The Stanford Daily

News

EnlargeEnlarge
Azia Kim (far right) looks at the camera during an ROTC rifle assembly line training exercise on Oct. 18, 2006. During fall quarter, Kim regularly attended both a military class and lab each week, posing the whole time as a high-achieving Stanford freshman. #gallery http://daily.stanford.org/image/full/7596
Anonymous

Azia Kim (far right) looks at the camera during an ROTC rifle assembly line training exercise on Oct. 18, 2006. During fall quarter, Kim regularly attended both a military class and lab each week, posing the whole time as a high-achieving Stanford freshman.

Azia used Stanford to get ROTC spot

Kim forged transcript, accepted $1,350 worth of military equipment and received dozens of hours of military training
By Daniel Novinson and Amit Arora
NEWS| To her friends in Kimball and Okada, she was Stanford student Azia Kim. But to her comrades in Santa Clara University’s Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) detachment, she was a Private Cadet affectionately nicknamed AK.

Physics lab squatter banned from campus

By Amit Arora and Daniel Novinson
NEWS| The University plans to inform Elizabeth Okazaki, the apparent imposter who has sporadically lived in the Varian Physics Lab for four years, that she is no longer welcome on Stanford’s campus.

Hurricane Katrina project vandalized

By Kelsey Mesher
NEWS| When Sarah Woodward ‘09 invited students to write on her Hurricane Katrina art installation near Green Library, she did not expect participants to sabotage her exhibit by using profanity and slamming Stanford Housing.

Dorms leave campus for holiday

By Kelsey Mesher
NEWS| Every year dorms and houses around campus use Memorial Day weekend to get off campus and experience life outside of the Stanford bubble. Houses ran the gamut this year, taking off to such exotic locales as Santa Cruz, San Francisco and Shasta Lake.

Farmers outraged over dirt from Munger

By megan maass
NEWS|

Rankings bother college presidents

By Andrew Valencia
NEWS|

Black community honors students for academics, service

By The Stanford Daily News Staff
NEWS|

Study: research excludes women, minorities

By Lia Hardin
NEWS|

Night owl? It’s not your fault

By Rachel Whelan
NEWS| A missing fifth copy of an otherwise innocuous DNA sequence could be the cause of some traffic accidents that occur in the early morning hours, research by scientists at the University of Surrey suggests.