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News Service |
Sea studios foundation,
established by Mark Shelley, ’72,
Nancy Burnett, ’65, and Michael
DeLapa, ’78, MS ’79, MBA ’85,
has produced National Geographic’s Strange
Days on Planet Earth, a four-part documentary set
to air on PBS beginning April 20. The program, hosted
by actor Edward Norton, examines new evidence of rapid
global change. Several Stanford scientists were advisers
on the show.... The Austrian postal service is issuing
a stamp honoring Carl Djerassi, professor
emeritus of chemistry, in March. Djerassi was born in
Vienna in 1923 and fled with his family in 1938 during
the Nazi occupation. The stamp recently was included
in an exhibit held at the Jewish Museum in Vienna....
Brian Atwater, ’73, MS ’74,
a tsunami expert with the U.S. Geological Society, was
the subject of a report on National Public Radio’s
“Weekend Edition” in early January. Atwater’s
research has shown that a tsunami at least as large
as the recent one in the Indian Ocean hit what is now
the northwestern United States in 1700, destroying native
villages.... Chris Bischof, ’92,
MA ’93, founder of Eastside College Preparatory
School in East Palo Alto, won a Jefferson Award from
the American Institute for Public Service for his community
service work. Bischof established the school in 1996
with eight students. Today its student body has grown
to 197, with 20 full-time teachers. All of Eastside’s
graduates have gone on to college.... It’s not
every day that the practice of law includes questions
about who owns a Picasso, but Ellis Horvitz,
’49, JD ’51, and Mary-Christine
Sungaila, ’88, are involved in one such
case before the California Supreme Court. The dispute
centers on whether the painter’s Femme en Blanc
belongs to the grandson of the woman who owned it before
Nazis stole it, or to the couple who bought it in good
faith in 1975. |