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"The Manic Monologues" is a confessional play co-produced by geological sciences PhD candidate Zack Burton that aims to destigmatize mental illness.
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Energy Resources Engineering students Khaled Aounallah, Kofi Owusu Agyeman, Grecia Ramirez Ovalle, Haoyu Tang and Larry Jin received prizes at this year's event.
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E-IPER students Valerie Shen, MS/MBA ’19, and Michael Levin, MS/JD ’19 competed on the team that received the grand prize for their ideas to optimize electricity use in the Stanford Cleantech Challenge.
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Stanford Earth received a 2019 American Institute of Architects Design Award from the San Francisco chapter for the barn at the O’Donohue Family Stanford Educational Farm.
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Rosamond Naylor, Noah Diffenbaugh, Scott Fendorf, and others are featured in this collection of research funded by seed grants, which are often used to try out risky, early-stage ideas.
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Naylor was honored for “designing ecologically and economically sound practices that protect native species and enhance global food security in marine and terrestrial ecosystems."
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SAE International, a global association for engineering professionals, honored Onori for preparing the next generation of engineers to meet the real-world challenges of their industry.
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Through the Stanford Distinguished Careers Institute (DCI), which helps professionals enter roles with social impact, Sydney Macy found inspiration in Richard Nevle's Wild Writing course.
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Stanford University president Marc Tessier-Lavigne discusses how Stanford is developing new energy strategies and confronting climate change.
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Stanford Earth's James Holland Jones discusses what makes stories a powerful way to communicate complex information and how the emerging genre of climate fiction (Cli-Fi) may motivate behavior change.
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The Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford brings together deep thinkers from diverse disciplines and communities to advance understanding of the full range of human beliefs, behaviors, interactions, and institutions.
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Jef Caers, Kate Maher, Roz Naylor and Rob Dunbar received funding for research projects that use AI to support humanity, foster collaborations and help to guide the future of AI.
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Lecturer Liz Carlisle’s new book, Grain by Grain, examines the history of wheat with co-author and Montana farmer Bob Quinn. In this Q&A, Carlisle talks about unlikely allies in a polarized economy, explains why driving positive change in agricultural sustainability must occur in multiple systems at once, and shares why she brings rural land stewards to engage in critical, candid conversations with her Stanford students.
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Postdoctoral researcher Daniel Ibarra recently traveled to the Philippines to collect cave deposits that are considered key to understanding changes in climate during ancient times.
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JP Spaventa, '21, Zoe Von Gerlach, '21 and Andrew Ying, '21, were awarded for the project they created in geophysics professor Dustin Schroeder's Introductory Seminar, The Space Mission to Europa.
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Geophysical processes have shaped Pozzuoli, Italy, like few other places in the world. Stanford students applied modern tools to understand those links and what it means to live with natural hazards as both threat and inspiration.