Issues
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Batter Up: Vanderbilt unveils $12 million baseball facility
The Commodores unveiled a new $12 million, 30,000-square-foot baseball facility—fully funded by donors—in October, ahead of the team’s annual Black and Gold Series, a best-of-three intersquad matchup that showcases the team’s talent and gives them some on-field experience. Read MoreNov 21, 2017
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Foul Play: Matthew Fisher-Davis draws on NCAA tournament mistake for motivation
After an onslaught of scathing remarks about busted brackets and a bad attitude, Fisher-Davis has been using the criticism as motivation to train even harder for the upcoming season. Read MoreNov 21, 2017
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Impression: Morgan Craig at Sarratt Gallery
With all that we have been taught, all that we have learned, just what have we wrought with all that we’ve burned? (oil on canvas, 2015) is featured in Morgan Craig’s solo exhibit With all that we have been taught …, on display through Nov. 30 at Sarratt… Read MoreNov 21, 2017
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More to the Story: Former Impact chairmen add to article about 1967 Symposium
As the chairmen of the first five Impact symposia, we are delighted when articles about this important and unique Vanderbilt institution are published, most recently the “Speak Up” article written by Andrew Maraniss in the Spring 2017 issue. Read MoreSep 25, 2017
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Mogul in the Making: Charles D. King’s entertainment career is turning out just the way he scripted it
In 2015, King started MACRO, a media company focused on developing content for multicultural audiences. The company’s first major project was the movie Fences, directed by Denzel Washington and nominated for four Oscars last year. Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Let There Be Light: Paris’ first police chief exposes the unholy work afoot in the ‘crime capital of the world’
in the latest book by Vanderbilt Professor of French Holly Tucker—City of Light, City of Poison: Murder, Magic, and the First Police Chief of Paris (2017, Norton)—she recounts the true-crime saga of a string of murders that plagued Paris in the late 1600s—and how the city’s first police chief stopped them. Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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The Writing That Binds: Two decades after a botched interview, two college friends reconnect
By Bryant Palmer, BA’95 JON KRAUSE It’s 1994, and I’m in the offices of the Vanderbilt Hustler at 10 a.m. on a Wednesday. I spend as much time here as anywhere else on campus, but not usually this early. I’ve got a phone interview, not with a dean… Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Brainiac: With her innovative ‘brain soup,’ Suzana Herculano-Houzel is changing neuroscience one species at a time
When she finally applied her "brain soup" technique to the human brain, Herculano-Houzel discovered we have an average of 86 billion neurons. Surprisingly, though, the neuron density is the same as in other primates, showing a clear evolutionary pattern from monkeys to humans. “We somehow manage to have this large brain with a large number of neurons; but it’s still just a regular primate brain,” says Herculano-Houzel. Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Artist and activist: Mel Chin named Peabody College Distinguished Alumnus
Visual artist Mel Chin, BA’75, was named this year’s Peabody College Distinguished Alumnus. (Courtesy Mel Chin) Visionary artist Mel Chin, BA’75, was honored during Commencement May 12 by Vanderbilt’s Peabody College of education and human development with the 2017 Distinguished Alumnus Award. Born in Houston in… Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Accolades
Mark L. Schoenfield, professor of English, is among 173 scholars, artists and scientists in the United States and Canada to be awarded a 2017 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. Assistant Professor of Cinema and Media Arts Jonathan Rattner’s film The Interior won the Michael Moore Award for… Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Decadence and Dada: Vanderbilt celebrates acquisition of Paul Verlaine poetry collection
The program cover for the Verlaine celebration featured this watercolor illustration by artist László Barta(1902–1961) under the name of Brutus, for a 1936 edition of a collection of Verlaine’s poems titled “Hombres.” Poet Paul Verlaine rocketed between emotional highs and lows, between a life of complete freedom… Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Golden Reed: Berkenstock celebrates 50 years with Lyric Opera of Chicago
James Berkenstock (top right) and his wife, Jean, co-founded the Midsummer’s Music Festival in Door County, Wisconsin, dedicated to the chamber repertoire. (Courtesy Midsummer’s Music Festival) Some people believe the life of a musician is nomadic, traveling the world and playing in all kinds of venues. However, James… Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Schoolboy to Helldiver: A Vanderbilt student writes home about a future that would never come
Emily Manchester Townes, BA’50, has preserved her brother’s war letters by compiling them into a family history. A portrait of John Manchester hangs behind her. (DANIEL DUBOIS) When John Speier Manchester left Vanderbilt halfway through his sophomore year in December 1942 to enlist in the U.S. Navy, he… Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Fire on Ice: Vanderbilt photographer captures Nashville Predators’ playoff run
Like the rest of Nashville, Vanderbilt was bitten by the hockey bug as the city’s 20-year-old NHL expansion team, the Predators, battled the Pittsburgh Penguins in June for this year’s Stanley Cup. University photographer John Russell, who shot much of the action for the Nashville team (including the photo seen here), even helped enlist Vanderbilt’s mascot, Mr. C., to rally Preds fans in the final days of the championship series. Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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History Lessons: Editor’s Letter, Summer 2017
As the campus buzzes with the arrival of new students (and the university made sure they were outfitted with solar eclipse glasses), I think about the spectrum of history embodied in an institution like Vanderbilt. What school traditions or past stories will ignite the imaginations of these newest Commodores? Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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A guide to good etiquette
Alumni Association President Perry Brandt, BA’74, JD’77, offers several tips for proper etiquette. Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Ralph’s Run: Webb goes for SEC record
Senior running back Ralph Webb is closing in on the goal line of ending his college career as the second-leading rusher in SEC history, behind Georgia’s Herschel Walker. Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Globetrotter: Overbeck represents America in Italy
Kayla Overbeck, a sophomore on the Vanderbilt women’s basketball team, spent part of her summer in Udine, Italy, playing for the USA Women’s U19 Team in the FIBA World Cup that captured the silver medal. Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Neighborhood Rebound: Former basketball player Jessica Mooney Holman gives back to her South Nashville community
Today, Holman plays an integral role as senior director of programs at Harvest Hands, a community development organization that promotes healthy living, spiritual formation and economic development in South Nashville. Read MoreSep 7, 2017
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Amanda Farnsworth, BS’81, MS’83: Historic flight
In August 2016, Farnsworth grabbed headlines by piloting her fixed-wing, single-engine Cirrus SR22T to Cuba, a feat made possible by the diplomatic thaw underway between the U.S. and the communist nation. Read MoreSep 7, 2017