Vanderbilt Magazine
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Virtual Vanderbilt: Oral History Preserves Wartime Memories
http://vandygoestowar.library.vanderbilt.edu Memories of historic battles, hide-outs from the Nazis, and campus war relief projects are preserved through the Vandy Goes to War oral history project, which can be heard on the Jean and Alexander Heard Library’s website. The length of interviews varies from… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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School of Nursing Pioneers Use of Smart Phones
Vanderbilt University School of Nursing is pioneering the use of smart phones as teaching tools. The school is one of the first in the nation to use a new application that transforms wireless devices, such as phones, iPod Touch and laptops, into classroom response devices for enhanced learning. “Students in… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Undergrads Present Work at National Political Science Conference
Gallo Two Vanderbilt undergraduates had the rare opportunity in April to present their research findings about the influence of patronage on presidential appointments and government performance at the 2010 Midwest Political Science Association Conference. Nick Gallo, a political science major who graduated in May, and Gabe Horton, a rising senior… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Traumatic Injuries Bring Senior Boomers to the ER
Cross-country biker Bob Ostrowe has resumed cycling after a 2006 crash. “Hope I die before I get old,” rocker Pete Townsend wrote in “My Generation,” a song that became an anthem for baby boomers. Now that most boomers are getting old, emergency room staffers are faced with a new phenomenon: Senior… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Vanderbilt Plays Key Role in Health Privacy
The U.S. health-care community is steadily moving into the digital age, shifting medical records from paper to electronic information systems. This movement raises serious concerns about security and privacy of patients’ medical information. In an attempt to put these concerns to rest, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt Set for Growth
Just six years have passed since Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital opened its doors at Vanderbilt, but already the facility has outgrown its space. Hospital officials in June announced plans for a multiphase, multiyear expansion project with an estimated total cost of $250 million. The Phase 1 expansion, with a price tag… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Tommie Morton-Young Receives Peabody Award
Morton-Young Nashville activist, scholar and author Tommie Morton-Young received the Distinguished Alumna Award from Peabody College of education and human development during Commencement ceremonies May 14. Morton-Young earned her master of arts degree in library science in 1955, becoming the first African American to graduate from George Peabody College for Teachers,… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Researchers Report Significant Advance in Autism Genetics
An international consortium of autism researchers, including two from Vanderbilt, has reported a significant advance in unraveling the genetics of autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Reporting in the June 9 issue of the journal Nature, the researchers compared the DNA obtained from nearly 1,000 people with ASD to nearly 1,300 matched… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Insulin-Signaling Disruption May Trigger Psychiatric Disorders
Researching the link between diabetes and schizophrenia are (from left) Aurelio Galli, Sabrina Robertson, Kevin Niswender and Michael Siuta. Defects in insulin action that occur in diabetes and obesity could directly contribute to psychiatric disorders like schizophrenia. Vanderbilt researchers have discovered a molecular link between impaired insulin signaling in the brain… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Super-Heavy Element 117 Newest Addition to Periodic Chart
Discovery of a new super-heavy element sheds light on the basic organization of matter and strengthens the likelihood that still more massive elements may form an “island of stability”— a cluster of stable super-heavy elements that could form novel materials with exotic and as-yet-unimagined scientific and practical applications. Vanderbilt physicist Joe Hamilton… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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More Writing Can Boost Reading Skills
Reading and writing have become essential skills for almost every job, yet the majority of students do not read or write well enough to meet grade-level demands. A report co-authored by Vanderbilt researchers Steve Graham and Michael Hebert finds that while the two skills are closely connected, writing is… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Nanosponge Drug Delivery Targets Cancerous Tumors
Eva Harth’s method for targeted drug delivery relies on relatively simple chemistry, making commercial production more viable. Imagine treating cancerous tumors by filling tiny sponges with drugs, attaching special chemical “linkers” that bond to the surface of tumor cells, and then injecting these sponges into the body. That’s the idea behind a nanosponge… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Be Afraid, Be Very Afraid
Early press materials for the Oct. 31 concert by the Blair Percussion VORTEX are issued with a tongue-in-cheek warning: “Don’t ENTER THE VORTEX if you’re afraid of the dark.” Members of Blair Percussion VORTEX, shown during their spring concert, must think like actors and move like dancers while playing various percussion… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Recent Books
The Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-shek and the Struggle for Modern China (2009, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press) by Jay Taylor, BA’52 Chiang Kai-shek set the stage for Taiwan’s evolution of a Chinese model of democratic modernization. Drawing on Chinese sources including Chiang’s diaries, Taylor provides penetrating insight into the dynamics of… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Students Launch Literary Journal
A national literary journal, Nashville Review, was launched by graduate creative writing students at Vanderbilt in April. Nashville Review will be issued three times a year, in the spring, fall and summer. It will operate under a broad definition of literature, including fiction, poetry, comics, songs and films. Interviews with… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Drawing the Line
Feliks Topolski’s gestural drawing “Neville Chamberlain” was featured in two summer exhibits at the Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery. Drawing employs the most intimate of media: a pencil, a pen, a piece of chalk, a sheet of paper. These materials, so easily accessible and normally used for writing, become in the… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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News Acquisitions
The papers of Julian Goodman, an NBC broadcast pioneer who helped bring to life the network news programs we watch today, have been placed in Special Collections at the Jean and Alexander Heard Library. Goodman began at NBC as a correspondent in 1945 during the formative years of… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Truth Teller
Minton Sparks (aka Jill Webb-Hill) Bare-legged in a housedress covered with red and orange flowers, spoken-word artist Minton Sparks walks to the microphone in bone-colored loafers, a purse of the same color hanging from her arm. As a guitar strums in the background, she begins… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Seven New Members Added to Alumni Association Board
The Vanderbilt University Alumni Association announces seven new members on its board of directors: Baptist Erik Baptist, BA’01, of Arlington, Va., is an attorney-adviser for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s Office of Enforcement, Division of Investigations. He majored in American studies and sociology at Vanderbilt before earning… Read MoreAug 22, 2010
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Travel Program Expands for 2011
Explore the world your way with other Vanderbilt alumni on an unforgettable journey presented by the Vanderbilt Travel Program. Whether you’re a seasoned Vanderbilt alumni traveler or have never taken a Vanderbilt trip before, the expanded slate of trips for 2011 offers something for everyone. Seventeen exciting itineraries… Read MoreAug 22, 2010