Issues

  • Full-Time GLBT Office to Launch

    Full-Time GLBT Office to Launch

    A full-time and fully staffed office to support the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community at Vanderbilt will launch this fall. The K.C. Potter Center, named in honor of a former dean of residential and judicial affairs at Vanderbilt who was supportive of the GLBT community, will replace a part-time… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Arts and Science Dean Named Provost

    Arts and Science Dean Named Provost

    Richard McCarty Photo by Daniel Dubois. Richard McCarty, a distinguished psychologist who has led the largest school at Vanderbilt University for the past seven years, has been named provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs. “Richard embodies Vanderbilt’s values of excellence and fairness,” said Chancellor Nicholas Zeppos in… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Green Power Begins at Home

    Green Power Begins at Home

    Illustration by Normand Cousineau Although manufacturers are responsible for much of the greenhouse-gas emissions in the United States, individuals largely contribute to the problem of climate change, too. So what can be done about it? A diverse group of experts at Vanderbilt University has created the Climate… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Children’s Hospital Namesake Remembered for Commitment and Caring

    Children’s Hospital Namesake Remembered for Commitment and Caring

    Monroe Carell Jr. during one of his frequent visits to the hospital that bears his name Photo by Dana Johnson. ­­­Monroe J. Carell Jr., BE’59, a Nashville executive admired as much for his philanthropy as for his business acumen, died June 20 after a courageous battle… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • 1,000 Words

    1,000 Words

    It took 5,000 pounds of sweet, ripe Driscoll strawberries to feed the masses at Vanderbilt’s Commencement on May 9. More than 3,000 undergraduate, graduate and professional students received their degrees, and thousands more family and friends joined them at the Strawberries and Champagne Celebration following graduation exercises.   Photo by… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Natural Born Optimist

    Natural Born Optimist

    Pamela King Ginsburg’s first day as a law school student turned out to be even tougher than she expected. It was almost as if she had “PICK ME” stamped on her forehead. In class after class that day, professors singled her out as the very first student they called… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Vanderbilt Magazine Staff – Summer 2008

    Vanderbilt Magazine Staff – Summer 2008

    Editor GayNelle Doll Art Director and Designer Donna DeVore Pritchett Editorial Associate Editor and Advertising Manager Phillip Tucker Arts and Culture Editor Bonnie Arant Ertelt, BS’81 Class Notes and Sports Editor Nelson Bryan, BA’73 Production and Design Assistant Director, Photography… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Letters to the Editor

    Letters to the Editor

    Echoes from the Holocaust I especially appreciated “In the Face of Destruction” by Lisa Robbins [Spring 2008 issue]. Harry Kahn, his wife Hannah Westfield, Erich Westfield, Ernest Freudenthal and others were classmates and friends of mine. Through them I learned about a world far beyond my small… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Books and Writers

    Books and Writers

    The Blue Star: A Novel (2008, Little, Brown and Company) by Tony Earley, Samuel Milton Fleming, Associate Professor of English It’s been eight years since readers met the character of 10-year-old Jim Glass, the anchor of Earley’s acclaimed debut novel, Jim the Boy. In The Blue Star,… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Visual Art: Safe Haven for Artists

    Visual Art: Safe Haven for Artists

    Noah Walcutt, a 2008 engineering school graduate, won this year’s $25,000 Margaret Wooldridge Hamblett Award with this interactive sculpture that combines art, music and engineering for therapeutic purposes. Photo by Steve Green. When the E. Bronson Ingram Studio Art Center was completed in 2005, it provided… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • God Plays Music City

    God Plays Music City

    Tom Kimmel, singer-songwriter and artist-in-residence for the “God in Music City” project, with artist Lisa Silver at the project’s culminating concert at Second Presbyterian Church. Photo by Steve Green. One Saturday last February, a curious busload from Vanderbilt got a taste of that old-time religion–and many of the… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • From the Editor: Last-Name Basis

    From the Editor: Last-Name Basis

    Illustration by Ellen Russell Sadler.   Joe B. Wyatt had been chancellor for four years when I came to work at Vanderbilt in 1986, and he had a reputation as an excellent steward of Vanderbilt’s finances. The Texas native didn’t look the part of the academic, with his athletic… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Contributors for the Summer 2008 Issue

    Contributors for the Summer 2008 Issue

    Michael Lee Woodard Michael Lee Woodard, BS’90, came to Vanderbilt in 1978 on a football scholarship. In 1982 he left college to enter military flight training, later returning to complete his education. Woodard has spent his adult life involved in military flying all over the world and has also… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Music: Monday Night Jazz Band Keeps Swinging … Every Tuesday

    Music: Monday Night Jazz Band Keeps Swinging … Every Tuesday

    Lane Denson, foreground, and Larry Taylor of the Monday Night Jazz Band. Photo by Steve Green When Lane Denson–Episcopal clergyman by day, cornet and flugelhorn player by night–started playing with the Monday Night Jazz Band, he hardly could have predicted how long it would last. “We’re… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Film: Brothers’ Dedication Subject of New Documentary

    Film: Brothers’ Dedication Subject of New Documentary

    Top: Dr. Milton Ochieng’, left, celebrates with his brother, Fred, at Fred’s white coat ceremony in August 2006. Right: The movie poster for Sons of Lwala Photo by Dana Johnson. One rainy evening 10 years ago, Patricia Opiyo, a pregnant woman from the remote village of Lwala, Kenya,… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Vanderbilt on the Potomac

    Vanderbilt on the Potomac

    Photo by Daniel Dubois. Dunkin’ Donuts. Cornell. The American Frozen Food Institute. Georgia Tech. The Snack Food Association. University of Michigan. The Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute. The University of Texas and University of California systems. The American Peanut Council. University of North Carolina. These are but a few of the… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Former Soviet Bloc Corruption Threatens Education

    Former Soviet Bloc Corruption Threatens Education

    Corruption in the former Soviet Union threatens the European Union’s attempts to standardize university degrees, warns Stephen P. Heyneman.Photo by Daniel Dubois. Graduates of universities in the former Soviet Republic may find their degrees losing value as corruption among higher education programs continues to rise, two Vanderbilt professors… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Hedge-Fund Study Reveals Distorted Reporting

    Hedge-Fund Study Reveals Distorted Reporting

    Nicolas P.B. Bollen’s research suggests the purposeful avoidance of reporting hedge-fund losses. Photo by Steve Green. Significant numbers of hedge-fund managers purposefully and routinely avoid reporting losses by marking up the value of their portfolios, according to research from the Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management. Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • $2.8 Million Grant to Link War Fighters

    $2.8 Million Grant to Link War Fighters

    New technology could help pilots, fighters and commanders to communicate seamlessly. getty images/CHECK SIX A computer freeze-up in the office is a hassle. In a fighter jet peppered with enemy fire, it’s a matter of life and death. Getting the increasingly large and complex… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008

  • Poor Diabetes Management Portends

    Poor Diabetes Management Portends

    istockphoto.COM Basic lifestyle changes could save children with obesity-related diabetes from a lifetime of complications. But making changes in areas such as diet and exercise is more difficult than adjusting to medical management of the disease, a Vanderbilt study shows. “Type 2 diabetes in children is such a new… Read More

    Jul 13, 2008