Year: 2008
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MEDIA AVAILABILTY: NEW CHANCELLOR OF VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY
The eighth chancellor of Vanderbilt University will be available to speak with media at 1 p.m. Saturday, March 1, in the second floor lobby of Kirkland Hall. Read MoreMar 1, 2008
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Documentary on child abuse and justice in Catholic church to be shown at Vanderbilt University; Director Jason Berry to speak at March 12 screening
A documentary about the justice system of the Vatican in a case of child abuse will be screened at Vanderbilt University, followed by a discussion with the director. Read MoreFeb 29, 2008
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Buddhist scholar to lecture on consumerism and ecology at Vanderbilt; David Loy speaks on March 18
Buddhist scholar David Loy will discuss how that religious tradition offers a fresh spiritual perspective on consumerism and ecology during a lecture at Vanderbilt University. Read MoreFeb 28, 2008
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VCH Study Finds Parents in Denial About Their Children’s Weight Problems
Parents and children in one of the highest-risk groups for health problems related to obesity often fail to recognize the severity of their own weight problems. Read MoreFeb 28, 2008
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Author, law professor and alumna Elyn Saks to speak at Vanderbilt; Her book The Center Cannot Hold: My Journey Through Madness was one of Time magazine’s ‘Top 10 Nonfiction Books of 2007’
Elyn Saks returns to her alma mater, Vanderbilt University, on Thursday, March 20, at Ingram Hall at the Blair School of Music. Read MoreFeb 27, 2008
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Vanderbilt engineers part of $2.8 million grant to link war fighters to global information grid
A computer freeze-up in the office is a hassle. In a fighter jet peppered with enemy fire, it\'s a crisis. Getting the increasingly large and complex systems people have come to rely on to interface and interact without shutting down has been the focus of engineering professor Doug Schmidt\'s career. Read MoreFeb 27, 2008
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Vanderbilt’s Berry Lecture to focus on science, philosophy and the environment; Two speakers set for March 24
Two speakers will lead a discussion on science, philosophy and the environment at this year\'s Berry Lecture at Vanderbilt University. Read MoreFeb 27, 2008
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Retail investors losing big bucks by failing to exercise call options, Vanderbilt research shows
Hundreds of millions of retail investor dollars are being left "on the table" because of carelessness or misunderstanding about the mechanics of call options, according to new research from the Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management. Read MoreFeb 26, 2008
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Video: "The Role of Blacks in the Media: Yesterday and Today"
Representation, reportage and reality: this panel discussion by prominent members of the Nashville media addresses the historical and contemporary challenges faced by black journalists. Read MoreFeb 25, 2008
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Video: “The Role of Blacks in the Media: Yesterday and Today”
Representation, reportage and reality: this panel discussion by prominent members of the Nashville media addresses the historical and contemporary challenges faced by black journalists. Read MoreFeb 25, 2008
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Fourteen students chosen as newest class of Ingram Scholars
Fourteen incoming freshmen have been chosen as the newest members of the Ingram Scholarship program. The 14 are among more than 700 high school seniors who applied, the largest number of applicants in the scholarship program\'s 14-year history. Read MoreFeb 22, 2008
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VUCast: News from Vanderbilt’s news network for week of Feb. 24
From unlocking a piece of the autism puzzle to presidential politics to a White House look-a-like of the canine persuasion, we have it all. Check out VUCast for the week of Feb. 24. Read MoreFeb 22, 2008
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Vanderbilt community breakfast topic is The Bible and Immigration; Alice Hunt to speak on morning of March 13
A Vanderbilt Divinity School professor will discuss what the Hebrew Bible has to say about immigration issues at a community breakfast on Thursday, March 13. Read MoreFeb 21, 2008
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Performance pay for teachers topic of national conference at Vanderbilt University Feb. 28-29
Paying teachers based on their performance in the classroom is a trend gaining momentum across the United States. But does it work? The complex issues surrounding that question will be the topic of a national conference, "Performance Incentives: Their Growing Impact on American K-12 Education," hosted by the National Center on Performance Incentives at Vanderbilt University Feb. 28-29. Read MoreFeb 21, 2008
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Artist Roger Shimomura to present his American Diary March 12 StudioVU lecture at Vanderbilt is open to public
Acclaimed painter and printmaker Roger Shimomura will give a multimedia presentation about his 40-year career as part of the StudioVU lecture series at Vanderbilt University. Read MoreFeb 20, 2008
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Vanderbilt business, economics, divinity, and education students combine forces to find ways to alleviate global poverty
Vanderbilt graduate students from four disciplines - business, divinity, economics, and education - have set an ambitious goal for their spring break trip to Bangladesh: Find ways to alleviate poverty in the poorest parts of the world. Read MoreFeb 20, 2008
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Strange Bedfellows show set for March 13 at the Basement; Openly gay singers to perform and discuss faith-oriented music
There are certain things that people may assume act like oil and water when they\'re tossed in together. Say, for example, homosexuality, religious faith and Christian-themed music in a Southern context. But on March 13 a one-of-a-kind event at the Basement listening room will poke some sizable holes in that assumption. Read MoreFeb 19, 2008
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Vanderbilt researchers find: Corruption in former Soviet bloc universities increases, threatens value of higher education
Graduates of universities in the former Soviet Republic may find their degrees losing value as corruption among higher education programs continues to rise, two Vanderbilt professors find in a new study published in the February issue of Comparative Education Review. Read MoreFeb 18, 2008
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WTO not the threat to environment, public health that critics claim
The World Trade Organization is not the villain many of its critics claim it to be, but it does suffer from ineffective compliance tools and a lack of transparency, Vanderbilt University researcher Trish Kelly finds in her new book, The Impact of the WTO: The Environment, Public Health and Sovereignty. Read MoreFeb 18, 2008
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Civil rights legend, historic Highlander Center educates new generation of student activists
Some of the world\'s most well known civil rights leaders and fighters for social justice - such as Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks and folk singer Pete Seeger - have visited and trained at The Highlander Research and Education Center, a 75-year-old hub for grassroots organizing and movement building. This month, aspiring activists of a new generation - students from Nashville area universities - will add their names to this legendary list. Read MoreFeb 18, 2008