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Issues

  • Visual Art: Poetry of the Visual Kind

    Visual Art: Poetry of the Visual Kind

    Lisa Wainwright, BA’82, can recall the precise moment when she embraced art history and education as her life’s work. An English major at Vanderbilt at the time, Wainwright was taking an art history class with Milan Mihal (now professor of fine arts, emeritus). “His class made me realize I… Read More

    Dec 3, 2010

  • Photography: In the Moment

    Photography: In the Moment

    The little girl in Stacey Irvin’s photograph is laughing. Her head tilts to one side, and her hand is at her chin. Either she wants to ask the photographer something, or she’s just eaten some of the grapes she holds in her other hand. Her eyes invite a conversation, and… Read More

    Dec 3, 2010

  • The ’60s at 50

    The ’60s at 50

    Connie Vinita Dowell, Vanderbilt’s dean of libraries, is kicking off the Heard Library’s new exhibits program with a bang—or maybe with a Frug. “We have a fabulous collection of ’60s materials on many topics,” Dowell says. “Now’s a good time to let people see it.” Cases exhibit everything from the… Read More

    Dec 3, 2010

  • Open House

    Open House

    Libraries can be intimidating places. The young James Baldwin thought so. Read More

    Dec 2, 2010

  • Acts of Faith

    Acts of Faith

    Divinity grads aim to compensate for the chaos in contemporary society. Read More

    Dec 2, 2010

  • Blending Back In

    Blending Back In

    Freak accidents sever limbs. Tumors disfigure faces. And reconstructive plastic surgeons team up for their toughest challenges. Read More

    Dec 2, 2010

  • Not Self, But Country

    Not Self, But Country

    When she was studying Shakespeare and Milton at Vanderbilt in the late 1970s, Nora Wingfield Tyson never dreamed she’d be making history one day. But last July in a cavernous aircraft-carrier hangar in Norfolk, Va., Rear Adm. Tyson did just that when she became the first woman in U.S. Navy… Read More

    Dec 2, 2010

  • Quality Instruction Aids Preschool Learning

    Quality Instruction Aids Preschool Learning

    A collaboration between Vanderbilt and Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools on an Early Reading First project for preschool children has yielded “spectacular” results in a preliminary study, according to project leaders. “The big picture is that high-quality language and literacy instruction in pre-K can make a big difference,” says Deborah Rowe,… Read More

    Dec 2, 2010

  • 50 Ways to Sniff a Human

    50 Ways to Sniff a Human

    In this corner, weighing in at 150 pounds: Homo sapiens, creator of the bug zapper, the citronella candle, the rolled-up newspaper and Deep Woods Off! And in the opposite corner, weighing in at less than 5 milligrams: Anopheles gambiae, transmitter of 250 million new cases of malaria each year, possessing… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Surgeon Shortage Has Global Implications

    Surgeon Shortage Has Global Implications

    U.S. health care exacts a heavy toll not only in terms of dollars, but also in the demand we exert on the world’s supply of surgeons. A decline in the number of international medical graduates practicing general surgery in the United States is contributing to a “crisis of urgency” as… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • For Crying Out Loud, Turn That Thing Down

    For Crying Out Loud, Turn That Thing Down

    Hearing loss now affects nearly 20 percent of U.S. adolescents age 12 to 19, a rise of 5 percent during the past 15 years, according to a new Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) study co-led by Dr. Ron Eavey, director of the Vanderbilt Bill Wilkerson Center and the… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Airborne Toxins Damage Soldiers’ Lungs

    Airborne Toxins Damage Soldiers’ Lungs

    Between 2003 and 2005, Vanderbilt physicians treated more than 50 soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division based in Fort Campbell, Ky., with a common complaint. Each soldier had a history of shortness of breath, and each one—a former supremely fit soldier—was having trouble passing a running test. They also shared… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Sports Roundup

    Sports Roundup

    First-year student R. Adams Cowley during a fall men’s lacrosse practice Soccer: Three Named ‘Players to Watch’ The Top Drawer Soccer website has included three Vanderbilt players in its “Top 20 Women’s College Players to Watch” list for the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference: seniors Molly and Megan Kinsella… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Baseball Reaches Super Regional

    Baseball Reaches Super Regional

    The Commodores extended their year well beyond the regular season and came within one game of moving on to the College World Series. The team finished with a 46–20 overall record. After a 40–15 regular season finish, Vanderbilt exited the SEC Tournament with losses to LSU and Florida, but won… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Where Are They Now?

    Where Are They Now?

    MATT FREIJE, BA’04 It’s autumn in Middle Tennessee, and Matt Freije, BA’04, is enjoying the cooler weather and outdoor chores at his home in Brentwood. He also enjoys the company of his wife, Amy, and their newborn son, Benton Matthew, born in March. “He’s keeping me busy,” Freije admits with… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • 2010 Athletics Hall of Fame Inductees

    2010 Athletics Hall of Fame Inductees

    Ten new members were inducted into the Vanderbilt Athletics Hall of Fame on Sept. 3, 2010. They make up the third class to be named to the hall. The new members are: Ernest “Bucky” Curtis, BA’51 (football, 1947–1950), first-team All-American in 1950, when he led the nation in receiving. Shan… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Coming to America

    Coming to America

    With his head down, Steve Tchiengang nonchalantly ambles through a group of students on the sidewalk near Rand Hall. His trip is interesting to watch. And at 6 foot 9 inches, it’s hard to miss, too. With a few graceful strides, he’s through the pack and well on his way… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Soap Floats

    Soap Floats

    First-year students mix it up at the Student Organizations Fair held in August. Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Details

    Details

    This little goldfinch adds a bit of life and color to the “Tree of Learning” sculpture just outside the Central Library. The sculpture by Greg Wyatt is the centerpiece of the Garden of Great Ideas, bronzes sponsored by the Newington Cropsey Foundation and scattered throughout campus. Read More

    Dec 1, 2010

  • Inquiring Minds

    Inquiring Minds

    Performance Pay Alone Doesn’t Raise Scores Rewarding teachers with bonus pay, in the absence of any other support programs, does not raise student test scores, according to a study by the National Center on Performance Incentives at Peabody College. This and other findings from a three-year experiment—the first scientific study… Read More

    Dec 1, 2010