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Glenn Matsumura
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even the most monumental
buildings and public structures are nothing more than
wood, brick, steel, glass—and
at Stanford, of course, sandstone and tile. Yet, over
time, some structures
gain a presence that transcends the materials with
which they were built. The Roman Forum, the pyramids
at Teotihuacan
and the Great Wall came to represent cultures,
significant human achievements and great social movements.
They are
imbued not only with history but also with the
ideas that surrounded their creation and the spirit of
the
people who were connected to them.
At Stanford,
buildings speak powerfully to our sense of place
and our history. The Quad memorializes
the vision of Jane and Leland Stanford. But Stanford’s
buildings also reflect the University’s future.
This fall, two dedications reminded us of how our
vision of the future is inextricably tied to our
past.
In
mid-October, we formally dedicated the William
R. Hewlett and David Packard Science and Engineering
Quadrangle. Bill and Dave, whose combined $77
million gift made the buildings possible, represented
the
best of what our alumni bring to the world. Their
inventive, entrepreneurial nature and their belief
in the
importance
of individuals made the HP Way synonymous with
the visionary leadership and technological innovations
of Silicon Valley.
Dave Packard and Bill Hewlett believed
in investing
in the next generation and in the importance of
education. The Science and Engineering Quad is
more than a memorial
to them—it’s a reminder that two of Stanford’s
closest friends believed in the future and the
University’s
role in making that future a good one.
Just across
the road stands another new building. A few days
following the dedication of the Hewlett
and Packard quadrangle, we dedicated the James
H. Clark Center.
The new building is named for another Silicon Valley
pioneer, philanthropist, former Stanford professor—and
my officemate in the early 1980s. The Clark Center
is a stunningly beautiful building, designed to
inspire the imagination while fostering collaboration
among
faculty
from more than 20 departments in four different
schools.
The Clark Center heralds a new era for Stanford
while expanding our commitment to research that
will enhance people’s lives. This new era in scholarship
is marked by the increasing necessity of crossing
disciplinary boundaries to solve the great scientific
challenges of
the 21st century. The center will be home base
for Bio-X, Stanford’s multidisciplinary initiative
to bring biology, engineering, medicine and the
basic sciences
to bear on some of humanity’s most daunting health
problems.
Such problems cannot be addressed with
the knowledge and expertise of a single discipline.
Fundamental research in the biosciences often calls for
collaboration
with
physicists and chemists. Translational biomedical
research requires that basic scientists, engineers
and clinicians
work together to create new treatments for disease.
Bio-X
and the new department of bioengineering—the
first department at Stanford to be jointly housed
in two schools—represent our commitment to the
future of collaborative, multidisciplinary teaching
and research.
These efforts also embody the willingness to be
pioneers in new areas of scholarship and new ways
of undertaking
our research and teaching mission.
To facilitate
the crossing of boundaries and establishment
of research collaborations, we created the Bio-X
Interdisciplinary Initiatives Program (IIP),
which provides seed funding;
it has already underwritten 40 projects. Some
may fail, but one measure of early success is
the awarding of outside
funding, and two of our seed projects have
already achieved this recognition. The National
Institutes of Health awarded
Stanford a five-year grant to extend a pilot
course
on cross-disciplinary training for diabetes
research.
That
course, funded by IIP, educated graduate students
in the biological sciences, bioinformatics
and bioengineering about the disease so that they
can apply their
specialized
skills to clinical problems. Another seed grant
from IIP funded development of proteomics technology
focused
on two autoimmune diseases. Now the NIH is
providing additional support for the multidisciplinary
work being done in the Stanford Proteomics Center
with a $14.6 million
contract.
I hope the next time you are at the Farm
you will visit the Hewlett and Packard quadrangle
and the
Clark Center. I am certain you will appreciate
their architectural
beauty and technological prowess. But I also hope
that you will see in them the expression of something
even
more important—Stanford’s commitment to be
a pioneer in the creation of new fields and the
generation of knowledge. 
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