Month: April 2010
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Watch: VUCast: What are these people doing in Admissions?
What are these people doing in Admissions, and what does a New York museum have to do with that baseball glove chair? It’s VUCast time for April 12. Read MoreApr 12, 2010
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‘Can You Hear Me Now?’ offers quirky perspectives on noise in libraries
While students through the years have sought out libraries as places for quiet learning, an increasing number of today’s young people use libraries for collaborative study sessions and instruction classes. Read MoreApr 12, 2010
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Return to special education’s roots needed for children with severe learning needs
There are two major schools of thought when it comes to educating children and youth with severe learning needs and both are off target, researchers from Vanderbilt and Clemson universities report. The researchers argue a return to the original principles of special education that is informed by modern data and techniques is needed to reform both general and special education. Read MoreApr 12, 2010
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Watch: Spring Faculty Assembly
Watch video of the 2010 Spring Faculty Assembly. Read MoreApr 9, 2010
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Watch: “Gesture, Archive, Repertoire: The Circulation of South Asian Embodied Histories”
Watch video of Ananya Jahanara Kabir, University of Leeds, speaking on history, art, film and modernity in post-colonial South Asia. Read MoreApr 8, 2010
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Watch: “Civilizing” Haiti: Representation, and its Discontents
Watch video of a Thinking Out of the Lunchbox discussion with Colin Dayan, professor of English, Robert Penn Warren Professor in Humanities; Jemima Pierre, visiting fellow, Robert Penn Warren Center for the Humanities; and Jane Landers, associate professor of history. Read MoreApr 8, 2010
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Watch: The Battle for America 2008
Watch video of Dan Balz and Haynes Johnson, two of the nation’s most experienced political reporters, engaging in an evening of political discussion. Read MoreApr 8, 2010
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UPDATE: Google lecture at Vanderbilt canceled
A lecture about Google’s effect on culture, commerce and community set for April 15 at Vanderbilt University has been canceled. Read MoreApr 8, 2010
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Leading historian to address ‘Barack Obama and the Remaking of Black America’
Ira Berlin, an American historian and author of The Making of African America: The Four Great Migrations (Viking 2010), will speak at Vanderbilt University on April 16. Read MoreApr 8, 2010
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Vanderbilt law professor set to join White House commission on bioethical issues
The White House announced that it plans to appoint Vanderbilt associate professor of law and philosophy Nita Farahany to the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues. Read MoreApr 8, 2010
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Vanderbilt physicist plays pivotal role in discovery of new super-heavy element
Vanderbilt physicist Joe Hamilton played a key role in the discovery of element 117, a new super-heavy element that has been created and identified by an international scientific team. Discovery of the new element provides new information about the basic organization of matter and strengthens the likelihood that still more massive elements may form an "island of stability": a cluster of stable super-heavy elements that could form novel materials with exotic and as yet unimagined scientific and practical applications. Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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The President’s Corner
Billy Ray Caldwell All good things must come to an end. As my term as president of the Vanderbilt Alumni Association Board of Directors comes to a close, I am reminded about exciting changes that have taken place the past couple of years and look forward to the future—of… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Golden Gate City Welcomes Chancellor
A packed house of Vanderbilt alumni, parents and friends gathered to hear an update about the university from Chancellor Nicholas Zeppos at the City Club of San Francisco on Jan. 28. Here the chancellor, left, chats with (clockwise) Meredith Thacker, BS’97; William Linsenmeyer, PhD’72; Doug Asiell, BA’92; Marjorie Sennett,… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Alumni Chapters Focus on Community Service
Last October alumni members of the Vanderbilt Atlanta Chapter were presented a President’s Volunteer Service Award recognizing the group’s nearly 400 hours of service to the Atlanta Community Food Bank during the previous year. Chapter members have been volunteering for the food bank on a monthly basis since 2007. “We… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Alumni Pass the Torch
As part of a continuing effort to help increase current students’ awareness of, and access to, Vanderbilt’s network of alumni, the Office of Alumni Relations has created “Dores Across Nashville,” a series of small, informal dinner gatherings for students in the homes of Nashville-area alumni. Each gathering centers on a… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Look for Us in the Kitchen
I hope there’s a kitchen in heaven. My loved ones know to look for me there. In fact, I expect to go to heaven straight from my own kitchen, leaving behind a freezer full of food and, less likely, clean dishes. I come from a long line of enthusiastic cooks… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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How I Play
Baker is one of six students accepted last year into Vanderbilt’s M.F.A. program in creative writing out of a pool of 374 applicants. One game my best friend and I used to play was this: We were castaways on an island where we were trapped with a horrible monster. We… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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A Wrinkle in Time
Glen Stewart (right) enjoys a pre-earthquake lunch with members of his mission group at the Olafson Hotel in downtown Port-au-Prince. We were going to be late for supper. That thought was uppermost in my mind as I prodded the members of my group to conclude their purchases in the One… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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The Greatest Fight
Muhammad Ali whispers to his wife, Lonnie, as she testifies at a U.S. Senate hearing in 2002. LONNIE WILLIAMS ALI, BA’78 When Lonnie Williams married the world’s most famous athlete in 1986, she knew little about the degenerative neurological condition that was just beginning to grip Muhammad Ali’s… Read MoreApr 7, 2010