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Rear Adm. Nora Tyson Named Distinguished Alumna

Rear Adm. Nora Tyson, BA’79, vice director of the Joint Staff and the first female commander of a U.S. Navy carrier strike group, has received the Distinguished Alumna Award, the highest honor bestowed upon a member of the Vanderbilt alumni community. Read More

Medicine Scholarship Honors Mentor

The spirit of mentorship and support shown to one medical student decades ago has come full circle in a bequest to establish a full scholarship at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Read More

Rodger Dinwiddie, BS’76, Schoolyard Strategist

Rodger Dinwiddie, recently named president of the International Bullying Prevention Association, never dreamed he would become an expert on the topic when he was a first-grade teacher at Tom Joy Elementary School in Nashville in the late ’70s. Read More

Zakiya Smith, BS’06, Education Referee

When Zakiya Smith was studying political science and education at Vanderbilt, she dreamed of someday working for the U.S. Department of Education. Not only did she fulfill that dream, but she became a senior adviser on education policy to President Barack Obama. Read More

Troy Ball, BA’81, Moonshiner

On the Discovery network’s show Moonshiners, whiskey makers stay one step ahead of the law as they tend backwoods stills. Troy Ball is also a moonshiner, but the similarities between her and the Appalachia moonshiners featured on the show are few. Ball’s whiskey is legal and, by all accounts, some of the best on the market. Read More

Off the Radar: Ben Woods, BA’10

Woods serves as associate editor at The Cambodia Daily, an English-language newspaper based in Phnom Penh. Read More

Vanderbilt and Nashville: Good Neighbors

Vanderbilt has grown up alongside its hometown to play a leading role in the life of the larger community—employing nearly 25,000 people; providing a Level 1 trauma center and top-ranked hospitals that admit around 65,000 patients a year; and generating millions of dollars for the local economy through athletics, cultural events, and a vast array of intellectual offerings. And that’s just for starters. Read More

Vanderbilt Sailing Club on Nashville’s Percy Priest Lake

Student and alumni members of the Vanderbilt Sailing Club braved some particularly crisp October air for a regatta on Nashville’s Percy Priest Lake during Reunion and Homecoming Weekend. Read More

AstraZeneca, VU collaborate to develop new treatments for major brain disorders

AstraZeneca and Vanderbilt University have signed a research collaboration agreement to identify candidate drugs aimed at treating psychosis and other neuropsychiatric symptoms associated with major brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease and schizophrenia. Read More

Dean Fauchet’s Vision for Solving Real-Life Problems

Fauchet says human needs can be grouped into four core basics—medicine and health; energy and natural resources; security; and entertainment—and engineering is part of each. Read More

Stassun on Producing Minority Ph.D. Recipients

Not long after he arrived at Vanderbilt nine years ago, Keivan Stassun, professor of astronomy, began building on a newly forged alliance with Fisk University, a historically black college just two miles from the Vanderbilt campus, in an effort to increase the number of African Americans, Latinos, Native Americans and other minorities earning Ph.D. degrees in science. Read More

Artist Explores the Physicality of Rope

Some people see a gigantic chunk of rope when they see a hawser line, which is a rope used in mooring or towing a ship. But when visual artist Huguette Despault May came upon one, she saw metaphors for the human condition. Read More

Innovation Helps Teach Math to Visually Impaired Students

A new Android app developed at Vanderbilt uses tactile feedback technology to help students with visual impairments to master algebra, geometry, graphing and other subjects that are particularly hard to comprehend without the aid of normal vision. Read More

Recent Books, Winter 2013

The latest offerings from Vanderbilt writers Read More

Service of Silent Remembrance for victims of Sandy Hook planned for Jan. 14

Vanderbilt’s Office of Religious Life will sponsor a Service of Silent Remembrance for the university community on Monday, Jan. 14, one month after the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. Read More

Largest 3-D Map of Universe Released to Public

Stargazers, rejoice: The largest-ever 3-D map of the universe has been released to the public. The new map contains images of 200 million galaxies. Read More

Commodores Top Baseball Poll

The Commodores’ 11-player freshman baseball class is the best in the nation, according to Collegiate Baseball. Read More

New Recreation Center and Multipurpose Facility Cast Wide Net

Vanderbilt broke ground in September on a new multipurpose field house, additions to the Student Recreation Center, and renovation of recreation fields. Read More

Stage & Screen Exhibit Draws from Performing Arts Collections

Stage & Screen: The Star Quality of Vanderbilt’s Performing Arts Collections, on view at Vanderbilt’s renovated Central Library and Special Collections, invites viewers to step “behind the curtain” of some of the world’s most memorable productions. Read More

‘Tumbleweed’ Sculpture Installed on Campus

A signature piece of art created by renowned American sculptor Mark di Suvero was acquired by Vanderbilt and installed April 30 between the Student Life Center and the E. Bronson Ingram Studio Arts Building. Read More