Month: March 2008
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Vanderbilt hosts conference on ‘Neglected Justices’
"Judicial Reputation: A Conference on Neglected Justices"opens at 4 p.m. Thursday, April 3, at the Vanderbilt Law School with a keynote address by G. Edward White, the David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law. Read MoreMar 31, 2008
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Op-Ed: Bickering exposes dishonest politics
An op-ed by Vanderbilt University legal and political scholar Carol Swain arguing that the fight between Sen. Barrack Obama and Sen. Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination and its focus on race and gender is harming the party. Read MoreMar 29, 2008
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VUCast: News from Vanderbilt’s news network for week of March 30
An event bringing together an Irish rocker/social activist, R & B band from the seventies and eighties . . . and Nick Zeppos? Check out this week's VUCast. Read MoreMar 28, 2008
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Vanderbilt’s Peabody College named No. 2 education school in nation; U.S. News & World Report releases annual graduate school rankings
Vanderbilt University\'s Peabody College of education and human development is the second-ranked education school in the nation, according to the latest rankings of graduate and professional schools by U.S. News & World Report. Read MoreMar 28, 2008
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Video: "Nashville in Our Living Room" concert series
Student concert committee Nashville in Our Living Room hosted its first concert March 26 in the atrium, affectionately known on campus as "the living room," in the university's new Commons Center. The event featured Nashville-based singer/songwriters Sara Beck and Audrey Spillman. Read MoreMar 27, 2008
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Video: “Nashville in Our Living Room” concert series
Student concert committee Nashville in Our Living Room hosted its first concert March 26 in the atrium, affectionately known on campus as "the living room," in the university\'s new Commons Center. The event featured Nashville-based singer/songwriters Sara Beck and Audrey Spillman. Read MoreMar 27, 2008
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Vanderbilt law professor named American Council on Education Fellow; Beverly Moran one of 36 ACE Fellows to receive intensive higher education leadership training in 2008-09
Beverly I. Moran, a distinguished tax scholar who has served on the faculty of Vanderbilt Law School since 2001, has been named an American Council on Education Fellow for the 2008-09 academic year. Read MoreMar 26, 2008
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Engineering professor receives NSF CAREER Award
Sharon M. Weiss, assistant professor of electrical engineering, has received a prestigious National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program Award. Read MoreMar 26, 2008
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Op-Ed: The abortion industry
An op-ed by Carol Swain, professor of law and of political science, on Planned Parenthood and its role in performing abortions. Read MoreMar 26, 2008
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Misalliance premiers April 4 at Vanderbilt; George Bernard Shaw explores the battle of the sexes and the generation gap in this witty play
A parachuting Polish acrobat. A socialist with a gun hidden in a Turkish bath. An out-of-control daughter. Eight marriage proposals. Welcome to the world of John Tarleton, the eccentric middle-class millionaire and one of the main characters in George Bernard Shaw\'s play Misalliance. Read MoreMar 26, 2008
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Vanderbilt professor named chair of biomedical engineering
Todd D. Giorgio, professor of biomedical engineering, has been named chair of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Vanderbilt University. Read MoreMar 26, 2008
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Video: Global Justice Series: "Global Transgenerational Justice"
The Responsibility and Global Justice Lecture Series, sponsored by the Philosophy Department, presents James Bohman, the Danforth Professor of Philosophy at St. Louis University. Read MoreMar 26, 2008
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Video: Global Justice Series: “Global Transgenerational Justice”
The Responsibility and Global Justice Lecture Series, sponsored by the Philosophy Department, presents James Bohman, the Danforth Professor of Philosophy at St. Louis University. Read MoreMar 26, 2008
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Racial Disparities Persist for Colonoscopy Screenings
African-Americans are far more likely to be diagnosed with and to die from colorectal cancer than whites or other minority groups. Despite this increased risk, a new study led by Vanderbilt University Medical Center researchers found that African-Americans are far less likely to undergo colonoscopy screening than whites, even when both groups have a family history of colorectal cancer. The study was published in the March 24 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine. Read MoreMar 26, 2008
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We very much hope you will attend the upcoming civility lectures at Vanderbilt, with gratitude for your time and attention
P.M. Forni, a Johns Hopkins professor who wrote the book on civility, will provide expert commentary on the topic during a series of appearances on the Vanderbilt campus April 3-4. Read MoreMar 25, 2008
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Vanderbilt University Library unveils next-generation research tool
Vanderbilt University Library users can locate and access more quickly an expanding variety of resources ñ print, digital and electronic ñ thanks to the new online service DiscoverLibrary. Read MoreMar 25, 2008
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New Research Projects Growing Nursing Shortage
The United States health care system needs to brace for a severe shortage of nurses, according to findings by Peter Buerhaus, Ph.D., of Vanderbilt University School of Nursing, Douglas Staiger, Ph.D., from Dartmouth University, and David Auerbach, Ph.D., of the Congressional Budget Office. Read MoreMar 25, 2008
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Video: Artist Amelia Winger-Bearskin on Performance Art and Digital Video
Watch video of a March 24 lecture on performance art and digital video. Read MoreMar 25, 2008
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Vanderbilt University police chief to become president-elect of IACLEA
Marlon C. Lynch, the chief of police at Vanderbilt University, is the 2008-2009 president-elect for the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Administrators, Inc. (IACLEA). Read MoreMar 25, 2008
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Consistent cost of Big Mac meal across countries proves euro didn’t cause expected price jump, Vanderbilt research finds
Contrary to popular belief, the introduction of the euro in 2002 did not result in price increases, even for food items, a Vanderbilt researcher found by comparing prices of a Big Mac meal in 13 European countries using their own currency with 12 who adopted the euro currency. Read MoreMar 24, 2008