Releases
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Op-ed: Of riots, immigrants and the revenge of history
The recent riots in France have their roots in that nation's colonialist history, argues Assistant Professor of History Moses Ochonu. Read MoreNov 22, 2005
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New book lays out rules for effective Internet retailing
Managers who use the Internet to sell products and services and to provide customers information can now take advantage of the latest academic research on online retailing. Read MoreNov 22, 2005
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National Institutes of Health leaders to headline Vanderbilt Kennedy Center 40th anniversary symposium
A symposium featuring top federal officials in mental health and human development will cap off a year of anniversary celebrations for the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Human Development. Read MoreNov 22, 2005
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Educators donate $750,000 to support teacher training and research at Vanderbilt’s Peabody College
A husband and wife who have spent their careers teaching have extended that service into the future with a donation of $750,000 to Vanderbilt's Peabody College of Education and Human Development. John and Leta Shelby Wimpey, alumni of Peabody College, made the donation to commemorate their lifelong commitment to education and to honor the memory of their daughter LeAnn Wimpey, also a teacher, who died in 1982 at the age of 29. Read MoreNov 18, 2005
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Vanderbilt psychologist Frank Tong named as one of 2005’s ‘Scientific American 50’
Vanderbilt psychologist Frank Tong has been named a research leader in the 2005 Scientific American 50, the magazine's annual list recognizing outstanding leadership in science and technology from the past year. Tong and his colleague Yukiyasu Kamitani, an investigator at ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratories in Kyoto, Japan, shared the honor for their work in neural imaging. Read MoreNov 18, 2005
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Brain morphing technology simplifies the surgical treatment for movement disorders
Tens of thousands of people who experience movement disorders associated with Parkinson's and a variety of other neurological conditions stand to benefit from a new guidance system that uses computerized brain-mapping techniques to significantly improve an increasingly popular procedure called deep brain stimulation. Read MoreNov 18, 2005
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Cancuen Maya archaeology exhibit tours Europe
The monuments, sculptures, jades, and other treasures recovered by the Vanderbilt University and National Geographic Cancuen Archaeological Project are now on exhibit in a museum tour in Europe. Read MoreNov 17, 2005
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Royal massacre site discovered in ruins of ancient Maya city; Skeletons of slain men, women and children found with precious adornments
Thirty-one assassinated and dismembered Maya nobles have been found by a team of Guatemalan and American archaeologists in a sacred cistern at the entrance to the sprawling royal palace in the ruins of the ancient city of CancuÈn, capital of one of the richest kingdoms of the Classic Maya civilization (circa A.D. 300-900), located in the PetÈn rain forest of Guatemala. The National Geographic Society, Vanderbilt University and the Ministry of Culture of Guatemala announced the gruesome discovery, which is believed to record a critical moment at the beginning of the mysterious collapse of this great ancient civilization. Read MoreNov 17, 2005
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How you view your first time can have long-lasting effects; Vanderbilt University professor explores virginity loss in new book
Losing one's virginity is among life's most significant experiences, and a new study explores its complexities, from how men and women view the act ñ much less differently than people might think ñ to how the circumstances surrounding virginity loss affect people long term and what it means for young gays and lesbians. Read MoreNov 15, 2005
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Youngest Triple-Organ Recipient in Vanderbilt’s History Now Recovering
A 15-year-old Coffee County girl is recovering after becoming the first child to receive a simultaneous heart and double-lung transplant at the Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt on Nov. 8. Read MoreNov 14, 2005
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Vanderbilt Legends Club hires new management company, Redstone Golf Management awarded five-year contract
Redstone Golf Management has been awarded a five-year contract to manage the operation of Vanderbilt Legends Club, a Vanderbilt University official announced. Read MoreNov 10, 2005
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MEDIA ADVISORY – Versatile artist Laurie Anderson to appear at Vanderbilt
Performance artist Laurie Anderson will discuss her entire repertoire and current project, "The Waters Reglitterized," on Wednesday, Nov. 16, at Vanderbilt University as part of the Chancellor's Lecture Series. Anderson's work has covered the spectrum of media, from performance, film, music and writing to photography and sculpture. Read MoreNov 9, 2005
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Hussein’s lawyers’ threat to not recognize the Iraqi court is “legal maneuvering” says Vanderbilt International law expert
A Vanderbilt international law expert says the threat by attorneys for Saddam Hussein to end all contact with the Iraqi court that will try the former Iraqi president is nothing but "legal maneuvering." Read MoreNov 9, 2005
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Vanguard founder Bogle to speak at Vanderbilt
John C. Bogle, founder of The Vanguard Group and president of the Bogle Financial Markets Research Center, will speak at Vanderbilt University at noon on Tuesday, Nov. 15, as part of the Owen Graduate School of Management's Distinguished Speaker Series. The event, which will be held in Benton Chapel on the Vanderbilt campus, is free and open to the public. Read MoreNov 8, 2005
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Vanderbilt anthropologist’s work to symbolize Chile’s bicentennial
Vanderbilt anthropologist Tom Dillehay has spent the past 30 years uncovering the ancient history of Chile and other South American countries, in the process changing our understanding of how and when humans first came to the Americas. His contributions to Chilean culture were recognized this fall by Chile's President Ricardo Lagos with an announcement that his work will be used to symbolize Chile's Sello Bicentenario, or bicentennial, which the nation will celebrate in 2010. Read MoreNov 8, 2005
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Sasser, Carlson to discuss American diplomacy at Vanderbilt
Two former U.S. ambassadors and alumni of Vanderbilt University will discuss diplomacy during a forum that will be part of International Education Week at Vanderbilt. Read MoreNov 8, 2005
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Nina Totenberg lecture cancelled; National Public Radio’s award-winning legal correspondent was to talk about Supreme Court Nov. 10 at Vanderbilt University
Due to unforeseen circumstances, Nina Totenberg, National Public Radio's award-winning legal affairs correspondent, has cancelled her speaking engagement at Vanderbilt University on Thursday, Nov. 10. Read MoreNov 8, 2005
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MEDIA ADVISORY – Biomedical pioneer to speak on tissue engineering and drug-delivery innovations
Credited with launching the fields of sustained drug delivery and tissue engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Institute Professor Robert S. Langer will give the John R. and Donna S. Hall Engineering Lecture at Vanderbilt at 2 p.m. Friday, Nov. 11. Read MoreNov 7, 2005
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MEDIA ADVISORY – Vanderbilt Holocaust lecture series features friendship of an Auschwitz survivor and Nazi Youth Movement member
An Auschwitz concentration camp survivor and a member of the Nazi Youth Movement will discuss their "uncommon friendship" as part of Vanderbilt's Holocaust Lecture Series Thursday, Nov. 10 at 7 p.m. at the Law School. Read MoreNov 7, 2005
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Vanderbilt one of the best places to work in the country, according to life scientists
Vanderbilt University ranks fifth among the "Best Places to Work in Academia," according to a survey of researchers in the life sciences that will be released Nov. 7 in The Scientist magazine. Read MoreNov 7, 2005