Month: March 2008
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‘Debating Immigration’ symposium March 20-21 at Vanderbilt Law School
A distinguished group of scholars, journalists and activists will grapple with some of the thorniest issues of immigration during a March 20-21 symposium at the Vanderbilt Law School. The event is free and open to the public. Read MoreMar 10, 2008
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Video: Vanderbilt celebrates selection of Nicholas S. Zeppos as chancellor
Watch video of the celebration of the selection of Nicholas S. Zeppos as the university's eighth chancellor during a special open house Monday, March 10, at the Student Life Center. Read MoreMar 10, 2008
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MEDIA ADVISORY: Vanderbilt University celebrates new chancellor at March 10 open house; Live video at 11 a.m.
Vanderbilt will celebrate the selection of Nicholas S. Zeppos as the university\'s eighth chancellor during a special open house Monday, March 10, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Student Life Center. Read MoreMar 7, 2008
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Symposium at Vanderbilt University to focus on the life and works of Jewish theologian Franz Rosenzweig March 13-14
Franz Rosenzweig was one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century, and in recent years his journals, letters and writings have been an important spur to thinking about the possibilities and limits of the humanities. He also remains a central figure in fields as varied as literature, history, philosophy and religious studies. Read MoreMar 7, 2008
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Three Nobel Laureates visit Vanderbilt in the next month
In the space of only five weeks, three Nobel Prize-winning physicists will visit the Vanderbilt campus and provide local researchers with updates on the latest developments in fields ranging from cosmology to the behavior of atoms to science education. Two of the three will also give free public lectures while they are here. Read MoreMar 7, 2008
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Link Found Between Vegetables and Decreased Risk of Breast Cancer
When your mother told you to eat your vegetables it appears that maternal wisdom had a scientific basis. Researchers with Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center and the Shanghai Cancer Institute in China have discovered a possible link between a diet rich in certain vegetables and a decreased risk for breast cancer. The study appears in the March issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Read MoreMar 7, 2008
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Topsy-Turvy World of Daylight-Saving Time Returns
The arrival of daylight-saving time this weekend means extra time for evening yard work or barbecues, but for some it also means sleepy days at work and even a bit of crankiness. Read MoreMar 7, 2008
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Youth gangs and public safety focus of Vanderbilt conference; Experts to examine gang prevention policies in United States and Central America
With dangerous youth gangs becoming firmly entrenched in communities throughout the United States and Central America, a March 11 conference at Vanderbilt University will bring together leading experts to share solutions to the alarming problem. Read MoreMar 6, 2008
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Lecture describes mankind’s special place in the universe
Exploding stars and black holes. Colliding galaxies and dark matter. Dark energy and cosmic inflation. The universe that modern science has revealed is strange and wild and beautiful, but doesn\'t seem particularly hospitable to life or very comprehensible. Read MoreMar 6, 2008
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Video: Thinking Out of the Lunch Box: "Islam and Europe — Sites of Conflict"
Professor of History and Jewish Studies David Wasserstein discusses Islam and Europe at the March 5 lunch and learn series. Read MoreMar 6, 2008
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Video: Thinking Out of the Lunch Box: “Islam and Europe — Sites of Conflict”
Professor of History and Jewish Studies David Wasserstein discusses Islam and Europe at the March 5 lunch and learn series. Read MoreMar 6, 2008
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‘Acting black’ hinders gifted black student achievement
Gifted black students often underachieve in school because of efforts to "act black," new research has found, offering insights into the achievement gap between black and white students in the United States and why black students are under-represented in gifted programs. Read MoreMar 6, 2008
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Vanderbilt Study Finds Genes Impact Response to Blood Thinner Warfarin
Variations in a gene involved in blood clotting determine patients\' initial response to the common blood thinner warfarin, researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center have reported. Read MoreMar 5, 2008
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Op-Ed: Crackdown shakes up a whole community
An op-ed by Vanderbilt sociologist Dan Cornfield criticizing recent actions involving immigrants in Middle Tennessee. Read MoreMar 5, 2008
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Democrats’ negativity will strengthen eventual nominee, says VU professor
While some Democrats fear that the increasingly negative tone in the protracted battle for the Democratic presidential nomination will hurt the party\'s chances in November, a Vanderbilt University political scientist anticipates just the opposite. Read MoreMar 5, 2008
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Photography exhibit at Vanderbilt highlights perspective of single parents; Valerie Taylor’s work on display at university during March
Rising photographer Valerie Taylor\'s first exhibit is about family from the perspective of single parents. Read MoreMar 5, 2008
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NIH-funded Vanderbilt research seeks ways to avoid information overload in health care choices among seniors
People faced with too many choices when making complex decisions not only have difficulty discerning the right choice, they often make poor choices, contrary to classic economic theory, according to research by Vanderbilt economist Mike Shor. Read MoreMar 4, 2008
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Oak Ridge laboratory director to discuss coming scientific challenges in energy production
Energy, environment, economy and security: never before has society been so acutely aware of the links between these issues. On April 10, Michelle V. Buchanan, associate laboratory director for physical sciences at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, will address these links in a lecture titled "Grand Scientific Challenges in Energy." Read MoreMar 4, 2008
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Vanderbilt physicist plays key role in making top physics journals available to minority colleges and universities
Vanderbilt physicist David Ernst played a key role in a new agreement designed to encourage minority students to pursue science careers by giving them easier access to top physics journals. Read MoreMar 4, 2008
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Working class women writers to gather for Vanderbilt symposium; Beyond Our Beginnings events run March 25-27
Women writers from lower and working class backgrounds will gather for the 2008 Vanderbilt Visiting Writers Series Spring Symposium to share their experiences and work with readers and each other. Read MoreMar 4, 2008