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Carville, Matalin and McCaffrey to speak

Political pundits James Carville and Mary Matalin and national security expert Gen. Barry McCaffrey will be the featured speakers for the 2003 IMPACT Symposium at Vanderbilt University. Read More

Toddlers have difficulty understanding relationship between video and reality

When a toddler sees herself on a home video, she may say “baby” or “girl” or think it is her sister on television. She knows she is here, in the real world – who is the child on the television? Read More

Howard Harrod, longtime Vanderbilt divinity and religious studies professor, dies

Howard Harrod, who grew up in Oklahoma among the Native Americans of the Northern Plains and spent his career studying and writing about their practices and beliefs, died Feb. 3 at his home after an extended illness. He was 70 years old. Read More

Space Shuttle tragedy

Vanderbilt professors offer comments on the space shuttle disaster--- Scientific experiments in space --- Robots in space--- Facing grief following national tragedies --- National policy implications Read More

New Vanderbilt study shows shoppers abandon online

Online consumers who are asked to enter a promotion discount code but do not have one are far less likely to complete their purchase than those who had a code or were not prompted for one, according to a new study by the Owen Graduate School of Management at Vanderbilt University. Read More

Boeing donates electrophoresis patent to Vanderbilt

The Boeing Company has donated a patent to Vanderbilt University covering a particle-separation technology originally developed for use in outer space that now could play an important role in the approaching nanotechnology revolution. Read More

Story of young love to open on Valentine’s Day

"Two Gentlemen of Verona” a musical adaptation opens in Neely Auditorium on Feb. 14, with additional performances on Feb. 15, 20, 21, 22 at 8 p.m. and one matinee Feb. 16 at 2 p.m. This happy coming-of-age story celebrates spring and its promise of love with a satirical Shakespearean undercurrent of government’s sometimes less than pure motives for war. Read More

Vice chairman of Federal Reserve to speak at Vanderbilt

Roger W. Ferguson Jr., vice chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, will speak on “September 11, the Federal Reserve and the Financial System” as part of the Owen Distinguished Speaker Series on Feb. 5. Read More

Corporate responsibility the subject of panel at Vanderbilt

Vanderbilt faculty representing the Law School, the Owen Graduate School of Management and the Divinity School will address the subject of corporate responsibility in a panel discussion on Feb. 3. Read More

Vanderbilt’s impact on mid-state economy increases to $3.4 billion

Vanderbilt’s impact on the local economy totaled at least $3.4 billion last year, according to a recently completed analysis. The University's economic impact on the Middle Tennessee region in fiscal year 2002 is up from $3 billion in FY 2001 – a 13 percent increase. Read More

State of the Union critical moment for Bush presidency, says Vanderbilt professor

President Bush’s Jan. 28 State of the Union address is his most important opportunity to date to make the case for going to war with Iraq, according to Thomas Schwartz, a Vanderbilt University expert on U.S. foreign policy and alliance politics. Read More

Overcoming of racial, medical barriers chronicled in film

Partners of the Heart, a documentary chronicling the 34-year relationship between a white physician and a black lab technician that resulted in a major breakthrough in pediatric cardiac surgery, will be shown Monday, Feb. 3, at 4 p.m. at Vanderbilt’s Sarratt Cinema. The special screening is free and open to the public. Read More

All-star lineup to discuss baseball economics

It’s a business where the cry of “strike” is as devastating to the game itself as to the player swinging the bat. The economic concerns of major league baseball—from labor-management relations and legal issues to competitive balance and contraction—will be the focus of a one-day conference at Vanderbilt University on Feb. 21. Read More

American children of war-coping with tearful goodbyes

More and more tearful goodbyes are happening across the country between American children and parents who are being deployed because of impending war. Read More

Aurbach elected to lead national College Art Association

Michael Aurbach, professor of art at Vanderbilt, has been elected president of the College Art Association (CAA), a national organization of more than 14,000 individual artists, art historians and other visual arts and museum professionals. Read More

If war, then what? Experts predict economic impact, offer historical view

Vanderbilt faculty are available to offer commentary and insight into what effect the prospect of war—and outbreak, should it happen—will have on the U.S. economy. Read More

Vanderbilt University renews support for affordable housing

Vanderbilt University, which remains committed to increasing the supply of affordable housing in Nashville, has renewed its five-year $100,000 investment in the Nashville Housing Fund. Through public and private resources, the nonprofit corporation assists low- and moderate-income families and individuals who want to become successful homeowners, and also works with developers to expand affordable housing options in Nashville. Read More

Jewish-Christian relations during the Spanish Inquisition and forgotten victims of the Holocaust launch new Jewish Studies series

Renee Levine Melammed, assistant dean of the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in Israel will present "Defying the Spanish Inquisition: The Crypto-Jewish Women of Castile" on Sunday, Feb. 2, and "The Forgotten Holocaust Victims: Sephardic Jewry," on Monday, Feb. 3. Read More

Vanderbilt University scholars commemorate 30th anniversary of Roe v. Wade

Vanderbilt law professor Rebecca Brown and Linda Manning, director of the Margaret Cuninggim Women’s Center at Vanderbilt, will give a talk on the historic Roe v. Wade decision at a noon lecture on Wednesday, Jan. 22. Read More

Relevant Religion series examines Christianity’s Quest for Power

Patout Burns, the Edward A. Malloy Professor of Catholic Studies at Vanderbilt Divinity School will lead “The Rise and Fall of the Imperial Church: Explorations of Christianity's Quest for Power,” the fifth in a series of studies exploring religion in the global context of culture, art, politics and economics. Read More