Sustainability scientist Alaina Wood (’17) is using her growing social media platform to let others know that it’s not all doom and gloom when it comes to our climate and it’s never too late to make a difference for the world around us.
College of Arts and Sciences
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AlumniArtsMagazineResearch and DiscoverySpring 2021Students
The Volunteer Spirit at Home in Appalachia
Volunteers bear the torch that lights the way for others. This passion to lead and serve is evident in the ways Vols roll up their sleeves and work to make our Appalachian home the best it can be.
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With her Met Opera National Council Auditions victory, soprano Alexandria Shiner (’16) hit a high note.
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With more than 520,000 acres in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, UT professors and students have a one-of-a-kind classroom right in their own backyard.
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Underwater archaeologist Bert Ho (’01) gets up close and personal with shipwrecks as part of his job with the National Parks Service’s Submerged Resources Center, which takes him to lakes, rivers, oceans, and beaches in the United States and around the world.
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Where does creativity end and copyright begin? Two School of Music professors join two College of Law professors to discuss the “Blurred Lines” trial and the implications it may hold for the entertainment industry.
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A woman with a dubious reputation. Presidential cabinet members at each other’s throats. A president with a conspiracy theory. It’s not a fictional story of political intrigue. It’s real-life drama—detailed…
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For Jennifer Stanley (’95), receiving a Rhodes Scholarship means having an obligation to give of her “time, talent, and treasure.”