qwant news | Dartmouth groups renew calls to rename Black arts center bankrolled by Epstein associate

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Dartmouth College’s Black Family Visual Arts Center, named for alumnus and former trustee Leon Black, is again under pressure to be renamed after revelations that Black paid Jeffrey Epstein $170 million for tax and investment advice despite Epstein’s 2008 guilty plea for soliciting prostitution. Alumni groups, the Women of Dartmouth association, the Student Government Association and survivors’ advocates have urged the board of trustees to remove both the Black family and Leon Black ’73 names, arguing that the association with Epstein inflicts ongoing harm on survivors of sexual assault. In response, the trustees announced in June they will create a committee to study campus‑wide naming policies, a move critics say merely stalls decisive action. The dispute reflects broader calls for Dartmouth to confront its ties to sexual‑assault perpetrators and to align its values with the demands of students, alumni and lawmakers.

Read more: https://www.nhpr.org/nh-news/2026-04-21/dartmouth-black-arts-center-epstein-ties-naming-controversy

#DartmouthCollege #LeonBlack #JeffreyEpstein #DianaWhitney #AnnieKuster #SianBeilock #ApolloGlobal #RonWyden #StudentGovernment #AnnieMcLaneKuster

AI generated summary, Read the full article for complete information.

Dartmouth groups renew calls to rename Black arts center bankrolled by Epstein associate

Dartmouth's board of trustees has announced that it will appoint a committee to study “naming across campus” at its next meeting, in June. For critics of Leon Black, who paid $170 million to Jeffrey Epstein after Epstein’s 2008 guilty plea to soliciting prostitution, this acton amounts to stalling.

NHPR New Hampshire Public Radio

Reposted from @cityofthousandoaks: The City of Thousand Oaks is seeking applicants for 8 scheduled vacancies on Youth Commission. The Youth Commission serves as City ambassadors, representing the matters concerning the City’s youth. 🌳

✨ Application Period: March 24 - April 23, 2026
✨ Members must be City residents ages 13-18 and currently in 8th - 10th grade to apply for a two-year term

To learn more and apply, visit toaks.gov/boards

#youth #studentgovernment #youthingovernment #civicengagement #thousandoaks #tocc

By the People: Debating American Government — 3rd Edition
by James Morone

🇺🇸 Debate democracy.
Think critically.
By the People — 3rd Ed.

DM for info.

#PoliticsStudy #CivicsLife #StudentGovernment #DigitalLearning

USG Open House explains student government roles ahead of Jan. 25 application deadline

The Undergraduate Student Government executive branch hosted an open house on Tuesday to explain the responsibilities and impact of student government as the election application deadline nears on Jan. 25. The event, held during USG’s weekly cabinet meeting, allowed prospective members to learn how the organization operates and explore its various committees before deciding whether […]

The Lantern

Vanderbilt Student Government and the Vanderbilt chapter of American Association of University Professors host campus Teach-In in response to Trump administration’s higher education compact – The Vanderbilt Hustler

Associate professor in social movements, indigenous rights and political anthropology Carwil Bjork-James speaks at the Teach-In against the Trump administration’s “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education,” as photographed on Oct. 17. 2025. (Courtesy of Ethan Thorpe)

Vanderbilt Student Government and the Vanderbilt chapter of American Association of University Professors host campus Teach-In in response to Trump administration’s higher education compact

Professors and graduate students gathered at the Teach-In to speak out against the compact.

By Ella Crocco, Staffer-in-Training, Oct 24, 2025

Vanderbilt Student Government and members of Vanderbilt’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors hosted a Teach-In on Oct. 17 regarding the higher education compact Vanderbilt was sent from the Trump administration. Students and faculty at the event discussed how they believe the compact could endanger academic freedom, education policy and the university’s core values, among other topics.   

Jessie Hock, associate English department chair and associate professor of English, opened the Teach-In with contextual remarks. Carwil Bjork-James, associate professor in social movements, indigenous rights and political anthropology, then spoke to the crowd about how he believes that if Vanderbilt agrees to the compact, it could have negative financial impacts for the university.  

“I think that our administrators are being misled by the promise of more research funding by an administration that is clearly cutting off research funding and restricting it at every level,” Bjork-James said.  

In an interview with The Hustler, Bjork-James said that the compact will not help ensure Vanderbilt is a space where students and faculty can freely express their thoughts.  

“I would say faculty are really committed to maintaining this campus as a place where [students] can speak freely, where [students] can come here with any political opinion, with any perspective, get an open education and where there are viable places to do scholarship and research and this compact is not the right way to do that,” Bjork-James said. 

Jada Benn Torres, associate professor in genetics, race and genetic ancestry, followed by speaking about how she believed Vanderbilt signing the compact would limit scientific research and free speech. In a message to The Hustler, Benn Torres said that the compact could contribute to the marginalization of communities and hopes Vanderbilt will continue to be a place where freedom of discussion is practiced.  

“I am very concerned that the compact will upend academic freedom and freedom of expression. Additionally, there are elements of the compact that further marginalize communities that are already marginalized,” Torres said. “Overall, I think that the university needs to be a place where we are free to ask difficult questions and grapple with uncomfortable answers.” 

Rebecca Epstein-Levy, assistant professor of Jewish studies and gender & sexuality studies, spoke about how she believes the compact has anti-trans provisions which would limit her ability to teach and research certain topics about Judaism and sex, sexuality, gender and disability.   

“I’m a Jewish ethicist, and I research and teach courses at the intersection of Jewish text, Jewish thought, and sex, sexuality, gender and disability,” Epstein-Levy said. “The compact’s claim that there are only two genders — a claim which is bigoted, venal and spectacularly wrong — would make it impossible for me to teach these subjects accurately and responsibly.” 

Jonathan Gilligan, earth and environmental studies and civil and environmental engineering professor, spoke about how he believes the compact could limit research and what is taught in science classes because topics may offend conservative policies. 

Gilligan shared in an interview with The Hustler that he and many of his colleagues are worried about government overreach. They believe that if the government enforces politicized versions of science upon universities, they will not stop with the biology of sex and gender.

Editor’s Note: I am proud of hopeful of American higher education. Stand up for your rights, and protect us all with your views and passion for Democracy. –DrWeb

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Vanderbilt Student Government and the Vanderbilt chapter of American Association of University Professors host campus Teach-In in response to Trump administration’s higher education compact – The Vanderbilt Hustler

#2025 #AAUP #AcademicFreedom #America #DEI #DonaldTrump #Education #Health #History #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Opinion #Politics #Resistance #Science #StudentGovernment #TeachIn #TheVanderbiltHustler #Trump #TrumpAdministration #TrumpSCompact #UnitedStates #VanderbiltUniversity

Campus Roundup: Undergraduate Student Government Election timeline

With the Autumn semester in full swing, students have the opportunity to participate in voting for the new student body executive board for the Undergraduate Student Government.  With the election results this past spring voided by the Office of Student Life, USG is required to hold the election from the beginning, starting with petition signatures.  […]

The Lantern
Op-ed: When Scheduling Issues Override Judicial Ethics, Why USG’s Judicial Panel Needs Real Accountability

Mason Bindemann is a third-year accounting student at Ohio State and founder of Lanarchy, a student gaming collective.  This year’s Undergraduate Student Government elections were marred by disqualifications, appeals and high-stakes procedural drama. At the heart of it all was the disqualification of Daizhon Cox, a case that exposed deep structural flaws in USG’s Judicial […]

The Lantern

The Associated Students of the University of California, Riverside (ASUCR), on Wednesday held a Senate meeting to fill three open ASUCR positions, Non-traditional Student Director, International Student Director, Elections Director and President Pro-Tempore (PPT), through special elections.

https://www.highlandernews.org/93848/asucr-fills-vacant-positions-in-special-elections/ #UCRiverside #StudentGovernment #HigherEd

ASUCR fills vacant positions in special elections - Highlander

The Associated Students of the University of California, Riverside (ASUCR), on Wednesday held a Senate meeting to fill three open ASUCR positions, Non-traditional Student Director, International Student Director, Elections Director and President Pro-Tempore (PPT), through special elections.  Called to order at 7:57 p.m, the meeting began with a public forum, where ASUCR President Abby Choy […]

Highlander