Israel: The Open University… is closed for now

Jerusalem Post: The Open University… is closed for now

The Open University in Ra’anana – the country’s largest university in terms of enrollment – was indefinitely closed on Sunday, after the academic staff went on strike following a four month long labor dispute over working conditions.

9 Tenured Faculty Members Are Laid Off at San Francisco Art Institute

The Chronicle News Blog: 9 Tenured Faculty Members Are Laid Off at San Francisco Art Institute

The San Francisco Art Institute has laid off nine tenured faculty members in the latest in a series of cutbacks aimed at stemming the institute’s cash-flow problems.

The financial crisis and credit crunch have hit the institute particularly hard, said Bob Gamboa, a spokesman. Lenders have been stingy since 30 percent of its endowment disappeared last fall in the stock-market crash. Since then, the institute has taken a number of belt-tightening measures, including a blanket salary freeze for nonunion faculty and staff members, compulsory furloughs during semester breaks, and a 25-percent pay cut for senior administrators.

Israel: Open University closed by strike

Haaretz: Open University closed by strike

Teaching staff at the Open University will begin an open-ended strike today, following a decision Thursday by its junior faculty union. This will be the first time an institution-wide strike has been held at the university, Israel?s largest in terms of student enrollment.?

Ohio: Hebrew Union could face closure

Cincinnati Enquirer: Hebrew Union could face closure

Tough economic times and multimillion-dollar debt might force Hebrew Union College, the nation’s oldest Jewish educational institution, to shut down its Clifton campus.

The Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion is facing an $8 million debt – in part because of flat fundraising, pension liabilities, and endowment and other revenue declines that have hit the institute harder than at any other time in its history, Rabbi David Ellenson, the college-institute’s president, told stakeholders in an e-mail.

Ontario: Job losses, fee hikes expected in UWO budget

London Free Press: Job losses, fee hikes expected in budget

Tuition fees at UWO will rise an average 4.5% and there’ll be unknown job cuts under a budget recommended by the school’s senate after heated debate yesterday.

The budget must still be approved by UWO’s board of governors, but some faculty and staff members accused the university of unnecessary spending as job losses loom.

Alleged racial incident stuns Tufts

Boston Globe: Alleged racial incident stuns Tufts

Allegations of racism are roiling the Tufts University campus after an allegedly drunk freshman and members of a Korean student group got into fisticuffs earlier this month in a dorm lounge.

North Carolina: Greensboro College cuts jobs, wages

News 14: Greensboro College cuts jobs, wages

GREENSBORO – Economic stresses have forced another Triad college to make some hard financial choices. Greensboro College administrators said they were forced to make some budget cuts.

Word of cuts spread quickly around campus.

Fla. Community College President Indicted

Inside Higher Ed: Fla. Community College President Indicted

When allegations first surfaced last year about possible conflicts of interest involving state funds earmarked for Northwest Florida State College and its award of a job to a prominent state legislator who arranged for the money, the college’s president, Bob Richburg, angrily distinguished the situation from recent scandals in Alabama’s community college system that had led to resignations and even criminal charges.

DuPage College adopts Horowitz’s “Academic Bill of Rights”

Inside Higher Ed: David Horowitz Wins a Round

For all the controversy over the “Academic Bill of Rights”, David Horowitz’s statement of his views of academic freedom, the document has been adopted rarely. But on Thursday, the board of the College of DuPage, a community college outside Chicago, adopted as official policy a statement based on the Horowitz document.

New Idea on Grad Students, Unions at NYU

Inside Higher Ed: New Idea on Grad Students, Unions

New York University has been the site of a historic breakthrough for the push to unionize graduate teaching assistants — and a bitter strike to preserve the union, which ended in failure, without collective bargaining. NYU administrators are now floating an idea that would give graduate students the right to join the university’s adjunct union.

The idea is linked to improvements NYU is considering in doctoral students’ funding packages. Currently, students receive five years of support, but some of the support is linked to teaching for two or four semesters. The NYU plan would end the teaching requirement. Graduate students would still be encouraged to teach, but any teaching assignments would be paid on top of their fellowships. For those assignments, they would be treated as adjuncts, and covered by NYU’s adjunct union.

Turkey: Thousands protest arrests of academics

AP: Thousands protest arrests in coup plot

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Thousands of people marched to the mausoleum of secular Turkey’s founder on Saturday to protest the arrests of university professors and other secularists accused of involvement in an alleged plot to topple the Islamic-rooted government.

More than 5,000 people, including students and university teachers in academic robes, waved Turkish flags, carried posters of Turkey’s late leader Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and chanted: “Turkey is secular and will remain secular!”

Chicago State’s student newspaper, Tempo, is back on stands as controversy lingers

Chicago Tribune: Chicago State’s student newspaper, Tempo, is back on stands as controversy lingers

Chicago State students delivered the first new issue of Tempo in weeks as the editor in chief and the newspaper’s former faculty adviser remain embroiled in a lawsuit against the school

The student editor carted stacks of newspapers across the Chicago State University campus, filling newsstands that have been empty for two months.

Passersby tried to read the cover of Tempo before it hit the stands this week, missing it since it stopped publishing amid battles with university administrators.

Hiring of Thomas Angers Faculty at Florida International

The New York Times: Hiring of Thomas Angers Faculty at Florida International

The former Knicks coach Isiah Thomas will be greeted in his new job at Florida International University with a reminder of his past.

Laurie Shrage, the director of women’s studies and a philosophy professor at the university, said she and some of her colleagues planned to hand-deliver to Thomas a copy of the university’s sexual harassment policy.

Valley City State University moves all instruction online after flooding closes campus

Inside Higher Ed: A River Runs Alongside It

This is Steven W. Shirley’s first year as Valley City State University president; he’s 36. “Although I felt a lot older after some of the sand bagging I was doing over the last few days.”

It’s a first year with an unusual end. Valley City on Wednesday announced it would move all instruction online for the remainder of the semester, as the Sheyenne River rose to record levels and officials called for an evacuation of the city’s flood plain (where much of the university is located). According to Mayor Mary Lee Nielson’s statement, the river’s elevation had never before exceeded 20 feet; a crest at 22 feet or higher is expected and, “additionally, the Corps of Engineers also predicts that we will likely remain at this elevated level for up to two weeks, adding additional strain to our dike system.”

Fighting over guns on campus

Inside Higher Ed: Gun Fight

Legislation that would allow guns on college campuses is moving forward in Texas and Missouri, but the history of other such fights suggests the issue won’t be put to rest with the passage of a bill.

University officials in Utah allowed concealed weapons on campus only after protracted battles in court and the Legislature. As for Colorado, the fight over firearms continues to this day. Well after the passage of a 2003 law that many argue allows for guns on college campuses, most universities have yet to lift bans.

Canadian university cuts Canadian studies program; US university adds Canadian studies program

The Chronicle: Oh. Canada.

On the old MTV game show Remote Control, contestants were often challenged to determine whether an erstwhile celebrity was “dead, or Canadian?” For Simon Fraser University’s Canadian-studies program, the answer is “both.”

Facing budget problems and declining interest from students, the British Columbia institution decided to nix the program, effective April 1. But south of the border, the University of North Dakota — in balmy Grand Forks — has asked the State Board of Higher Education for permission to add a Canadian-studies minor to its curriculum. The university already offers a handful of courses that could be reclassified as Canadian studies, and three professors have volunteered to co-teach a survey course.

Generation Gaps Are Evident in Professors’ Views of Their Jobs

The Chronicle: Generation Gaps Are Evident in Professors’ Views of Their Jobs

For college professors who are members of the baby-boom generation, the Rolling Stones’ song “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” may resonate as more than just a youthful memory, the results of a new study suggest.

Compared with faculty members who are older or younger than they are, baby-boomer professors are much less satisfied, over all, with their jobs, according to findings from the study, which was presented here this week at the annual conference of the American Educational Research Association.

North Dakota Campus to Stay Closed for Rest of Spring Semester

The Chronicle News Blog: North Dakota Campus to Stay Closed for Rest of Spring Semester

Valley City State University officials decided yesterday to keep their campus closed for the rest of the semester, after flooding from the Sheyenne River prompted Valley City, N.D., to urge about half its residents to evacuate until the waters recede, which may not happen for two weeks.

Canadian Researchers Protest Budget Cuts in Open Letter to Prime Minister

Globe and Mail: PM urged to restore science funds
More than 2,000 scientists galvanized into ‘Don’t leave Canada behind’ campaign

More than 2,000 researchers, including some of the country’s most respected scientists, have signed an open letter to the Prime Minister calling the funding cuts in the January budget “huge steps backward for Canadian science.”
The Chronicle News Blog: Canadian Researchers Protest Budget Cuts in Open Letter to Prime Minister

More than 2,000 Canadian scientists have signed an open letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper decrying budget cuts in science, especially at a time when President Obama is bolstering research in the United States.

Law Professors Sue Publisher Over ‘Sham’ Book Supplement

The Chronicle News Blog: Law Professors Sue Publisher Over ‘Sham’ Book Supplement

Two law professors are suing West Publishing in federal district court for putting their names on a book supplement they did not write, arguing that it is a “sham” that could damage their reputations.

For nearly 20 years, David Rudovsky, a senior fellow at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and Leonard Sosnov, a professor of law at Widener Law School, have compiled an annual supplement to their 1988 book, Pennsylvania Criminal Procedure: Law, Commentary and Forms.