| andrea
paz frost, ’98, can speak to at least one
Stanford myth from personal experience. She and her
husband, “Voice
of Stanford Stadium” Steve Frost, ’96, were married
in MemChu on a coveted June day, and they had to reserve
the date 14 months—not five years—in advance.
As
director of Visitor Information Services, Paz Frost
shepherds the 60-plus students who field questions from
the more than 100,000 annual campus visitors. Shortly
after taking the job in 2001, she started jotting down
recurring legends
she was hearing from the guides. Paz Frost consulted
with
University archivist Maggie Kimball, ’80, about the
facts and enshrined the worst offenders on a “Wall
of Myth” in her
office. STANFORD evaluates the credibility of several
on a scale of 1 (yeah, right) to 5 (could be):
MYTH: Memorial Church has a (3, 4, 5)-year waiting list
for people who want to get married there.
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: ••••
FACT: Desirable summer slots require reservations about
one year in advance; the wait for nonpeak times is shorter.
Memorial Church requires three months to coordinate a
ceremony; the Roman Catholic Church requires six months.
MYTH:
Leland and Jane Stanford originally wanted to donate
money to Harvard as a memorial to their son, but were
rebuffed because of their clothing and tattered appearance.
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: ••
FACT: “This story is
totally untrue,” trumpets
the Wall of Myth.
MYTH: The Marguerite shuttle is named
for a horse that belonged to the Stanfords (variously
described as Jane’s
favorite mare, the elder Leland’s first horse and
little Leland’s preferred pony).
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: ••••
FACT: The free shuttle service is named after a horse
that belonged to one of the livery services that ferried
people from Palo Alto to campus in the University’s
early years.
MYTH: Bill Gates donated the computer
science building so that the professor who failed him
at Harvard would
have to teach in a building bearing his name.
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: •
FACT:“There is no truth to this,” proclaims
the Wall, “and it should never be said.”
MYTH:
When returning to campus for their 50th reunion, the
members of each class can vote to open their time
capsule.
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: •••••
FACT: The only time capsule openings have been inadvertent
due to large construction projects such as the Wallenberg
Hall renovation. There are no plans to open the time
capsules in the Inner Quad.
MYTH: The tree athletic
mascot was randomly picked out of a hat.
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: •
FACT: The Tree is derived from
a real evergreen named El Palo Alto, “though how directly is debatable,” as
the Wall of Myth puts it. Part of El Palo Alto—which
Leland Stanford selected as the name of his farm—still
stands near the Palo Alto-Menlo Park border.
MYTH: Bay
Area earthquakes have never caused a Stanford fatality.
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: •••
FACT:“Unfortunately,” says the Wall, “this
is not true.” In 1906, student Junius Hanna and staff
member Otto Gerdes were killed, both by collapsing
chimneys.
MYTH: The Stanfords chose red tile roofs so that
Leland Jr. could spot the campus from heaven.
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: ••••
FACT:“Absolutely not true,” says the Wall. “Think
of all the other red-tile buildings in California! ”
MYTH:
Because of her commitment to a coeducational instutution,
Jane Stanford insisted that the facade
of Memorial Church
depict an equal number of men and women.
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: •••
FACT: Jane Stanford did insist that women be represented
in the church iconography. But more men than women
appear on the facade, which depicts Christ blessing
the people. “The
50/50 ratio,” the Wall explains, “is apparent
in the male/female pairs of figures in the East and
West transept (Old Testament) and in the stained glass
windows
located high in the nave (New Testament). ”
MYTH: The
black squirrels on campus are the result of: (a) a
science experiment gone wrong; (b) two European
squirrels
brought by Leland Jr.; (c) “I don’t know, but
aren’t they freaky?”
BELIEVABILITY FACTOR: ••
FACT: Black squirrels happen. “It’s simple
biology,” declares
the Wall.
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