At Stanford's 124th Commencement, Richard Engel, the chief foreign correspondent for NBC News, told Stanford's 2015 graduates that taking chances can make a meaningful difference in the future of humanity.
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At Stanford's 124th Commencement, Richard Engel, the chief foreign correspondent for NBC News, told Stanford's 2015 graduates that taking chances can make a meaningful difference in the future of h...
Stanford's 2015 Baccalaureate, a multifaith celebration that is a part of Commencement weekend, featured Vernon E. Jordan Jr., a student reflection and spiritual songs from Africa and the African d...
Manu Prakash, an assistant professor of bioengineering at Stanford, and his students have developed a synchronous computer that operates using the unique physics of moving water droplets. Their goa...
Anne Sanquini, a PhD student at Stanford, is studying how to motivate people to take precautionary action to protect their homes and schools against earthquakes. On April 25, Sanquini found herself...
Musicologist Nate Sloan’s investigation of Harlem Renaissance jazz portrays a diverse, multisensory experience where music, place and race influenced each other in profound and lasting ways.
'American Heathen,' a graphic novel researched, written and illustrated by Stanford students, focuses on the life and times of a Chinese American man who dedicated much of his life to improving the...
Stanford celebrated the accomplishments of the 2015 Amy J. Blue Award winners with an afternoon ceremony and reception in the Koret-Taube Conference Center at the Stanford Institute for Economic Po...
After extensive study of Searsville Dam and Reservoir, a Stanford committee recommends that the university develop and evaluate, in collaboration with resource agencies, two alternative ways to ach...
Japan must transform its economy in a way that mirrors the innovation ethos in places like Silicon Valley and Stanford University, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said during a speech at Stanfor...
Drawing on 18th- and 19th-century writings, religious studies scholar Kathryn Gin Lum shows how the concept of "hell" influenced religion, politics and social reform in the first century of America...
Stanford announces an innovative new approach to meeting its energy needs that will make it one of the world's most energy-efficient universities. The comprehensive new system incorporates solar po...
Stanford Alumni Association presents a selection of Classes Without Quizzes, panels and Stanford Book Salon discussions taught by top Stanford faculty at Reunion Homecoming. Filmed on location at Stanford University.
Open Office Hours is an opportunity to converse with great minds at Stanford. Drawing on the traditions of faculty office hours and learning outside the lecture hall, the series is free and open to anyone with a Facebook account.
For more than 90 years Stanford has delivered courses specifically intended for freshmen. These classes, often taught by faculty teams representing distinct departments and schools, encourage students to develop the ability to ask rigorous questions that can lead to scientific experimentation or literary interpretation or social policy analysis. Read more about the program: http://stanford.io/1qdh9Q7 #ThinkingMatters
Each year about 1,000 Stanford students pursue undergraduate research projects, which put them in close touch with faculty mentors and often take them far from campus: http://stanford.io/1F0mMLq