Vanderbilt Magazine

  • Nine Added to Alumni Association Board

    Nine Added to Alumni Association Board

    The Vanderbilt Alumni Association Board of Directors announces nine new members, from a wide range of class years and professions. All are serving three-year terms, except where noted. Mark D. Arons, BA’80, of Fairfield, Conn., is a partner in the law firm of Millman Arons & Millman in Westport, where… Read More

    Sep 6, 2011

  • The ’Dores of Summer

    The ’Dores of Summer

    The body count was piling up fast. Two hit the ground first. Then three, four and five went down in quick succession. Onlookers soon lost count as the heap of squirming uniformed men just kept growing. Read More

    Sep 3, 2011

  • The President’s Corner

    The President’s Corner

    In my address to the Class of 2011 in May, welcoming them into the global family of Vanderbilt alumni, I asked them to consider what it means to be a Commodore as they prepare to engage the wider world of commerce, family and society. For me, being a Commodore begins… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Bacterial Hitchhikers: Who’s Really in the Driver’s Seat?

    Bacterial Hitchhikers: Who’s Really in the Driver’s Seat?

    Bacteria can influence the sexual behavior of their Nasonia hosts.Like all species of animals and plants, we humans are unwitting hosts to our own set of bacterial travelers. We carry thousands of different species of microbes, which scientists refer to as “the human microbiome.” In fact, only one among every… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Vanderbilt Partners with Chinese Government to Reduce HIV

    Vanderbilt Partners with Chinese Government to Reduce HIV

    Qian Vermund Vanderbilt researchers are partnering with the Chinese government and a large volunteer organization to test combination methods for reducing the spread of HIV—the AIDS virus—among gay men in China. Thirty years into the global HIV pandemic, it is apparent that no single strategy will stop the spread… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • What Fourth-Down Decisions Reveal About Deadlines and Risk

    What Fourth-Down Decisions Reveal About Deadlines and Risk

    Try asking any Monday morning quarterback about blown fourth-down play calls in the NFL and you are guaranteed passionate opinions. In most fourth-down plays, an NFL team will punt or try for a field goal. But occasionally, teams decide to do something that is viewed as risky: attempt a fourth-down… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • The Buzz on Brood XIX

    The Buzz on Brood XIX

    Millions of 13-year cicadas emerged in Nashville in May, emitting sound levels at 85 to 88 decibels and clogging up cooling systems all over campus.And on the subject of bugs—Nashville’s largest brood of cicadas emerged in May and hung around for five or six weeks, blanketing the campus like thousands… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • New Insect Repellent Thousands of Times Stronger Than DEET

    New Insect Repellent Thousands of Times Stronger Than DEET

    Targets for a new class of insect repellent could include backyard bugs and agricultural pests, says researcher Patrick Jones. Imagine an insect repellent that not only is thousands of times more effective than DEET—the active ingredient in most commercial mosquito repellents—but also works against all types of insects, including… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • History Test: Were You There? (Answer)

    History Test: Were You There? (Answer)

    The well-known bronze statue of university founder Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, sculpted by Giuseppe Moretti of New York, has had four homes. Planned for four years, the statue was completed and brought to Nashville in 1897 and was first displayed near the Parthenon replica in what is now Centennial Park during… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • History Test: Were You There?

    History Test: Were You There?

    Shipping magnate Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt was no stranger to travel, but this is an odd journey indeed. What’s being done with the Commodore statue in this 1986 photograph? Go here to find out if you’re right. Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Justin Miller: Where the Streets Have No Name

    Justin Miller: Where the Streets Have No Name

    JUSTIN MILLER, BS’09 NICK GORDON, BE’09 Justin Miller (left), Nick Gordon (right) and Michael—a CARE for AIDS client in Kamirithu, Kenya, whom fellow clients call “The Chairman”—help build a chicken coop for a church. A contractor by trade, Michael organized a group of clients to start a craft-making business and… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Andréa Bouchey Young: Odds Are, It’s a Sure Thing

    Andréa Bouchey Young: Odds Are, It’s a Sure Thing

    ANDREA BOUCHEY YOUNG, BA’00 “Horses and the jockeys who ride them are some of the most remarkable athletes I’ve encountered in my career,” says Andréa Bouchey Young, president and COO of Sam Houston Race Park in Houston. Young, a lifelong sports fan, has seen some great athletes. Before joining Sam… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Top Picks

    Top Picks

    Lazarus Alumnus Heads NBC Sports Group Mark Lazarus, BA’86, formerly president of NBC Sports Cable Group, was named the new chairman of NBC Sports Group in May. Lazarus replaces Dick Ebersol, one of the most powerful figures in television sports. Lazarus is a 19-year cable industry veteran. As former Turner… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Quote/Unquote – Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Wangari Maathai

    Quote/Unquote – Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Wangari Maathai

    “We live in a world where resources are finite. Unless all of us accept [responsibility], we shall not prevent conflict over land, minerals, water and forests.” — Nobel Peace Prize laureate Wangari Maathai, speaking at Senior Day on May 12… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Four New Alzheimer’s Genes Uncovered

    Four New Alzheimer’s Genes Uncovered

    Jonathan Haines, director of the Vanderbilt Center for Human Genetics Research Vanderbilt researchers, who helped organize a consortium including the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, and the Boston University School of Medicine, have identified four new genes linked to Alzheimer’s… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Powerful NMR Magnet a Boon to Research

    Powerful NMR Magnet a Boon to Research

    Onlookers cheered on the morning of Saturday, May 7, as a shattering champagne bottle christened the delivery of a $5 million, 7.5-ton magnet to Vanderbilt. The magnet is the main part of an ultra-high field, 900-megahertz nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometer that will help researchers solve the mysteries of cancer,… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Vanderbilt Earns ‘A’ on Environmental and Social Transparency

    Vanderbilt Earns ‘A’ on Environmental and Social Transparency

    Vanderbilt received an “A” rating and was among the top five universities recognized in a recently released analysis of environmental and social sustainability transparency. Using data collected during the spring of 2010 from university websites and other voluntary reporting initiatives, the Roberts Environmental Center (REC) at Claremont McKenna College analyzed… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Top Business Schools Launch Americas MBA Program

    Top Business Schools Launch Americas MBA Program

    Vanderbilt’s Owen Graduate School of Management is partnering with three other leading graduate business schools in North and South America to offer a master of business administration program for international executives starting this August. Called the Americas MBA for Executives, the two-year degree program provides students with the opportunity to… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • Year of Firsts for Med Graduates

    Year of Firsts for Med Graduates

    Drs. Charles Phillips and Lara Hershcovitch married in May. Members of Vanderbilt University School of Medicine’s Class of 2011 ushered in a new curriculum and worked to help improve it—all while being noted for their collegiality and for the unprecedented number of them who wound up as couples. Of… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011

  • College Halls Moves to Kissam

    College Halls Moves to Kissam

    Kissam College Halls Construction is set to begin on the next phase of the university’s residential college system, College Halls at Vanderbilt. The university will break ground in May 2012 on Kissam College Halls, two colleges that will each house about 330 upperclass students—a mixture of sophomores, juniors and… Read More

    Sep 2, 2011