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CENTURY AT STANFORD
100 YEARS AGO (1901)
Jane Stanford returned in October from a 15-month international
tour that included visits to England, France, Switzerland, Italy, Egypt
and Palestine.
The Memorial Church organ, built for $15,500 by the Murray
M. Harris Organ Co. of Los Angeles, was installed in the choir loft of
the unfinished church. It featured 46 stops and 2,905 pipes, ranging in
length from 1/2 inch to 16 feet.
75 YEARS AGO (1926)
Three hundred guests watched a demonstration of six 2.1-million-volt flashovers
between electrodes 20 feet apart at the September dedication of the Harris
J. Ryan High-Voltage Laboratory. The University had set aside 200
acres for an experimental high-voltage transmission line, as well as a
building resembling a dirigible hangar. Using these facilities, Professor
Ryan and his associates solved many problems of power transmission in
the West, including how to deliver electricity from Hoover Dam to Los
Angeles.
The University used a major grant from the Guggenheim Fund to establish
the Daniel Guggenheim Experimental Laboratory of Aerodynamic and Aeronautic
Engineering. Since 1916, professors William F. Durand and Everett
P. Lesley had conducted airplane propeller research on campus. The grant
enabled them to test propellers and airplane parts in a new structure
behind the Quad.
50 YEARS AGO (1951)
University officials in October took the first step in opening portions
of Stanford land to industrial users when they signed a lease with Varian
Associates for a 10-acre tract along El Camino Real, adjacent to Barron
Park. The San Carlos-based electronics companyformed by Russell
H. Varian, 25, MA 27, and his brother, Sigurd, as a spin-off
of research they conducted in the Stanford physics departmentbuilt
a $1 million research and development laboratory during the next year.
Varian Associates was the first tenant in what became the Stanford
Industrial Park (renamed Stanford Research Park in 1974).
St. Anns Chapel, constructed in Palo Alto for the Newman
Clubthe Catholic student organizationwas dedicated in October.
War correspondent and playwright Clare Booth Luce donated the chapel as
a memorial to her daughter, Ann Clare Brokaw, a Stanford student who was
killed in a Palo Alto automobile accident in 1944.
Sequoia Halls top two floors were cut down and the building
remodeled into a one-story headquarters for the statistics department.
Constructed as the original Roble dormitory for women in 1891, the building
had been turned over to men and rechristened Sequoia Hall when the new
Roble opened in 1918.
25 YEARS AGO (1976)
Professor Burton Richter was named co-winner of the Nobel Prize
in physics for directing the team of Stanford and Lawrence Berkeley Lab
scientists that discovered the elementary psi particle two
years earlier.
Stanford University Press closed its printing division, which dated
to the Universitys early days. Publication functions remained intact.
Karen Bartholomew,'71, writes this column on behalf of the Stanford
Historical Society.
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