Issues
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Met School: An unlikely spot in Lincoln Center acknowledges Rockefeller support of Vanderbilt University
JONATHAN TICHLER, METROPOLITAN OPERA By Dr. John Sergent, BA’63, MD’66 In 1972 I moved to New York City with my wife, Carole, BA’63, and our two young daughters to do a fellowship in rheumatology. A few months after we moved, we met Francis Robinson, a fellow… Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Constant Content: Q&A with Kelly Campbell, BS’00
Hulu’s chief marketing officer looks for heart at the intersection of entertainment and tech DANIEL BAXTER Campbell As the ways we consume media continue to change, viewers have more choices than ever before. In 2012, Disney, NBC Universal (now Comcast) and 21st Century Fox banded together to… Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Up Close and Personal: Vanderbilt explores the frontiers of imaging technology
Recent advances in imaging technology are enabling Vanderbilt scientists to gain unprecedented views of how molecules, cells and tissues work together, yielding radical new insights into the causes, treatment and prevention of disease. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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How to navigate a nutritious diet
A registered dietitian, Jamie Pope says nutritional guidelines should reflect current science, but be livable and practical. “We need to be honest with ourselves about which healthy lifestyles are possible and sustainable for us,” she says. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Star Light, Star Bright: Tiana Clark, MFA’17, is one of poetry’s most exciting new voices
Drawing upon a rich background of life experiences and an unflinching desire to challenge injustice, Tiana Clark, MFA’17, has emerged as an electrifying new voice in poetry. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Purple Haze: Students celebrate Holi festival
The South Asian Cultural Exchange welcomed students to Wyatt Lawn on April 15 as part of a weekend-long celebration of the Hindu festival known as Holi. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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#Vandygram, Spring 2018
From Vanderbilt Libraries’ Shakespeare Festival to Vanderbilt Divinity School’s Young Child Parade, not to mention a new bike-sharing program, it’s been an active spring on campus. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Painting Personality: Everett Raymond Kinstler ‘performs’ the role of portrait painter
Tom Wolfe by Everett Raymond Kinstler Successful portraiture is all about conveying the personality of the sitter. It sounds easy, but it’s not, because those character traits that make up a person’s true self have little to do with actual physical appearance. To successfully capture the sitter, portraiture requires… Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Volunteer Leadership Weekend
Two hundred enthusiastic alumni and parents gathered to support Vanderbilt as part of the university’s inaugural Volunteer Leadership Weekend, held Feb. 23–24. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Dorothy Gunther Pugh, BA’72: Dance with a different P.O.V.
It’s been a long journey for CEO and founding artistic director Dorothy Gunther Pugh, the former junior-high schoolteacher whose dream was to bring a premier ballet company to her native city. For her vision she was named Memphian of the Year last December by Memphis, the City Magazine. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Enriching Fellow Travelers
Mershon’s affinity for Vanderbilt has inspired nearly 20 years of consecutive annual giving. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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’Dores of Distinction
To help ensure that Vanderbilt’s mission stays on track and is poised for future success, Chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos has convened a broadly diverse group of alumni leaders called the ’Dores of Distinction. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Trailblazer Tribute: New basketball scholarship honors Perry Wallace
Civil rights trailblazer Perry Wallace, BE’70, who became the first-ever African American varsity basketball player in the Southeastern Conference when he suited up for Vanderbilt in 1967, has been honored with a new scholarship at the university. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Milestone Victory: Tim Corbin becomes baseball program’s all-time winningest coach
Head Baseball Coach Tim Corbin became the program’s all-time winningest coach March 4 when the ’Dores defeated Houston 9–4. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Recent Books, Winter/Spring 2018
Literary Obscenities: U.S. Case Law and Naturalism after Modernism (2018, Penn State University Press) by Erik M. Bachman, BA’03 This comparative historical study explores the broad sociocultural factors at play in the relationships among U.S. obscenity laws and literary modernism and naturalism in the early 20th century. Putting obscenity case… Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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‘By a Whisker’: Women’s tennis falls shy of second NCAA championship
The Vanderbilt women’s tennis team came up just short in its quest for a second national championship, falling 4–3 in a tight three-set match to the Stanford Cardinal at the Wake Forest Tennis Complex in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, May 22. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Community and Celebrity: Author Leah Stewart finds the connection between the two
Photo by Jason Sheldon Leah Stewart, BA’94, has five acclaimed books to her credit, and her sixth, What You Don’t Know About Charlie Outlaw (2018, G.P. Putnam’s Sons), released this spring, is certain to further her reputation as a writer of keenly observed, engaging fiction. With its lively story… Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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New Music: New CDs by Blair student ensembles
Such Sweet Thunder, the debut recording of the Blair Big Band, was released in March and includes Blair students and faculty, plus some of Nashville’s veteran players. Tracks include new compositions as well as standards such as “The Very Thought of You,” which features legendary Nashville pianist Beegie Adair. Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Volunteer Leadership Weekend Brings 200 Alumni and Parent Volunteers Together
J.R. Hand, BS’03, and Kailey Hand, BS’03, MEd’05 The 200 alumni and parent volunteers represented Reunion, chapters, the Association of Vanderbilt Black Alumni, G.O.L.D. Council, and the Parents and Family Association board. “There was an exciting energy level with so many Commodores together. I really enjoyed meeting the… Read MoreJun 8, 2018
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Universal Language: With “Phantom of the Opera,” Stan Tucker has seen the world
As music director for the world tour of Phantom of the Opera from 2012 to 2016–and as associate music supervisor for seven international companies of the production–Stan Tucker, BMus’73, has felt the whoosh of the show’s iconic falling chandelier hundreds of times as it landed inches from his head. Photo… Read MoreJun 8, 2018