, executive director of the Florida State University Real Estate Foundation. “We haven’t gotten to the point of identifying the size of buildings, the use of buildings. We have this incredible land asset less than a mile away from the main campus. We want to be able to leverage the value of those land assets for the future growth and development of FSU.”
In February, Graham made a presentation to members of Blueprint’s intergovernmental agency.
He presented a map showing FSU properties in the southwest corridor of the city. He said FSU, in its role of being a good steward, was interested in making sure its future was being considered as the planning panel identifies infrastructure projects, such as roads, coming before the agency.
In that presentation, he noted several developments have sparked interest within the FSU community:

  • The Florida Department of Transportation plans to widen Orange Avenue from South Monroe Street to Capital Circle Southwest. “The expansion would run in front of the FSU campus, the property that fronts the golf course,” Graham said.
  • The university’s razing of the buildings at Alumni Village. “What’s left out there are rolling hills and beautiful oak trees,” he said. “We are asked what our plans are for Alumni Village.”
  • FSU’s agreement with Nicklaus Design, an international firm founded by golf legend Jack Nicklaus, for a future design of the Don Veller Seminole Golf Course and Club.
“All of these factors have caused us to focus on this portion of our campus and to ensure we are planning appropriately for the next 50 years,” Graham told the Democrat recently.
“It’s important that we pay attention to the land assets that we have and make sure we are good stewards of these resources.”
FSU and the Blueprint staff agreed to continue meeting to identify infrastructure priorities the university would need to have in place before drawing up development plans. That report will come back before the Intergovernmental Agency, which is comprised of city and county commissioners.
“It’s always exciting to hear about growth in our community and FSU is a leading force for vitality in our region,” said Ben Pingree, director of Tallahassee-Leon County Department of Planning, Land Management and Community Enhancement. “We are coordinating with FSU now to leverage their growth, as they look at their next round of major improvements, to maximize the greater community benefits."

Collaboration is key

Graham says it's important that FSU's ideas for the southwest campus mesh with the city and the county's plans for that sparsely developed quadrant.
The availability of land opens possibilities for FSU. The main campus includes 475 acres and is considered land-locked, making FSU one of the highest density campuses in the state university system.
That compares to the nearly 900 acres in the southwest corridor. Of that, about 600 acres are available for future growth.
“There’s almost twice as much (land) outside the main campus that it is within,” Graham said.

Exploring a new access from Orange Avenue

FSU wants to explore creating an access road to the FSU property from West Orange Avenue. That connector road could run past the golf course through Alumni Village with a connection to Lake Bradford Road.
“It opens up the interior of FSU’s property, making it more accessible,” Graham said.
Under current conditions, motorists wanting to access the golf course of even the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering have to turn on Pottsdamer Street, which runs by the Callen neighborhood with its brick homes and well-maintained yards.
“That is not being the best steward of the neighborhood street,” Graham said.
What’s needed, he said, is a second entrance road that would improve entering and leaving the campus.
“It would have a positive impact on the (Callen) neighborhood,” he said.
But a new entrance from Orange Avenue raises also concerns. What impact a new road would have on the golf course property?  What impact would the road have on future building?
In addition, there are environmental considerations to add to the discussion, Graham said.
For their part, city and county officials also have big plans. Pingree said Blueprint has the Airport Gateway project in the 2020-2040 set of projects.
According to the Blueprint website, the project is designed to create a gateway from the airport into the city. Improvements on Springhill Road will focus on bicycle and pedestrian safety.
The improvements along Lake Bradford Road would complement the nearby Gaines Street redevelopment, which has drastically altered the landscaped just south of FSU. It also would focus on improving safer pedestrian, bicycle, and vehicular infrastructure within walking distance to FSU, FAMU, and Gaines Street.
“At this point, staff has been directed to research and provide an analysis of the opportunities that could happen as a result of any new partnership with FSU in relation to our Blueprint 2020 project: Airport Gateway,” Pingree said. “We are in the initial steps of performing this analysis now. “
Pingree said Blueprint also is planning a Southwest Area Transportation Plan that addresses future mobility needs and supports future development.
“In other words, we are initiating a rigorous study of the growth in this area that will take into account FSU’s perspectives as well as FAMU’s, the Airport, the Leon County Research and Development Authority and existing neighborhoods,” he said.
The most desired outcome, Graham said, is agreeing on what works best for the university and the larger Tallahassee community.
“When we look at all the major stakeholders, we have an opportunity to plan in a silo or work together. We choose to work together,” Graham said. “If Blueprint believes there is increased value to creating this complimentary connection through the FSU property then those are the opportunities the community can study.”



http://www.wtxl.com/news/officials-meet-to-discuss-plans-for-fsu-gateway-district/article_26bfd4a4-9d79-11e7-bb20-876232144a36.html




The Blueprint Intergovernmental Agency is meeting right now.

The board, looking at a project that could create a "gateway district" in Tallahassee.


The goal is to develop an urban entrance into the city from the airport, collaborating with FSU and FDOT. That would involve landscaping and expanding roadways in the southwest.

The project would connect FSU's southwest campus to the main one.

The idea of a district came up a few months ago and ties into the airport gateway that was already approved as a Blueprint project.


"How can we do road projects and stormwater projects with a greater good, with a high impact for the benefit -- and create that sense of place?" said Ben Pingree, the director of the Department of PLACE. "We think the Airport Gateway Project is there. We think the district will take it potentially even further."

The price tag is $58 million with an extra $21 million coming from the state and FSU. But this project isn't a done deal.


Officials meet to discuss plans for FSU "gateway district"

Has ESPN already cheaped out on the upcoming ACC Network?




http://www.newsobserver.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/luke-decock/article174345116.html

"It certainly has the distinct aura of penny-pinching, although in this era of digital television, it may not matter at all. But at the least, given the uncertainty surrounding ESPN’s finances and how they may affect this new network, you’d like to have the sense the ACC Network is going to be done the right way, and doing it somewhere other than Charlotte certainly feels like the first corner has been cut."

Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/luke-decock/article174345116.html#storylink=cpy

Monday, September 18, 2017

ACC Network & NYC (Updated)



Michael FelderVerified account @InTheBleachers 23 hours ago
Most savage part of Disney-Altice to force ACCN & SECN "we'll take everything from you"





Bryan FischerVerified account @BryanDFischer 4 hours ago

ACC Network Will Be Based Out Of Bristol Instead Of Charlotte As Widely Thought

Why don't I get a warm fuzzy on this?  Don't trust Swofford at all.

http://m.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Daily/Issues/2017/09/18/Media/ACC-Network.aspx

It was thought when ACC Commissioner John Swofford last year announced plans to launch an ACC Network by ’19 that the ESPN-owned channel would operate out of Charlotte and share its headquarters with SEC Network, which has been based in Charlotte since its launch in '14. ESPN has invested significantly into its studios and office space for ESPN Events in the city, about 100 miles south of the ACC's Greensboro HQ. However, ESPN told network staff today that ACC Network’s primary studio home will be on its Bristol, Conn., campus, where it built a 194,000-square foot studio three years ago for more than $100M for shows like “SportsCenter” and ESPN’s NFL studio programming. “Some had the sense that Charlotte was a natural, but, really, both locations are within our footprint,” Swofford said, referring to the conference’s northeastern schools of Boston College, Pitt and Syracuse. “ESPN has been looking at different scenarios since before we announced that we are moving forward with the ACC Network. We ended up in a really good place.” ESPN will keep its presence in Charlotte -- in fact, some ACC Network senior leadership, like Senior VP/College Networks Programming Rosalyn Durant, will remain there. Charlotte staff will continue to produce studio programming for SEC Network, which is not moving. In certain cases, ESPN’s Charlotte studio will conduct some coach and player interviews for ACC Network, but its studio production and operations will be housed in Bristol. Similar to the SEC Network, each ACC school will have its own studio space on campus.

IMPORTANCE OF LOCATION DECREASING: ESPN Exec VP/Programming & Scheduling Burke Magnus said, “In today’s world of video communication and technology, physical location is becoming less important every day. This was a circumstance born out of having the most resources at our disposal in Bristol to deliver on our plan for the ACC Network.” The ACC’s new network is expected to launch in ’19 and already has carriage deals in place with some digital video providers. Swofford said his optimism about the channel grows every day. “We’re where we thought we’d be, if not ahead of schedule,” he said. “The production facilities on campuses are going well, and we continue to be very excited about it.”

Bar Exam Comparison - Florida




http://www.floridasupremecourt.org/index.html

Comparison
http://www.floridasupremecourt.org/barscores/Results%20-%202017/July/09-18-2017_Bar-Scores-Comparison.pdf

Results
http://www.floridasupremecourt.org/barscores/index.shtml


Friday, September 15, 2017

Comparing teams with most NFL players on opening day rosters to their records since 2012




#DaHaleVerified account @DavidHaleESPN 5 minutes ago




Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Inside Florida State's Quest for Superior Football Fitness




http://www.menshealth.com/fitness/florida-state-football-strength-training-0/slide/1

We embedded with Florida State crew to chronicle their strength workouts

football quirk: The game lasts about three and a half hours, but each play is a mere four seconds or so. Most of the time the players move slowly. In fact, they spend just 2 to 4 percent of a game at or near max velocity. That's what the analysts at Florida State learned by crunching five years of GPS data. It's up to strength coach Vic Viloria to prepare the players to seize those big-game moments. Viloria uses GPS tracking and other technology to tweak his fitness playbook. It's a sweaty combination of old-school strength principles, progressive training gadgets, and fighting spirit.
We spent a day embedded with the crew to learn what it takes to achieve peak physical fitness, shooting all the fascinating moments from their strength workouts. Below, a selection of the best.

How Pensacola almost became home to Florida State University


http://pulsegulfcoast.com/2017/09/how-pensacola-almost-became-home-to-florida-state-university

Times are good for the University of West Florida: the school is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year; a new president is ramping up plans to expand the school’s presence in downtown Pensacola, the economic and cultural hub of the region; and after a celebrated inaugural season, the school’s long-awaited football program is heading into its second year.
But over the years, it seems the university has always strived to be part of greater things. One of the state’s newest universities, UWF was first established in 1963. Today, the institution is playing a game of catch up to the other powerhouse universities in the state that have existed in some form for nearly two centuries.
<img data-attachment-id="17670" data-permalink="http://pulsegulfcoast.com/2017/09/how-pensacola-almost-became-home-to-florida-state-university/wfs_rc04562" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/WFS_rc04562.jpg?fit=600%2C736" data-orig-size="600,736" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="WFS_rc04562" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/WFS_rc04562.jpg?fit=245%2C300" data-large-file="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/WFS_rc04562.jpg?fit=600%2C736" class="wp-image-17670 size-full" src="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/WFS_rc04562.jpg?resize=600%2C736" alt="" srcset="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/WFS_rc04562.jpg?w=600 600w, https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/WFS_rc04562.jpg?resize=245%2C300 245w" sizes="(max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px" data-recalc-dims="1" />
West Florida Seminary main building, circa 1880. Built in 1854 as the Florida Institute. (Special to The Pulse)
The history of the University of West Florida could have been much different, however, if a decision made 166 years ago had gone differently. It was then that Pensacola was a favored location for one of two public universities to be established in Florida — one east of the Suwanee River (long considered the dividing line between east and west Florida) and another university to be established west of the river.
In the early 19th century, Florida’s elected representatives had already recognized the value of higher education but they had failed to translate their enthusiasm into action during the territorial era. In 1823, the territorial council of Florida voted to set aside two townships’ worth of public land to raise money for a “seminary of higher learning.” 13 years later in 1836, territorial Governor Richard Keith Call appointed a 14-member board to plan for a University of Florida. But by the time Florida became the United States’ 27th state in 1845, Florida was still lacking a state college of any kind.
In the first half of the 19th century, Pensacola was the largest city in Florida. The town was the capital of West Florida and was considered the “Wild West” of the Southeast, providing refuge for a diverse population made up of buccaneers, pirates, and smugglers to political refugees, frontiersmen, freed slaves, and Native Americans. West Florida had yet to be “Americanized” like its neighbors to the north.
Pensacolians and many Floridians lamented the state of their educational system. Georgia established a public university in 1785, while the University of Alabama had been open since 1831. Meanwhile, Florida’s young men and women were obliged to travel outside the state to finish their training, or not receive it at all. In January 1851, the Legislature took action by establishing two seminaries for teacher training, one for each side of the Suwannee River. Beyond this one directive, the act was silent as to where the two schools should be located. The Legislature would have to make that choice once the options were clearer.
<img data-attachment-id="17671" data-permalink="http://pulsegulfcoast.com/2017/09/how-pensacola-almost-became-home-to-florida-state-university/1847letter" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letter.jpg?fit=1073%2C1626" data-orig-size="1073,1626" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="1847letter" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letter.jpg?fit=198%2C300" data-large-file="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letter.jpg?fit=676%2C1024" class="wp-image-17671 size-full" src="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letter.jpg?resize=1073%2C1626" alt="" srcset="https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letter.jpg?w=1073 1073w, https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letter.jpg?resize=198%2C300 198w, https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letter.jpg?resize=768%2C1164 768w, https://i0.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letter.jpg?resize=676%2C1024 676w" sizes="(max-width: 1073px) 100vw, 1073px" data-recalc-dims="1" />
The 1847 petition to the General Assembly of the State of Florida asking for the state seminary west of the Suwannee River be located in Pensacola. (Special to The Pulse)
Several towns throughout the state took this as their cue to make it very clear why they should be chosen as the site for one of the new seminaries. In recommending themselves, the petitioners focused on the healthfulness and convenience of their location. Pensacola’s advocates, for example, argued the city’s proximity to the Gulf of Mexico and points west would attract students from neighboring Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and perhaps even the West Indies. Ocala’s petitioners pointed to their position near the geographic center of the peninsula and the number of stage roads in the area as reasons for the town’s worthiness.
In a 1847 petition to the General Assembly of the State of Florida, Pensacolians asked that the state seminary west of the Suwannee River be located in Pensacola.
“Your memorialists therefore respectfully ask of your honorable body the passage of a law establishing at Pensacola, a University, as one of the higher Seminaries contemplated in the act of Congress already referred to,” the petitioners wrote.
The petition outlined three reasons for the establishment of the university in Pensacola.
“Among the causes for placing the Institution at Pensacola, your memorialists would respectfully present the following:
1. The salubrity of the place. The institution could be continued in its exercises without the periodical fear of disease.
2. The cheapness of provisions and building.
3. Its geographical position. Besides students from Florida, it would command a large number from Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, and the West Indies. New Orleans and Mobile alone would furnish a large number. The facility of communication with Pensacola is such, that from all the places named students might come with ease.
<img data-attachment-id="17668" data-permalink="http://pulsegulfcoast.com/2017/09/how-pensacola-almost-became-home-to-florida-state-university/1847letterclip" data-orig-file="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letterclip.jpg?fit=417%2C211" data-orig-size="417,211" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"1"}" data-image-title="1847letterclip" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letterclip.jpg?fit=300%2C152" data-large-file="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letterclip.jpg?fit=417%2C211" class="wp-image-17668 size-full" src="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letterclip.jpg?resize=417%2C211" alt="" srcset="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letterclip.jpg?w=417 417w, https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/1847letterclip.jpg?resize=300%2C152 300w" sizes="(max-width: 417px) 100vw, 417px" data-recalc-dims="1" />
(Special to The Pulse)
Your memorialists in conclusion respectfully present the whole subject to the consideration of your Honorable body, and ask the passage of a law establishing at Pensacola, under the auspices of the state, the University of West Florida.”
Not everyone agreed, obviously.
Pensacola was locked into a competition for the new seminary with Tallahassee, the new capital of the state. In perhaps an overly confident move, Pensacolians promised to provide only the land necessary to build a seminary. Tallahassee, however, went much further in their incentives to lure the seminary.
<img data-attachment-id="17669" data-permalink="http://pulsegulfcoast.com/2017/09/how-pensacola-almost-became-home-to-florida-state-university/rc09230" data-orig-file="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/rc09230.jpg?fit=600%2C346" data-orig-size="600,346" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="rc09230" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/rc09230.jpg?fit=300%2C173" data-large-file="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/rc09230.jpg?fit=600%2C346" class="wp-image-17669 size-full" src="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/rc09230.jpg?resize=600%2C346" alt="" srcset="https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/rc09230.jpg?w=600 600w, https://i1.wp.com/pulsegulfcoast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/rc09230.jpg?resize=300%2C173 300w" sizes="(max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px" data-recalc-dims="1" />
West Florida Seminary. Built in 1854 as the Florida Institute. (Special to The Pulse)
The mayor of Tallahassee and city council heavily lobbied the state assembly and pledged to donate $10,000 (about $300,000 today). City officials also offered to grant the institution an annuity of $1,500 per year. Citizens of nearby Quincy proposed a similar offer to gift the buildings used by the Quincy Academy, but the petitioners did not commit any specific amount of cash to the project. The Legislature eventually chose Tallahassee as the site for the state seminary west of the Suwannee, which ultimately became the Florida State College for Women and later the Florida State University.
East of the Suwannee River, Ocala in Marion County and Newnansville in Alachua County were the main contenders for a seminary. The Ocala petitioners offered to give the state 16 town lots in Ocala valued at $5,000, plus $1,600 cash, as well as the buildings then being used by the East Florida Independent Institute. Newnansville did not yet possess anything like the East Florida Independent Institute had to offer, but in their petition the citizens of the town pledged $5,000 toward constructing new facilities. The Legislature ultimately selected Ocala as the East Florida site, which after a series of transformations and a relocation to Gainesville became the University of Florida.
In the end, of course, it was Tallahassee that was chosen as one of two sites for the state’s public universities, giving rise to Florida State University. Here in Pensacola, the University of West Florida — whose name and creation had first been conceived more than 112 years ago — was finally established in 1963, and it would be five years more — exactly 50 years ago — that students would begin attending classes.

Noles Rank Seventh in Baseball America Recruit Rankings



http://seminoles.com/noles-rank-seventh-in-baseball-america-recruit-rankings/


Baseball America released its annual recruiting rankings Tuesday, and Florida State’s incoming class leads the Atlantic Coast Conference and ranks seventh nationally. The Seminoles welcome 14 newcomers to a team that is coming off a No. 6 final ranking in 2017 and its first trip to the College World Series since 2012.

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Florida State leaps another five spots in national rankings

This is HUGE. 

If only FSU could get the state (COE & COM issues) and it's alumni (need a Billion plus endowment, this is unacceptable to not be at this point) to back this up with more resources, FSU has a shot at top 25.


http://news.fsu.edu/news/university-news/2017/09/12/florida-state-leaps-another-five-spots-national-rankings/

U.S. News & World Report Ranks FSU No. 33 Among Public Universities
Florida State University has jumped to No. 33 among national public universities in the U.S. News & World Report rankings after moving up five places for the second consecutive year.
The rankings appear in U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Colleges 2018” guidebook. In two years, FSU has vaulted 10 spots among public universities since placing No. 43 in 2016. Last year, FSU ranked No. 38 among public universities.
“We are thrilled that U.S. News & World Report continues to recognize Florida State University as one of the best universities in the nation,” said President John Thrasher. “It means our reputation of academic excellence is rising throughout the state and the nation, and that’s a reflection of our world-class faculty, staff and students.”
Florida State’s excellent graduation and student retention rates are the driving forces behind FSU’s ranking among the nation’s best public universities. FSU’s four-year graduation rate is among the top 25 nationally, the six-year graduation rate is 80 percent and the university’s freshman retention rate is nearly 93 percent, which ranks 18th nationally.
“This is an exciting time at Florida State University,” said Sally McRorie, provost and executive vice president for Academic Affairs. “We are clearly recruiting even better students, and the success of our programs is being noticed, and emulated, by our peer institutions.”
The Florida Legislature’s designation of FSU as one of the state’s two preeminent universities and the additional funding that comes with it has enabled the university to raise faculty salaries and hire more faculty. As a result, FSU has improved in metrics such as faculty compensation and student-faculty ratio.
“We are extremely grateful to the Florida Legislature and Florida Board of Governors in helping our continuing efforts to raise Florida State to a higher level of national prominence,” Thrasher said. “The funding that the Legislature has invested in FSU has allowed us to vigorously pursue our strategic goals.”
McRorie reiterated that the university’s emphasis on student success is at the heart of its rapid ascent in the national rankings.
“I’m so pleased that everybody’s hard work is really paying off for the university,” McRorie said. “Before a student even arrives on campus, our focus is on their success, and we’re seeing great results.”
FSU is committed to preparing students through comprehensive orientation, stressing the importance of taking 15 credit hours each semester and encouraging students to take advantage of co-curricular opportunities available like internships and job shadowing, McRorie said.
The strategy is working. With FSU’s 80 percent six-year graduation rate, the university well exceeded a prediction by U.S. News that FSU’s graduation rate would be 71 percent.
FSU also saw improvements in reputational ratings by university peers, student selectivity and alumni giving.
Also included in this year’s U.S. News report were undergraduate business program rankings. Florida State’s undergraduate business program made a significant jump, moving up 14 spots to No. 27 among public universities and 18 spots to No. 45 among all national universities. The undergraduate business rankings are based solely on peer assessment.
“Our significant move up in the rankings reflects the hard work and commitment of our faculty and staff, and the unwavering support of our alumni,” said Michael D. Hartline, dean of the College of Business. “We are determined to continue strategic investments in our people and programs in order to continue further down the path of preeminence.  It’s gratifying to be recognized for our efforts.”
U.S. News & World Report determines its national university rankings based on seven factors: graduation and retention rates (22.5 percent); assessment of excellence, i.e. peer and high school counselor assessment (22.5 percent); faculty resources (20 percent); student selectivity (12.5 percent); financial resources (10 percent); graduation rate performance, i.e. the difference between actual and predicted graduation rate (7.5 percent); and alumni giving (5 percent).
Florida State University shares the No. 33 spot with four other public universities: Michigan State University, North Carolina State University, University of California-Santa Cruz and the University of Delaware.
Among all national universities, including private universities, FSU ranked 81st, up from 92nd last year. The national universities category comprises 311 institutions (190 public, 114 private and seven for-profit) that offer a wide range of undergraduate majors as well as master’s and doctoral degrees.


http://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2017/09/12/do-not-post-untilfsu-moves-up-no-33-among-u-s-news-and-world-reports-best-public-universities-rankin/656011001/

Florida State University edged closer to its goal of becoming a top 25 national public university Tuesday, placing No. 33 in the U.S News & World Report rankings released today.
 
 
In the 2017 list, FSU ranked No. 38 and in 2016, placed No. 43.
The 2018 Best College Rankings were released Tuesday.
 
Among all national universities, including private universities, FSU ranked 81st, up from 92nd last year, the university said.
For more on the report, visit www.usnews.com/best-colleges.

Colleges most represented on 2017 NFL Opening Day rosters



http://www.ncaa.com/news/football/article/2017-09-07/colleges-most-represented-2017-nfl-opening-day-rosters

Friday, September 8, 2017

Another addition to College Town (The Lumberyard)




http://www.naproperties.com/places/the-lumberyard/

Why Does This Place Matter?

The Lumberyard, a five-story student housing development near Florida State University in Tallahassee, makes way for new homes for college kids—and carves a path into the future for the J.H. Dowling family and their legacy lumberyard, once located on the spot.

Campuses Change Cities

It’s often hard to separate a college from the idea of its college town. The University of Georgia has its Athens. Harvard, Cambridge. The presence of a growing student population tends to influence the surrounding community in a major way, as has been the case at Florida State University in Tallahassee. In a former industrial zone blocks from the football stadium, warehouses and lumberyards have given way to student housing and a walkable, urban environment that college kids (and their parents) increasingly want. We’ve had a big hand in the neighborhood’s transition, developing much needed retail and residential properties there since 2012. But by 2016, there was one remaining legacy business: a lone lumberyard whose time had come. Tractor-trailer deliveries intermingled with students walking to class, and the combination was getting dicier by the day. Real, beneficial progress happens when you address human needs, and for progress to continue here, we had to address the needs of the people attached to the legacy business that remained.

A Tale of Two Developments

J.H. Dowling established its lumberyard on Tallahassee’s Madison Street in the 1950s, in a district that would later come to be called College Town. A move was long overdue (the company had admittedly outgrown their property years before), but Dowling wasn’t in a financial position to relocate, and moreover couldn’t fathom closing their doors and displacing 22 employees, many of whom had been with the company for decades. (Nor did they want to pay over a million dollars in capital gains tax.)
We knew there had to be a solution that served both Dowling’s needs and the needs of Florida State’s growing campus population. That’s how NAP came to build and (briefly) own our own lumberyard. There’s a provision in the tax code that says if I have something that you have in like kind, then you and I can trade it without tax implications. So we helped the Dowlings find and secure a new location a few miles down the road, and through the 1031 Tax Free Exchange, entered into an agreement to build it, then trade the new lumberyard that we had built for their existing property. We both signed our deeds. We put them into escrow. And we ended up with a jewel piece of land in the middle of campus, while the Dowlings ended up with massive tax savings and a beautiful new place to extend their legacy long into the future. A true win-win.

Urbanization Explodes

Relocating the original Dowling lumberyard wasn’t the only obstacle we encountered however. An unexploded World War II-era bomb was discovered during construction, wrapped in tree roots. Likely to have come from the Dale Mabry Army Air Base and a leftover from fighter training in the 1940s, the bomb had to be detonated on site—an explosion that broke 14 windows in an adjacent student housing project. Understandably, the rest of the property was immediately, carefully inspected with ground penetrating radar to ensure there weren’t any additional explosives. Luckily there weren’t, and construction resumed safely.

Past Meets Future. Future Smiles.

The Lumberyard will be ready to welcome students next summer, just in time for them to settle in for the fall 2018 semester. They may not know the history of the place, but a lot of people do, and we wanted to honor it in any way we could—hence the name, a tribute to J.H. Dowling, and all of the lumberyards that once operated in the neighborhood. Cities change. Tallahassee has changed. With The Lumberyard, NAP is helping to facilitate that change, while treating the past—and the people who are a part of it—with all due respect. As for the Dowling’s new lumberyard: It’s up and running, on a 6-acre parcel (three times the size of the old site), that’s also home to the company’s corporate offices, storage warehouses and a 7,300 square foot hardware store.
 

Sunday, September 3, 2017

FSU Bama TV rating. highest rated opener



Matt BakerVerified account @MBakerTBTimes 27 minutes ago

Ralph D. RussoVerified account @ralphDrussoAP 32 minutes ago