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...principle, and concludes that Brandeis is guilty of "sincerity bred hypocrisy." The three chapels, he points out, appear equal in size but in fact differ in capacity, the Jewish chapel holding twice as many as the others. It is alleged that Brandeis also violates its ideals "negatively" by luring non-Jewish students with scholarships...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BRANDEIS REPLIES | 5/15/1956 | See Source »

...anything but hypocritical. The painfully simple fact remains that Brandeis, so far as I know alone among universities, has provided campus facilities for worship by its students without either excluding some of them or forcing them to worship as guests in an uncongenial atmosphere. Nor is the solicitation of non-Jewish students either unprecedented in principle or unreasonable. I have a strong suspicion that Harvard offers inducements of one kind or another to students from beyond the Appalachians and from other foreign pastures--and for that matter, from the city of Cambridge. Is it also hypocritical for Harvard to introduce...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BRANDEIS REPLIES | 5/15/1956 | See Source »

That Brandeis students are cynical does not surprize me--they are assigned more Nietzsche than Locke; but that they too are hypocritical is an observation which (sirrah!) the record does not support. The student who told Mr. Rosenthal that she gives a higher figure for non-Jewish enrollment because it "sounds good" is just a patriot turned inside-dopester...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BRANDEIS REPLIES | 5/15/1956 | See Source »

...began with the oft-quoted observation that among Jewish women whose husbands have been routinely, ritually circumcised, cervical cancer is only one-tenth to one-fifth as common as among non-Jewish women of similar age and social status. Was this coincidence or what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Circumcision & Cancer | 4/5/1954 | See Source »

Israel decided to honor him with the first visa ever granted to a non-Jewish German tourist. But when the news got out, there were mutterings from unforgiving Jewish extremists, so the Israeli government told Lüth to come incognito, if at all. and fibbed to the press that his trip had been canceled. Not until his trip was over and he was back home in Hamburg last week did the story of the "traveler to Cyprus" come out. "Israel has been defiled," cried the jingoist daily Herut, but other Israelis found the situation wryly humorous. "When the Germans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ISRAEL: Mysterious Traveler | 5/11/1953 | See Source »

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