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100 YEARS AGO (1904)
Norman Dole, Class of 1904, set the first world
record by a Stanford athlete when he cleared
the bar in pole vault at 12 feet, 8/25 inches using
a carved spruce pole during a Stanford-Cal track meet.
His daughter, Janet Dole Tuffli, ’38, later donated
his trophy to the University.
Nearly the entire student body gathered May 5 at
the home of Jane Stanford to welcome her home
from a year in Asia, Australia and the Middle East.
They listened to her describe visits with Stanford alumni
in Japan and India, and ate refreshments served on long
tables under the trees.
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75 YEARS AGO (1929)
In May, the campus celebrated the 50th anniversary
of the development of “moving
pictures” at the old stock farm. In the
1870s, Leland Stanford had hired photographer Eadweard
Muybridge to test his theory that at one point in its
fastest gait, a trotter has all four feet off the ground.
Muybridge used 24 cameras with electrically controlled
shutters tripped by the horse, and devised a machine
to project the images in quick succession. Identical
plaques commemorating the achievement were installed
in Memorial Court and at the horse stables, where two
old employees of the farm took part in the ceremony.
Charley Worcester, Gov. Stanford’s coachman, was
present. Other events included a screening of San Francisco
Before the Fire and other early films; a campus assembly
with Louis B. Mayer of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as one of
three speakers; and an exhibition at the Art Gallery
with one of the original cameras.
The Carnegie Institution’s Division of Plant
Biology was dedicated in August on five acres
Stanford leased to Carnegie for its $75,000 laboratory
and glasshouse.
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50 YEARS AGO (1954)
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Results of the student body’s spring
elections: Peter Bing was elected president
and Dianne Goldman was elected vice president. Goldman,
’55, in photo at right, is U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein
of California. Bing, ’55, serves on the Stanford
Board of Trustees.
Stanford Museum, closed since 1945,
reopened after an extensive refurbishing of the building
and reorganization of the collections. Classics professor
Hazel D. Hansen, ’20, MA ’21, PhD ’26,
and her students restored many Greek ceramics from broken
shards tossed in boxes after the 1906 earthquake. Museum
officials put on permanent display the gold spike that
marked completion in 1869 of the first transcontinental
railroad. An armed guard delivered the ceremonial spike
from a Wells Fargo storage vault.
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25 YEARS AGO (1979)
History professor Don E. Fehrenbacher won the
Pulitzer Prize in history for The Dred Scott
Case: Its Significance in American Law and Politics.
Fehrenbacher told interviewers that he intended to write
a short book on the infamous 1857 U.S. Supreme Court
decision, “but it grew out of all proportion:
a history of the Dred Scott case became the basis for
writing a history of the slavery controversy.”
The Oxford University Press book ended up 741 pages.
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| KAREN
BARTHOLOMEW, ’71,
writes this column on behalf of the Stanford Historical
Society (histsoc.stanford.edu).
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