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100 YEARS AGO (1903)
President Theodore
Roosevelt spoke to an enthusiastic overflow
audience at Assembly Hall (now Building
120) in May. He paid tribute to Stanford
veterans of the Spanish-American War, talked
of the need
for college men to volunteer for military
service, called on students to spend their
lives “in
hard labor for great and glorious and useful
purposes” and
praised the beauty of the campus and its
surroundings. Later, Roosevelt visited with
Jane Stanford and
planted a redwood tree on Serra Street between
Encina Hall and the Quad.
In June, Jane Stanford transferred her powers as surviving founder
to the University’s Board
of Trustees, granting them control of the institution’s
management and endowment. In August, she began
a journey through Australia, Asia and the Middle
East,
visiting alumni and collecting objects for
the Stanford museum.
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75 YEARS AGO (1928)
The Stanford Illustrated Review promoted Herbert
Hoover’s candidacy for the Republican nomination
for president. Scrapping its traditional neutral
stance, the independent alumni magazine devoted
the entire April issue to stories about Hoover, a
Stanford
trustee who graduated in the Class of 1895,
and his wife, Lou Henry Hoover, Class of 1898. In
addition
to numerous letters of support from alumni,
the issue included praise of Hoover by then-president
Ray Lyman
Wilbur and former president David Starr Jordan.
To
facilitate candidate Hoover’s trips to and
from his Stanford home, the campus airport and aviation
school at the corner of El Camino and Stanford Avenue
constructed a 4,000-foot-long runway that would accommodate larger planes, including
the 12-passenger trimotor Fokker model loaned to the Hoover campaign by Richfield
Oil Co.
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50 YEARS AGO (1953)
Botanist Douglas H. Campbell, the last of the 15-member “pioneer
faculty” from Stanford’s opening in October
1891, died at his campus home at 93. An expert
on mosses and ferns, he was an associate of
David Starr
Jordan at Indiana University and had followed
him west.
The Stanford lab housing the world’s
largest electron linear accelerator and most
powerful vacuum tubes was reorganized and renamed
the W.W.
Hansen Laboratories
of Physics. It memorialized physics professor William Webster Hansen, ’29,
who died at age 39 of a lung disease caused by inhaling the beryllium used in
his research.
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25 YEARS AGO (1978)
For the first time in intercollegiate tennis history,
the men’s and women’s national championships
were won by the same school: Stanford.
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News Service
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Math
professor Karel deLeeuw was murdered in his
office by graduate student Theodore Streleski,
who struck
him from behind with a small sledgehammer.
Streleski turned
himself in 12 hours later, claiming the mathematics faculty had unfairly delayed
his graduate study. At his trial, he said the murder was “logically and
morally correct.” DeLeeuw was a much-loved teacher who only briefly served
as Streleski’s adviser; other faculty members were on Streleski’s
confessed hit list. After a conviction for second-degree murder, based on diminished
mental capacity, Streleski served seven years in prison.
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| KAREN BARTHOLOMEW, ’71, writes
this column on behalf of the Stanford Historical
Society.
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