Issues
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Vanderbilt Establishes Biophotonics Center
The growing field of biophotonics explores the interaction of biological systems and light, with the aim of finding ways to use light in medical breakthroughs. Funding in biophotonics research at Vanderbilt totals nearly $25 million. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Students Hone Writing in Cryptology Course
Vanderbilt students taking a course in cryptography have contributed a series of essays on professor Holly Tucker’s Wonders & Marvels website. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Vanderbilt Earns ‘A’ in Patient Safety
Vanderbilt University Hospital earned the highest possible grade recently in a nationwide survey of hospital patient safety. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Small Particle, Big City
For 20 years the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center, in sponsorship with the Nashville Mayor’s Advisory Committee for People with Disabilities, has put together an annual exhibit of work by artists with a wide range of ages, abilities and disabilities called Creative Expressions. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Blair Premieres New Works at National Conference
As the Blair School of Music wrapped up its 50th anniversary celebrations, 2015 kicked off with several world premieres and a major national conference. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Hersch Composition Draws on Visual Arts
On Feb. 26 the Blair School of Music gave the world premiere of American composer Michael Hersch’s Zwischen Leben Und Tod. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Women’s Cross Country Wins NCAA South Region
Placing three runners among the top 10 finishers, the women’s cross country team won the NCAA South Region Championship in Tallahassee, Florida, on Nov. 14. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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’Dores, Soles4Souls Partner in Costa Rica
During Christmas break, Vanderbilt athletics sent 13 student athletes and two support staff on an eight-day service trip to Costa Rica. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Baseball Opens Season as Nation’s No. 1 Team
In February, Vanderbilt baseball became the first men’s team in school history to open the season as No. 1 in the nation. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Predatory Eels Deliver Taser-Like Jolts
The electric eel—the scaleless Amazonian fish that can deliver a jolt strong enough to knock down a horse—possesses an electroshock system uncannily similar to a Taser. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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3-D Culturing Predicts Cancer Drug Efficacy
New “tumor in a dish” technology is poised to assess rapidly how effective specific anticancer cocktails will be on an individual’s cancer before chemotherapy begins. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Game Theory Can Help Predict Crime
About a decade ago, the hit movie Minority Report featured a police force that could predict crimes and swoop in before they happened. That kind of crime fighting may not be far off if a team headed by Eugene Vorobeychik, assistant professor of computer science and computer engineering, has its way. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Everywhere @ Once: Oliver Luckett’s influence on social media reaches far and wide
A tireless entrepreneur, Luckett has made a career of diving headfirst into challenges, launching a string of tech startups all intent on shaking up the status quo in one way or another. His latest one, theAudience, is the world’s largest social media publishing company. Based in Los Angeles, it produces thousands of unique pieces of content on behalf of its clients each year. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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All In: As veterans seek to enter the business world, Vanderbilt emerges as a leading choice
As more soldiers leave the military and seek to enter the business world, Vanderbilt has emerged not only as a leading choice by military students but as one of the elite B-schools that has embraced those students most enthusiastically. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Growing to New Heights: Unprecedented Growth Leads to Latest Hospital Expansion
A $30 million fundraising campaign is underway at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. It will support a four-floor building expansion that will help advance the size and scope of the hospital’s existing comprehensive and specialized pediatric health care programs. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Obituary: Peyton S. Mathis Jr., BE’40, Home to Montgomery
Maj. Peyton S. Mathis Jr. played football for Vanderbilt and earned his bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering, volunteering as an aviation cadet in the U.S. Army Air Forces in 1940. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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From Access to Impact: Opportunity Vanderbilt Scholarship Recipients Aim High
A glimpse into the lives of four scholarship recipients shows not only how Opportunity Vanderbilt is empowering individuals, but how they are contributing to Vanderbilt, their communities and the world. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Jack Minardi’s Advanced 3-D Electronics Printer Grabs National Spotlight
Minardi, BE’12, is co-founder and software engineering lead for Voxel8, developer of a custom-electronics-producing 3-D printer that is a darling of tech media. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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What a Great University Does
In 2014, Lester “Ruff” Fant, BA’63, and his wife, Susan, made a significant commitment to the College of Arts and Science to establish, among other things, an endowed Lester G. “Ruff” Fant III Dean’s Fund and the James Thornton Fant Chair in Sustainability Studies. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Grassroots Effort Yields First AVBA Scholarship
Candace Grisham, Class of 2018, has been named the first recipient of the Association of Vanderbilt Black Alumni Scholarship. Read MoreMar 23, 2015