Features
HOW TECH TICKS
Energizer: The power plant that powers Tech
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Home, Sweet Home: The changing shape of housing in America
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Maximizing Potential:
Microencapsulation company leverages the region's resources
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On a Mission: Veterans find a niche at Virginia Tech
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ALUMNUS PROFILE
Brad Casper: On Point with the NBA's Phoenix Suns
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LIVING PYLONS
Championing the Environment 24/7
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Energizer: The power plant that powers Tech
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Home, Sweet Home: The changing shape of housing in America
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Maximizing Potential: Microencapsulation company leverates region's resources
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On a Mission: Veterans find a niche at Virginia Tech
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Brad Casper: On Point with the NBA's Phoenix Suns
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PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
Charles W. Steger '69
In this day of more than 4,000 American colleges and universities of all stripes and seemingly universal access to a college education, it might be hard to sense the revolutionary nature of the land-grant college concept. Emerging from a 19th-century American culture dependent on agriculture and industry, land-grant schools were the first higher-education institutions focused on research and improving the economy.
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PROFESSOR PROFILE
Leo Piilonen
Instructional Velocity
When sharing the secrets of physics with students, Leo Piilonen often turns to tangible examples.
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Virginia Tech Treasurer, 1952-82
James F. Boone (business administration '37) was Virginia Tech's treasurer for 30 years. Approaching his 97th birthday in late July, Boone has plenty of stories to tell—and he did just that, speaking to his granddaughter, Tiffany Boone Pruden, a graphic designer at Virginia Tech.
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Aficionados of Mario Puzo's "The Godfather" now owe a debt to Virginia Tech Professor of English Ed Falco (above), who has written a prequel to Puzo's epic tale.
AUDIO: Falco interviewed by WVTF
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STILL LIFE
In late March, members of Virginia Tech's Contemporary Dance Ensemble performed in "Springing Into Motion," the group's spring showcase. The ensemble was founded in 1990 to promote dance and artistic expression.
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Historic Medallion Finds a New Home
Fourteen feet in diameter, 500 pounds, and 50 years old, a medallion featuring the university seal—one of two medallions that once adorned Shultz Dining Hall—was installed on the exterior southeast wall of the
Holtzman Alumni Center, facing the Duck Pond, in May. The two medallions had to be removed from the exterior of Shultz, which opened in 1962, to make way for the hall's renovation and incorporation into the new Center for the Arts, slated to open in 2013. Vice President for Alumni Relations Tom Tillar '69 secured the medallion to preserve on the alumni center.