Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Leland Stanford Junior University Marching Band (LSJUMB) is the student marching band representing Stanford University and its athletic teams. Billing itself as "The World's Largest Rock and Roll Band," the Stanford Band performs at sporting events, student activities, and other functions.
The incumbent Stanford band manager now annually passes his or her position to the new manager with 4 seconds left in the Stanford–Cal game. [14] Whenever Stanford holds the Stanford Axe, the plaque is altered in protest so that the outcome reads as a 20–19 Stanford victory. When the Axe is returned to Cal's possession, the plaque is ...
The Stanford Tree is the Stanford Band's mascot and the unofficial mascot of Stanford University. Stanford's team name is " Cardinal ", referring to the vivid Stanford Cardinal Red color (not the common songbird as at several other schools), and the university does not have an official mascot.
Just over 16% of Stanford’s Class of 2023 were the children of Stanford grads, the school reported in 2020. A similar share of students admitted to USC in 2022—14%—were legacies, or ...
Of course, "Stanford University Marching Band" should redirect to this article, and the folks at the marching band wikiproject can include "Stanford University Marching Band" in their list of bands . . . if they value conformity to their naming convention over fidelity to the LSJUMB's actual title. David Cohen 19:57, 13 July 2007 (UTC)
In a talk at Stanford University, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt discussed the future of AI, touched on geopolitics, and went on an anti-remote work rant that he later walked back.. He also gave ...
Over the past decade, bombastic, theatric, operatic metal Swedes have become unlikely mainstream rock stars. They won the Grammy for Best Metal Performance in 2016 and have scored three ...
The Stanford Tree as a blindfolded hostage in a picture released to the Daily Californian by the Phoenix Five, October 1998. The Phoenix Five were a group of five University of California, Berkeley students in Theta Chi who stole the Stanford Tree from the Band Shak on the campus of Stanford University in the early morning hours of October 17, 1998.