Our Weekend Roundup is released on Sunday mornings during the school year and features an engaging rundown of the news from the previous week in the form of a briefing. It also includes editors’ picks from other sections. Subscribe here to receive emails like this.
Unlike some peer institutions, Stanford plans to charge undergraduates the normal rate to stay on campus this summer: a total of $6,155 for both housing and dining. But students say that the cost is financially prohibitive for those on campus who have no other housing options.
More than 750 students have signed a petition calling for the University to provide additional financial aid for students with demonstrated need and increase flexibility with housing deadlines and contracts. The Undergraduate Senate passed a resolution on Tuesday calling on Residential & Dining Enterprises (R&DE) and the Financial Aid Office to take similar measures.
University administrators have told students that Stanford is “working to identify financial resources to help students who need to live on campus this summer and can’t afford the housing fee.” In the meantime, administrators are directing them to existing aid sources. Financial aid will only be given to students enrolled in classes, and it will count for one of their 12 quarters of aid, though students have the option to apply for additional quarters.
Munira Alimire ’22 and Vianna Vo ’21 will serve as the 2020-21 ASSU executives, after running the first unopposed campaign for the role since 1999. They plan to focus on supporting mental health, reforming the structure of the ASSU and advocating for marginalized communities.
A record number of incumbents and upperclassmen were elected to the Undergraduate Senate after a 31-candidate election season marked with tension. One incumbent senator who successfully ran for reelection apologized for past anti-Israel tweets before the election, after the Stanford College Republicans posted the tweets on its Facebook page. A slate of candidates of color was also “Zoom-bombed” during a town hall last weekend by unknown individuals who hurled anti-Black hate speech and broadcast violent and anti-Semitic images. All 10 slate members were elected to next year’s 15-member Senate, which will include six returning senators and only six frosh.
For the Graduate Student Council (GSC), voters elected 15 out of 18 candidates, including four of the five incumbents who ran.
The only contested class president campaign was that for the 2020-21 sophomore class presidency. Voters elected the Tree Huggers slate. The Stanford LorAXE and 21 for Everyone were elected to the junior and senior class presidency, respectively, after running unopposed.
All 94 annual grant applications on the ballot were also approved. There were no amendments on the ballot.
Here’s what else is happening:
For the latest coronavirus updates, follow along with The Daily’s live blog, which includes a map of confirmed cases and a timeline of Stanford’s response to the outbreak.
Despite a widely circulated email that seemed to outline plans for the 2020-21 academic year, both the University and the professor who originally sent the email told The Daily no decisions have been made.
A Stanford student launched a nonprofit to connect farmers who have excess produce from COVID-19 restaurant shutdowns with food banks that have increased need due to job loss.
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