Blog

Posts Tagged ‘debt’

Israel’s last day envisioned; UC Santa Cruz complaint; Labor strikes in Israel; and more [Required Reading]

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

An Israeli filmmaker envisions what Israel’s “last day” would look like, although takes many creative liberties while doing so. However unsettling the video may be, Uriel Heilman notes, it provides a thought provoking, yet unrealistic, depiction of what an attack on Israel and the response would look like. [JTA]

Members of the Jewish clergy have found new ways to cope with their student debt upon graduating by applying for federal loan forgiveness for employees of non-profit organizations. However, the Department of Education recently released new guidelines for who qualifies for this relief – and religious organizations are not on it, sparking an interfaith movement to change the law. [Huffington Post]

“In the small world of seminary training and professional religious jobs, the news that the public service loan forgiveness provision is not an option for religious workers has thrown a wrench in the plans of young pastors, rabbis, imams and other members a profession already known for low pay, long hours and high stress.”

George Clooney to star in new film about art experts chasing down works stolen by the Nazi regime. [JTA]

Tammi Rossman-Benjamin, a lecturer at the University of California, Santa Cruz, discusses why she filed a Title VI complaint against the university, alleging anti-Semitism against Jewish students. [Forward]

“Although he [University President Mark Yudof] implies that the primary target of my complaint is ‘abhorrent speech’ on campus, this is simply not so. Rather, my complaint focuses on university faculty and administrators who have regularly and egregiously abused their positions as employees of a public university and violated the tenets of their profession to promote their own virulently anti-Israel political agenda, which in turn has had deleterious effects on many Jewish students.”

The Histadrut labor federation, Israel’s main labor union, and the Israeli government fail to reach an agreement on contract workers, resulting in the first labor strike the country has seen in five years. [NYT]

Lower tuition… yay! Israel and Iran… meh… [State of the Students]

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

Everybody and their mother is trying to predict what’s going to happen in the 2012 race to the White House. At New Voices, we’re wondering what college students will vote for. Well, tonight may have given us a hint.

Most college students use their Tuesday night to catch up on homework or party before class-free Wednesday.

At American University in Washington, D.C., its student newspaper (which, by the way, I also work for) The Eagle proclaims, “It’s time for the most anticipated televised event of the year at AU. Nope, not the Super Bowl. It’s the State of the Union!”

AU College Democrats gathered the campus political junkies in The Tavern, AU’s bar-turned-hamburger-and-burrito-joint. As early as half and hour before showtime, students milled about, bought themselves a turkey cheese steak and settled in for President Barack Obama’s sixth statement to a joint session of Congress.

AU’s known to be a pretty liberal campus, so it was not surprising that Obama got a raucous round of applause when he began to give his State of the Union.

But what’s even more interesting is what students didn’t seem to care about. Obama’s celebration of global teamwork to stop Iranian nuclear weaponry, and the subsequent growth of Iranian sanctions, received barely any response from the gathered students. Obama’s mention of support for Israel received only a polite golf clap.

But students were apathetic about more than just the United States’s relationship with Israel. Approval for a clean energy economy and reaction to Obama’s gratitude to American soldiers was tepid at best.

But there were certainly highlights for students watching the president’s address happening only six miles away. Students naturally chuckled (by chuckled, I mean literally laughed out loud) at House Majority Leader Eric Cantor’s (Republican of Virginia and surprise Jew) visible conniption at Obama’s call for a payroll taxes and First Lady Michelle Obama’s embarrassed reaction to Barack’s joke gone sour.

But when it came to education costs, students came just short of jumping out of their seats in exultation. When Obama said the cost of college was too high, one student, with sarcasm dripping, loudly asked, “Really?”

Everybody else in the room laughed in agreement.

Obama continued to please AU Eagles when he called for more work-study financial aid, demanded lower student loan interest rates and, most importantly, scolded universities for raising tuition too much.

“Let me put colleges and universities on notice: If you can’t stop tuition from going up, the funding you get from taxpayers will go down,” Obama said.

Students responded in kind with surprised enthusiasm for the Commander in Chief’s hardline against rising tuition, an issue students at AU are all too familiar with.

But students’ passion shone through where they cared. Applause and cheers abounded for:

  • The end of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell,
  • Decreasing our debt and “nation building at home,”
  • Continuing American exceptionalism,
  • The creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,
  • Prevention of another BP oil spill,
  • More bipartisanship in Congress,
  • Equal pay for women,
  • The DREAM ACT and immigration reform
  • And most of all, the death of Osama Bin Laden.

The (more frequent and double) Reading List: Satire galore!

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

A brilliant, though morally dubious, satire of the Bin Laden killing. [Galactic Empire Times]

A hilariously appropriate response to the Der Tzeitung-Hillary Clinton fiasco. [Feministe]

Turning the Der Tzeitung-HC fiasco into a meme. [Hasidic Photoshop]

Who said falafel could unite Israelis and Palestinians? In Brooklyn, it’s another excuse to fight. [The Brooklyn Paper]

A clever idea: limericks on the parsha. [Torah Limericks]

The Jewish Week Came out with its 36 Under 36 today! Here’s one impressive college student. [JW]

Some inspiration for defenders of women’s rights in Israel. [JJ]

Encountering Gilad Shalit’s mother. [Forward Sisterhood]

A good point: Hamas isn’t running negotiations, so why does it matter if it’s in the government? [HuffPo]

Another win for the Israeli left: A lot of important former chiefs of staff openly oppose Bibi. [Forward JJ Goldberg]

Congrats, graduates! Now go pay off your student debt! [Time]

The Reading List: Student Anger in the West Bank

Friday, November 5th, 2010

Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira Closeup No GlassesAs students and the rabbinate try to reconcile in Israel proper, violent followers of a Chabad rabbi in the West Bank are attacking military and security personnel. [Failed Messiah]

Meanwhile, here’s a guide to how Chabad does its kiruv, or religious outreach, on campus — the final installment of a three-part guide to kiruv. [Frum Satire]

A student at the Arava Institute, which advocates for coexistence between Palestinians and Jews, responds to an attack on Masa, the umbrella group for long-term Israel programs and a sponsor of some Arava students. [The Masa Israel Blog]

Two from the Huff: First, banks are spending $83 million on promoting student credit cards… and leading more students into debt? [HuffPo]

Second, a professor dispels myths about elite professors. [HuffPo]