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100 YEARS AGO (1903)
William F. Durand, a designer of marine screw propellers
from Cornell, joined the faculty as an engineering
professor. During World War I, he shifted to airplane
propellers, soon becoming the nation’s leading
authority. In 1941, at age 82, he was called to Washington
to help develop jet propulsion for aircraft. Durand
Building commemorates him.
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75 YEARS AGO (1928)
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Stanford Archives
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Stanford scored a touchdown in the last seconds
of the Big Game to tie Cal 13-13. A week later,
Stanford defeated heavily favored Army, 26-0,
at Yankee Stadium in a game considered one
of the best
exhibitions of coaching by Glenn “Pop” Warner
(left).
Stanford alumnus, trustee and resident Herbert Hoover,
Class of 1895, was elected 31st U.S. president. Late
in the evening of November 6, as Hoover’s
landslide over Alfred E. Smith became apparent, 2,000
students
accompanied “March King” John Philip
Sousa and his 70-piece band to serenade the
president-elect at his home on San Juan Hill. Sousa
played “El
Capitan,” “Stars and Stripes Forever” and
the “Star-Spangled Banner” (designated
as national anthem during Hoover’s term). Hoover’s
eyes filled with tears as students then sang
the Stanford Hymn. A nationwide radio hookup transmitted
the celebration. The day before, a crowd estimated
at 10,000 cheered Hoover as he arrived at the
Palo
Alto train station and rode up Palm Drive to
his home.
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50 YEARS AGO (1953)
Trustees approved a recommendation from President
J.E. Wallace Sterling to relocate the School of
Medicine and its hospital from San Francisco to the Stanford
campus. Sterling said the “key relationship
of medical education and science to other scientific
fields can best be strengthened and advanced by bringing
the School of Medicine into the closest possible
physical and intellectual relationship to the whole
University.”
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25 YEARS AGO (1978)
Reflecting a thaw in Chinese-American relations, six scientists from the People’s Republic of
China arrived in October for a two-year stay
and were followed by a larger group in January.
Several Stanford scholars went to China a year later
as part
of an exchange between Stanford and the Chinese
Academy of Sciences. Although other American
universities
had hosted individual scholars, Stanford’s
was the first reciprocal arrangement.
A water
main broke near Meyer Library, flooding the
basement for 24 minutes before it was shut
off at 3:15 on a Saturday morning. Within hours,
librarian David Weber put out an appeal for
volunteers to help
pack and move 45,000 wet books to giant freezers
until they could be vacuum dried, then restored.
Bekins Moving Co. sent more than 2,400 packing
boxes, Peninsula Creamery provided a truck,
and Modern Ice
Co. of San Jose donated cold storage. Damage
was estimated at $1 million.
On New Year’s
Eve, football coach Bill Walsh led Stanford
from a 0-22 deficit early in the third
quarter to defeat Georgia 25-22 in the Bluebonnet
Bowl in Houston. Quarterback Steve Dils, ’79,
completed 17 of 28 passes for 210 yards and
three touchdowns, and was voted offensive MVP.
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| KAREN
BARTHOLOMEW, ’71, writes this column on behalf
of the Stanford Historical Society.
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