Reagan Villet
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Vanderbilt University, Aspen Institute’s Weave Project explore “How To Heal a Divided America” this week
“How To Heal a Divided America” is a community-building exercise focused on knitting together diverse perspectives and lived experiences to better approach, analyze and address the societal problems of polarization and isolation facing our communities and the world. The event series, which is a partnership between the Aspen Institute’s Weave: The Social Fabric Project and Dialogue Vanderbilt, began Sept. 12 and will culminate on Sept. 19–20. Read MoreSep 16, 2024
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Limited Submission Opportunity: 2025 Brain Research Foundation – Seed Grant Program
Vanderbilt (VU and VUMC, collaboratively) may nominate one candidate for the 2025 Brain Research Foundation Seed Grant Program. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Limited Submission Opportunity: 2024 NEH Humanities Research Centers on Artificial Intelligence
Vanderbilt University may submit one application to the NEH Humanities Research Centers on Artificial Intelligence opportunity. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Limited Submission Opportunity: 2025 Conservation, Food & Health Foundation Grants
Vanderbilt University may submit one application to the January 2025 cycle of the Conservation, Food and Health Foundation (CFH) Grants program. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Limited Submission Opportunity: 2024 Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation Grants Program
Vanderbilt University submit one proposal to The Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation grants program. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Practicing Law for the Greater Good: Navigating the world of public interest law
While practicing public interest law upon graduation has become more popular amongst law students, it still falls outside of the status quo. Assistant Dean and Martha Craig Daughtrey Director for Public Interest Beth Cruz, in partnership with the Career Services Office, held an informational panel for Vanderbilt Law students interested in practicing public interest law after graduation. The panel offered guidance on how to navigate an interest or passion for public interest law as a current or prospective law student. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Update your personal devices to the secure VUIT Wi-Fi network by Sept. 30
If you connect any of your personal devices to Vanderbilt’s Wi-Fi network while you are on campus, it is now time to re-onboard that device to the new network. Personal devices are noted as any device that is not managed by VUIT, such as your cell phone or tablet. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Campus Dining partners with Residential Colleges for Commons Cup sustainability challenge
The sustainability challenge encourages students to sign up for ReusePass and actively use reusable containers at dining locations. Points will be awarded based on how many signups and full cycle container returns each house completes throughout the academic year. This initiative not only supports a greener campus but also helps students build lasting sustainable habits. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Lunon appointed senior counsel to the vice chancellor and general counsel at Vanderbilt University
Darryl W. Lunon II, an accomplished attorney whose practice has focused on a range of issues affecting colleges and universities, has been named senior counsel to the vice chancellor and general counsel at Vanderbilt University. Lunon joins the Office of the General Counsel from the Georgia Institute of Technology, where he was deputy general counsel and chief ethics and compliance officer. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Vanderbilt Law School Celebrates the 50th Anniversary of Dunn v. Blumstein
After moving to Nashville to join the faculty at Vanderbilt Law School, James Blumstein was denied the right to vote because of Tennessee’s durational residency requirements and decided to sue. Blumstein successfully argued the case himself before the Supreme Court, effectively enfranchising around six percent more potential voters. On the 50th anniversary of the court’s decision, Vanderbilt Law School organized a celebration to commemorate Blumstein’s victory. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Vanderbilt to celebrate National Postdoc Appreciation Week Sept. 16–20
In collaboration with many campus partners, the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs has curated a roster of events in celebration of the Vanderbilt postdoc community. Read MoreSep 12, 2024
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Robert Putnam, political scientist and author of ‘Bowling Alone,’ comes to Vanderbilt Sept. 19
Dialogue Vanderbilt is partnering with the Aspen Institute’s Weave Project to bring Robert Putnam to campus to explore “How to Heal a Divided America" on Thursday, Sept. 19, at 5:30 p.m. Read MoreSep 9, 2024
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Limited Submission Opportunity: 2025 Moore Inventor Fellows
Vanderbilt (VU + VUMC, collaboratively) may nominate up to two candidates for the Moore Inventor Fellows competition. Read MoreSep 5, 2024
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Limited Submission Opportunity: 2025 St. Baldrick’s Foundation Grants
Vanderbilt (VU + VUMC, collaboratively) may submit applications for one Scholar (Career Development) Award and one Research Grant proposal for the St. Baldrick’s Foundation spring grant cycle. Read MoreSep 5, 2024
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Extraction/Interaction, the Curb Center’s fall exhibition, opens Sept. 9
Acid mine drainage. Digitally printed legal documents. Drone photographs. Core samples. Appalachian bituminous coal. The artists represented in Extraction/Interaction—the Curb Center’s fall exhibition—use these and other materials to create bodies of work that galvanize responses and resistance to the climate crisis. Featuring the work of Will Wilson, Eliza Evans and John Sabraw, Extraction/Interaction considers how climate grief can transform artistic practice into a mechanism for positive environmental impact. Read MoreSep 4, 2024
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VUSN Awarded $1.5 million to continue work on SANE program
The Vanderbilt University School of Nursing has been awarded a $1.5 million grant to grow its effective sexual assault nurse examiner education program. The new grant will expand recruitment, education and retention strategies for SANEs and increase, diversify and sustain the national SANE workforce. Read MoreSep 3, 2024
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Restoring Vanderbilt’s Natural History Museum: Rediscovering the lost plesiosaur (cast)
Embarking on a new research project often brings unexpected discoveries—some intriguing, some novel, but rarely a find of a lifetime. Such a remarkable discovery occurred when university archivist and associate director Kathy Smith stumbled upon a pile of plaster, hidden away for 60 years in a dim, cluttered closet of the Branscomb Quad basement. This plaster turned out to be the long-lost Crampton’s Plesiosaur Cast from the 1870s, missing for nearly six decades. Read MoreSep 3, 2024
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Department of Mathematics announces fall dates for free math instruction community program for local middle and high school students
The Nashville Math Circle is back for fall 2024, and registration is now open. The program provides Nashville-area students in grades 7–12 the opportunity to learn creative math problem-solving skills in a friendly, fun environment from leading Vanderbilt faculty. Read MoreSep 3, 2024
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Vanderbilt time capsule offers ‘snapshot’ of campus during Sesquicentennial year
What do a Commodore ID Card, a piece of the Bicentennial Oak, a baseball signed by two-time national championship-winning head baseball coach Tim Corbin, and a video of the 2019 Carmichael Tower implosions all have in common? They are among more than 150 items that future generations will discover in a Vanderbilt time capsule to be opened in the year 2174. Read MoreSep 3, 2024
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Heard Libraries exhibit looks at prominent literary figures through lens of correspondence
Please Continue: Literary Correspondence as Conversation features notes and letters penned by acclaimed writers representing more than a century of English literature, from the mid-1800s to the 1980s. Highlights include correspondence from Mark Twain, Henry James, Arthur Conan Doyle, Zora Neale Hurston, C.S. Lewis, Flannery O’Connor, Langston Hughes, P.G. Wodehouse, Katherine Anne Porter and others. Read MoreSep 3, 2024