Vanderbilt Magazine
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Up to Speed
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, traffic crashes are the leading cause of death for American teens. Dr. Corey Slovis, professor and chair of emergency medicine, offers important driving rules for their safety. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Apartheid’s Lessons
Nontombi Naomi Tutu, a second-year master of divinity student and daughter of retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu, has been honored with the Otis Social Justice Award. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Bird’s-Eye View
Vanderbilt photographer Daniel Dubois took to the sky in a helicopter Aug. 29 to capture the season-opening football game against Ole Miss. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Budget Crunch
Vanderbilt University Medical Center is taking steps to reduce operating expenses by 8 percent—$250 million—to be achieved by the end of fiscal 2015. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Magnum Opus
Robert Vantrease, an artist in VUMC's Interactive, Web and Design office, witnessed a great deal of campus history during his 64-year tenure at the university. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Steampunk Sondheim
Vanderbilt Opera Theatre has put an offbeat spin on a fairy-tale-inspired musical by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine. The setting is decidedly steampunk: a melding of Victorian-era design, industrial gears and steam-powered machinery that is both retro and futuristic at the same time. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Digging to China
Vanderbilt will promote free online courses in China through a partnership between Coursera, a leading massive open online course (MOOC) platform, and NetEase, one of the largest Chinese Internet companies. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Smaller Footprint
Greenhouse gas emissions from campus have decreased by 19 percent from an all-time high reached in 2008—and by 14 percent between 2005 and 2012. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Bigger Picture
Mark Kendall’s debut documentary film is ostensibly about the journey made by a decommissioned American school bus to become a mode of transportation for Guatemalan workers. But the film is really about how something as seemingly insignificant as a bus can be part of something larger. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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All Roads Lead to Vanderbilt
I seldom venture anywhere without some Vanderbilt link popping up. For this issue of the magazine, it was a 50-cent copy of Deliverance at a Pasadena flea market and a conversation with a stranger about James Dickey. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Opportunity Rocks
Vanderbilt University is ranked No. 17 in U.S. News & World Report’s latest list of top national universities, while also receiving recognition for its value, learning communities and undergraduate research. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Move-In Madness
More than 1,300 first-year students moved their belongings into residence halls on The Martha Rivers Ingram Commons on Aug. 17. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Heavenly Daze
Bosley Jarrett’s shot of the night sky in Franz Josef, New Zealand, was one of 12 finalists in Vanderbilt’s 2013 Global Education Office photo contest. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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How to win an argument: Expert advice from debate director M.L. Sandoz
Debate Annoying Family Members like a Pro This Holiday Season This holiday season we all can count on a few things to mark the occasion. Families will gather, turkey will be served, and perhaps most dependable of all, arguments will erupt. At least one person always seems to be at… Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Busy Intersection
A new interdisciplinary program examines the presence of Latinos and Hispanics as an integral part of U.S. culture and history. Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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Gary Roberson, BA’69
Cave Man At age 11, Gary Roberson crawled into a cave on his very first Boy Scout camping trip and fell in love. To this day he’s still enamored, especially when he sets foot in undiscovered territory. “Caving is one of the few things in the world that allows you… Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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At Home on Water
The Complexity of Seattle’s Floating Homes Community Now studying to be an architect, Erin Feeney explored Seattle’s community of floating homes in a recent book and exhibit, both pictured below. (Greg Gilbert) Erin Feeney, BA’07, did not have architecture in mind as a career when she… Read MoreDec 2, 2013
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The Last Wild River
It was the 9-degree, molar-rattling middle of January in North Georgia, and I was on my way to visit the Chattooga River, 57 miles of fierce backcountry water and etched stone where the film of my father’s first novel, Deliverance, was shot in the summer of 1971. Read MoreDec 2, 2013