Search Experts Urge Gallaudet U. to Move Cautiously in Replacing Ousted President-Designate

Inside Higher Ed: Calm at Gallaudet

After months of protest over the selection of Jane K. Fernandes as president, students and faculty at Gallaudet University are getting back to the business of higher education — with things somewhat resolved since the board on Sunday terminated her contract Sunday night. A mess of tents, banners and tables still decorated the lawn at the campus’s entrance Monday, but at 5:00 p.m. protesters opened the main gate to outside traffic. They expect to have any mess cleaned up by this morning.

The Chronicle: Search Experts Urge Gallaudet U. to Move Cautiously in Replacing Ousted President-Designate

People with experience in presidential searches for higher-education institutions said on Monday that after the traumatic events of the last few weeks at Gallaudet University, culminating in the revocation of the appointment of the person picked as its next president, the university should take a breather.

New global realities demand a new kind of unionism

Financial Times: New global realities demand a new kind of unionism

At a Forum for Responsible Globalisation in Lyons this week, trade unions, alongside others, are presenting their views on what is wrong with the phenomenon and what can be done about it. This is not exactly headline news, with at first sight little prospect of more than a ritual moan about the ways of the world. However, from Lyons, the world’s trade unions will go on to Vienna to found the International Trade Union Confederation – the most representative and united trade union international in history. Many of globalisation’s problems have their roots in the world of work. So it is reasonable to expect that some of the answers will come from there too.

Mexico: Oaxaca Tense and Only Relative Calm after Police Crackdown

IPS News: Tense and Only Relative Calm after Police Crackdow

The Mexican government justified on Monday the violent storming by federal police of social protests in the capital of the southern state of Oaxaca, saying it had restored peace and order. But the evidence tells a different story.

“The situation has got worse. We have been subjected to violent and unacceptable attacks (on Sunday) which left three dead, more than 50 under arrest, several ‘disappeared’ and some cases of torture,” Florentino López, spokesman for the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO), told IPS.

Flavio Sosa, another of the organisation’s leaders, said negotiations with the government would be shut down as long as federal police forces — who he described as “criminals and rapists” — remained in Oaxaca.
But President Vicente Fox, whose six-year term is due to finish in December, sees things from a different angle. “Today, social harmony has returned to Oaxaca,” he said on Monday.

In Oaxaca “we were able to combine dialogue and the search for agreements with establishing order and respect for the law. Dialogue was essential to restoring peace and calm,” he said.

On Sunday afternoon, thousands of police in armoured trucks entered Oaxaca, the state capital. By dint of shoving, truncheon blows, tear gas and water cannon, the police evicted the APPO encampments and barricades that the protesters set up five months ago in the city streets and parks.

The demonstrators, most of whom offered no resistance and instead bunkered down in the buildings of the public Benito Juárez Autonomous University, held protest marches Monday through the city of Oaxaca, demanding withdrawal of the police and the immediate resignation of Governor Ulises Ruiz.

The conflict in Oaxaca began on May 22 when teachers went on strike for higher wages. They were joined by 350 social organisations that came together in APPO in June, after Ruiz called in the police to break up the teachers’ protest.

The conflict escalated to the present level amid failed negotiations between the federal government and APPO.

The protesters’ main demand is the removal of Ruiz, who they accuse of corruption and authoritarianism. But the governor, who belongs to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), refuses to go, in spite of pressure by his own party and by the Fox administration to do so.

This Monday, legislators of the governing National Action Party (PAN) and the leftwing Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) approved, without PRI support, an agreement in which they publicly called on Ruiz to resign.

Meanwhile, Emilio Gamboa, leader of the PRI in the Chamber of Deputies, asked the governor to “examine his conscience” as to whether he should remain in office.

According to APPO activist López, the protesters who are missing may have been taken to military installations and are probably being subjected to torture. He also said three people were killed.

Government spokespersons have denied these reports. They say 23 people were arrested and that there was one death, a youth hit by a firecracker that he had set off himself.

The governmental but independent National Human Rights Commission, which sent 18 observers to Oaxaca, said that it had recorded one death as a result of the police crackdown, the same young man mentioned by the government. According to the Commission, he died after he was hit by a tear gas canister.

Dialogue with APPO remains open, and the unionised teachers of Oaxaca, who are at the heart of the uprising, will suspend their strike and return to their classrooms Monday, said Rubén Aguilar, Fox’s spokesman.

But APPO says it will not resume talks with the government unless the police pull out of Oaxaca, and classes have not started.

Police stood guard on the main streets and parks of Oaxaca Monday, but elsewhere APPO supporters were rebuilding their barricades. Meanwhile, commercial and tourist activity in the city remained low-key.

The minister for Security, Eduardo Medina, explained that the decision to use force in Oaxaca was based on the premise that violence and disorder could not be allowed to continue in the state.

“Use of force is not the way to solve a social and political conflict. But it had to be done, and now there will be dialogue and negotiation through institutional channels,” he said.

Medina denied APPO’s suggestion that sending the police into Oaxaca was a move in support of the controversial state governor. He insisted that the purpose of the action was solely to restore order.

The police were sent in the day after violent clashes between APPO members and men in civilian dress who have been identified as local police officers and municipal officials linked to the PRI. The violence was the worst since the social and political conflict began in May.

The shootout involved the use of firearms by both sides, as confirmed by film images and photographs. Four people were killed, including Bradley Will, an independent U.S. journalist who was working for the alternative on-line news agency Indymedia. His death drew a protest from the U.S. embassy in Mexico.

Human rights groups have reported that APPO members have been repeatedly attacked by paramilitary groups and hired killers. Most of the 15 people who have died so far in the Oaxaca conflict belonged to APPO.

According to Sergio Aguayo, an academic and political scientist at El Colegio de México, the police raid in Oaxaca did not solve the conflict and, in fact, might make things worse.

Historian Lorenzo Meyer felt much the same way. He believed that the decision to use force in Oaxaca may have been a response to pressure from the U.S. embassy after the death of reporter Bradley Will. (END/2006)

Showdown looms as Mexican riot police move in on city occupied by protesters

The Guardian: Showdown looms as Mexican riot police move in on city occupied by protesters

Thousands of federal riot police backed by armoured trucks and helicopters pushed into the Mexican city of Oaxaca yesterday as a protest that began over teachers’ pay spiralled into a major confrontation.

Police wearing body armour and carrying riot shields and submachine guns were accompanied by water cannon and helicopters as they moved from the outskirts of the city towards the central plaza that has been occupied by a leftwing movement for months.

U Cincinnati: Domestic partner benefits OK’ed

The Enquirer: Domestic partner benefits OK’ed

Domestic partners of University of Cincinnati faculty and non-union employees will have access to benefits, including life insurance and long-term care insurance, the university’s trustees decided today.

Trustees unanimously approved the new benefits with no discussion during a special 15-minute meeting this morning.

Online-Only Capella U. Is Set to Be First University to Go Public Since Last Year

The Chronicle: Online-Only Capella U. Is Set to Be First University to Go Public Since Last Year

How ready is Wall Street to invest in a stand-alone, all-online university? The owners of Capella University could get the answer to that question as early as this week, as they gear up to sell shares in the corporate parent, the Capella Education Company, in an initial public offering.

The deal would be the first IPO in the higher-education sector since June 2005 public offering by the Lincoln Educational Services Corporation, a company whose colleges focus on two-year programs in automotive technology and allied health.

UC, Christian schools at odds

Sacramento Bee: UC, Christian schools at odds

The University of California and an association of fundamentalist Christian schools are heading for a showdown over their competing views of academic freedom.

The conflict erupted over a decision by UC admissions officers a couple of years ago to reject future proposals for high school curricula based on certain Christian textbooks published by Bob Jones University Press of South Carolina and A Beka Books of Florida. Approval was not withdrawn from courses that already received an OK.

AAUP protests another scholar’s visa denial

Inside Higher Ed:

The American Association of University Professors is protesting another scholar’s visa denial to federal officials. In this case, Adam Habib of the South African Human Sciences Research Council was denied entry to the United States when he arrived October 21. A letter from the AAUP noted that Habib had previously entered the United States many times, and was coming to work with academic groups. The letter urged federal officials to “remove barriers” to the visits of foreign scholars to the United States.

Gallaudet Ousts Incoming President

Washington Pose: Gallaudet Board Ousts Fernandes

The governing board of Gallaudet University revoked the appointment of the school’s incoming president yesterday, giving in to the demands of students, faculty and others whose protests have kept the nation’s premier school for the deaf in turmoil for the past month.

Inside Higher Ed: Gallaudet Ousts Incoming President

In an abrupt reversal, Gallaudet University’s Board of Trustees on Sunday dismissed Jane K. Fernandes from her position as the next president of the institution.

A board statement issued Sunday evening said that with “much regret and pain,” the board had come to the conclusion that “it is in the best interests of the university to terminate Dr. Fernandes from the incoming president’s position.” Ever since Fernandes was appointed in May to become president, the former provost has been the target of protests. In the last month, those protests have escalated to the point that the university for the deaf was at times effectively shut down.

The Chronicle: Gallaudet U. Trustees Terminate Appointment of President-Designate

Following a month of intense protests at Gallaudet University, the institution’s Board of Trustees voted on Sunday to rescind its controversial appointment of the university’s president-designate, Jane K. Fernandes.

The board reached its decision following a heavily guarded, daylong meeting at a hotel near Dulles International Airport, outside Washington.

The announcement that Ms. Fernandes would not become the university’s president as planned on January 1 was accompanied by “much regret and pain,” according to a statement released by Gallaudet. “We understand,” the statement continued, “the impact of this decision and the important issues that inherently arise when a board re-examines decisions in the face of an ongoing protest.”

The board’s appointment of Ms. Fernandes, in May, to replace I. King Jordan as president touched off protests among students and faculty members almost immediately. Opponents say Ms. Fernandes is not a strong enough advocate for deaf people and makes decisions without adequately consulting others.

In recent weeks, student protesters had blocked some of the campus gates at Gallaudet, the nation’s only university for the deaf.

After news of the board’s decision reached students on Gallaudet’s campus on Sunday evening, hugs and cheers abounded, and celebratory beer flowed freely as students, alumni, and national leaders for deaf people celebrated the board’s decision.

The Teacher’s Strike in Oaxaca: A primer

Pine Magazine: The Teacher’s Strike in Oaxaca: A primer

A little while back we ran a story about the teacher’s strike in Oaxaca. The entire story can be found here, though we’ve excerpted it below to fully focus on Mexico’s Oaxaca, which has been under police siege after a massive teachers’ protest. The protest has been going on for about five months, with a recent violent peak that left one person dead.

Here are some news stories written by people on the scene: Reuters, Forbes and the AP/USA Today. We are trying to hunt down more independently written articles for you.

Teachers’ union proposal for strike rejected

ANA: Teachers’ union proposal for strike rejected

Teachers in public middle schools and high schools are also set to return to classrooms on Monday, as a proposal by their union’s leadership, OLME, for a 24-hour strike on Nov. 3 and 9 failed to win a two-thirds majority of local representatives that attended an urgently called general assembly on Friday.

L.A. Teachers brace for strike

Los Angeles Daily News: Teachers brace for strike

Under mounting pressure for major reforms at Los Angeles schools, the teachers union has brought in its tough former leader to help mobilize members for a strike if its demands are not met.

United Teachers Los Angeles is hiring a former UTLA president, Wayne Johnson, who organized a successful nine-day strike in 1989 and wrangled a 24 percent pay raise over three years. Johnson later served as the hard-nosed president of the California Teachers Association and is now a consultant.

Alberta: Parkland teachers reject deal: board

Edmonton Journal: Parkland teachers reject deal: board

Parkland School Division says its teachers’ union rejected a contract proposal today that would have seen them get a 9.5 per cent pay raise over three years.

Drayton Valley Western Review: No strike for now
There is some relief from the tension of a looming teachers’ strike in the Parkland School District.
Robert Twerdoclib, president of the Parkland teachers’ local of the Alberta Teachers’ Association, said that a decision had been made at last Wednesday night’s general meeting to “calm the waters,” by not taking immediate strike action.

“It was resolved not to call any strike at this point and time,” said Twerdoclib.
However, emotion is still running high between the two parties of the dispute.

From Oaxaca to the Zócalo: Uprisings and Repression in Mexico

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Upside Down World: From Oaxaca to the Zócalo: Uprisings and Repression in Mexico

Jose Santiago sits in front of the radio station’s guarded door with a box of bread rolls in his lap. To his left, soda crates filled with Molotov cocktails line the wall. To his right two women with a club stretched between them block the door. A 62 year-old elementary school principal in Oaxaca City, Santiago was supposed to retire this year, but when state police brutally repressed a teachers’ strike on June 14, sparking an unprecedented civil uprising from all sectors of society, he thought, “I’d rather jump in.”

Drop Patent, Educause Urges Blackboard

Inside Higher Ed: Drop Patent, Educause Urges Blackboard

The leaders of higher education’s main technology association have written a powerfully worded letter urging Blackboard to relinquish the rights it gained under a controversial patent of online learning technologies in the public domain and to drop a patent infringement lawsuit it filed in August against a Canadian competitor, Desire2Learn.

Iowa: Regents take flak on review at schools

Des Moines Register: Regents take flak on review at schools

University of Iowa faculty complain that a strategic planning initiative ‘has not been transparent so far.’

University of Iowa faculty leaders are alarmed that the Iowa Board of Regents has launched a strategic-plan review at Iowa’s public universities without including faculty, students or Iowa lawmakers.

“It does seem to me that public institutions function the best the more transparent they are,” said Sheldon Kurtz, president of the U of I Faculty Senate.

“It has not been transparent so far.”

Mich. weighs ban on affirmative action

AP: Mich. weighs ban on affirmative action

Jennifer Gratz was turned away from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1995. The white high school honor student suspects she would have been admitted if she were black or Hispanic.

Eleven years later, in a campaign Gratz helped set in motion, Michigan voters will decide whether to bar the state government from using race and gender to determine who gets into college, who gets hired and who receives contracts.

Kentucky: Judge sides with Fletcher on Murray regents

Courier-Journal: Judge sides with Fletcher on Murray regents

A Franklin Circuit judge has dismissed a lawsuit seeking to block Gov. Ernie Fletcher’s appointment to the Murray State University board of regents.

Judge Tom Wingate agreed with Fletcher that he has the right to reject nominees submitted to him by the Postsecondary Education Nominating Committee.

Earlier this year Fletcher rejected two lists of nominees to the Murray board, but eventually appointed appeals court judge Jeff Taylor from a third list. The lawsuit was brought by the three nominees originally submitted by the nominating committee.

Scientists Endorse Candidate Over Teaching of Evolutio

The New York Times: Scientists Endorse Candidate Over Teaching of Evolutio

In an unusual foray into electoral politics, 75 science professors at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland have signed a letter endorsing a candidate for the Ohio Board of Education.

Groups protest UNH’s decision not to fire RA who made racial slurs

Union Leader: Groups protest UNH’s decision not to fire RA who made racial slurs

A University of New Hampshire resident assistant who used racial slurs during an appearance on UNH’s television station last month has stirred minority students into action after the school allowed him to keep his job.

The resident assistant, a white student at UNH, turned himself in to UNH’s Office of Residential Life after the incident and apologized for his actions. The Office of Multicultural Affairs was alerted soon after.