Releases
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Vanderbilt Medical Center makes this year’s U.S. News & World Report’s ‘Honor Roll’ of best hospitals
U.S. News & World Report is listing Vanderbilt Medical Center on its "Honor Roll" of hospitals – an honor reserved for a select group of institutions labeled by the magazine as the "best of the best." Read MoreJul 11, 2008
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Visionary leadership among strengths of new dean of Vanderbilt Heard Library
Connie Vinita Dowell, a Vanderbilt University graduate with three decades of experience working in academic libraries, including two senior leadership positions, has been named dean of the Jean and Alexander Heard Library at Vanderbilt. Read MoreJul 9, 2008
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MEDIA ADVISORY: Area students to conduct simulated Hubble Space Telescope Repair Mission
Students at the Vanderbilt Dyer Observatory's space exploration camp will conduct a simulated space shuttle mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope on Friday, July 11. The mission will use a large mock-up of the Hubble Space Telescope and computer software derived from NASA training simulators. The mission plan was created based on the upcoming scheduled shuttle Atlantis repair mission to the Hubble in October 2008. Read MoreJul 9, 2008
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Author to discuss ‘Closing the Food Gap’ between food systems for the poor and everyone else
Nationally recognized author, speaker and expert on food justice issues Mark Winne will be featured at a talk and signing of his book Closing the Food Gap, which examines methods to get decent, healthy food to our nation's poor. Read MoreJul 8, 2008
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‘Mind’s eye’ influences visual perception
Letting your imagination run away with you may actually influence how you see the world. New research from Vanderbilt University has found that mental imagery – what we see with the "mind's eye" – directly impacts our visual perception. Read MoreJul 7, 2008
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Op-Ed: Struggling to be ourselves
All of life is a struggle. Achieving high ideals demands teeth-gritting pain, sadness and loss. It may take generations to embody the values on which a nation is founded. And once embodied, they perpetually threaten to slip away. Read MoreJul 7, 2008
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Op-Ed: America betrayed
America is not living up to the principles embodied in the Declaration of Independence. As a consequence, there is much unrest. We have forgotten who we are, how we were established and what we were meant to be. We have become a declining, decadent nation; too arrogant for its own good. On this July 4, 2008, we must look back "lest we forget." amy.wolf@vanderbilt.edu Read MoreJul 7, 2008
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Gifted education expert to head up Vanderbilt Programs for Talented Youth
National gifted education expert Tamra Stambaugh has been chosen as the next director of Vanderbilt's Programs for Talented Youth, which provide a variety of intensive learning opportunities for gifted youth, their parents and educators. Read MoreJul 3, 2008
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Fireworks at home are a risky way to celebrate July 4
National statistics show 10 percent of firework injuries are sustained by toddlers, and injuries are most likely to occur when children have fireworks without adequate supervision. Read MoreJul 3, 2008
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Vanderbilt study finds Iraq war hurt Republican, not Democratic, House members
This fall Democratic campaign strategists might want to target traditionally Republican congressional districts with heavy casualties in Iraq, according to research by two Vanderbilt University political scientists. While many political pundits have attributed the unpopularity of the Iraq war to a congressional landslide for the Democrats in 2006,… Read MoreJul 3, 2008
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Media Advisory: Guatemalan toddler with large neck tumor prepares for life-changing surgery
Joseline Elizabeth Vasquez Santay will undergo preliminary procedures to help doctors at the Monroe Carell Jr. Children\'s Hospital at Vanderbilt determine how to safely remove a neck tumor which is as large as the toddler\'s head. Read MoreJul 2, 2008
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Migraine mutations reveal clues to biological basis of disorder
Fifteen percent to 20 percent of people worldwide suffer from migraines – excruciating headaches often presaged by dramatic sensations, or "auras." By studying a rare, inherited form of migraine, researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center have found clues to the biological basis of the painful, debilitating disorder. In the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Alfred George Jr., M.D., and colleagues report that genetic mutations linked to this rare form of familial migraine alter the function of sodium channels – protein "tunnels" through brain cell membranes involved in the electrical conduction of nerve impulses. Read MoreJul 1, 2008
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New Vanderbilt Autism Clinic provides one-point entry
Vanderbilt University is making it easy for families and professionals to find autism services by introducing the Vanderbilt Autism Clinic – a single helpline staffed by an autism expert who can make referrals for what\'s needed. Vanderbilt recruited Sarah Zombek to serve as family services coordinator. She held a similar position at Massachusetts General Hospital in an autism clinic with a national reputation for family-centered care. Read MoreJun 30, 2008
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Nashville Collaborative aimed to help Latino families to launch June 28
The Nashville Collaborative, a partnership between the Monroe Carell Jr. Children\'s Hospital at Vanderbilt and Metro Nashville Parks and Recreation to improve child health, will launch Saturday, June 28. Read MoreJun 27, 2008
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Media Advisory: Rally Across America to stop at Children’s Hospital
Rally Across America, a non-profit charity bicycle race which raises money for childhood cancer research, will visit the Hematology and Oncology Clinic at the Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt on Friday, June 27. Read MoreJun 26, 2008
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Vanderbilt economist joins leadership at national environmental think tank
Vanderbilt's Justin Potter Professor of American Competitive Enterprise and professor of law Mark Cohen is taking on a new role as vice president of research for Research for Resources for the Future (RFF). RFF is an independent, non-partisan research organization dedicated to improving environmental, energy and natural resource policymaking worldwide through social science research of the highest caliber. Read MoreJun 26, 2008
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Students to help shape Nashville’s downtown landscape and create next must-have iPhone gadget
College students and recent graduates from across the country have converged on the Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management for an intensive month-long business boot camp. The goal of the Accelerator Summer Business Institute, which began June 6 and ends July 3, is to offer an action-packed immersion into all areas of business, such as marketing, finance, real estate and corporate strategy. Read MoreJun 23, 2008
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Vanderbilt Board member, Children’s Hospital namesake Monroe Carell dies
Monroe J. Carell Jr., a Nashville executive admired as much for his generous philanthropy, especially in support of Vanderbilt University, as for his business acumen, died peacefully at home today after a courageous battle with cancer. Read MoreJun 20, 2008
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The Jazz Journalists Association honors VU Press book
A Vanderbilt University Press book of photographs of jazz music greats combined with the life story of the late bassist and photographer Milt Hinton was named the best jazz book of 2008 by The Jazz Journalists Association. Read MoreJun 19, 2008
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Newly born identical twin stars show surprising differences
The analysis of the youngest pair of identical twin stars yet discovered has revealed surprising differences in brightness, surface temperature and possibly even the size of the two. The study, which is published in the June 19 issue of the journal Nature, suggests that one of the stars formed significantly earlier than its twin. Read MoreJun 18, 2008