The Stanford Daily

Author: The Daily News Staff


Articles by this author:

BRIEF: Stanford will test emergency notification system

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| In order to be prepared for a campus-wide crisis, Stanford will test out its emergency mass notification system this Wednesday.

BRIEF: Stanford profs join Academy of Sciences

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

BRIEF: GSB plans executive training program in Indian cities

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Two GSB faculty members, Organizational Behavior and Human Resources Prof.

BRIEF: Medical school study reveals errors in blood pressure treatment

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The study, published in the May issue of “Hypertension,” analyzed data from a 2003-2004 study on medical care services provided at the offices of private physicians across the country.

BRIEF: Profs elected to science academy

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Five Stanford professors were elected to the National Academy of Sciences last week: Chemistry Prof.

BRIEF: Santa Clara air merits “F”

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Santa Clara County received less than stellar air-pollution ratings in a recently released American Lung Association report.

BRIEF: Coffee coming to Caltrain station

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Another branch of Caffe del Doge is set to open in the Palo Alto Caltrain station, according to the Palo Alto Daily News.

BRIEF: Walk the Farm 2008 assesses water usage

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| According to a press release from the Bill Lane Center for the Study of the North American West, much of the trail took walkers on private land, where leaseholders and ranchers met the hikers to share their experiences of ranching and farming.

BRIEF: Cal senior fatally stabbed, suspect taken into custody

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Wootton was stabbed during a confrontation outside of the sorority Chi Omega early Saturday morning, according to The Daily Californian.

BRIEF: Stanford postdoc wins sudoku championship

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Snyder, who is researching genetic sequencing at Stanford, took home the top prize after two straight days of competition in he which he faced off against opponents from more than 30 countries.

BRIEF: Research links erotic photos to risk-taking

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Heterosexual men exposed to erotic photos are more likely to take larger financial risks than they otherwise would, according to a recent study by Stanford researchers.

BRIEF: Stanford prof. nabs Nemmers

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford’s Paul Milgrom was announced as the winner of Northwestern University’s 2008 Nemmers Prize in economics.

BRIEF: Stanford researchers create stem cells

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| A team of Stanford researchers in the School of Medicine has successfully transformed normal skin cells into cancer stem cells.

BRIEF: Programming team wins silver medal

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The Stanford programming team came in seventh place overall in the contest, which included teams from peer institutions such as MIT as well as teams from Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe and the South Pacific.

BRIEF: Koret Pavilion opened to public

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Koret Pavilion, a new 9,500-square-feet facility of the Harold and Libby Ziff Center for Jewish Life, opened its doors on Apr.

BRIEF: Researchers to study hypersonic flight

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| A $17 million grant will fund researchers at Stanford, working with the U.S.

BRIEF: Prof. receives $10 million research grant

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Materials Science and Engineer Assistant Prof.

BRIEF: Former ME Prof. dies at 94

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Former Mechanical Engineering Prof.

BRIEF: Rice plans to return to Farm

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

BRIEF: Biology prof. awarded environmental achievement prize

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Biology Prof.

BRIEF: Business students earn $25,000 in telecom. competition

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Students from the Graduate School of Business took home the top prize in the third annual International Tech Strategy Business Case Competition hosted by Ericsson and Boston University.

BRIEF: Stanford Mock Trial heads to nationals

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Members of the Stanford Mock Trial will advance to the national championship after two of Stanford’s teams finished in first and second place at the Silver National Tournament in Tucson, Ariz.

BRIEF: Stanford, Cal to up stem cell research

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The Siebel Stem Cell Institute will bring together the two California universities’ top scientists from the fields of biology, chemistry, engineering and computer science.

BRIEF: Automobile break-ins on the rise

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| A series of vehicle break-ins has hit campus this past week.

BRIEF: Grad. programs outperform competition

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford clinched seven #1 slots and 13 top-three finishes in U.S.

BRIEF: Model U.N. takes top prize at Chicago conference

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The team received Best Large Delegation award.

BRIEF: History prof. dead at 73

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| History Professor Emeritus George M.

BRIEF: Dawkins talks science, religion

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Dawkins, chair for the Public Understanding of Science at the University of Oxford, discussed a variety of concerns surrounding evolution, religion and the public backlash against science.

BRIEF: GSB aids underserved women

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The Stanford Graduate School of Business (GSB) will join the investment firm Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

BRIEF: Biology prof. wins Sophie Prize for conservation efforts

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Biology Prof.

BRIEF: Football recruit killed in L.A. shooting

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Shaw, who was walking home around 8:30 p.m.

BRIEF: Stanford aids new university in Saudi Arabia

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), slated to open in September 2009, will be a graduate-level, international research university sponsored by Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah.

BRIEF: Author Gomes to serve as Baccalaureate speaker

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Peter J.

BRIEF: Hoover Institution home to Buckley archive

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The Hoover Institution will serve as the final resting place for the broadcast archive of deceased conservative commentator William F.

BRIEF: Popcorn cost lowers movie theater ticket prices, study finds

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The study found that by charging more for concessions such as popcorn, movie theaters were able to keep ticket prices lower.

BRIEF: DNA research maps human migrations

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford scientists have created the most extensive genetic map of the human species to date, providing support for two long-held hypotheses about human migration patterns.

BRIEF: Stem cells heal rats’ brains after stroke

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| These stem cells can form any cell type in the body, but coaxing them to form neural cells in particular has been tough.

BRIEF: SLAC to suspend tour program, shift focus

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) will temporarily suspend its tour program beginning Mar.

NEWS BRIEFS

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The core of the academic classes in the new department will come from the interdisciplinary and currently interdepartmental Earth Systems major.

BRIEF: Sun Exposure May Prevent Cancer

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Although long considered a main cause of skin cancer, sun exposure may actually prevent certain other forms of the disease. Researchers from Stanford, the Northern California Cancer Center and the University of Southern California reported that sun exposure may actually help reduce the risk of advanced breast cancer among women with light skin. Researchers said limited exposure to sunlight can stimulate a healthy immune response to help generate Vitamin D, which is believed to play a role in preventing colon, prostate and ovarian cancer. Vitamin D can also be found in dietary supplements and in foods like fortified milk, cereal and certain kinds of fish, including mackerel, salmon and tuna.

BRIEF: Men see greater “reward” than women in video games

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Perhaps unsurprisingly, video games activate the reward regions of the brain in men more than they do in women, according to researchers at the School of Medicine.

Brief: Moerner receives Wolf Prize in Chemistry

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Chemistry Prof.

Brief: Nobel Prize Winner dies at 82

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Nobel Laureate and former Stanford geneticist Joshua Lederberg died Feb.

News Brief: University to acquire Gould papers

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford will inherit the late paleontologist Stephen J.

News Briefs

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

News Brief: GSB places fourth in Financial Times annual ranking

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford’s Graduate School of Business (GSB) placed fourth in this year’s Financial Times ranking of the world’s top MBA programs, the newspaper announced yesterday.

News Briefs

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

Engineers win award for blood circulation device

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| A team of eight Stanford undergraduate and graduate students designed an electrical device to prevent blood clots during air travel, leading to a first place finish at the 31st annual Advancing Hispanic Excellence in Technology, Engineering, Math and Science (AHETEMS) Design Competition at the end of autumn quarter.

BRIEF: Joint-venture center to study oceans

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford University, the Monterey Bay Aquarium and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute announced last Wednesday plans to create the Center for Ocean Solutions, an organization which will aim to protect the Earth’s oceans.

News Brief: ASSU initiative places key texts on reserve

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| More than $3,000 worth of textbooks have been placed on two-hour reserve at Green Library this quarter as the result of an ASSU initiative funded by the Office of the Provost.

Alum donates $20 million to stem-cell research, Hospital

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Just as Stanford Hospital & Clinics begins its billion-dollar renovation, it has received a $20 million donation to pursue the future of medicine.

Carnegie director chosen from Farm

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Bryk will begin his tenure in August.

Quality change in campus tap water

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Tap water across campus may appear cloudy or milky-white starting this week due to system maintenance by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission (SFPUC), Stanford’s water supplier.

News Briefs

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Long-time Stanford professor and acclaimed biographer Diana Middlebrook died on Dec.

Historical society wins preservation award

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The Stanford Historical Society’s Historic Houses Committee received the 2007 Governor’s Historic Preservation Award earlier this month for its efforts to preserve old homes in the community.

Gumball Challenge supports microfinance

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| In the days leading up to Thanksgiving Break, young entrepreneurs gathered for the Gumball Challenge — an effort to raise money for microfinance that began this month at Stanford, Yale, UC-Berkeley, St.

Computer science prof. dies at 75

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Emeritus Computer Science Prof.

Brief: Endowment exec says goodbye

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

Missing student found

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Nicholas Dunn '09, the student who was reported missing Thursday after failing to arrive home in Hawaii, has been found, according to his roommate, who said Dunn showed up in his room Friday morning.

Bio-X supercomputer one of the fastest and greenest

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Leave it to Stanford to have not only one of the world’s top supercomputers but also one of greenest.

Bush awards Hoover fellow Hanson humanities medal

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| President George W. Bush awarded Hoover Institution Fellow Victor Davis Hanson with a National Humanities Medal yesterday at the White House.

Clinical trials find new volunteers through database

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Paid studies may be popular among students, but now everyone — not just members of the Stanford community — will have access to the various clinical trials being performed at the School of Medicine.

Foreign student enrollment increases nationwide

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Foreign students are feeling more and more at home at Stanford and other American universities, according to a new report by the U.S. Government.

Brief: Stanford ranking falls from 6th to 19th

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| In the Times of London’s Higher Education Supplement last week, Stanford fell to 19th place - from sixth place last year — in the paper’s ranking of the top world universities.

Brief: Stanford edges WSU, wins Fitness Challenge

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford came from behind to beat Washington State in the Pac-10 Fitness Challenge on Friday.

Brief: Palo Alto tops list of expensive football towns

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

Fundraising ranked seventh

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| In The Chronicle of Philanthropy’s annual “Philanthropy 400” report published last week, Stanford ranked seventh among the top 400 charities in 2006.

Robot car takes second in DARPA race

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

PS3’s give protein project world record

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford has set a new world record for video game console use — but not in the way you’d expect.

“Junior” drives into Challenge finals

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| “Junior” may be young, but he’s already driving the Stanford Racing Team toward victory.

Local teen kidnapped and assaulted

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| An unknown suspect attacked a 17-year-old woman between 3 p.m.

BREAKING NEWS: Earthquake rocks Stanford

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The University's emergency management contingencies were launched soon after and officials say the situation is under control.

Correction

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

All-female conference for self-described geeks

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Organizers of the “She’s Geeky” conference, which wrapped up yesterday in Mountain View, know firsthand what it’s like to be a woman in a male-dominated field.

Stanford Hospital & Clinics hires new chief financial officer

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Just as it prepares for a $1 billion construction project, Stanford Hospital & Clinics hired the man to watch those dollar signs pile up: Daniel Morissette will serve as the hospital’s new chief financial officer.

Scholar takes prize for making math cool

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Those who tune into CBS on Friday nights watch Charlie — the same guy who plays Bernard the elf from “The Santa Clause” — make math sexy.

Insomniac fish aid gene research

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Aquarium owners may want to take a second look — their fish might not be sleeping.

Conference honors Hoover fellow

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Economics Prof. John Taylor Ph.D. ‘73, a Hoover Institution senior fellow, will be honored this weekend at a Dallas conference entitled “John Taylor’s Contributions to Monetary Theory and Policy.”

Prof. recognized for community volunteer work

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| History Prof. Albert Camarillo will receive the Hispanic Foundation of Silicon Valley’s highest honor, the La Familia Award, to recognize his family’s volunteer efforts and their “exemplary commitment and volunteer service to the community,” according to the foundation’s Web site.

News Brief: Thief robs West Lag computer cluster

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Sometime in the past week, thieves nabbed two computers and a monitor from the West Lagunita computer cluster.

Endowment reports big gains

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

New engineering major offered

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

News Briefs

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Prof.

Hennessy to reach out to South American schools on trip

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| President John Hennessy will join U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings and a band of other education leaders on an expedition to Chile and Brazil from Aug. 18-24. The trip aims to build educational partnerships and support study abroad.

SLAC receives two-year contract renewal

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) granted Stanford a two-year extension of its $316 million contract to manage the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), just in time for the Sept. 30 deadline.

Female student robbed at knifepoint

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

Deans, ASSU meeting invites student input

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

UPenn law dean to head public service center

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

Cadet to White House

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Diana Clough ‘07 will travel to the White House today to take her Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) Oath of Office from President George W. Bush. Clough will take the oath with 50 other ROTC cadets who plan to enter the Army, Air Force or Navy.

Blackfest draws crowds

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Nearly 600 students flocked to Roble Field on Sunday to watch Hip Hop artist Lupe Fiasco perform at Blackfest 2007, an annual event that celebrates the culture of the African Diaspora.

Two receive Truman award

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Deborah Warshawsky ‘08 and Kate Hadley ‘08 were recently selected as Truman Scholars, joining 63 other juniors nationwide as recipients of the prestigious award, which honors students based on their “leadership potential, intellectual ability and likelihood of ‘making a difference,’” according to the scholarship’s Web site.

Beinecke Scholar chosen from Farm

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Molly Cunningham ‘08 was recently named one of 20 juniors nationwide to win a Beinecke Scholarship, a merit prize that honors students in the humanities, social sciences and arts.

Correction

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

STAND organizes demonstration to protest Darfur genocide

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Close to 100 Stanford students participated in the Global Day for Darfur rally in San Francisco yesterday.

Stanford on iTunes boasts snazzy updates and more content

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Students tuned in to “Stanford on iTunes U” may have noticed a recent increase in listening options. The site now includes lectures from six courses, in addition to almost 1,000 other recordings of talks around campus.

SLAC plans hunger strike

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Lisa Llanos ‘09, Sheva Diagne ‘08, Joseles De La Cruz ‘07 and physics graduate student Daniel Weissman will eat together in a public forum tonight at 7 p.m.

Arts of the Americas

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Workers assemble Arts of the Americas, a new exhibit opening at the Cantor Arts Center on April 18.

CSRE to get grant, 10 new faculty

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| The Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity (CCSRE) recently received a $2.5 million gift that will allow the 10-year-old program to grow in scope, while Provost John Etchemendy announced yesterday that his office would offer further support by funding 10 new faculty positions and six new graduate fellowships for the Center.

Distinguished math professor dies

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS|

Harvard Prof. new Bio-X head

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| President John Hennessy announced two weeks ago that Carla Shatz, chair of the Neurobiology Department at Harvard, will return to Stanford this summer after a 16 year absence as she takes over during the next phase of the Bio-X program.

Grad schools ranked highly

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Stanford is the only university in the country listed in the top 10 of all five major graduate school disciplines, according to the 2008 U.S. News & World Report rankings released Friday.

Admissions office reports records across the board

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| On Friday, the Office of Undergraduate Admission announced that a total of 2,465 applicants were accepted to the University this year. Admitted students have until May 1 to decide whether to accept Stanford’s offer.

Symposia bridges across fields

By The Daily News Staff
NEWS| Energy Crossroads 2007, a multi-day symposium that will address global energy and environmental concerns, will begin today with opening remarks by former CIA Director R. James Woolsey and will last until Saturday.