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people
Jan. 13, 2025
My time away from campus has afforded me a rare opportunity to truly cherish the people that made my Stanford experience what it is.
Nov. 19, 2025
Fertig writes about the connection between religion and voting, arguing that people's religious beliefs ought not influence their voting when legislation affects people beyond their faith.
By Paul Fertig
May 6, 2025
Students from indigenous communities gathered on Monday, sharing personal stories to bring attention to underreported violence affecting indigenous communities.
Feb. 5, 2026
Adapted from Emily Henry’s bestselling novel, “People We Meet on Vacation” tells the story of two opposite best friends who reunite each summer for a week-long vacation, gradually confronting the feelings they’ve avoided for a decade.
By Audrey Chang
Nov. 30, 2025
The Hoover Institution’s People, Politics, and Places Fellowship affords students first-hand summer experiences in rural American communities.
Oct. 20, 2025
Last weekend, alumni from the classes of 1965 through 2020 attended events and social gatherings that reflected their graduating years.
By Mara Hankins
Oct. 28, 2025
The closer the collapse of the empire, the crazier its laws are, and the people must adapt.
May 4, 2025
In her directorial debut, “Actual People,” Asian American filmmaker Kit Zauhar stars in a comedy about a young woman making disastrous choices in her final week of college.
March 2, 2026
Bernie Sanders has a powerful voice — and he activates people with more than just speech.
Nov. 5, 2025
In this poem, Withers delivers a resonant message on what it means to stand with oppressed people of the world.
Feb. 23, 2025
"Maybe the things I thought were fun were just alright, and the real fun was hidden in plain sight," Linden Hansen '28 writes for her column, "Overheard at Stanford."
Dec. 10, 2024
The Santa Clara County District Attorney committed a grave mistake by dismissing the case, writes the victim's attorney.
Oct. 6, 2024
Ajay Banga, 14th president of the World Bank Group, discussed challenges and opportunities in global sustainable development.
By Helen Katz
Feb. 25, 2026
In a recent study, Stanford researchers quantified the cost of lifting people out of poverty globally, providing a framework to inform future policy decisions.
By Emma Wang
Jan. 17, 2025
As AI continues to shape industries and influence decision-making, gaps in AI literacy have become more relevant to the way users interact with the shifting technology. Students and professors weighed in on the concern that others are excluded from meaningful participation.
By Jolie Li
March 4, 2026
Liz Clabaugh ’95 and Caroline Sekar ’03 were victims of the Sierra Nevada avalanche that killed nine people. Stanford friends shared their memories of the sisters.
March 11, 2025
What are those campus landmarks we know and love? These are peoples’ happy places, Hansen writes.
Feb. 18, 2026
Stanford researchers investigated which types of climate messaging are most effective in motivating people to take collective action, finding that focusing on past successes ranks the highest.
By Sophia Lande
April 15, 2025
Chris Vinasco '28 describes the stories that exist all around us, in the people we find ourselves drawn to.
Dec. 6, 2024
King Vanga lost a defamation lawsuit against the family of two victims he killed in a 2021 car accident. He previously sued them for letters and emails they wrote to Stanford, claiming they spread false information.
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