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SEPTEMBER / OCTOBER 2003

‘Some friends call me their “ombuddy,” and others call me “Bud.” But most people say, “Who are you? What is this?” ’

University ombudsperson Lowell Price, on what to call him

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Farm Report News
med students
Curriculum
Changing the Way Medical Students Learn
application for reinstatement
Policy
The New Rules on Stopping Out
mentor
grad students
Mentoring Women in the Sciences
Chris Field
ecology
What Happens to Plants When the Planet Heats Up?
Tompkins
research
Explaining Martha Stewart
bike
retail
Keeping Campus Rolling Along
Hanushek
education
What Class-Size Reduction Can’t Do
Mr. Squirrel
lore
Have You Heard the One About the Squirrels?
Moya
think tanks
The New Topics in Ethnic Studies
Price
what you don’t know about
The Ombudsperson
CAMPUS NOTEBOOK
Affirmative Action Decision; Soccer Fields for Palo Alto; Shopping Center Leased; Honoring Edward Teller
   
Photo credits
From top to bottom: Stanford University Medical Center; Linda Cicero (4); Visual Art Services; Diane Thornton; Linda Cicero; Linda Cicero. Right: Diane Thornton
Population of People’s Republic of China in 2002: 1,284,303,705

Chinese students enrolled at Stanford in 2002: 553

Percentage of those who were undergraduates: 2

Stanford alumni living in China or Hong Kong: 733

Stanford faculty born in China or Hong Kong: 47

Chinese restaurants in Palo Alto: 14

McDonald’s restaurants in Beijing: 56

Sources: The World Factbook 2002; Stanford Bechtel International Center; Stanford Office of Asian Relations; Palo Alto Weekly Visitor’s Guide to the Midpeninsula; McDonald’s
Diane Thornton illustration
Inquiring Minds
Medical Rounds
     
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