Issues

  • Vanderbilt University

    Recent Books, Summer 2014

    New books from Vanderbilt writers Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • John Seigenthaler illustration

    John Seigenthaler: Champion of the First Amendment

    John Seigenthaler died July 11 at the age of 86 after a life that saw him serve as special assistant to U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy; suffer a brutal beating by segregationists while attempting to aid 1960s Freedom Riders; become a founding editor of what is now one of the nation’s largest newspapers, USA Today; and win the respect and admiration of generations. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Photo of Lee Ann Hawkins with family

    From College Crush to the College World Series, Lee Ann Hawkins Adores the ’Dores

    As a first-year student at Vanderbilt in 1951, Lee Ann Allen sat on the hillside and watched senior Charlie Hawkins pitch for the Commodores. There were no dugouts and no stands, just simple wooden benches for each team. She fell in love with Charlie—Vanderbilt’s first All-SEC baseball player—and then with Vanderbilt baseball. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos

    Academic Strategic Plan Charts Vanderbilt’s Course

    Vanderbilt’s Academic Strategic Plan, which will guide university investments in faculty recruitment, capital planning, academic programs and philanthropic priorities during the next decade, was unveiled by Chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos Aug. 21 at the Fall Faculty Assembly. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Photo of Fran Hardcastle

    Volunteer’s Helping Heart Has Widespread Impact

    Fran Hardcastle’s impact on Vanderbilt ranges from the formation of a children’s hospital-within-a-hospital with the Junior League, to telephones in waiting rooms, sleeper chairs for parents, and fundraising for needs all over campus. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Photo of Jerry Parr with President Ronald Reagan and Nancy Reagan

    Jerry W. Parr, BA’62, Matters of Life and Death

    On March 31, 1981, Secret Service agent Jerry W. Parr was head of the detail protecting President Ronald Reagan during a speech at the Washington Hilton. When would-be assassin John Hinkley Jr. opened fire, Parr shoved Reagan into a waiting car and ordered him taken to George Washington University Hospital—actions credited with saving the seriously wounded president’s life. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Tim Corbin

    Corbin Named National Coach of the Year

    Head Coach Tim Corbin was named National Coach of the Year by Collegiate Baseball on June 27, two days after winning Vanderbilt’s first-ever men’s national title. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt Baseball Claims a Long-Awaited National Title

    John Norwood's home run propelled the ’Dores to a 3–2 victory in the deciding game of the College World Series, giving the university its first-ever national championship in any men’s sport. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Luis Paulo Rosenberg

    Rosenberg’s lofty goals for Corinthians Soccer

    Rosenberg, MA’73, PhD’76, is vice president of São Paulo's Sport Club Corinthians Paulista, the wealthiest soccer club in Brazil. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Photo of young African American girls with computers

    Kimberly Bryant, BE’89, Is Changing the Face of High-Tech with Black Girls Code

    The mission of Bryant's nonprofit organization, Black Girls Code, is to reach out to minority girls age 7 to 17 from all socioeconomic levels, and teach them about computer technology—from creating websites and writing computer applications to crafting computer games and working in robotics. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Vanderbilt University

    A Guide to Places Made Famous by Cornelius Vanderbilt and His Heirs

    What follows is a guide to some of the places that reflect the Vanderbilts’ enduring legacy. Numerous structures remain standing, many of which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, while others fell victim to the wrecking ball long ago. Still others live on, not because of any family connection, but because of the cachet of the Vanderbilt name itself. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Edward Durell Stone

    Edward Durell Stone’s Architectural Vision Endures

    Much of the tranquil beauty that imbues today’s campus was engendered by architect Edward Durell Stone's plan. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Illustration for Doug Parker feature story

    Readers’ Letters, Summer 2014

    I enjoyed Seth Robertson’s article “Flight Path” in the Spring 2014 issue, which chronicled Doug Parker’s career culminating in his running the world’s largest airline, American Airlines Group. What a great accomplishment for Mr. Parker. It is very reassuring to have a Vanderbilt graduate [MBA’86] in such an important position. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Vanderbilt University

    Metzl on Mental Illness and Gun Violence

    After the horrific mass murder at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2011, a conservative commentator claimed that “guns don’t kill people—the mentally ill do.” Metzl believes this attitude is based on misconceptions about mental illness and violence that obscure larger issues about gun violence in America. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Vanderbilt University

    The Search for Earth-Like Planets

    Researchers have developed a model that estimates the effect that a star's diet has on its chemical composition. This model will add substantially to astronomers’ understanding of the process of planet formation as well as assist in the ongoing search for Earth-like exoplanets. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Illustration of book atop a pedestal

    World’s Best Issue Ever!

    Our appetite for “world’s greatest” data has only grown through the centuries, stoked in recent years by electronic media, instant feedback and infographics. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Alan Bentley

    Technology Transfer Efforts Gain Steam

    Vanderbilt signed 101 licensing agreements with industry partners during fiscal year 2014, nearly 20 more than the record total set last year. Many transactions were in medical diagnostics, health care information technology, pharmaceutics, oncology and biotechnology. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Vanderbilt Sports Medicine trainer Michelle Johnson

    Sports Medicine Provided Free to Area Schools

    For more than 20 years, Vanderbilt Sports Medicine has maintained a relationship with Metro Nashville Public Schools to ensure excellent care is provided to local athletes. Vanderbilt is now the official sports medicine provider to all 15 Metro high schools. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Industrial Internet Consortium illustration

    Tech Giants, Engineers to Create Standards for ‘Internet of Things’

    A new group called the Industrial Internet Consortium (IIC)—which includes Vanderbilt engineers and researchers in the university’s Institute for Software Integrated Systems (ISIS)—announced plans in March to create engineering standards for the “Internet of Things.” Read More

    Sep 26, 2014

  • Warren and Moore colleges

    Warren and Moore Colleges Open

    Warren College and Moore College, the newest of Vanderbilt’s residential options, opened to upperclass students in August. Read More

    Sep 26, 2014