Year: 2009
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Video: Larry Van Horn explaining his health care opinions – soundbite 2
Watch a soundbite of: Larry Van Horn explaining his health care opinions. Read MoreMar 18, 2009
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Video: Larry Van Horn explaining his health care opinions – soundbite 1
Watch a soundbite of: Larry Van Horn explaining his health care opinions. Read MoreMar 18, 2009
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MEDIA ADVISORY: Careers with impact: Industry leaders talk about socially & environmentally conscious jobs
The Net Impact group at the Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management is hosting a day-long symposium on profitable environmentally and socially conscious careers and the new sustainable economy. Read MoreMar 17, 2009
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President’s cabinet secretaries control the pork, Vanderbilt research finds
While many people associate the word "pork" with lawmakers' wasteful spending for pet projects, new Vanderbilt research demonstrates the importance of cabinet secretaries and their political ideology in the distribution of lucrative federal grants. Read MoreMar 17, 2009
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Vanderbilt Dyer Observatory hosting special telescope viewing in celebration of Galileo’s anniversary
Galileo looked through a telescope for the first time 400 years ago. The global "100 Hours of Astronomy Cornerstone Project" hopes to have as many people as possible look through a telescope as Galileo did from April 2 to 5. Vanderbilt Dyer Observatory will participate in the project by offering people a chance to view the stars on Saturday, April 4. Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Video: “From Famine to Feast: The Impact of an Influx of Federal Research Funding”
Watch video of a Federal Forum on "From Famine to Feast: The Impact of an Influx of Federal Research Funding." Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Audio: Stacey Floyd-Thomas and students at community breakfast
Listen to Stacey Floyd-Thomas and students at community breakfast. Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Sweet Affliction
Stitchery by Ethel Wright Mohamed (1906–1992)/Courtesy of Hazel L. Wilson and the Ethel Wright Mohamed Stitchery Museum, Belzoni, Miss. For most of my adult life, I have been fascinated by the old Southern style of shape-note singing—even though for many years I actually knew little about it and certainly never… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Where Are They Now?
On football game days, you can find Don Orr, BE’56, at the same place he was some 50 years ago—overlooking Dudley Field and looking for a Vanderbilt victory. Orr led the Commodores to their first bowl game and first bowl win in the 1955 Gator Bowl with a 25–13 win over Auburn. “It… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Bowled Over
Bobby Johnson: “Rather than having just a few talented star players, we’re pretty good at each position now.” The man responsible for leading the Commodore football team to its first postseason win since Sputnik orbited the earth is not necessarily doing the things one might expect after such a feat. He’s not… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Sports Roundup
Preeg, Blatt. Photo credits: Daniel Dubois Women’s Tennis: Preeg, Blatt Undefeated in Fall Classic The women’s team closed out the fall season with six out of eight singles wins at the SEC Fall Coaches Classic held at the University of Alabama. Freshman Chelsea Preeg and junior Hannah Blatt won their respective brackets… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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This Is Your Brain on Bach
www.istockphoto.com Musicians really do think differently than the rest of us. Vanderbilt psychologists have found that professionally trained musicians more effectively use a creative technique called divergent thinking, and use both the left and right sides of their frontal cortex more heavily than the average person. Previous studies of creativity… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Military Grant Spurs Bone Regrowth Study
Why do some bone cells knit together neatly following a fracture or amputation, while others grow wildly into soft tissue that can limit range of motion and cause problems with prosthetics? Dr. Erika Mitchell, assistant professor of orthopaedic trauma, has won a $1.3 million, three-year grant from the U.S. Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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‘Quick Fix’ Leads to Personal Bankruptcy
© MCT/TIM LEE Each year some 10 million American households borrow money through payday loans. Payday lenders now have more storefronts than McDonald’s and Starbucks combined. But a recent study shows that payday-loan applicants who received the quick cash after their first application were significantly more likely to file… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Birthday May Play Role in Asthma Risk
Children born four months before the peak of cold and flu season have a greater risk of developing childhood asthma than those born at other times of year, according to new research from Vanderbilt. In the Tennessee Asthma Bronchiolitis Study, which involved an analysis of the birth and medical… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Satellite Measurements Reveal Region of Magnetosphere
Earth is protected from the onslaught of solar wind by the magnetosphere, an invisible shield of magnetic fields and electrically charged particles that surrounds our planet. The northern and southern polar lights—the aurora borealis and aurora australis, respectively—are the only visible parts of the magnetosphere, but it is a critical… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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“Obama Effect” Shrinks Performance Gap
High-profile role models are one driver of improved academic performance for African Americans. The presidential run of Barack Obama has made a strong positive impact on the test-taking achievement of African Americans, according to research by Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management Professor Ray Friedman. Documenting what Friedman and his… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Vanderbilt Is First-Ever Higher Education Institution on Fortune List
Fortune Magazine’s annual ranking of the 100 best places to work in the United States includes Vanderbilt this year, marking the first time a university has made the list. The No. 98 ranking represents approximately 21,000 employees at Vanderbilt University and Vanderbilt University Medical Center. The rankings are determined… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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Expanded Data Pipeline Makes Big Bang
Vanderbilt researchers now have access to 15 times more bandwidth, thanks to a new 10-gigabit-per-second circuit that began routing new traffic in December. The previous circuit allowed 662 megabits of data to be transferred per second. “The new 10-gigabit-per-second circuit connects to Southern Crossing in Atlanta,” says Matthew Hall,… Read MoreMar 16, 2009
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New Antipsychotics No Better for Heart
A Vanderbilt research team provides strong evidence that new, or atypical, antipsychotic drugs carry the same cardiovascular risk as older, or typical, antipsychotic drugs. Their findings appeared in the Jan. 15 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. The atypical antipsychotics have one important advantage over their older counterpart:… Read MoreMar 16, 2009