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Campus Antisemitism

“Princeton’s inability to provide an open forum for the former prime minister of one of America’s fiercest allies is an embarrassment,” the president of the university’s Israel advocacy group told JNS.
The legislation shows “Tennessee is taking proactive steps to protect its Jewish community,” said a Combat Antisemitism Movement representative.
The managing director of Yale’s new Program for the Study of Antisemitism told the school’s student paper that “many Jews are uncomfortable” with the widely-adopted working definition.
“We’re seeing a disturbing increase in antisemitic attacks and rhetoric on college campuses,” stated Rep. Nicole Malliotakis.
“Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visas,” the U.S. Secretary of State said of foreign visitors supporting terrorist organizations.
“While no school, including Brown, is perfect, this campus offers a welcoming environment where you can be a proud Jew,” school officials and leaders of its Jewish community said.
The lawsuit is a “wake-up call,” said the executive director of The Lawfare Project. “Ignoring the rights of Jewish students has consequences.”
“The chains were removed by Columbia’s Public Safety and the individuals were escorted off campus,” a university spokesperson told JNS.
U.S. schools supporting “pro-terrorism activities should lose every cent of federal funding and subsidization,” stated Sen. Katie Britt.
“We are not perfect,” Harvard University president Alan Garber wrote. “Antisemitism is a critical problem that we must and will continue to address.”
An administration official told “The Daily Caller” that Princeton University has “perpetuated racist and antisemitic policies.”
The university “at last did the right thing” suspending its relationship with the Palestinian institution, a former Harvard president wrote.