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MAY 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE Of Viruses And Vectors. In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we can prepare. features. TAKE A ZOOM FATIGUE SURVEY; PANDEMIC ALCOHOL AND DRUG USE Up close and personal. Science has confirmed what you already know—being on Zoom all day is existentially exhausting. Communication professor Jeremy Bailenson, director of the Stanford Virtual Human Interaction Lab, looked at the psychological effects of spending hours at a time on Zoom and other video platforms and identified four causes of Zoom fatigue along with some very easyfixes.
HOW TO GET RID OF VHS TAPES No one seems to know exactly how many VHS tapes were made during the medium’s heyday, but in 2003 the Danish environmental protection agency estimated annual sales of about 12 million tapes per year, in that tiny country alone. Extrapolated around the world, that’s a whole lot of obsolete plastic, indeed. If only it were that simple. TRUTH AND LIES AT HARVARD The story has it that sometime in the 1880s a man and woman show up unannounced to meet with the president of Harvard. They talk to him about building a memorial for their son, who “accidentally killed” himself after his freshman year at Harvard. Eyeing the woman’s “faded gingham dress” and the man’s “homespun threadbare suit WHO KILLED JANE STANFORD? H aunting the hallowed halls of Stanford for almost a century is a hushed-up whodunit that has reared its head only from time to time, and only in whispers. It concerns the mysterious death of the University’s co-founder, Jane Stanford. Though most history books attribute Mrs. Stanford’s death at 76 to heart failure, a closer look at the documents and drama surrounding her demise reveals a EDUCATION AFTER APARTHEID Opens in new window. Ihron Rensburg spent much of the late 1980s detained without trial in South African prisons for his antiapartheid work with the United Democratic Front (UDF). “Solitary confinement for nine months at a stretch poses an enormous challenge to one’s intellectual, physical and spiritual faculties,” says Rensburg, MA’94
WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PARTY OF LINCOLN? For exactly 100 years — from Lincoln’s election in 1860 to JFK’s victory in 1960 — the regional structure of American politics was remarkably stable. The white South’s abiding hatred of the party of Lincoln made the states of the former Confederacy the electoral foundation of the Democratic Party. So important was the region toboth
WHAT TO DO WITH STYROFOAM: ESSENTIAL ANSWER Instead of a vase, you get 20 pieces of porcelain. Enter d-limonene, a natural oil from the rinds of citrus fruits that is often used for cleaning. Add this "orange oil" to the EPS and you'll get a sticky substance that can help you reassemble your vase. Though it may take a little time, research and possibly money on your end, there is no need WHERE DOES FAKE NEWS COME FROM? Starbird’s studies reveal an online network that nurtures fake news: an array of websites that repurpose the same content and amplify one another’s messaging, creating a misimpression among readers that multiple sources are reporting a story. It is, essentially, a hothousefor false claims.
STANFORD MAGAZINELATESTFEATURESESSAYSADVICECONTACTCOLLECTIONS STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
MAY 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE Of Viruses And Vectors. In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we can prepare. features. TAKE A ZOOM FATIGUE SURVEY; PANDEMIC ALCOHOL AND DRUG USE Up close and personal. Science has confirmed what you already know—being on Zoom all day is existentially exhausting. Communication professor Jeremy Bailenson, director of the Stanford Virtual Human Interaction Lab, looked at the psychological effects of spending hours at a time on Zoom and other video platforms and identified four causes of Zoom fatigue along with some very easyfixes.
HOW TO GET RID OF VHS TAPES No one seems to know exactly how many VHS tapes were made during the medium’s heyday, but in 2003 the Danish environmental protection agency estimated annual sales of about 12 million tapes per year, in that tiny country alone. Extrapolated around the world, that’s a whole lot of obsolete plastic, indeed. If only it were that simple. TRUTH AND LIES AT HARVARD The story has it that sometime in the 1880s a man and woman show up unannounced to meet with the president of Harvard. They talk to him about building a memorial for their son, who “accidentally killed” himself after his freshman year at Harvard. Eyeing the woman’s “faded gingham dress” and the man’s “homespun threadbare suit WHO KILLED JANE STANFORD? H aunting the hallowed halls of Stanford for almost a century is a hushed-up whodunit that has reared its head only from time to time, and only in whispers. It concerns the mysterious death of the University’s co-founder, Jane Stanford. Though most history books attribute Mrs. Stanford’s death at 76 to heart failure, a closer look at the documents and drama surrounding her demise reveals a EDUCATION AFTER APARTHEID Opens in new window. Ihron Rensburg spent much of the late 1980s detained without trial in South African prisons for his antiapartheid work with the United Democratic Front (UDF). “Solitary confinement for nine months at a stretch poses an enormous challenge to one’s intellectual, physical and spiritual faculties,” says Rensburg, MA’94
WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PARTY OF LINCOLN? For exactly 100 years — from Lincoln’s election in 1860 to JFK’s victory in 1960 — the regional structure of American politics was remarkably stable. The white South’s abiding hatred of the party of Lincoln made the states of the former Confederacy the electoral foundation of the Democratic Party. So important was the region toboth
WHAT TO DO WITH STYROFOAM: ESSENTIAL ANSWER Instead of a vase, you get 20 pieces of porcelain. Enter d-limonene, a natural oil from the rinds of citrus fruits that is often used for cleaning. Add this "orange oil" to the EPS and you'll get a sticky substance that can help you reassemble your vase. Though it may take a little time, research and possibly money on your end, there is no need WHERE DOES FAKE NEWS COME FROM? Starbird’s studies reveal an online network that nurtures fake news: an array of websites that repurpose the same content and amplify one another’s messaging, creating a misimpression among readers that multiple sources are reporting a story. It is, essentially, a hothousefor false claims.
MARCH 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE The pandemic crumbled cornerstones of U.S. education. The question now is what will emerge from the rubble. TRUTH AND LIES AT HARVARD The story has it that sometime in the 1880s a man and woman show up unannounced to meet with the president of Harvard. They talk to him about building a memorial for their son, who “accidentally killed” himself after his freshman year at Harvard. Eyeing the woman’s “faded gingham dress” and the man’s “homespun threadbare suit SAYS WHO | STANFORD MAGAZINE Free Thinkers. Academic freedom is the principle that protects faculty members’ right to study what they want and say what they think, to voice unpopular views and question conventional wisdom. “It is vital for both our research and our teaching missions,” says Stanford president Marc Tessier-Lavigne. WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PARTY OF LINCOLN? For exactly 100 years — from Lincoln’s election in 1860 to JFK’s victory in 1960 — the regional structure of American politics was remarkably stable. The white South’s abiding hatred of the party of Lincoln made the states of the former Confederacy the electoral foundation of the Democratic Party. So important was the region toboth
WHY HIGHER EDUCATION MATTERS The stakes are high. Recently passed federal tax-reform legislation may reduce charitable contributions and stress some state education budgets. A new excise tax on endowments affects about 35 colleges and universities, including ours. Moody’s revised the 2018 PAPER, PLASTIC OR REUSABLE? The Nitty Gritty. Let’s dish the dirt on each type of bag individually — then we can compare. Paper. According to the previously cited U.K. study, it takes three reuses of a paper bag to neutralize its environmental impact, relative to plastic.A bag’s impact is more than just its associated carbon emissions: Manufacturing a paper bag requires about four times as much water as aplastic bag.
11 TIPS FOR MORE EFFECTIVE, LESS ANNOYING REMOTE MEETINGS Talk less. Online meetings are both more taxing and more boring than face-to-face meetings, says organizational behavior professor Bob Sutton. Keep meetings shorter than usual, if possible, he says, and try not to talk too long. “In small meetings, if you go more than five minutes without giving others the chance to speak, ask questions,add
MARK TWAIN'S INCONVENIENT TRUTHS The author of Tom Sawyer is avuncular, unthreatening, genial—cuddly almost. The Mark Twain that comes later has sharper edges, and may not be cuddly at all. What does it mean to embrace the tame Twain—the author of unthreatening books for children, beloved stories, and clever aphorisms—but to largely ignore the author of the hard-hitting essays and searing commentaries who grew THE DIRT ON ORGANICS: NITTY-GRITTY The synthetic pesticides and fertilizer used in conventional agriculture mean higher yields and crops that survive through difficult growing conditions. Similarly, many genetically modified organisms (GMOs), which are prohibited in organic agriculture, can reduce water, land and pesticide requirements. These efficiencies arepalpable in the low
8 TIPS FOR FORGIVING SOMEONE WHO HURT YOU Remind yourself why you want this person in your life. When someone you care about acts in a way that is hurtful to you but you want to keep the relationship, it’s important to remember the good the person has done for your life, Luskin says. “People are not replaceable. It’s important to remind yourself that you have onefather, one
STANFORD MAGAZINELATESTFEATURESESSAYSADVICECONTACTCOLLECTIONS STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
BOOKS | STANFORD MAGAZINE Books. Reviews and recs for a Stanford-filled reading list. March2021.
MAY 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE Of Viruses And Vectors. In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we can prepare. features. TAKE A ZOOM FATIGUE SURVEY; PANDEMIC ALCOHOL AND DRUG USE Up close and personal. Science has confirmed what you already know—being on Zoom all day is existentially exhausting. Communication professor Jeremy Bailenson, director of the Stanford Virtual Human Interaction Lab, looked at the psychological effects of spending hours at a time on Zoom and other video platforms and identified four causes of Zoom fatigue along with some very easyfixes.
WHY HIGHER EDUCATION MATTERS The stakes are high. Recently passed federal tax-reform legislation may reduce charitable contributions and stress some state education budgets. A new excise tax on endowments affects about 35 colleges and universities, including ours. Moody’s revised the 2018 HOW TO GET RID OF VHS TAPES No one seems to know exactly how many VHS tapes were made during the medium’s heyday, but in 2003 the Danish environmental protection agency estimated annual sales of about 12 million tapes per year, in that tiny country alone. Extrapolated around the world, that’s a whole lot of obsolete plastic, indeed. If only it were that simple. A SOLUTION TO E-WASTE Although it’s resistant to heat, water and mild basic solutions, the fully functioning circuit dissolved when placed in a slightly acidic solution, with a pH about 100 times weaker than that of common vinegar or lemon juice — in other words, acidity levels that occur innature. In such a
EDUCATION AFTER APARTHEID Opens in new window. Ihron Rensburg spent much of the late 1980s detained without trial in South African prisons for his antiapartheid work with the United Democratic Front (UDF). “Solitary confinement for nine months at a stretch poses an enormous challenge to one’s intellectual, physical and spiritual faculties,” says Rensburg, MA’94
WHO KILLED HOMER?
Who Killed Homer? They were supposed to keep the Greek and Roman flame burning. Instead, the authors argue, today's classicists have trashed their own field, squandering the legacy that shaped Western civilization and destroying a noble profession. September/October 1998. Reading time 8 min. CAN VEGETARIANISM SAVE THE WORLD?: ESSENTIAL ANSWER But a more recent study conducted by the Worldwatch Institute estimates that the difference would be even greater. By their estimations, livestock and their byproducts account for 51 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. While many vegetarian diets still include livestock byproducts such as dairy, their study suggests thatreducing meat
STANFORD MAGAZINELATESTFEATURESESSAYSADVICECONTACTCOLLECTIONS STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
BOOKS | STANFORD MAGAZINE Books. Reviews and recs for a Stanford-filled reading list. March2021.
MAY 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE Of Viruses And Vectors. In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we can prepare. features. TAKE A ZOOM FATIGUE SURVEY; PANDEMIC ALCOHOL AND DRUG USE Up close and personal. Science has confirmed what you already know—being on Zoom all day is existentially exhausting. Communication professor Jeremy Bailenson, director of the Stanford Virtual Human Interaction Lab, looked at the psychological effects of spending hours at a time on Zoom and other video platforms and identified four causes of Zoom fatigue along with some very easyfixes.
WHY HIGHER EDUCATION MATTERS The stakes are high. Recently passed federal tax-reform legislation may reduce charitable contributions and stress some state education budgets. A new excise tax on endowments affects about 35 colleges and universities, including ours. Moody’s revised the 2018 HOW TO GET RID OF VHS TAPES No one seems to know exactly how many VHS tapes were made during the medium’s heyday, but in 2003 the Danish environmental protection agency estimated annual sales of about 12 million tapes per year, in that tiny country alone. Extrapolated around the world, that’s a whole lot of obsolete plastic, indeed. If only it were that simple. A SOLUTION TO E-WASTE Although it’s resistant to heat, water and mild basic solutions, the fully functioning circuit dissolved when placed in a slightly acidic solution, with a pH about 100 times weaker than that of common vinegar or lemon juice — in other words, acidity levels that occur innature. In such a
EDUCATION AFTER APARTHEID Opens in new window. Ihron Rensburg spent much of the late 1980s detained without trial in South African prisons for his antiapartheid work with the United Democratic Front (UDF). “Solitary confinement for nine months at a stretch poses an enormous challenge to one’s intellectual, physical and spiritual faculties,” says Rensburg, MA’94
WHO KILLED HOMER?
Who Killed Homer? They were supposed to keep the Greek and Roman flame burning. Instead, the authors argue, today's classicists have trashed their own field, squandering the legacy that shaped Western civilization and destroying a noble profession. September/October 1998. Reading time 8 min. CAN VEGETARIANISM SAVE THE WORLD?: ESSENTIAL ANSWER But a more recent study conducted by the Worldwatch Institute estimates that the difference would be even greater. By their estimations, livestock and their byproducts account for 51 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. While many vegetarian diets still include livestock byproducts such as dairy, their study suggests thatreducing meat
DETECTIVE WORK
“If I shoot this gun today and I don’t vomit, I can do this job,” Erica Escalante told the firing range instructor during preparatory training for police academy. That was 1998, in Oxnard, an oceanside city in Ventura County, Calif., and Escalante, ’90, a former linguistics and Slavic languages major, had never touched afirearm.
WHAT A TRIP
A catalyst in the development of the Sixties counterculture, Kesey’s 1964 cross country adventure with the Merry Pranksters (chronicled in Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test) secured his enduring fame. But his gift for storytelling, combined with a boisterous charisma, solidified his legend. A celebrated novelist, psychedelicINTO THE SCREECH
A lifelong musician rediscovers the joy of being a novice. Into the Screech A lifelong musician rediscovers the joy of being a novice. TRUTH AND LIES AT HARVARD The story has it that sometime in the 1880s a man and woman show up unannounced to meet with the president of Harvard. They talk to him about building a memorial for their son, who “accidentally killed” himself after his freshman year at Harvard. Eyeing the woman’s “faded gingham dress” and the man’s “homespun threadbare suit THE DIRT ON ORGANICS: NITTY-GRITTY The synthetic pesticides and fertilizer used in conventional agriculture mean higher yields and crops that survive through difficult growing conditions. Similarly, many genetically modified organisms (GMOs), which are prohibited in organic agriculture, can reduce water, land and pesticide requirements. These efficiencies arepalpable in the low
THE FEARS I CAN’T WASH AWAY My earliest personal memory of racism is the most egregious one. I was in elementary school, and the day after Halloween, my family awoke to find “F*ck Chinhese” written in shaving cream across our blue-graygarage door.
WHO KILLED JANE STANFORD? H aunting the hallowed halls of Stanford for almost a century is a hushed-up whodunit that has reared its head only from time to time, and only in whispers. It concerns the mysterious death of the University’s co-founder, Jane Stanford. Though most history books attribute Mrs. Stanford’s death at 76 to heart failure, a closer look at the documents and drama surrounding her demise reveals a THE 5 TYPES OF CONCUSSIONS A concussion is a mild traumatic brain injury that can have a variety of symptoms.In a recent paper published in Neurosurgery, Stanford researchers, led by pediatric emergency physician Angela Lumba-Brown and neurosurgeon Jamshid Ghajar, identified five subtypes of concussions and recommended a different initial treatment for each one.While the categories are not mutually exclusive and share 8 TIPS FOR FORGIVING SOMEONE WHO HURT YOU Remind yourself why you want this person in your life. When someone you care about acts in a way that is hurtful to you but you want to keep the relationship, it’s important to remember the good the person has done for your life, Luskin says. “People are not replaceable. It’s important to remind yourself that you have onefather, one
WHERE DOES FAKE NEWS COME FROM? Starbird’s studies reveal an online network that nurtures fake news: an array of websites that repurpose the same content and amplify one another’s messaging, creating a misimpression among readers that multiple sources are reporting a story. It is, essentially, a hothousefor false claims.
STANFORD MAGAZINELATESTFEATURESESSAYSADVICECONTACTCOLLECTIONS STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
BOOKS | STANFORD MAGAZINE Books. Reviews and recs for a Stanford-filled reading list. March2021.
MAY 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE Of Viruses And Vectors. In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we can prepare. features. CONTACT | STANFORD MAGAZINE welcome. Thanks for checking out Stanfordmag.org. This site is part of the family of products offered by Stanford magazine. Here you can enjoy great stories from our editorial and creative teams, including our advice section; thematic collections of stories; and more than 6,000 stories from the print magazine dating back to 1996. HOW TO GET RID OF VHS TAPES No one seems to know exactly how many VHS tapes were made during the medium’s heyday, but in 2003 the Danish environmental protection agency estimated annual sales of about 12 million tapes per year, in that tiny country alone. Extrapolated around the world, that’s a whole lot of obsolete plastic, indeed. If only it were that simple. WHO KILLED JANE STANFORD? H aunting the hallowed halls of Stanford for almost a century is a hushed-up whodunit that has reared its head only from time to time, and only in whispers. It concerns the mysterious death of the University’s co-founder, Jane Stanford. Though most history books attribute Mrs. Stanford’s death at 76 to heart failure, a closer look at the documents and drama surrounding her demise reveals a TRUTH AND LIES AT HARVARD The story has it that sometime in the 1880s a man and woman show up unannounced to meet with the president of Harvard. They talk to him about building a memorial for their son, who “accidentally killed” himself after his freshman year at Harvard. Eyeing the woman’s “faded gingham dress” and the man’s “homespun threadbare suit WHAT TO DO WITH STYROFOAM: ESSENTIAL ANSWER Instead of a vase, you get 20 pieces of porcelain. Enter d-limonene, a natural oil from the rinds of citrus fruits that is often used for cleaning. Add this "orange oil" to the EPS and you'll get a sticky substance that can help you reassemble your vase. Though it may take a little time, research and possibly money on your end, there is no need DON'T DRINK THE WATER (FROM YOUR DEHUMIDIFIER): ESSENTIAL Just as a cold drink collects condensation from the surrounding air, most dehumidifiers use cold metal tubes to turn water vapor from a gas to liquid water. This "condensate" then collects in a bucket or drains out through a hose. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, stagnant condensate can harbor biological contaminants, including A HARD LOOK AT HOW WE SEE RACE A Hard Look at How We See Race. Jennifer Eberhardt’s research shows subconscious connections in people’s minds between Black faces and crime, and how those links may pervert justice. Law enforcement officers across the country are taking note. September/October 2015. Reading time 13 min. STANFORD MAGAZINELATESTFEATURESESSAYSADVICECONTACTCOLLECTIONS STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
BOOKS | STANFORD MAGAZINE Books. Reviews and recs for a Stanford-filled reading list. March2021.
MAY 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE Of Viruses And Vectors. In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we can prepare. features. CONTACT | STANFORD MAGAZINE welcome. Thanks for checking out Stanfordmag.org. This site is part of the family of products offered by Stanford magazine. Here you can enjoy great stories from our editorial and creative teams, including our advice section; thematic collections of stories; and more than 6,000 stories from the print magazine dating back to 1996. HOW TO GET RID OF VHS TAPES No one seems to know exactly how many VHS tapes were made during the medium’s heyday, but in 2003 the Danish environmental protection agency estimated annual sales of about 12 million tapes per year, in that tiny country alone. Extrapolated around the world, that’s a whole lot of obsolete plastic, indeed. If only it were that simple. WHO KILLED JANE STANFORD? H aunting the hallowed halls of Stanford for almost a century is a hushed-up whodunit that has reared its head only from time to time, and only in whispers. It concerns the mysterious death of the University’s co-founder, Jane Stanford. Though most history books attribute Mrs. Stanford’s death at 76 to heart failure, a closer look at the documents and drama surrounding her demise reveals a TRUTH AND LIES AT HARVARD The story has it that sometime in the 1880s a man and woman show up unannounced to meet with the president of Harvard. They talk to him about building a memorial for their son, who “accidentally killed” himself after his freshman year at Harvard. Eyeing the woman’s “faded gingham dress” and the man’s “homespun threadbare suit WHAT TO DO WITH STYROFOAM: ESSENTIAL ANSWER Instead of a vase, you get 20 pieces of porcelain. Enter d-limonene, a natural oil from the rinds of citrus fruits that is often used for cleaning. Add this "orange oil" to the EPS and you'll get a sticky substance that can help you reassemble your vase. Though it may take a little time, research and possibly money on your end, there is no need DON'T DRINK THE WATER (FROM YOUR DEHUMIDIFIER): ESSENTIAL Just as a cold drink collects condensation from the surrounding air, most dehumidifiers use cold metal tubes to turn water vapor from a gas to liquid water. This "condensate" then collects in a bucket or drains out through a hose. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, stagnant condensate can harbor biological contaminants, including A HARD LOOK AT HOW WE SEE RACE A Hard Look at How We See Race. Jennifer Eberhardt’s research shows subconscious connections in people’s minds between Black faces and crime, and how those links may pervert justice. Law enforcement officers across the country are taking note. September/October 2015. Reading time 13 min.CURRENT ISSUE
Of Viruses And Vectors. In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we can prepare. DOWNLOAD PDF (4.54 MB) Past Issues. Classifieds. CONTACT | STANFORD MAGAZINE welcome. Thanks for checking out Stanfordmag.org. This site is part of the family of products offered by Stanford magazine. Here you can enjoy great stories from our editorial and creative teams, including our advice section; thematic collections of stories; and more than 6,000 stories from the print magazine dating back to 1996.DETECTIVE WORK
“If I shoot this gun today and I don’t vomit, I can do this job,” Erica Escalante told the firing range instructor during preparatory training for police academy. That was 1998, in Oxnard, an oceanside city in Ventura County, Calif., and Escalante, ’90, a former linguistics and Slavic languages major, had never touched afirearm.
WHY HIGHER EDUCATION MATTERS The stakes are high. Recently passed federal tax-reform legislation may reduce charitable contributions and stress some state education budgets. A new excise tax on endowments affects about 35 colleges and universities, including ours. Moody’s revised the 2018 TRUTH AND LIES AT HARVARD The story has it that sometime in the 1880s a man and woman show up unannounced to meet with the president of Harvard. They talk to him about building a memorial for their son, who “accidentally killed” himself after his freshman year at Harvard. Eyeing the woman’s “faded gingham dress” and the man’s “homespun threadbare suit GOING WILD | STANFORD MAGAZINE A biologist gets in touch with his inner primate. Robert Sapolsky is breathing hard, partly from the sheer physical exertion of sliding on his back into the cavern where a tranquilized baboon has dragged a dying impala, partly from the anxiety of not knowing if he is going to have to tangle with a drugged 70-pound beast with three-inch canineteeth.
WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PARTY OF LINCOLN? For exactly 100 years — from Lincoln’s election in 1860 to JFK’s victory in 1960 — the regional structure of American politics was remarkably stable. The white South’s abiding hatred of the party of Lincoln made the states of the former Confederacy the electoral foundation of the Democratic Party. So important was the region toboth
HEART OF A LEGEND
T he most celebrated player in Stanford football history came from just down the road, and a world away. He was a hard-knocks kid from San Jose, a Mexican-American with an Irish surname, who gravitated to Stanford in part because he wanted to stay close to his parents, bothof whom were blind.
THE FEARS I CAN’T WASH AWAY My earliest personal memory of racism is the most egregious one. I was in elementary school, and the day after Halloween, my family awoke to find “F*ck Chinhese” written in shaving cream across our blue-graygarage door.
THE PULSE OF LGBTQ HEALTH In 2005, Juno Obedin-Maliver was a medical student with no plans to focus her career on LGBTQ health. As her medical training progressed, Obedin-Maliver, who is lesbian, noted a troubling gap: Topics related to the health of LGBTQ people weren’t being covered in a way that would prepare her and her classmates to take informed care of the people in her community. STANFORD MAGAZINELATESTFEATURESESSAYSADVICECONTACTCOLLECTIONS STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
BOOKS | STANFORD MAGAZINE STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
MAY 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we canprepare.
CONTACT | STANFORD MAGAZINESTANFORD LAWYER MAGAZINESTANFORD LITERARYMAGAZINE
welcome. Thanks for checking out Stanfordmag.org. This site is part of the family of products offered by Stanford magazine. Here you can enjoy great stories from our editorial and creative teams, including our advice section; thematic collections of stories; and more than 6,000 stories from the print magazine dating back to 1996. WHO KILLED JANE STANFORD? H aunting the hallowed halls of Stanford for almost a century is a hushed-up whodunit that has reared its head only from time to time, and only in whispers. It concerns the mysterious death of the University’s co-founder, Jane Stanford. Though most history books attribute Mrs. Stanford’s death at 76 to heart failure, a closer look at the documents and drama surrounding her demise reveals a HOW TO GET RID OF VHS TAPES Congratulations! You’ve overcome nostalgia and you’re ready to get rid of some VHS tapes. But if you thought you could unload them on eBay or Craigslist, you’re going to be disappointed: VHS tapes, like so much outmoded technology, are too ubiquitous to be valuable, and not nearly old enough to EDUCATION AFTER APARTHEID Education After Apartheid Once imprisoned for his ideas on reform, Ihron Rensburg is now implementing them. A HARD LOOK AT HOW WE SEE RACE T he first time Jennifer Eberhardt presented her research at a law enforcement conference, she braced for a cold shoulder. How much would streetwise cops care what a social psychology professor had to say about the hidden reaches of racial bias? Instead, she heard gasps, the loudest after she described an experiment that showed how quickly people link Black faces with crime or danger at a WHAT TO DO WITH STYROFOAM: ESSENTIAL ANSWER It's good to hear that you still want to do something with the bulky white stuff. Many people assume that the only option is the trash—I know I have. But with just a DON'T DRINK THE WATER (FROM YOUR DEHUMIDIFIER): ESSENTIAL Q: I wonder whether the water pulled out of the air by dehumidifiers is pure and drinkable. How does it compare to distilled water? Asked by Bill Wachob, '69, from Eggertsville, N.Y. STANFORD MAGAZINELATESTFEATURESESSAYSADVICECONTACTCOLLECTIONS STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
BOOKS | STANFORD MAGAZINE STANFORD magazine provides news and views through a Stanford alumnilens.
MAY 2021 | STANFORD MAGAZINE In an increasingly interconnected world, the next pandemic is not 100 years away. Here’s what scientists are worried about and how we canprepare.
CONTACT | STANFORD MAGAZINESTANFORD LAWYER MAGAZINESTANFORD LITERARYMAGAZINE
welcome. Thanks for checking out Stanfordmag.org. This site is part of the family of products offered by Stanford magazine. Here you can enjoy great stories from our editorial and creative teams, including our advice section; thematic collections of stories; and more than 6,000 stories from the print magazine dating back to 1996. WHO KILLED JANE STANFORD? H aunting the hallowed halls of Stanford for almost a century is a hushed-up whodunit that has reared its head only from time to time, and only in whispers. It concerns the mysterious death of the University’s co-founder, Jane Stanford. Though most history books attribute Mrs. Stanford’s death at 76 to heart failure, a closer look at the documents and drama surrounding her demise reveals a HOW TO GET RID OF VHS TAPES Congratulations! You’ve overcome nostalgia and you’re ready to get rid of some VHS tapes. But if you thought you could unload them on eBay or Craigslist, you’re going to be disappointed: VHS tapes, like so much outmoded technology, are too ubiquitous to be valuable, and not nearly old enough to EDUCATION AFTER APARTHEID Education After Apartheid Once imprisoned for his ideas on reform, Ihron Rensburg is now implementing them. A HARD LOOK AT HOW WE SEE RACE T he first time Jennifer Eberhardt presented her research at a law enforcement conference, she braced for a cold shoulder. How much would streetwise cops care what a social psychology professor had to say about the hidden reaches of racial bias? Instead, she heard gasps, the loudest after she described an experiment that showed how quickly people link Black faces with crime or danger at a WHAT TO DO WITH STYROFOAM: ESSENTIAL ANSWER It's good to hear that you still want to do something with the bulky white stuff. Many people assume that the only option is the trash—I know I have. But with just a DON'T DRINK THE WATER (FROM YOUR DEHUMIDIFIER): ESSENTIAL Q: I wonder whether the water pulled out of the air by dehumidifiers is pure and drinkable. How does it compare to distilled water? Asked by Bill Wachob, '69, from Eggertsville, N.Y.CURRENT ISSUE
George Shultz is best known for his work in the 1980s to end the nuclear arms race. But the economist and diplomat was a public servantto the end.
CONTACT | STANFORD MAGAZINE welcome. Thanks for checking out Stanfordmag.org. This site is part of the family of products offered by Stanford magazine. Here you can enjoy great stories from our editorial and creative teams, including our advice section; thematic collections of stories; and more than 6,000 stories from the print magazine dating back to 1996.DETECTIVE WORK
“If I shoot this gun today and I don’t vomit, I can do this job,” Erica Escalante told the firing range instructor during preparatory training for police academy. That was 1998, in Oxnard, an oceanside city in Ventura County, Calif., and Escalante, ’90, a former linguistics and Slavic languages major, had never touched afirearm.
WHAT A TRIP
Before there was Woodstock, the Summer of Love or flower-painted VW bugs, there was Ken Elton Kesey. Quenching his thirst with LSD-spiked fruit juice and wearing homemade clothes bearing then-taboo images of the American flag, Kesey burst memorably onto the national scene. TRUTH AND LIES AT HARVARD You can’t believe everything you read on the Internet. Sometimes you shouldn’t believe any of it. Take the tale of two “backwoods country hicks” that’s been zapped across the nation and around the world in countless e-mails over the last few months. WHY HIGHER EDUCATION MATTERS A merican colleges and universities serve society and are reliable engines of personal and national prosperity. They include 43 of the top 100 worldwide. Yet public trust in the value of higher education has been shaken. Families are frustrated about the costs of college. GOING WILD | STANFORD MAGAZINE A biologist gets in touch with his inner primate. Robert Sapolsky is breathing hard, partly from the sheer physical exertion of sliding on his back into the cavern where a tranquilized baboon has dragged a dying impala, partly from the anxiety of not knowing if he is going to have to tangle with a drugged 70-pound beast with three-inch canineteeth.
THE FEARS I CAN’T WASH AWAY My earliest personal memory of racism is the most egregious one. I was in elementary school, and the day after Halloween, my family awoke to find “F*ck Chinhese” written in shaving cream across our blue-graygarage door.
A SOLUTION TO E-WASTE Chemical engineers develop a biodegradable electronic circuit. In the not-so-distant future, the internet may connect to everything from your toaster to your T-shirt. But as we realize the Internet of Things, the number of sensors and other devices will only proliferate, THE PULSE OF LGBTQ HEALTH In 2005, Juno Obedin-Maliver was a medical student with no plans to focus her career on LGBTQ health. As her medical training progressed, Obedin-Maliver, who is lesbian, noted a troubling gap: Topics related to the health of LGBTQ people weren’t being covered in a way that would prepare her and her classmates to take informed care of the people in her community. __ Latest Features Essays AdviceCOLLECTIONS __ __
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editor’s choice
December 2020
Features
THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE Making predictions about 2021 seems downright foolhardy. We did itanyway.
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BIBLIO FILE: WHAT TO READ NOW — DECEMBER 2020 New releases that inspire us.Online Exclusives
BLACK, PREGNANT AND GRIEVING ‘For some of us, the journey to motherhood comes at a highercost.’
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Herbrina Sanders
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MISCHIEF MANAGED
Stately and venerable, this oak tree witnessed antics that wereanything but.
By
Charity Ferreira
OUR COLLECTION ON COVID-19__
‘It’s Here, and It’s Spreading’ Washington state health officer Kathy Lofy, ’93, remembers the beginning of the pandemic. By Deni Ellis Béchard Stepping Up for the Navajo Nation Grassroots effort supplies PPE to health-care workers in Navajocommunities.
By Melinda Sacks
How Next Year Will Be Different The outline of a plan for 2020-21. By Summer Moore BatteRapid Response
How the Stanford research community pivoted to address thecoronavirus.
By Deni Ellis Béchard Back to ‘School’ What things are like now from the educators’ side of the Zoom.By Charity Ferreira
If History Is Any Guide 4 Stanford scholars on how the pandemic could transform us. Helping Little Ones Show Their Love from Afar A Stanford doctor wrote some rhymes to explain social distancing to his toddler. Next thing he knew, he had self-published a book. By Summer Moore Batte Faith and Hope in the Hospital Corridors Chaplaincy takes on a new look.By Andrew Tan
‘We Might Come Out Weak, but We Are Going to Come Out’ In overwhelmed eastern Peru, an Indigenous alum rallies a scrappy medical brigade to confront COVID-19.By Melinda Sacks
Everybody Dance Now
Stanford’s English department gets its Zoom groove on.By Kathy Zonana
‘It’s Here, and It’s Spreading’ Washington state health officer Kathy Lofy, ’93, remembers the beginning of the pandemic. By Deni Ellis Béchard Stepping Up for the Navajo Nation Grassroots effort supplies PPE to health-care workers in Navajocommunities.
By Melinda Sacks
How Next Year Will Be Different The outline of a plan for 2020-21. By Summer Moore BatteRapid Response
How the Stanford research community pivoted to address thecoronavirus.
By Deni Ellis Béchard Back to ‘School’ What things are like now from the educators’ side of the Zoom.By Charity Ferreira
If History Is Any Guide 4 Stanford scholars on how the pandemic could transform us. Helping Little Ones Show Their Love from Afar A Stanford doctor wrote some rhymes to explain social distancing to his toddler. Next thing he knew, he had self-published a book. By Summer Moore Batte Faith and Hope in the Hospital Corridors Chaplaincy takes on a new look.By Andrew Tan
‘We Might Come Out Weak, but We Are Going to Come Out’ In overwhelmed eastern Peru, an Indigenous alum rallies a scrappy medical brigade to confront COVID-19.By Melinda Sacks
Everybody Dance Now
Stanford’s English department gets its Zoom groove on.By Kathy Zonana
‘It’s Here, and It’s Spreading’ Washington state health officer Kathy Lofy, ’93, remembers the beginning of the pandemic. By Deni Ellis Béchard Stepping Up for the Navajo Nation Grassroots effort supplies PPE to health-care workers in Navajocommunities.
By Melinda Sacks
How Next Year Will Be Different The outline of a plan for 2020-21. By Summer Moore BatteRapid Response
How the Stanford research community pivoted to address thecoronavirus.
By Deni Ellis Béchard__
BACK TO ‘SCHOOL’ What things are like now from the educators’ side of the Zoom.BY
Charity Ferreira
IF HISTORY IS ANY GUIDE 4 Stanford scholars on how the pandemic could transform us. HELPING LITTLE ONES SHOW THEIR LOVE FROM AFAR A Stanford doctor wrote some rhymes to explain social distancing to his toddler. Next thing he knew, he had self-published a book.BY
Summer Moore Batte
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