Daily editors sat down with President Marc Tessier-Lavigne to discuss free speech on campus, the University’s greatest challenges when it comes to the issue and more.
The revised alcohol and drug policy and the University's recent steps toward substance use education stem from a report put together by the Alcohol Solutions Group formed by Provost Persis Drell in 2019.
Though Stanford administrators are more prepared to handle the virus than they were last year, safety precautions are "going to need to remain present, and may need to morph, as the situation changes in the future," Minor said.
The Tree Huggers, who ran uncontested, were reelected to serve as junior class presidents. The Stanford LorAXE won over Work Card Play Carder to return as senior class presidents.
The elections saw a 17.3% voter turnout — a decrease from last year’s 36.64%. All general amendments failed because the graduate student voter quorum was not reached, as only 8.73% of graduate students voted.
As the new climate and sustainability school takes shape, Daily reporters sat down with Vice Provost and Dean of Research Kam Moler and School of Earth Dean Stephan Graham to ask community questions related to its timeline, funding, faculty hiring processes and more.
The University plans to have a regular incoming class of around 1,700 students, plus the 378 students who took a gap year during the 2020-21 academic year.
Many specifics remain up in the air ahead of ResX's planned fall implementation. The Daily sat down with Vice Provost for Student Affairs Susie Brubaker-Cole and Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education Sarah Church to find out more.
Neighborhoods would divide the campus into eight to 10 clusters of varying residence types that students would be assigned to before the start of their frosh year.
As Stanford undergraduates near one year of virtual learning, clubs and other student groups reflect on ways that they found a sense of community online.
This year marks the 30th year anniversary of Stanford Medicine’s Jonathan J. King Lecture series. During Tuesday evening’s lecture, Lucy Kalanithi discussed her late husband’s New York Times bestselling memoir, “When Breath Becomes Air.”
After amassing nearly 1,500 signatures, a petition started by comparative literature professor David Palumbo-Liu ultimately was unsuccessful in instating Chanel Miller’s “Know My Name” as one of this year’s Three Books.
CS 472: "Data Science and AI for COVID-19" allows undergraduate students, graduate students and people around the world to unite in the fight against the novel coronavirus.
Writing Medicine, a weekly workshop led by bestselling author and Director of Writing and Storytelling at Stanford’s Medicine and the Muse Program, gathers hundreds of healthcare individuals to explore creative writing and share their stories during the ongoing pandemic.