Year: 2010
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Question Everything, and Pass It On
Aaron Noll, a sophomore biological sciences major from Fort Mitchell, Ky., is a forward on the basketball team and the current recipient of the Martin F. McNamara Jr. Honor Scholarship. After Martin McNamara Jr. died 26 years ago, his family honored him by establishing the Martin F. McNamara Jr. Honor… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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A million thanks to all the Reunion 2009 volunteers
Over the last year and a half, our hard-working volunteers encouraged classmates to come back and give back to Vanderbilt. We welcomed 5,160 Vanderbilt alumni, spouses and friends to campus for the 2009 Reunion/Homecoming weekend. Our volunteers’ hard work also resulted in more than $39 million in gifts and pledges—an… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Music: Approaching the Gates
The Blakemore Trio Nearly four years have passed since the Blakemore Trio (violinist Carolyn Huebl, cellist Felix Wang and pianist Amy Dorfman, all three of whom are on the faculty of Vanderbilt’s Blair School of Music) first decided to ask New York composer Susan Botti to write a… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Writing Upstarts
Four years after its creation and only a year and a half after granting degrees to its first class, the Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Creative Writing program at Vanderbilt University has been named a top 20 program in the country by Poets & Writers magazine. Vanderbilt was ranked… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Twain and Twang
The Jean and Alexander Heard Library is remembering one of America’s most beloved writers with the exhibit “Mark Twain: An American Original,” on display in Special Collections through June 30. The exhibit is free and open to the public. “Twain and Twang,” Nashville’s citywide celebration, marks the 175th anniversary this… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Accolades: Bachmann and López
Bachmann Wins Tufts Discovery Award Beth Bachmann (right), assistant professor of English, is the 2010 winner of the prestigious Kate Tufts Discovery Award, given to honor a poet’s first book. The award, presented by Claremont Graduate University, includes a $10,000 prize. Bachmann’s Temper, published last year by the University of… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Recent Books
Gold Medal Physics: The Science of Sports (2010, The Johns Hopkins University Press) by John Eric Goff, BS’92 Using performances by elite athletes such as Greg Louganis, Bob Beamon and Lance Armstrong as starting points, Goff discusses the science behind diving, long jumping, cycling, skating, football, soccer, and a… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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The School of Country Life
Until the late 1950s, Peabody College’s Knapp Farm was known for its herd of prize, purebred Holsteins. George Peabody College for Teachers, which opened on its present-day campus in 1914 after a series of previous incarnations dating from 1785, had two related missions. One was to provide a graduate-level education… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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1,000 Words
In February, Vanderbilt students and other volunteers completed “Food Fight,” a large mural in Rand Hall that depicts an epic battle between junk and healthy food. Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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In Business, Poaching Allowed
Among business leaders it’s generally accepted that “poaching” or hiring a competitor’s employees violates an unwritten rule of business and may be unethical. But a new research paper concludes that as long as their actions are not deceptive or illegal, companies that intentionally identify, contact and offer employment to a rival… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Physicists Measure Material Hotter Than the Sun
Greene, Maguire, and Velkovska It’s the hottest temperature ever achieved in a laboratory: 250,000 times hotter than the heart of the sun. Three Vanderbilt physicists are members of the scientific team that has reported creating an exotic state of matter with a temperature of 4 trillion degrees Celsius. The new… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Sexual Parasite Sheds Light on Disease Treatments
About 100 million years ago, the bacterium Wolbachia came up with a trick that has made it one of the most successful parasites in the animal kingdom: It evolved the ability to manipulate the sex lives of its hosts. “When it developed this capability, Wolbachia spread rapidly among the world’s… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Collaboration Advances Sepsis Detection and Management
When Jason Martin gives a talk about his research, he begins with the story of Mariana Bridi da Costa. The Brazilian supermodel died from severe sepsis after amputation of her hands and feet failed to stop its spread. Martin, a fellow in allergy, pulmonary and critical care medicine, is part… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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A Gift from the Sea: World Peace
One of the best ways the world can promote peace and stability is to expand commercial nuclear power based on the extraction of uranium from the ocean, contends Frank Parker, an internationally recognized expert in remediation of radioactively contaminated soil and water. At a meeting held at the Pontifical Academy… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Vox Populi
“My students may not expect to learn about Plessy v. Ferguson or Brown v. Board of Education, but these things and many others play into musical moments,” says Jim Lovensheimer, shown here with his faithful greyhound, Shoes. Experienced in the context of our day-to-day lives, pop music can seem ephemeral… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Vanderbilt Takes Lead in Transit Initiative
Courtesy Metropolitan Transit Authority Vanderbilt is the primary sponsor of a new nonprofit corporation created to promote public transportation in Middle Tennessee. The university has committed $100,000 per year for the next three years to help fund the Transit Alliance of Middle Tennessee. “Mass transit is already an important part… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Wanted: Urban Teachers
A program aimed at improving teaching in urban middle schools will begin enrolling students this summer. The result of a partnership between Peabody College of education and human development and Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools (MNPS), it is geared toward students who want to teach in Nashville public schools. Students will… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Quote/Unquote: General Petraeus
“The duties of leadership at any level … are to try and get the big ideas right, first and foremost.” —Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of the U.S. Central Command, on the challenges of Afghanistan. The International Legal Studies program and the College of Arts and Science sponsored his… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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Engineering Students Launch New Apps
Finding out where to eat, what’s happening, and how to get around are common questions on every college campus. At Vanderbilt the answers to these questions can be found quickly and easily using new applications developed by engineering students for iPhone and Android mobile devices. The new free apps—Dining, Campus… Read MoreApr 7, 2010
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School of Nursing to Offer Nutrition Master’s
Beginning fall 2010, Vanderbilt University School of Nursing will offer its first non-nursing degree: a master of science in nutrition and dietetics. “When we consider our nation’s obesity epidemic, the complexity of health-care delivery, and the use of the Internet as a source of health information, we realize that we… Read MoreApr 7, 2010