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TOP STORY: Fanyo’s book
features more than 200 Daily front pages.
Rod Searcey
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ken fanyo figures
he spent way too much time in the Stanford Daily office
as a student, poring over the old volumes
housed there. He even thought about compiling some
of the best front
pages into a book. “My parents thought it might be a
good idea to graduate first,” he says. So he did, but
he didn’t forget about the book. The Stanford
Daily: 100 Years of Headlines, edited by Fanyo, ’88,
was published this fall by Ladera Publishing Corporation.
Organized
by decade, the book reproduces more than 200 Daily front pages, beginning with the first issue in
September 1892 (when the newspaper was called the
Daily Palo Alto), and
ending in June 2003. In between is a compelling collection
of administrative actions, natural disasters, faculty
achievement and student mischief. On one end of the
spectrum, a gruesome
account of the shooting death of a student in 1909;
on the other, a story about 45 Branner freshmen running
naked across
the Golden Gate Bridge in 1974. Between 1968 and
1972, when opposition to the Vietnam War and military
recruitment on campus
peaked, “there were stories about violence and
protests just about every day,” says Fanyo, so
it’s
no coincidence that those two decades comprise more
than one-quarter
of the
book.
Philip Taubman, ’70, Daily editor in 1969
and now Washington bureau chief of the New York Times, wrote the introduction. “The
front pages are like a family album, filled with
images that are likely to transport readers back
to the day, even the hour,
to memorable campus moments,” he writes.
Fanyo, a business consultant, hopes proceeds from the
sale of the book will help offset a downturn in Daily
revenue caused by the weak economy.
| This article misspelled
the name of the book’s editor, Ken Fenyo. |
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