Vanderbilt Magazine
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Game Theory Can Help Predict Crime
About a decade ago, the hit movie Minority Report featured a police force that could predict crimes and swoop in before they happened. That kind of crime fighting may not be far off if a team headed by Eugene Vorobeychik, assistant professor of computer science and computer engineering, has its way. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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All In: As veterans seek to enter the business world, Vanderbilt emerges as a leading choice
As more soldiers leave the military and seek to enter the business world, Vanderbilt has emerged not only as a leading choice by military students but as one of the elite B-schools that has embraced those students most enthusiastically. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Growing to New Heights: Unprecedented Growth Leads to Latest Hospital Expansion
A $30 million fundraising campaign is underway at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. It will support a four-floor building expansion that will help advance the size and scope of the hospital’s existing comprehensive and specialized pediatric health care programs. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Obituary: Peyton S. Mathis Jr., BE’40, Home to Montgomery
Maj. Peyton S. Mathis Jr. played football for Vanderbilt and earned his bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering, volunteering as an aviation cadet in the U.S. Army Air Forces in 1940. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Jack Minardi’s Advanced 3-D Electronics Printer Grabs National Spotlight
Minardi, BE’12, is co-founder and software engineering lead for Voxel8, developer of a custom-electronics-producing 3-D printer that is a darling of tech media. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Adrian Reif, BS’07, Plays with Food
Reif is the founder of Yumbutter, which turns organic peanuts, almonds and sunflowers into products like spicy Thai peanut butter and almond butter with chia, hemp seeds and goji. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Dr. Rachel Idowu, MPH’14, Ebola Up Close
Dr. Rachel Idowu spent five weeks in Africa last summer assisting the Ebola outbreak response in Monrovia, Liberia’s capital and most populous city. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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From Access to Impact: Opportunity Vanderbilt Scholarship Recipients Aim High
A glimpse into the lives of four scholarship recipients shows not only how Opportunity Vanderbilt is empowering individuals, but how they are contributing to Vanderbilt, their communities and the world. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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What a Great University Does
In 2014, Lester “Ruff” Fant, BA’63, and his wife, Susan, made a significant commitment to the College of Arts and Science to establish, among other things, an endowed Lester G. “Ruff” Fant III Dean’s Fund and the James Thornton Fant Chair in Sustainability Studies. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Happy Feet: Dance Marathon Raises Big Money
Since Dance Marathon was established in 2003, the student-led organization has raised more than $1.3 million for Children’s Hospital. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Grassroots Effort Yields First AVBA Scholarship
Candace Grisham, Class of 2018, has been named the first recipient of the Association of Vanderbilt Black Alumni Scholarship. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Networking Night Draws Thousands
Nearly 1,500 alumni and friends gathered Nov. 6 in 36 Vanderbilt chapter cities, including London, Beijing and Shanghai. From the industry-coded name tags to the networking tips and attendee lists provided in advance, the entire focus was on facilitating connections. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Obituary: Richard F. Arenstorf, Celestial Mathematician
Richard F. Arenstorf, professor of mathematics, emeritus, died Sept. 18, 2014, at age 84. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Obituary: Penny Campbell, BS’77, MDiv’89, Community Activist
Penny Elizabeth Campbell, a pioneer in the fight for LGBT rights and a strong advocate for justice and equality, died Sept. 3, 2014, at her Nashville home. She was 61. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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The Vanderbilt Alumnus, Vol. 1, No. 1
The inaugural issue of The Vanderbilt Alumnus, published in October 1915, totaled 20 pages and featured four pages of class notes, a reprint of Chancellor James Kirkland’s address marking the beginning of the academic year, and a half-page section of topical quips called “Impertinent… Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Sensible Shoes
For nearly 30 years now, Vanderbilt has enriched my life immeasurably. I am retiring this spring—in the same year that Vanderbilt Magazine celebrates its first 100 years of publication. Read MoreMar 23, 2015
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Divinity Students Leave Large Footprint on Nashville’s Nonprofit Scene
For Vanderbilt Divinity School alumni who run Nashville nonprofits, the need to serve the city’s underserved remains as great and as varied as ever. Read MoreDec 23, 2014
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Shining Through: Amy Grant, ’82, finds inspiration and purpose in the power of community
Amy Grant’s music is like a prism: multifaceted and capable of dazzling surprises at every turn. And just as with a prism, there’s something transformative about the way her music reveals its source of illumination. Her light, so to speak, comes not only from an abiding faith in God but from a belief in humanity’s goodness as well. Read MoreDec 23, 2014
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An Interview with Provost Susan Wente
Last April, Susan Wente, a cell biologist who most recently served as associate vice chancellor for research and senior associate dean for biomedical sciences at Vanderbilt, was named university provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs. Read MoreDec 23, 2014
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Rosevelt Noble Documents the Black Experience at Vanderbilt
To date, Rosevelt Noble has completed roughly 150 various interviews relating to his project and has taken more than 175,000 photos documenting the experience of African Americans on campus. Read MoreDec 23, 2014