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The Office for Civil Rights of the U.S. Education Department has opened an investigation into allegations of antisemitism at Harvard University, where the campus, like many others, has been roiled by demonstrations and confrontations between pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian students in the weeks since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel. The complaint against Harvard, filed on Tuesday, joins a growing list of federal civil rights investigations into complaints of discrimination based on “shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics,” including at Columbia, Cornell, Wellesley College, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Tampa and the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art. The list includes a handful of school districts as well, including New York City public schools, Clark County School District in Las Vegas and Hillsborough County Schools in Tampa. The Office for Civil Rights announced on Nov. 16 that it was investigating such complaints as part of its efforts to “take aggressive action to address the alarming nationwide rise in reports of antisemitism, anti-Muslim, anti-Arab, and other forms of discrimination and harassment on college campuses and in K-12 schools since the October 7 Israel-Hamas conflict.”
Persons: , Organizations: Civil Rights, U.S . Education Department, Harvard University, Israel, Harvard, Columbia, Cornell, Wellesley College, University of Pennsylvania, University of Tampa, Cooper Union for, Advancement of Science, New, Clark County School District, Hillsborough County Schools Locations: Israel, New York City, Las Vegas, Hillsborough, Tampa
The University of Pennsylvania is under investigation for alleged violations of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. Photo: Hannah Beier for The Wall Street JournalThe Education Department is investigating several schools over reports of harassment against Jewish and Muslim students in response to ongoing campus tensions related to the Israel-Hamas war. The department is investigating Columbia University, Cornell University, the University of Pennsylvania, Wellesley College, Lafayette College, the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, and the Maize Unified School District in Kansas. The schools are under investigation for alleged violations of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which protects students from, among other things, discrimination based on shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics.
Persons: Hannah Beier Organizations: University of Pennsylvania, Civil, Wall Street, Education Department, Jewish, Columbia University, Cornell University, Wellesley College, Lafayette College, Cooper Union for, Advancement of Science, Maize Unified School District Locations: Israel, Kansas
A Free-Speech Fix for Our Divided Campuses
  + stars: | 2023-11-17 | by ( Suzanne Nossel | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
The Israel-Hamas war has created a crisis of protest and confrontation on American campuses. At Cooper Union in New York, pro-Palestinian student demonstrators pounded on the door of a library as fearful Jewish classmates sheltered inside. A Cornell undergraduate used a campus website to post threats to attack the school’s center for Jewish life. Both Brandeis and Columbia have taken steps to penalize pro-Palestinian student groups for activity they argue violates university policies, prompting charges that they are selectively suppressing activism. As the conflict continues in the Middle East, college students are alternately emboldened and alarmed, faculty are at loggerheads, donors are irate, and college presidents are embattled.
Persons: Israel Organizations: Cooper Union, Palestinian, Cornell, Harvard, Brandeis, Columbia Locations: Israel, New York
Protests by pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian groups on college campuses have intensified tensions between students groups, faculty and administrations in recent weeks. Universities have struggled to contain the blowback as students and faculty raise concerns over both security and free speech. On Tuesday, about 400 students gathered at Columbia University to protest the war and to criticize university leaders for suspending two pro-Palestinian student groups through the end of the semester. The university said it would cooperate with the investigation and said it was taking steps to address antisemitism. Three Jewish students sued New York University this week over what they said was a hostile environment that had allowed antisemitism to go unchecked.
Persons: Biden, Catherine E, Lhamon, Ben Chang, Kathy Hochul, banged, N.Y.U, John Beckman Organizations: Columbia, Cooper Union, Cornell, Hamas, U.S . Department of Education’s, Civil Rights, Wellesley College, University of Pennsylvania, Lafayette College, Maize, Office, Civil, Israel, Universities, Columbia University, Cornell University, Gov, New York University Locations: New York, Israel, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Kansas
Opinion | Universities Are Failing at Inclusion
  + stars: | 2023-11-16 | by ( David Brooks | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Over the past five weeks, Jewish students on America’s campuses have found themselves confronted with those who celebrate a terrorist operation that featured the mass murder and reportedly the rape of fellow Jews. They see images of people tearing down posters of kidnapped Jewish children. At M.I.T., Jewish students report that they were told by some faculty members to avoid the university’s main lobby — which had been the site of a pro-Palestinian protest — for their own safety. I’ve been teaching on college campuses off and on for 25 years. It’s become increasingly evident to me that American adolescence and young adulthood — especially for those who wind up at elite schools — now happen within a specific kind of ideological atmosphere.
Persons: Rabbi Nomi Manon, Hillel, ” Shabbos Kestenbaum, I’ve, It’s Organizations: Cooper Union, University, Albany, Albany Times - Union, , Harvard Divinity School, ” Universities Locations: M.I.T, American
Organizers say it is the first Jewish alumni association in the history of the university. Harvard President Gay wrote a letter to members of the larger Harvard community addressing the tensions on Thursday. While a large chunk of university donations come from big gifts, small donations from alumni are becoming an increasingly important source of funding for higher education, according to the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE). Universities like to tout the high number of donations they receive to show that they have an engaged alumni base, said CASE. More than 300 Cooper Union alumni also recently threatened to end donations over the New York school’s response to anti-Israel protests.
Persons: Bill Ackman, Leslie Wexner, , , , Claudine Gay, Dean, Harvard College Rakesh Khurana, Rebecca Claire Brooks, Gay, Brooks, ” Brooks, ” Cooper Organizations: New, New York CNN, Harvard University, Harvard, Pershing, Harvard College, Harvard College Jewish Alumni Association, Organizers, Jewish, Holocaust, CNN, “ Harvard, Council, Advancement, Universities, Cooper Union Locations: New York, Israel
This most recent wave of hate began with prejudiced comments obscured by seemingly righteous language. Days later, at a pro-Palestine rally, the Cornell associate professor Russell Rickford said he was “exhilarated” by Hamas’s terror attack. In an article, a Columbia professor, Joseph Massad, seemed to relish the “awesome” scenes of “Palestinian resistance fighters” storming into Israel. Most recently, over 100 Columbia and Barnard professors signed a letter defending students who blamed Israel for Hamas’s attacks. In recent days, some universities, including Cornell, have released statements denouncing antisemitism on campus.
Persons: didn’t, Russell Rickford, Joseph Massad, Barnard, Israel Organizations: Cornell, Cooper Union, New York University, George Washington University, Harvard, Palestine, Columbia Locations: Columbia, Israel, Palestine, Al, Aqsa
Opinion | The Laws of Campus Culture War
  + stars: | 2023-11-02 | by ( David French | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +15 min
They represent the moral and philosophical foundations for the concrete constitutional rules of culture war that directly apply on campus. One of the most powerful and compelling arguments for free speech in American history was born out of mob suppression. In 1860, Frederick Douglass wrote his “Plea for Free Speech in Boston” after a violent mob shut down an antislavery event. Every college and university — public or private — that receives federal funds has an affirmative duty to protect students’ civil rights. In the recent past, schools have sometimes been too enthusiastic about stopping harassment, defining the term so broadly that university anti-harassment policies actually violate students’ free speech rights.
Persons: George Washington, , , Abraham, ” Washington, Johnson, Watts, they’re, Deactivating, Frederick Douglass, ” Douglass, Biden, Davis, VI, Scott Alexander’s, it’s, Organizations: State University System of, Justice, Cooper Union, Cornell University, Trees School, . Ohio, Klan, Hamas, Civil, of Education, Cornell, Democratic Locations: State University System of Florida, Palestine, New York City, Ithaca, N.Y, , United States, America, Newport, R.I, Texas, Terminiello, Chicago, Brandenburg, ., Ohio, , Gaza, Florida, Boston, Monroe County
Opinion: The shocking resurgence of antisemitism
  + stars: | 2023-11-01 | by ( Opinion Frida Ghitis | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +10 min
She is a weekly opinion contributor to CNN, a contributing columnist to The Washington Post and a columnist for World Politics Review. Frida Ghitis CNNA few of the rioters carried Palestinian flags, underscoring the obvious link between the attack and the war between Israel and Hamas. In terrifying scenes, the rampaging crowd, some shouting “Allahu akbar,” surrounded passengers, pressuring them to prove they were not Jewish. Universities have become hotbeds of antisemitism, with Jewish students fearing for their safety. (Police have since arrested a Cornell student after he allegedly threatened to kill Jewish students.)
Persons: Frida Ghitis, “ Allahu akbar, , , Christopher Wray, Michael Koplow, , Simon Sebag Montefiore, Stalin, Hitler, “ I’m, Olaf Scholz, Biden, Israel, that’s, It’s, Vladimir Putin, Rabbi Alexander Boroa, — “ Hitler Organizations: CNN, Washington Post, Politics, Frida Ghitis CNN, Hamas, Makhachkala Uytash, United Nations General Assembly, Universities, Cornell University, Ivy League, Police, Cornell, The Cooper Union, Israel, Republican, Boston Marathon, Federation of Jewish Locations: Dagestan, Russian, Tel Aviv, Israel, Gaza, Egypt, Makhachkala, Russian Republic of Dagestan, Palestine, New York, menacingly, Austria, South Africa, Nicaragua, Germany, Venezuela, Milan, Hamburg, Berlin, Australia, Argentina, Russia, China, United States, Caucusus, Moscow, Ukraine, Washington
Jewish students are planning to sue colleges like Cornell and Harvard for doing enough to stop antisemitism on campuses. "There has been an explosion of antisemitism on college campuses," attorney Mark Ressler told Insider. Harvard, New York University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The plaintiffs in the planned lawsuits will be "students who have been victimized by on-campus bigotry and hatred directed at them because they are Jewish," Ressler said. "And yet when it comes to Jewish students, university administrators have a double standard and they have put their head in the sand and allowed this problem to become out of control," he said.
Persons: Mark Ressler, Ressler, , Kasowitz Benson Torres, City's, Hitler, Israel Organizations: Cornell, Harvard, Civil, Service, New, Cornell , New York University , Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, Fox Business, . Harvard, . Harvard , New York University , Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Jewish, City's Cooper Union, Defamation League, Hamas, ADL Locations: United States, New York City, Israel, Cornell ,, . Harvard ,, Jewish, Palestinian, Gaza
Anthony Vidler, an architectural historian who, beginning in the 1960s, reshaped his field by setting aside dry chronologies of styles and movements for an interdisciplinary approach borrowing from psychoanalysis, French literary theory and cultural studies, died on Oct. 19 at his home in Manhattan. His wife, the literary critic Emily Apter, said the cause was B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Mr. Vidler, who was born in Britain during World War II, was part of a generation of European and Latin American architectural historians who arrived in the United States in the 1960s and ’70s, bringing with them new, theory-driven viewpoints about architecture as a realm of ideas and not just design. Sometimes cast as architecture’s version of the British Invasion, scholars like Mr. Vidler, Kenneth Frampton and Alan Colquhoun settled in New York City and in architectural programs at a small number of institutions, above all Princeton University, where Mr. Vidler taught for almost 20 years and remained affiliated for decades. He also served as dean of the architecture schools at Cornell, from 1997 to 1998, and Cooper Union, from 2001 to 2013.
Persons: Anthony Vidler, Emily Apter, Vidler, Kenneth Frampton, Alan Colquhoun Organizations: Princeton University, Cornell, Cooper Union Locations: Manhattan, Britain, United States, British, New York City
Watching for the Bus Stop Gallery
  + stars: | 2023-07-19 | by ( Jori Finkel | More About Jori Finkel | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The artist Felipe Baeza knows something about waiting for the bus. Growing up in Chicago in the 1990s, he rode the city bus on his own starting around age nine. Going to college at Cooper Union in New York to study art, he took the bus or subway from his home in Spanish Harlem to get to class. They will also appear on digital kiosks and newsstands in Mexico City. Navigating a city by public transportation changes the way you experience the landscape, the world.”
Persons: Felipe Baeza, , Baeza, Organizations: Cooper Union, Art Fund Locations: Chicago, New York, Spanish Harlem, Los Angeles, Brooklyn, Baeza, Boston, Léon, Mexico, Mexico City, Celaya
A writers' strike has been underway since overnight Monday. Thousands of Hollywood writers have fanned out across the streets of Los Angeles since early Tuesday afternoon, waving signs and chanting to demonstrate their resolve. Insider spoke with eight WGA members who are picketing or contributing to the work stoppage in other ways. Are you a member of the Writers Guild of America or do you work in the entertainment industry? How is the writers' strike impacting you?
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