Stanford University
Die Luft der Freiheit weht.
(The winds of freedom blow.)
| Established | 1891 |
|---|---|
| School type | Private |
| President | John L. Hennessy |
| Location | Stanford, California |
| Campus | Suburban, 8,180 acres (32 km²) |
| Enrollment | 13,800 |
- For other meanings of Stanford, see Stanford (disambiguation).
Stanford University is a privately funded university in Stanford, California. It is located approximately 35 miles southeast of San Francisco, in an unincorporated part of Santa Clara County adjacent to the city of Palo Alto.
Stanford University lies at the heart of the Silicon Valley, both literally and historically, and is one of the most prestigious universities in the world. Additionally, it is one of few schools in the U.S. that combine top-notch academics with winning athletic programs.
Situated on an expansive and picturesque campus in suburban California, Stanford University offers comprehensive undergraduate and graduate education programs as well as hosting a world-renowned medical center and a wide variety of research facilities and community outreach projects.
History
Stanford was founded by railroad magnate and California Governor Leland Stanford along with his wife, Jane Stanford, and is named in honor of their deceased teenage son, Leland Stanford, Jr. Thus, the school's official name is Leland Stanford Junior University, but is rarely referred to by its full title. Locals and university affiliates are known to refer to the school as The Farm, a nod to the institution's origins as a horse farm.
The University's founding grant was written on November 11, 1885, and accepted by the first Board of Trustees on November 14. The cornerstone was laid on May 14, 1887, and the University officially opened on October 1, 1891, to 559 students, with free tuition. The school was established as a coeducational institution although it maintained a cap on female enrollment for many years.
The official motto of Stanford University, selected by the Stanfords, is "Die Luft der Freiheit weht." When loosely translated from the Latin, by way of German, the quote from Ulrich von Hutten means "The wind of freedom blows." At the time of the school's establishment, German had recently replaced Latin as the dominant language of science and philosophy (a position it would hold until World War II).
Campus
Stanford University owns 8,180 acres (32 km2), making it the second-largest university complex in the world. The main campus is bounded by El Camino Real, Stanford Avenue, Junipero Serra Boulevard and Sand Hill Road, in the center of the Santa Clara Valley on the San Francisco Peninsula.
The Stanford Quad and its original Moorish-Romanesque architecture are part of the campus plan contributed by H. H. Richardson, his successors, Shepley, Rutan and Charles Allerton Coolidge, and legendary architect Frederick Law Olmsted. Much of the first construction was destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake but the University retains the Quad, the old Chemistry Building (which is currently unoccupied) and Encina Hall (reportedly the residence of John Steinbeck during his time at Stanford). After the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake inflicted further damage the University implemented a billion-dollar capital improvement plan to retrofit and renovate older buildings for new, up-to-date uses.
Many of the modern buildings were designed in the Spanish-colonial style common to California, with red tile roofs and white stucco exteriors, which gives the campus a uniform yet distinctly Californian look that many find aesthetically pleasingthe red tile roofs and bright blue skies common to the region are a famously complementary combination. The University has its own golf course and a seasonal lake (Lagunita), both home to the endangered California Tiger Salamander.
The off-campus Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve is a nature reserve owned by the university and used by wildlife biologists for research. Hopkins Marine Station, located in Pacific Grove, California, is a marine biology research center owned by the university since 1892.
Contemporary campus landmarks include the Stanford Quad and Memorial Church, the art museum and art gallery, the Stanford Mausoleum and the Angel of Grief, Hoover Tower, the Rodin sculpture garden, the Papua New Guinea sculpture garden, Green Library and the Dish. Frank Lloyd Wright's 1937 Hanna House, and the 1919 Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover House, are both National Historic Landmarks now on university grounds.
Institutions
Besides the university, the Stanford trustees oversee Stanford Research Park, the Stanford Shopping Center, the Stanford University Museum of Art, Stanford University Medical Center and many associated medical facilities (including the Lucile Packard Children's Hospital), as well as many acres of undeveloped foothills.
Other prominent Stanford-affiliated institutions include the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) and the Stanford Research Institute, a now-independent institution which originated at the University.
Stanford also houses the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, a major public policy think tank that attracts visiting scholars from around the world.
The Stanford University Libraries hold a collection of more than eight million volumes. The main library in the SU library system is Green Library. Meyer Library holds the East Asia collection and the student-accessible media resources. Other significant collections include the Lane Medical Library, Jackson Business Library, Falconer Biology Library, Cubberley Education Library, Branner Earth Sciences Library, Swain Chemistry and Chem-E Library, Jonsson Government Documents collection, Crown Law Library, the Stanford Auxiliary Library (SAL), the SLAC Library, the Hoover library, the Marine Biology Library at Hopkins Marine Station and the University's special collections.
Digital libraries and text services include HighWire Press, the Humanities Digital Information Services group and the Media Microtext Center. Several academic departments and some residences also have their own libraries.
Stanford University student traditions include Full Moon on the Quad, the Halloween party at the Stanford family mausoleum, Sunday Flicks, steam-tunnelling, Primal Scream and Viennese Ball.
Academics
The University enrolls approximately 6,500 undergraduates and 7,300 grad students. Stanford has a reputation among students as being a relaxed, fun-loving, warm-weather alternative to the Ivy League. The schools of the University include the School of Humanities and Sciences, School of Engineering, School of Earth Sciences, School of Education, Graduate School of Business, Stanford Law School and the Stanford University School of Medicine.
Admission is extremely competitive, and according to The Atlantic Monthly, it is the sixth-most selective college in the United States (after MIT, Princeton, Caltech, Yale and Harvard).
Stanford awards the following degrees: B.A., B.S., B.A.S., M.A., M.S., Ph.D., D.M.A., Ed.D., Ed.S., M.D., M.B.A., J.D., J.S.D., J.S.M., LL.M., M.A.T., M.F.A., M.L.S., M.L.A. and ENG.
The University has approximately 1,700 faculty members, including 17 Nobel laureates and 23 MacArthur fellows. The largest part of the faculty (40 percent) are affiliated with the medical school, while a third serve in the School of Humanities and Sciences.
Stanford built its international reputation as the pioneering Silicon Valley institution through top programs in engineering and the sciences, and birthed companies such Hewlett-Packard, Cisco Systems, Yahoo!, Google and Sun Microsystemsindeed, "Sun" originally stood for "Stanford University Network." The university also offers world-class programs in the humanities, particularly creative writing, history, government, economics and psychology.
University leadership
Stanford University is governed by a board of trustees, in conjuction with the university president and provosts and the deans of the various schools.
Presidents
- David Starr Jordan (1891-1913)
- John Casper Branner (1913-1915)
- Ray Lyman Wilbur (1916-1943)
- Donald Bertrand Tresidder (1943-1948)
- J. E. Wallace Sterling (1949-1968)
- Kenneth Sanborn Pitzer (1968-1970)
- Richard Wall Lyman (1970-1980)
- Donald Kennedy (1980-1992)
- Gerhard Casper (1992-2000)
- John L. Hennessy (2000-present)
Provosts
The position of Provost was created in 1952 during the Presidency of J. E. Wallace Sterling. Many people consider the Stanford Provost to be the "heir apparent" to the President because of the five men who succeeded Sterling as President, three were Provost of Stanford (Lyman, Kennedy, and Hennessy), one was Provost of the University of Chicago (Casper), while the other was President of Rice University (Pitzer). The Provost is the University's chief academic and budget officer. The Provost and the President together conduct Stanford's relationships with the neighboring community and other schools and organizations.
- Douglas M. Whitaker (1952-1955)
- Frederick E. Terman (1955-1965)
- Richard Wall Lyman (1967-1970)
- William F. Miller (1971-1978)
- Gerald J. Lieberman (1979-1979)
- Donald Kennedy (1979-1980)
- Albert M. Hastorf (1980-1984)
- James N. Rosse (1984-1992)
- Gerald J. Lieberman (1992-1993)
- Condoleezza Rice (1993-1999)
- John L. Hennessy (1999-2000)
- John W. Etchemendy (2000-present)
Notable Stanford alumni
Stanford's most famous alumni include U.S. President Herbert Hoover; Supreme Court Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, Anthony Kennedy, Stephen Breyer and William Rehnquist; first daughter Chelsea Clinton; actress Jennifer Connelly; entrepreneur Charles Schwab; Hewlett-Packard cofounders Bill Hewlett and David Packard, author John Steinbeck; and athletes Tiger Woods, John Elway and John McEnroe.
Academic Leaders
- Derek Bok (1951), President Emeritus Harvard University
- Vinton Cerf, Internet pioneer
- Vartan Gregorian (1958), President Emeritus Brown University; President Carnegie Corporation
- Victor Davis Hanson (PhD 1980), classicist, historian, National Review contributor
- Clark Kerr (MA), President Emeritus of the University of California
- Richard Levin (1968), President Yale University
- Ronald Rivest (PhD), cryptographer
- Peter Salovey, Dean Yale University
Actors, Film and Media
- David Brown, movie producer
- Jennifer Connelly, actress
- Ted Danson, actor (transferred to Carnegie-Mellon University)
- Ted Koppel (MA), journalist
- Daniel Pearl, journalist
- Fred Savage, actor
- Ben Savage, actor
- Sigourney Weaver, actress
- Reese Witherspoon, actress (dropped out)
- Richard Zanuck, movie producer
Astronauts
- Eileen Collins (MS)
- Mike Fincke (MS)
- William Fisher
- Owen Garriott (MS, PhD)
- Susan Helms (MS)
- Mae Jemison
- Tamara Jernigan (BS, MS)
- Gregory Linteris (MS)
- David Low (MS)
- Edward Lu (PhD)
- Bruce McCandless (MS)
- Barbara Rudding Morgan
- Ellen Ochoa (MS, PhD)
- Scott Parazynski (BS, MD)
- Sally Ride (BA, BS, MS, PhD)
- Stephen Robinson (MS, PhD)
- Steve Smith (BS, MS, MBA)
- Jeff Wisoff (MS, PhD)
Entrepreneurs and Business Leaders
- Robert M. Bass, (MBA 1974) President, Keystone, Inc.
- Sergey Brin (MS), Google cofounder
- Ray Dolby, audio engineer, founder of Dolby Labs
- David Filo (MS), Yahoo! cofounder
- Carly Fiorina (1976), CEO, Hewlett-Packard
- Bill Hewlett (1934), Hewlett-Packard cofounder
- Vinod Khosla (MBA), Sun Microsystems cofounder, Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers partner
- Philip H. Knight (MBA 1961), founder and CEO, Nike
- Robert Mondavi, vintner
- David Packard (1934), Hewlett-Packard cofounder
- Larry Page (MS), Google cofounder
- Charles R. Schwab (1959, MBA 1961), founder, chairman, and CEO of Charles Schwab, Inc.
- Peter Thiel, Paypal cofounder, Clarium Capital founder
- Jerry Yang, Yahoo! cofounder
Literature and Arts
- Dhan Gopal Mukerji, socio-cultural critic and author
- Stewart Brand, editor
- Robbie Conal, artist
- Harriet Doerr, author
- Dana Gioia, poet, head of NEA
- Robert Hass (MA, PhD), U.S. Poet Laureate
- Ken Kesey (MA), author
- Robert Motherwell, painter
- Robert Pinsky (PhD), U.S. Poet Laureate
- Vikram Seth, poet and author
- John Steinbeck, author (dropped out)
- Scott Turow (MA), author
Miscellaneous
- Lou Henry Hoover, First Lady
- Chelsea Clinton (2001), First Daughter
- Michael Murphy, author and co-founder of Esalen Institute
Political Leaders
- Ehud Barak (MA) former Prime Minister of Israel
- Max Baucus, U.S. Senator
- Jeff Bingaman (LLB), U.S. Senator
- Frank Church, late U.S. Senator
- Warren Christopher (LLB), former U.S. Secretary of State
- Kent Conrad, U.S. Senator
- Gray Davis, former Governor of California
- Dianne Feinstein, U.S. Senator
- Herbert Hoover, President of the United States
- William Perry, former U.S. Secretary of Defense
- Thomas M. Storke, U.S. Senator
- Alejandro Toledo (PhD), President of Peru
- James Woolsey, former CIA director
- Ron Wyden, U.S. Senator
Supreme Court Justices
- Stephen Breyer (1959), U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice (nominated by Bill Clinton)
- Sandra Day O'Connor (1950, LL.B. 1952), U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice (nominated by Ronald Reagan)
- Anthony Kennedy (1958), U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice (nominated by Ronald Reagan)
- William Rehnquist (1948, MA 1948, LL.B. 1952), U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice (nominated by Richard Nixon)
Notable Stanford faculty and affiliates
- Kenneth J. Arrow, Nobel Prize-winning economics professor
- Steven Chu, Nobel Prize-winning physics professor. Professor at Stanford from 1987 to 2004.
- Milton Friedman, Nobel Prize-winning economics professor, Hoover Institute
- Donald Knuth, creator of TeX and computer science pioneer and professor emeritus
- Robert Laughlin, Nobel Prize-winning physics professor, Professor at Stanford from 1989 to 2004.
- Lawrence Lessig, IP and constitutional law professor
- John McCarthy, responsible for the coining of the term Artificial Intelligence, and inventor of the Lisp programming language.
- Douglas Osheroff, Nobel Prize-winning physics professor
- Martin Perl, Nobel Prize winning physics professor
- Myron Scholes, Nobel Prize-winning economics professor
- Paul Berg, Nobel Prize-winning chemistry professor
Stanford athletics
Stanford participates in the NCAA's Division I-A and forms part of the Pac-10 athletic conference. It also has membership in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation for indoor track (men and women), water polo (men and women), women's gymnastics, women's lacrosse, men's gymnastics, and men's volleyball. Stanford's traditional sports rival is Cal. Stanford has won the NACDA Director's Cup (formerly known as the Sears Cup) every year for the past ten years (the award has been offered the past eleven years), honoring the first-ranked collegiate athletic program in the United States.
Stanford offers 34 varsity sports (18 female, 15 male, one coed), 19 club sports and 37 intramural sports—about 800 students participate in intercollegiate sports. The University offers about 300 athletic scholarships.
The winner of the annual "Big Game" between the Cal and Stanford football teams gains custody of the Axe. Stanford's football team played in the first Rose Bowl in 1902, losing 49-0 to the University of Michigan. Stanford has played in 12 Rose Bowls, most recently in 2000.
Formerly the Stanford Indians (from 1930 to 1972), that mascot was changed in the 1970s because it was politically incorrect. The Stanford sports teams are now officially referred to as the Stanford Cardinal (the color, not the bird), but the band's mascot, The Tree, is often mistaken as the school's mascot. Part of Leland Stanford Junior University Marching Band (LSJUMB), the tree symbol derives from the El Palo Alto redwood tree on the Stanford and City of Palo Alto seals.
Notable Stanford athletes
- Notah Begay, golf
- Bob Bryan, tennis (dropped out)
- Mike Bryan, tennis (dropped out)
- Josh Childress, basketball
- Amy Chow, gymnastics
- Jarron Collins, basketball
- Jason Collins, basketball
- John Elway, American football
- Janet Evans, swimming
- Eric Heiden, speed skating, cycling
- Casey Jacobsen, basketball
- Arthur Lee, basketball
- Mark Madsen, basketball
- Casey Martin, golf
- John McEnroe, tennis (dropped out)
- Patrick McEnroe, tennis
- Pablo Morales, swimming
- Mike Mussina, baseball
- Summer Sanders, swimming
- Kerri Strug, gymnastics
- Debi Thomas, figure skating
- Jenny Thompson, swimming
- Kerri Walsh, volleyball
- Tom Watson, golf
- Tiger Woods, golf (dropped out)
See also
External links
- Stanford University Official Website (http://www.stanford.edu/)
- Stanford Athletics Official Website (http://www.gostanford.com/)
- Stanford University Student Groups Website (http://osa.stanford.edu/)
- Stanford Management Company Official Website (http://www.stanfordmanage.org/)
- Wellspring of Innovation: Database of Stanford-affliated companies (http://www.stanford.edu/group/wellspring/)
- Associated Students of Stanford University Official Website (http://assu.stanford.edu/)
- Stanford Student Enterprises (http://sse.stanford.edu/)
- The Stanford Daily (http://daily.stanford.edu/)
- Searchable Campus Map (http://campus-map.stanford.edu/campus_map/index.jsp)
- Unofficial Guide to Stanford (http://unofficial.stanford.edu/)
- Photos of Stanford University (http://www.terragalleria.com/california/california.stanford.html)
- Rate Professors (http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/SelectTeacher.jsp?sid=953)
University seal and S-tree images © Stanford University
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