Year: 2008
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Commencement 2008: A summary of news and feature stories
A roundup of news and feature items related to Vanderbilt Commencement, May 7-9, 2008. Read MoreMay 7, 2008
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San Diego superintendent to receive Vanderbilt Peabody Distinguished Alumnus Award
Terry B. Grier will receive the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Vanderbilt University\'s Peabody College of education and human development during Commencement ceremonies on Friday, May 9. Grier is the new superintendent of the San Diego Unified School District, in San Diego. Read MoreMay 7, 2008
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MEDIA ADVISORY: Vanderbilt’s Senior Class Day event with musician and social activist Bob Geldof moved to Memorial Gym because of severe weather threat
Vanderbilt\'s Senior Class Day lecture on Thursday, May 8, has been moved to Memorial Gym because of the threat of severe weather. Musician and social activist Bob Geldof will now speak at 10 a.m. in the gym. Read MoreMay 7, 2008
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Senior Day activities for Thursday, May 8 are being moved inside due to threat of severe weather
There is a threat of severe weather on Thursday, May 8. Senior Class Day events will be moved indoors. Video of the event will be streamed live from this Web site at 10 a.m. Read MoreMay 7, 2008
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MEDIA ADVISORY: Vanderbilt’s Owen School graduates to hear about the ‘heart and soul’ of business in aftermath of Sept. 11
In his May 9 commencement address at Vanderbilt\'s Owen Graduate School of Management, Howard Lutnick, Chairman and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, will tell graduating MBAs that the heart and soul of a business resides inside its people and transcends success in the marketplace. Read MoreMay 7, 2008
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Vanderbilt Police Department stepping up efforts to enforce seat belt laws as part of nationwide campaign
Vanderbilt University\'s police department is joining with hundreds of law enforcement agencies across the country to intensify efforts to enforce seat belt laws during the 2008 Click It or Ticket campaign May 12 - June 1. Read MoreMay 6, 2008
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Richard McCarty named provost at Vanderbilt; Psychologist has been Dean of College of Arts and Science since 2001
Richard McCarty, a distinguished psychologist who has led the largest school at Vanderbilt University for the past seven years, will be presented to the Vanderbilt Board of Trust next week for confirmation as the university\'s chief academic officer. Read MoreMay 6, 2008
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Vanderbilt University and Discovery Education partner to offer new tool to evaluate school leaders
Discovery Education and Vanderbilt University are partnering to launch a new research-based evaluation tool that measures the effectiveness of school principals. The Vanderbilt Assessment of Leadership in Education (VAL-ED), which is being exclusively distributed by Discovery Education, was created at Vanderbilt University through a grant from the Wallace Foundation. Read MoreMay 6, 2008
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Two Vanderbilt professors awarded Guggenheim Fellowships
Two professors in Vanderbilt\'s College of Arts and Science have been named 2008 Fellows by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Michael D. Bess, the Chancellor\'s Professor of History, and Barbara Hahn, Distinguished Professor of German, are among 190 recipients in the United States and Canada to receive a Guggenheim. Read MoreMay 6, 2008
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MEDIA ADVISORY: Musician and social activist Bob Geldof to speak at Vanderbilt’s Senior Day
Musician and social activist Bob Geldof will speak at Vanderbilt\'s Senior Class Day on Thursday, May 8, at 10 a.m. on Alumni Lawn. Senior Class Day, which starts with a ceremonial walk through the gates of the university at 9:30 a.m., is held the day before the university\'s commencement exercises. Geldof\'s speech will be webcast live. Read MoreMay 5, 2008
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Graduates developed passions at Vanderbilt that extend well beyond May 9
Read a selection of profiles of some of the stellar members of the Class of 2008. Read MoreMay 5, 2008
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Invention To Find Skin Cancer Without Biopsies
Researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, are developing a hand-held non-invasive scanner to diagnose skin lesions on a patient, avoiding painful unnecessary biopsies. Researchers say it could radically change how doctors find skin cancer. Read MoreMay 5, 2008
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Vanderbilt University honors 15 retiring professors
Fifteen retiring faculty members will be recognized during Vanderbilt\'s May 9 commencement ceremony when the university honors their years of service and bestows on them the title of emeritus or emerita faculty. Read MoreMay 2, 2008
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Vanderbilt Executive MBA graduates win national competition for start-up company concept
A team of Executive MBA students from Vanderbilt\'s Owen Graduate School of Management has won first place in the MBA Jungle Business Plan Competition, a national competition held recently in New York City. Read MoreMay 2, 2008
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Graduate doesn’t let wheelchair keep her from working with AIDS orphans in Africa
Palmer Harston was on a spring break trip visiting relatives in Nashville when her family was involved in a terrible car wreck. Eight-year-old Palmer was airlifted to Vanderbilt Children\'s Hospital, where she underwent emergency surgeries to save her life and was a patient for months. Her injuries left her confined to a wheelchair. Years later, her memories of the life-saving treatment she received at Vanderbilt led her to apply for college here. Read MoreMay 2, 2008
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Vanderbilt students’ post-graduation plans center on service
La Chureca, the city dump on the outskirts of Managua, Nicaragua, could be the setting for a dreary, futuristic movie. A city of scavengers, many of them orphans, they live in the filthy heaps of refuse at this municipal garbage dump. Clothed in rags, they rummage for food, scrounging out a meager existence by selling the small trinkets or recyclables they find, or sometimes selling their own bodies to survive. Read MoreMay 2, 2008
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Shan Foster to graduate; leaves behind more than shattered records
Vanderbilt basketball star Shan Foster, who will receive a degree in human and organizational development from Vanderbilt\'s Peabody College on May 9, is the kind of student who gives teachers hope that the next generation is in good hands, said Sharon Shields, professor in the practice of human and organizational development."He embodies the idea that learning should be transformational," Shields said. "And it was for him. But he also transformed those around him." Read MoreMay 2, 2008
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Managing risk in an increasingly hazardous world
If you have a nagging feeling that life is getting increasingly hazardous, you may be interested in the new book, "Operational Risk Management," by Mark D. Abkowitz, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Vanderbilt University. Read MoreMay 1, 2008
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Vanderbilt engineer changes plans after winning art award
When Noah Walcutt arrived at Vanderbilt to study engineering, he had little or no interest in art. But a chance decision to take an elective course in sculpture led him to create an award-winning design melding his engineering skills, musical interests and new-found artistic creativity into a project that has changed the course of his life after graduation. Read MoreMay 1, 2008
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Photography project in J. C. Napier Homes gives ‘littles’ chance to speak about big social issues, photo exhibit opening May with Mayor Karl Dean
Ten middle school students who live in public housing will show Nashville what the world looks like through their eyes at an exhibition of their documentary photography and social change work May 8 from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at the Nashville Civic Design Center. Read MoreMay 1, 2008