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New York Times columnist David Brooks to explore "The Geography of Politics" in Vanderbilt address

David Brooks, a columnist for The New York Times and senior editor at The Weekly Standard, will explore "The Geography of Politics" in a Vanderbilt University address on Wednesday, Oct. 22. The lecture begins at 6 p.m. in Ingram Hall at Vanderbilt's Blair School of Music. A reception with Brooks will precede the lecture at 5 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. Read More

Vanderbilt and Fisk Universities win $2.9 million to study nanotechnology

Vanderbilt and Fisk Universities professors will conduct joint research and train doctoral students from both institutions in the rapidly growing interdisciplinary field of nanoscience and nanoengineering as a result of winning a highly competitive, $2.9 million national grant. Read More

Navy F-18 jets fly over Vanderbilt University Oct. 11 for Military Appreciation Day

Vanderbilt University will honor the men and women of the United States Armed Services on Saturday, Oct. 11, during Military Appreciation Day, which will include an F-18 jet flyover minutes before the 1 p.m. CST kickoff of the Vanderbilt-Navy football game. Read More

Dancer and choreographer featured at next (Lunch) Box discussion

InsideOut of the (Lunch) Box, sponsored by Vanderbilt University and the Tennessee Performing Arts Center, will feature choreographer and dancer Bill Shannon Oct. 16 at War Memorial Auditorium. Read More

Kennedy Center and Nashville Public Library cosponsor exhibit of nationally renowned artist Laura McNellis

The works of nationally renowned artist Laura Craig McNellis will be displayed in the Courtyard Gallery of the Nashville Public Library, 615 Church Street, Oct. 10 through Dec. 31, in an exhibit co-sponsored by the library and the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center. Read More

Vanderbilt political experts 2004 presidential race to be intensely negative

A Vanderbilt University political scientist who is writing a book about political attack ads predicts the 2004 presidential campaign will be the nastiest in 45 years. John Geer has been analyzing television ads in all the presidential races from 1960 through 2000. Read More

NBC-Universal merger likely to result in better programs

Vivendi's recently announced decision to sell Universal Studios and its other media assets to NBC should improve the quality of television programming, according to Christopher Yoo, a media law expert at Vanderbilt University. Read More

"Do not call" controversy likely to turn into agency turf battle

The future of the national "do not call" list is likely to turn into a debate over which federal agency should be responsible for enforcing it, according to Christopher Yoo, associate professor of law at Vanderbilt University. Read More

Hotel home for new Vanderbilt Sleep Center

Seeking a more "sleep-friendly" environment, sleep experts at Vanderbilt Medical Center are taking a novel approach for providing sleep studies. In a first for Nashville and Middle Tennessee, Vanderbilt has opened the first hotel-based sleep center in the Marriott at Vanderbilt University. The state-of-the-art sleep laboratory utilizes regular hotel rooms, slightly converted to monitor sleeping patterns. Read More

Vanderbilt engineering professor receives national "outstanding educator" award

Cited for his "national influence on the development of biomedical engineering as a discipline," Dr. Thomas R. Harris, chair of the biomedical engineering department at Vanderbilt, recently received the highest award given by the Biomedical Engineering Division of the American Society for Engineering Education. Read More

Wayne Rosso, president of file sharing company Grokster, to speak at Vanderbilt

Wayne Rosso, the self-proclaimed "Sultan of Swap," will address the Vanderbilt University community on Monday, Oct. 13, at 7 p.m. His lecture, titled "Take Back the Music," will be held in Room 103 of Wilson Hall on the Vanderbilt campus. The event is free and open to the public. Read More

MEDIA ADVISORY: World-renowned advocate for people with disabilities to speak at Vanderbilt Kennedy Center

Margaret Giannini, M.D., F.A.A.P., a world-renowned advocate for people with disabilities, will speak at the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Research on Human Development on Thursday, Oct. 9, 2003, at 4 p.m. She is currently the Director of Health and Human Services Office on Disability and has over fifty years of service toward disability advocacy. Read More

Vanderbilt to participate in worldwide test of HIV vaccine

Vanderbilt University Medical Center is participating in worldwide tests of a potential vaccine that can stimulate important immune responses against the virus that causes AIDS. Read More

Philosophers gather at Vanderbilt to examine implications of pluralism

Some of the nation's top philosophers will gather at Vanderbilt for a two-day conference at Vanderbilt University to examine pluralism, a relatively new position in philosophy that has attracted attention for its application to a wide array of current issues. Read More

Vanderbilt University study first comprehensive look at behavioral health services provided for children in TennCare

TennCare provided behavioral health services to more of the state's children during state fiscal years 1994-2000; however, the volume of services children received for emotional and behavioral problems decreased, a new study shows. Read More

Vanderbilt physicist wins China’s top international science prize

A collaboration that started in the early 1970's when a Chinese physicist wrote Joe Hamilton to request some reprints of his recent papers on physics culminated in a ceremony in Beijing on Sept. 22. At the official occasion, presided over by China's Minister of Science and Technology and broadcast on national television, Hamilton, who is the Landon C. Garland Distinguished Professor of Physics at Vanderbilt, received the National Prize of International Scientific and Technological Collaborations of China ñ the highest award that the Chinese government bestows on foreign scientists. Read More

Vanderbilt to host Brown v. Board of Education 50th Anniversary Commemorative Series

Vanderbilt University will host a series of public lectures throughout the 2003-04 academic year to mark the 50th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's historic Brown v. Board of Education decision. Read More

Two Peabody professors win Vanderbilt faculty awards

Peabody College professors have been named the 2003 recipients of two of Vanderbilt's most prestigious faculty awards. Read More

New Vanderbilt Student Life Center will offer social hall, expanded meeting space, enhanced Career Center

Vanderbilt will break ground Saturday, Oct. 4, on a new Student Life Center that will feature a 10,000-square-foot social hall, a comprehensive career center and consolidated space for international scholars and study abroad services. Read More

Vanderbilt study shows audit firms will continue to put their own interests first, changes imposed by SEC may help clean up industry

Think the accounting scandals of the past two years have straightened out the audit industry? Not so. A Vanderbilt University study reveals that, despite the attention called to the industry for its complicity in the corporate scandals, audit firms under pressure from major clients bending the rules are still prone to produce inaccurate audit opinionsóif they think they won't be caught. Read More