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Tag: Rutgers University

  • Formerly A Friend — Now A Foe – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    CollegeEaglesMore PHLNewsUnique Columns

    If You Didn’t think that Philly High School and College Talent Is Making An Impact Across America — Look No Farther Than the Chicago Bears.

    The Eagles have made an incredible reputation on personnel moves — but on Friday at Lincoln Financial Field — some of those decisions combined with former tri-state area talent contributed to a Bears win. A lot of familiar names helped to contribute to the Bears win over the Eagles on Black Friday at Lincoln Financial Field. And several have even had a locker at the Novacare Complex during Nick Sirianni’s tenure as Head Coach of the Eagles.

    After winning the NFC in 2022 — the Eagles had a forgettable 2023–2024 campaign where the season unraveled. Adding Safety Kevin Byard opposite fellow Middle Tennessee State alumni Reed Blankenship did not work out in Philly. Now — Kevin Byard III is part of a Bears defense that is creating turnovers almost week after week.

    And how about a college and high school connection?

    St. Joe’s Prep graduate D’Andre Swift did not return to the Eagles after 1,000 yards in 2023. His teammate and fellow St. Joe’s Prep Graduate — Olamide Zaccheaus also did not return after the 2023 campaign. The Eagles instead won the Super Bowl last year with Jahan Dotson and Johnny Wilson as the receivers behind Devonta Smith and AJ Brown.

    While the Eagles were winning a Super Bowl back in 2018 — two hours north in Ramsey, New Jersey at Don Bosco Preparatory High School — Kyle Monangai was making his presence known in the running game. At Rutgers — he would rush for over 3,200 yards before being drafted this spring by the Bears in the seventh round of last year’s Draft.

    And finally the return of an old friend. On the Eagles last possession on 3rd and 4 — CJ Gardner-Johnson popped Jalen Hurts after a short run. When the Eagles obtained CJ Gardner-Johnson in both 2022 and 2024 — they went to the Super Bowl the following season in both seasons. When the Eagles decided to turn to youth in the secondary after a Super Bowl win — Gardner-Johnson was out first to Houston and then to Baltimore and finally to Chicago.

    The Eagles weren’t just beaten by former talent. They were beaten by Philly Talent.

    Tags: CJ Gardner-Johnson DeAndre Swift Jalen Hurts Olamide Zaccheaus Rutgers Scarlet Knights Rutgers University

    Categorized: College Eagles More PHL News Unique Columns

    Michael Thomas Leibrandt

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  • Leaders of Rutgers, Northwestern, UCLA to testify before Congress on Pro-Palestinian campus protests

    Leaders of Rutgers, Northwestern, UCLA to testify before Congress on Pro-Palestinian campus protests

    What to Know

    • House Republicans have summoned the leaders of Northwestern University and Rutgers University to testify about concessions they gave to pro-Palestinian protesters to end demonstrations on their campus.
    • The chancellor of the University of California, Los Angeles, also was scheduled to appear Thursday in the latest in a series of hearings by the House Committee on Education and the Workforce into how colleges have responded to the protests and allegations of antisemitism.
    • Tensions over the Israel-Hamas war have been high on campuses since the fall and spiked in recent weeks with a wave of pro-Palestinian tent encampments that led to over 3,000 arrests nationwide.

    House Republicans have summoned the leaders of Northwestern University and Rutgers University to testify about concessions they gave to pro-Palestinian protesters to end demonstrations on their campus.

    The chancellor of the University of California, Los Angeles, also was scheduled to appear Thursday in the latest in a series of hearings by the House Committee on Education and the Workforce into how colleges have responded to the protests and allegations of antisemitism. Tensions over the Israel-Hamas war have been high on campuses since the fall and spiked in recent weeks with a wave of pro-Palestinian tent encampments that led to over 3,000 arrests nationwide.

    After the first of those hearings in December, an outcry of criticism from donors, students and politicians led to the resignations of the presidents of Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania, who gave cautious, halting answers to questions about whether calls for the genocide of Jews would violate their schools’ conduct policies.

    In April, the committee turned its attention to Columbia President Minouche Shafik, who took a more conciliatory approach to Republican-led questioning. Shafik’s disclosure of disciplinary details and concessions around faculty academic freedom upset students and professors at Columbia. Her testimony, and subsequent decision to call in police, escalated protests on campus that inspired students at other colleges to launch similar demonstrations.

    Thursday’s hearing expands the scope of the committee’s inquiry for the first time to large, public universities, which are more strictly governed by First Amendment and free speech considerations. Earlier hearings largely focused on private, Ivy League colleges.

    Originally, the presidents of Yale University and the University of Michigan were called to testify. But the committee shifted its attention to Northwestern and Rutgers after those colleges struck deals with pro-Palestinian protesters to limit or disband encampments.

    Expected to testify Thursday are Michael Schill, the president of Northwestern; Gene Block, UCLA’s chancellor; and Jonathan Holloway, the president of Rutgers.

    The concessions that Northwestern and Rutgers agreed to were limited in scope. Like some other colleges that reached agreements with protesters, they focused on expanding institutional support for Muslim and Arab students and scholars on campus.

    At Northwestern, the administration agreed to re-establish an advisory committee on its investments that includes student, faculty and staff input. The university also agreed to answer questions about financial holdings including those with ties to Israel.

    Rutgers agreed to meet with five student representatives to discuss the divestment request in exchange for the disbanding of the encampment. The university also stated it would not terminate its relationship with Tel Aviv University.

    The committee’s chair, Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., criticized the schools for their decision to negotiate with protesters.

    “The Committee has a clear message for mealy-mouthed, spineless college leaders: Congress will not tolerate your dereliction of your duty to your Jewish students,” she said in a statement. “No stone must go unturned while buildings are being defaced, campus greens are being captured, or graduations are being ruined.”

    UCLA’s oversight of its campus protests has been under scrutiny since counter-demonstrators with Israeli flags attacked a pro-Palestinian encampment on campus. The counter-demonstrators threw traffic cones and released pepper spray in fighting that went on for hours before police stepped in, drawing criticism from Muslim students and political leaders and advocacy groups.

    On Wednesday, the police chief at UCLA was reassigned “pending an examination of our security processes,” according to a statement from the school.

    Annie Ma

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  • Maybe Good News for IBS Suffers And Marijuana

    Maybe Good News for IBS Suffers And Marijuana

    Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a miserable diagnose and can be disrupting to every day life.  is a frustrating and isolating illness for many patients. Constipation, diarrhea, gas and bloating are all common symptoms of IBS. While it doesn’t damage your digestive tract or raise your risk for colon cancer, there isn’t a clear cure.  Often, it can be managed through medications, diet and lifestyle changes.  One study estimates that up to 20% of Americans experience IBS, which is considered a chronic disease. Research indicates those with IBS miss three times as many workdays as those without bowel symptoms.

    RELATED: How Effective Is Marijuana In Treating IBS?

    Data suggests maybe good news for IBS steers and marijuana.  There has been enough research is recently Ohio’s State Medical Board unanimously approved IBS as a qualifying condition for Ohio’s medical marijuana program, making it the 26th ailment on the list.  The clear benefit has helped those in medical marijuana states move toward an easier life.

    Cannabinoids reduce production of gastric acid secretion by activating the CB1 receptors. Recent studies have also identified a potential pathophysiologic mechanism for IBS. Activation of the cannabinoid 1 (CB1) and the cannabinoid 2 (CB2) receptors reduce motility, limit secretion, and decrease hypersensitivity in the gut.

    Photo by Bill Oxford/Getty Images

    Researchers at Rutgers University suggest in a study marijuana can help ease the suffering of patients with severe IBS symptoms.  They analyzed data of Nationwide Readmissions Database from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, comparing IBS patients who were cannabis users vs. non-cannabis users. Among non-cannabis users, all-cause 30-day readmission rates were 12.7%. In cannabis users, that figures was only 8.1%. The study also found cannabis use correlated with shorter hospital stays and overall lower hospitalization charges.

    The study included 6,798 adult IBS patients, 357 of which were identified as cannabis users. The non-cannabis group had a mean age of about 53 years while marijuana users were about 36 years on average. Women were the primary gender in both cannabis users (62%) and non-users (81%)—which is expected, as IBS affects more women than men.

    RELATED: Marijuana And Gut Health

    Currently, there isn’t a cure for IBS, but a report indicated that marijuana could provide future therapeutic potential for patients. Unfortunately, more research needs to be to make it as effective as possible and understand dosage.

    Amy Hansen

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  • Striking Faculty and Grad Students Secured Big Pay Raises This Academic Year

    Striking Faculty and Grad Students Secured Big Pay Raises This Academic Year

    Higher-ed unions had their most active academic year in recent memory. A series of strikes led to changes that graduate students and faculty members touted as big wins: better wages, more benefits, and improved working conditions.

    The work stoppages, which often lasted weeks, disrupted campuses. Many graduate students and faculty weren’t teaching their classes; in some cases, final exams and grades were delayed. Things got so bad in New Jersey, for instance, that the governor felt the need to step in and mediate between the state’s flagship public university and its faculty union in hopes of staving off a court battle.

    The conflicts stemmed from a convergence of trends in higher education and the broader U.S. economy. Among them are colleges’ growing reliance on contingent faculty and a cutthroat academic job market, as well as soaring living costs and a burgeoning labor movement.

    Here’s a rundown of six institutions where strikes this past year resulted in pay raises for graduate students and faculty members.

    University of California

    A standoff across the University of California system went on for six weeks, from early November to late December. The UC strike of 48,000 graduate students, postdocs, and researchers, the largest in higher-ed history, proved influential — and prompted even more union activity on campuses this spring.

    After a 40-day work stoppage, the unions secured base pay increases ranging from 55 to 80 percent for academic employees and 25 to 80 percent for graduate-student researchers. For example, for a first-year teaching assistant, the minimum annual salary will increase to $36,000 from $25,000 by 2024. However, some student workers have argued that the cost of living near many UC campuses remains significantly higher than those minimums.

    “Our members stood up to show the university that academic workers are vital to UC’s success,” said Ray Curry, then-president of the United Auto Workers, which represents the grad students and postdocs, in a statement. “They deserve nothing less than a contract that reflects the important role they play and the reality of working in cities with extremely high costs of living.”

    The New School

    Shortly after UC graduate students and postdocs walked off the job, so did part-time faculty at The New School, a private liberal-arts university in New York City. About 90 percent of the institution’s faculty are adjuncts or lecturers.

    New School faculty said their wages hadn’t kept up with inflation for years. Classes came to a standstill. Students occupied the university center. Parents threatened a lawsuit over the disruptions.

    The union reached a five-year deal three weeks later with the university. In the first year, some of the lowest-paid adjuncts will see their pay go up by about a third.

    For a faculty member teaching studio or lab courses that add up to 90 contact hours — a measure of time spent in the classroom with students — minimum pay will increase to nearly $13,000, from about $8,600, by fall 2026. Instructors will also be paid for their out-of-classroom work; the stipend will start at $400 per course and rise to $800.

    University of Illinois at Chicago

    In January, faculty at the University of Illinois at Chicago fought for increased wages and more job security. After a six-day strike, the contract was ratified.

    The minimum salary for nontenured faculty increased to $60,000 from $51,000; for tenured faculty, the minimum salary rose to $71,500 from $60,000. Union members also received a one-time bonus of $2,500 to adjust for inflation.

    Faculty also lobbied for increased mental-health support and free psychological testing for students. As a result of bargaining, the university has promised to create a strategic plan focused on mental health.

    Eastern Illinois University

    After the University of Illinois at Chicago’s strike came a work stoppage at Eastern Illinois University. Unions at five of the state’s public colleges went on strike this academic year.

    The Eastern Illinois union is made up of around 450 workers, including professors and academic advisors. Students picketed alongside instructors in solidarity.

    After a six-day strike, faculty received a 15-percent raise in pay over four years and, for the first time, paid parental leave.

    Temple University

    At Temple University, in Philadelphia, a bitter fight dragged on for six weeks. It started with a walkout in late January by the Temple University Graduate Students’ Association, which represents about 750 student workers and research assistants.

    After a week of disruption, the university said it would take away tuition and health-care benefits from the striking students. By mid-March, the sides came to an agreement.

    The new four-year contract standardized pay across fields and will increase graduate students’ minimum salary to $27,000, from the current range of $19,292 to $20,840, by the fall of 2025. The university also agreed to improve parental and bereavement leave, and to start a committee to review student workloads.

    Rutgers University

    Roughly 9,000 instructors at Rutgers went on strike in mid-April for the first time in the university’s history. Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, was so concerned about how the strike could affect the university’s nearly 70,000 students that he called both sides to the state capital for a “productive dialogue.” The strike ended after five days.

    Adjunct professors came away with a 43-percent raise. Graduate students saw their pay go up by more than a third. They were also guaranteed five years of funding.

    “In important ways — especially in confronting precarity and poverty wages in higher education — we have set a new standard,” the union said in a statement.

    Emma Hall and Zachary Schermele

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  • Rutgers’ President Threatened to Take Striking Instructors to Court. Then He Walked It Back.

    Rutgers’ President Threatened to Take Striking Instructors to Court. Then He Walked It Back.

    Thousands of instructors at Rutgers University joined a national surge in union activity on Monday, becoming the fifth currently active strike on a college campus.

    Three unions representing roughly 9,000 educators, researchers, and clinicians announced the strike on Sunday after nearly a year of contract negotiations. The strike will disrupt classes for Rutgers’ nearly 70,000 students across three campuses.

    Union leadership is asking its members to join the picket line and refuse to conduct teaching, research, and other business at Rutgers, according to the largest of the three unions on strike. Strikers are still permitted to complete certain responsibilities, like writing letters of recommendation for students.

    “By exercising our right to withhold our labor, we will prove to the administration that WE are the university,” the union, Rutgers American Association of University Professionals-American Federation of Teachers, wrote in a letter to its members.

    The standoff has put a harsh spotlight on Jonathan Holloway, the Rutgers president. Holloway drew pushback for initially suggesting that his administration would seek a court order to stop the strike and force a “return to normal activities.”

    The Rutgers administration walked back that threat on Monday after a meeting with New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, according to Rutgers spokesperson Dory Devlin.

    Murphy “asked us to delay taking legal action asking the courts to order strikers back to work so that no further irreparable harm is caused to our students and to their continued academic progress,” Devlin wrote in an email. “We agreed to his request to refrain from seeking an injunction while it appears that progress can be made.”

    A labor expert said turning to the courts amid a strike might make the situation worse. “One thing that injunctions can cause is it can actually exacerbate the conflict as opposed to hoping to resolve the conflict,” said William A. Herbert, executive director of the National Center for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions at Hunter College in the City University of New York.

    Holloway is a scholar of African American studies and history. An open letter from over 40 prominent historians of labor and African American history — including Ibram X. Kendi, a professor at Boston University and the founder of the Center for Antiracist Research — had called on Holloway to rescind his threat of an injunction. The letter also voiced support for the striking workers.

    “We know that as an expert in African American history, you have thought deeply about how struggles for racial justice have consistently been aligned with the demands for jobs, labor rights, and democracy in the workplace,” the letter stated.

    Holloway expressed his frustration with the strike in a letter to the campus community on Sunday. “To say that this is deeply disappointing would be an understatement, especially given that just two days ago, both sides agreed in good faith to the appointment of a mediator to help us reach agreements,” Holloway wrote.

    Rutgers is facing financial woes, and Holloway said in February that the university would have to remedy a $125-million shortfall over the next three years.

    In a message to students and faculty about the strike, Rutgers wrote that it was “committed to ensuring that our more than 67,000 students are unaffected by the strike and may continue their academic progress.” Rutgers plans to continue classes and distribute grades and expects employees to report to work. The issue is a pressing one as the end of the semester looms, with finals and grades coming soon.

    Rutgers officials wrote that employees who engage in the strike “are subject to a loss of pay and/or benefits, and other sanctions as they may apply or as the court deems appropriate.”

    There is no state law that prohibits public-sector workers from striking in New Jersey, Herbert said, adding that Holloway’s argument relied on common law, or legal precedent from the courts, which have intervened in strikes from public workers in the past.

    “Although there is no state statute that bars strikes, in some instances, courts in New Jersey have issued injunctions against walkouts by public employees,” the Rutgers AAUP-AFT wrote on its website. “An injunction may require public employees to end a strike and return to work. The University administration would have to petition a court for an injunction.”

    The strike comes after 94 percent of members of two of the unions — representing primarily full- and part-time faculty and graduate workers — voted to authorize a strike in March.

    We’ve been bargaining for 10, 11 months — got virtually no response to any of our proposals, and when we did, they were paltry. They were insulting.

    The unions’ bargaining demands include increased pay to keep up with inflation for graduate workers, better job security for part-time lecturers, and more affordable housing for university community members.

    Rutgers officials have offered salary increases for faculty, postdocs, and graduate employees, but union leaders say the raises aren’t good enough.

    The university’s proposal would provide across-the-board 12-percent pay increases for full-time faculty by July 1, 2025; 3 percent in lump-sum payments to all the faculty unions to be paid out over the first two years of the new contract; a 20-percent increase in the per-credit salary rate for part-time lecturers over the four years of the contract; a 20-percent increase in the minimum salary for postdocs in four years; and higher wages for graduate assistants and teaching assistants.

    “The offers that they’re presenting still aren’t enough to guarantee a living wage for the people who are most essential, one could argue, to the successful operation of the university,” said Manu Chander, an associate professor of English at Rutgers’ Newark campus and the president of the Newark chapter of Rutgers AAUP-AFT.

    Chander said he’s on strike to improve conditions for adjunct faculty and graduate employees, whom he described as the most vulnerable workers.

    Kyle Riismandel, an associate professor of history and American studies at Rutgers and the vice president of the Newark chapter of Rutgers AAUP-AFT, said the picket line drew a large crowd on Monday.

    “We’ve been bargaining for 10, 11 months — got virtually no response to any of our proposals, and when we did, they were paltry,” Riismandel said. “They were insulting.”

    Julian Roberts-Grmela

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  • Rutgers University educators set to go on strike in what would be massive, historic walkout

    Rutgers University educators set to go on strike in what would be massive, historic walkout

    9,000 Rutgers University faculty members set to strike Monday


    9,000 Rutgers University faculty members set to strike Monday

    00:44

    After nearly a year of bargaining for what they call a fair contract, unions representing 9,000 faculty and staff at Rutgers University plan to walk off the job Monday morning, CBS New York reports.

    The strike would impact full- and part-time union employees and would be the first in the school’s 257-year history and would be one of the largest strikes in the history of higher education, the station says.

    Gothamist says it “will virtually shutter the university’s campuses in New Brunswick, Newark and Camden,” affecting some 67,000 students.  

    The unions negotiated with university officials through the weekend but the sides failed to reach contract agreements.

    The president of the Rutgers American Association of University Professors-American Federation of Teachers (AUP-AFT), Rebecca Givan, said in a statement that the unions and management remain far apart on many core issues.

    “We intend for this new contract to be transformative, especially for our lowest-paid and most vulnerable members,” Givan said. “But our proposals to raise graduate workers and adjunct faculty up to a living wage and establish meaningful job security for adjuncts are exactly the ones that the administration has resisted most.”

    An online town hall was to be held Sunday night to announce the strike.

    New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy tweeted a statement calling the sides to meet at his office on Monday “to have a productive dialogue.”

    The university had said it had brought in a mediator to help the two sides reach a deal.

    Rutgers President Jonathan Holloway sent a letter to the community expressing his frustration over the situation and provided a link with guidelines for students, as well as for faculty and staff, on what to know during a strike.


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  • 3 unions representing about 9,000 Rutgers University faculty and staff to begin historic strike over contract negotiations | CNN

    3 unions representing about 9,000 Rutgers University faculty and staff to begin historic strike over contract negotiations | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Three unions representing about 9,000 Rutgers University faculty and staff will go on strike Monday morning after nearly a year of gridlocked contract negotiations, marking the first educator strike in the university’s nearly 257-year history, according to the unions.

    Members of the unions will form picket lines on Rutgers’s three main campuses in New Brunswick, Newark and Camden, New Jersey, to demand salary increases, improved job security for adjunct faculty and guaranteed funding for graduate students, among other requests, union representatives said in a joint release.

    “Those closest to our learning and to the university’s mission to teaching, research and service deserve more than to merely be surviving and scraping by,” Rutgers masters student Michelle O’Malley said during a virtual town hall Sunday night.

    The three unions are Rutgers AAUP-AFT, which represents full-time faculty, graduate workers, postdoctoral researchers and counselors; the Rutgers Adjunct Faculty Union, which represents part-time lecturers; and AAUP-BHSNJ, which represents faculty who teach at the university’s medical and public health facilities.

    While union leaders expect the action to halt instruction and “non-critical research,” the university is insisting most classes will continue. Clinicians at the university’s health facilities “will continue to perform patient care duties and critical research, while curbing voluntary work,” the unions’ release said.

    In guidelines posted in the case of a strike, the university advised students to continue to attend classes and complete assignments as normal.

    “To say that this is deeply disappointing would be an understatement,” Rutgers University President Jonathan Holloway said in a letter to the community. According to Holloway, the two sides agreed to appoint a mediator just two days before the strike was announced.

    “For the past several weeks, negotiations have been constant and continuous,” the president said. “Significant and substantial progress has been made, as I have noted, and I believe that there are only a few outstanding issues. We will, of course, negotiate for as long as it takes to reach agreements and will not engage in personal attacks or misinformation.”

    Union representatives, however, insist that the university has refused to meet their central demands.

    “After sitting at the bargaining table for 10 months trying to win what we believe to be fair and reasonable things, like fair pay, job security, and access to affordable health care, and getting virtually nowhere on these core demands, we had no choice but to vote to strike,” Amy Higer, a part-time lecturer at Rutgers and president of the Adjunct Faculty Union, said in a statement.

    She continued, “We’ve heard management say that a strike will harm students. But you know what really harms students? The high turnover that results from paying teachers poorly and making them reapply for their jobs every semester.”

    New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy in a statement implored university and union bargaining committee representatives to meet in his office Monday “to have a productive dialogue.”

    In addition to the three groups that announced the strike, there are nine other unions seeking new contracts with the university, according to the unions’ release.

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  • Rutgers University educators plan to go on strike Monday morning

    Rutgers University educators plan to go on strike Monday morning

    9,000 Rutgers University faculty members set to strike Monday


    9,000 Rutgers University faculty members set to strike Monday

    00:44

    NEW YORK — After nearly a year of bargaining for what they call a fair contract, unions representing 9,000 faculty and staff at Rutgers University plan to walk off the job at 9 a.m. on Monday morning.

    The strike would impact full-time and part-time union employees and would be the first staged in the school’s 257-year history and be one of the largest strikes in the history of higher education.

    The unions negotiated with university officials through the weekend but the sides failed to reach contract agreements. Rutgers AAUP-AFT President Rebecca Givan said in a statement the unions and management remain far apart on many core issues.

    “We intend for this new contract to be transformative, especially for our lowest-paid and most vulnerable members,” Givan said. “But our proposals to raise graduate workers and adjunct faculty up to a living wage and establish meaningful job security for adjuncts are exactly the ones that the administration has resisted most.”

    An online town hall was to be held Sunday night to announce the strike.

    Gov. Phil Murphy released a statement on Twitter calling the sides to meet at his office on Monday “to have a productive dialogue.”

    The university had said it had brought in a mediator to help the two sides reach a deal.

    Rutgers President Jonathan Holloway sent a letter to the community expressing his frustration over the situation and provided a link with guidelines for students, as well as for faculty and staff, on what to know during a strike.

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  • Rutgers basketball star donates endorsement money to program that gave him his start

    Rutgers basketball star donates endorsement money to program that gave him his start

    Rutgers basketball star shares bond with mentor


    Rutgers star shares strong bond with mentor who helped him find basketball

    01:37

    Newark, New Jersey — Cliff Omoruyi is known for his powerhouse dunks. 

    But the Rutgers University junior only started playing basketball at age 14, just before his family in Nigeria sent him to New Jersey.

    “It was just to get a better education,” Omoruyi told CBS News.

    Omoruyi moved in with Muhammad Oliver, a volunteer with the basketball program at the Salvation Army Center in Newark, who wasn’t overly impressed with Omoruyi’s on-court skills at first.

    “He had a lot of work to do,” Oliver said. “We had to basically start from scratch.”

    Oliver was not only Omoruyi’s legal guardian, but also a motivator.

    “I almost gave up on basketball,” Omoruyi said. “He got me to believe that I could be what I want if I just keep working.”

    It was a work ethic that applied off the court too and allowed Omoruyi to serve as a role model for Oliver’s son.  

    “Because of Cliff, my son improved academically tremendously,” Oliver told CBS News. “He saw how Cliff handled basketball and math.”

    Clifford Omoruyi
    Clifford Omoruyi of the Rutgers Scarlet Knights looks on in the game against the Purdue Boilermakers at Mackey Arena on Feb. 20, 2022, in West Lafayette, Indiana.

    Getty Images


    Omoruyi, who leads Rutgers in points and rebounds this season, is also one of 10 finalists for the Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award, given annually to the nation’s best college center.

    And as one of the best players in the Big Ten Conference, he has earned $25,000 in endorsements. In honor of Oliver, he’s donated all that money to revitalize the basketball court at the Salvation Army Center.

    Omoruyi said Oliver changed his life.

    “I think he’s changed our life as well,” Oliver replied.


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  • Multimillion-Dollar Payouts Are on the Rise in Sexual-Misconduct Lawsuits. Colleges’ Insurers Have Had Enough.

    Multimillion-Dollar Payouts Are on the Rise in Sexual-Misconduct Lawsuits. Colleges’ Insurers Have Had Enough.

    After the rulings are handed down in sexual-misconduct lawsuits against colleges, a second legal battle quietly begins.

    Determining who pays the legal fees and settlements — which, in the most sweeping cases, can total hundreds of millions of dollars — often leads to behind-the-scenes squabbles as colleges and their insurance carriers parse general liability policies.

    That tension is playing out between Baylor University and Lexington Insurance Company, which sued in January to stop covering claims against the university in a vast sexual-assault scandal.

    In higher education, insurers and institutions have typically been a united front: Colleges pay premiums, carriers pay up after a crisis. Now, cracks in the relationship are forming, especially as more sexual-misconduct lawsuits are lodged and settlements grow larger. Insurance companies and colleges are increasingly concerned about risk — both financial and reputational.

    In response, many insurers are simply walking away from higher-education coverage. Those that remain are taking precautions to avoid the financial fallout of sexual misconduct, putting the burden of legal fees and payouts more squarely on the shoulders of colleges.

    The Penn State Effect

    The tipping point came in the case of the former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky at Pennsylvania State University, which led to one of the first public rifts between a college and its insurer.

    The abuses perpetrated by Sandusky involved hundreds of victims over the more than four decades he was employed by Penn State. Thirty-two victims sued the university for damages, and settled for $93 million, as reported by PennLive.

    But neither Penn State nor its then-insurance company, Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Association Insurance, wanted to pay.

    In 2016, after a three-year court case, a judge ruled on the “interpretation” of the contracts between PMA and Penn State — in essence, how the university’s insurance policies could be triggered by claims of sexual misconduct, and if the policies applied to Sandusky-related claims.

    Complicating the case was that, as is typical, Penn State’s insurance policies often changed year-to-year, and many victims were abused by Sandusky multiple times over several years. The judge’s opinion stated that claims made by each victim would trigger the policy of the year when the first incident of abuse occurred.

    But for some years, the university’s insurance coverage didn’t apply in certain situations — letting PMA off the hook. Penn State’s insurance policies in the mid-1990s, for example, did not cover sexual abuse or molestation. After 1998, PMA did not need to cover Penn State because the policies no longer applied when university officials first learned about Sandusky’s abuse and did not act to prevent it. And, beginning in 2005, only one claim related to Sandusky could be filed each year, according to the policies.

    While the public does not know how much of the multimillion-dollar settlement was paid by Penn State or PMA, the case touched off a new era in higher-ed insurance, said Kyle D. Logue, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School who’s an expert in insurance law.

    As a result, general liability policies are narrowing to exclude sexual abuse, said Logue. This pattern is common in insurance, he said: As insurers realize that certain risks are extremely large, or largely under the control of the institution that’s being insured, exclusions are added to protect against that risk.

    Sexual-misconduct coverage in general liability policies might only be approved if the colleges meet certain requirements. United Educators, an insurance company that works exclusively with schools and colleges, requires applicants to have policies in place on sexual-misconduct prevention and ways to report and investigate incidents. Other insurers simply no longer offer sexual-misconduct coverage.

    Claiming Otherwise

    With Penn State in recent memory, Lexington Insurance is following a similar playbook at Baylor and hoping to pre-emptively steer clear of a big payout. The pending sexual-misconduct lawsuit brought by 15 former students alleges that the plaintiffs were sexually assaulted by other students and staff members between 2004 and 2017 and that the university didn’t act to protect them.

    At Baylor, as at Penn State, the insurance policies were triggered for the year an incident occurred; a policy from 2014, for example, was triggered by a claim filed two years later.

    Filed on January 10, Lexington’s lawsuit alleges that Baylor’s policies didn’t cover sexual misconduct between 2012 and 2016, when the majority of the alleged sexual abuse occurred. For the remaining alleged assaults, the sexual abuse does not meet the definition of an “occurrence” — namely, an accident — because the university may have failed to prevent the incident under the federal gender-equity law known as Title IX, Lexington argues.

    (A spokesperson for Baylor University said the university “continues to work with Lexington regarding previous claims” but switched insurers for its general liability coverage “a few years ago.”)

    Amid such high-profile scandals, many insurers want to minimize their risks, opting for a different approach known as a claims-based policy. Under that system, when universities file claims with their insurer, that triggers the current year’s policy, which often no longer covers sexual abuse — no matter what year the misconduct occurred.

    “The shift to claims-made policies provides more general protection for the insurer than the specific exclusion does,” said Logue, in an email response to The Chronicle.

    United Educators maintained its occurrence-based coverage because it is “preferable for our members,” according to a spokesperson.

    Striking Out on Their Own

    As outside insurance companies become more wary of higher ed, many colleges are joining the ranks of corporations and creating a new structure to insure their risks.

    That new structure — known as a captive insurance company — is a separate legal entity, but the university is involved in its main operations, including creating policies and managing claims. Yale University, the University of California system, Rutgers University, and the University of Minnesota are among the colleges that self-insure with captive insurance companies.

    Michigan State University created such a company, called Lysander Series, after settling a lawsuit with the 300-plus victims of Larry Nassar, the former university sports doctor who abused women and girls under the guise of performing medical treatment. According to reporting from The Wall Street Journal, Michigan State rejected a policy with reduced coverage from its longstanding insurer, United Educators, and created Lysander instead.

    In 2019, at the time of its creation, a Michigan State spokesperson told the Journal that the policy from Lysander Series “broadly excludes insurer liability for sexual misconduct.” A United Educators spokesperson said the company does not “publicly disclose member or insurance policy details.”

    MSU also took to court its 13 former insurers to cover the $500-million settlement with Nassar’s victims. As of last September, Michigan State had recouped around $100 million, according to the Lansing State Journal. In November, a judge found that the American Physicians Assurance Corporation was not obligated to pay $31 million for costs related to the Nassar case under a 2000-2001 insurance policy.

    Sealing the Cracks

    The Nassar case was “one of the worst of the worst,” said Bryan Elie, vice president for underwriting at United Educators.

    But the conflicts in college insurance are only going to increase as more victims come forward about abusive behavior and sexual-misconduct lawsuits proliferate, experts say.

    In 2014 a report compiled by United Educators of publicly available cases involving sexual misconduct listed one case that topped $1 million. In 2022 that number jumped to five. Settlements within the University of California system and at the University of Southern California topped $615 million and $852 million, respectively.

    “Those trends have just been growing and growing,” said Kimberly Pacelli, a partner at the Title IX consulting firm TNG.

    Invariably, while conducting trainings for colleges’ Title IX coordinators, Pacelli notices that administrators realize the nature of their work is inherently risk management.

    “We always recommend that [Title IX coordinators] interface with their finance and administration folks to really understand who’s their insurer and what the insurance covers,” said Pacelli.

    Meanwhile, insurers are getting more invested in training colleges on Title IX policies to further minimize their risk. “From our perspective, our goal is to help the institution,” said Elie. He added: “Don’t let a serial predator take root.”

    Elissa Welle

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