Parker receives nuclear waste management lifetime achievement award
Vanderbilt Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Frank L. Parker has received the 2003 Wendell D. Weart Lifetime Achievement in Nuclear Waste Management Award. Read More
Vanderbilt Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Frank L. Parker has received the 2003 Wendell D. Weart Lifetime Achievement in Nuclear Waste Management Award. Read More
A strong need for courageous leadership at a time of profound racial and ethnic changes in America is the topic for the next installment of the Thinking Out of the (Lunch) Box series on April 2. Read More
The deepening split between the United States and some of its traditional European allies over the Iraqi crisis is likely to dominate a number of sessions at the European Union Studies Association (EUSA) Eighth Biennial International Conference, scheduled March 27-29 at the Hilton Suites in downtown Nashville. Vanderbilt University is serving as a local host for the conference, which is expected to draw about 500 scholars, government officials and others interested in issues related to the European Union. Read More
Vanderbilt University Professor Don H. Doyle has been selected as the inaugural Fulbright chair in American history, a post established by the Brazil Fulbright Commission. Read More
I Am Beautiful, a nationally recognized seminar that counters the obsession with feminine thinness will come to Vanderbilt Universitys Sarratt Cinema Monday, March 24, at 7 p.m. Read More
Neal Tate, dean of the Robert B. Toulouse School of Graduate Studies and Regents Professor of Political Science at the University of North Texas, has been appointed professor of political science and chair of the Department of Political Science at Vanderbilt. Read More
Top businesswomen including the head of Time Inc. will share their strategies for succeeding in the workplace with Vanderbilts Owen Graduate School of Management and the local business community at the Committee of 200 Spring Outreach Seminar on April 4. Read More
If Al Gore did indeed invent the Internet, it's time for him to return and teach America's public schools how to use it. Electronic technology has revolutionized 21st-century work, but not 21st-century learning. Read More
Vanderbilt@TPAC@Vanderbilt@TPAC presents "Shakespeare: In and Out of Love" Thursday, March 20 at 11:30 a.m. in War Memorial Auditorium at Legislative Plaza. Read More
Ambassador David J. Scheffer, senior vice president of the United Nations Association of the United States of America (UNA-USA), will discuss the role of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the United States position on the ICC at Vanderbilt University Law School on Thursday, March 27. Read More
Peter Diamond, president of the American Economic Association, will speak about Social Security Reform at the McGee Lecture on March 27 at Vanderbilt University. Read More
Former supermodel Ann Simonton will cover topics ranging from corporate controlled medias effects on democracy to issues of gender, violence and sexual intimacy during her lecture, Sex, Power and the Media, Wednesday, March 19, at Vanderbilt University. Read More
To justify military action without Security Council approval, the president invoked the doctrine of "pre-emptive" self-defense. In doing so, he dismissed a centuries-old principle of international law and opened the door to a world of unknown dangers and grave moral challenges. Allison Marsten Danner, Vanderbilt University professor of law, collaborated with George Fisher, Stanford University professor of law, to write the following op-ed. Read More
Ebrahim E. I. Moosa presents "Re-Thinking Islam in Modernity" on March 20 and Kanan Makiya presents "The United States and Post-Saddam Iraq" on Wednesday, April 2. Read More
The 130th anniversary of the founding of Vanderbilt University will be celebrated March 17 at 10 a.m. when the Universitys leadership and other interested persons gather at the statue of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt. Read More
Rising Middle East tensions and self-centered government policies serve as the backdrop for Lee Blessing's drama "Two Rooms," April 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12. Read More
"A Letter to Harvey Milk" the one-man show about a week in the life of Harry Weinberg, a widower and Holocaust survivor living in San Francisco will be performed at the Schulman Center for Jewish Life March 25 at 7:30 p.m. Read More
Qualified students from Arkansas will have the opportunity to attend Vanderbilt University on scholarship, thanks to a special fund set up by the late Arkansas state Sen. Robert Harvey, who held two Vanderbilt degrees. Read More
(Sound Available) Vanderbilt professors offer comments on possible warClick the link above for tipsheet. Read More
MSNBCs Hardball with Chris Matthews cancelled its scheduled live broadcast at Vanderbilt Universitys Ingram Hall on March 19. In notifying the University of the cancellation, the producer cited the possible war with Iraq. MSNBCs Hardball hopes to come to Vanderbilt at a later date. Read More