A recent study finds discrepancies between how, on average, men and women perceive antisemitism on their university campuses.
An intruder at UPenn's Hillel smashed a table and podium, flipped over a table in the lobby, and yelled antisemitic slurs in an attack on the Jewish student center.
The judge presiding over the case ruled that the principal failed “to take appropriate and reasonable steps to discourage and modify the antisemitic student bullying and harassment behavior.”
As the head of Ono Academic College, Ranan Hartman has been changing Israel's higher education sector and pushing to integrate students from underprivileged backgrounds.
As the new school year begins, these findings furnish essential evidence of the breadth and depth of antisemitism students encounter.
My suggestion is the creation of a single cross-campus, pro-Israel advocacy group that would confront Ivy League university antisemitism in the eye.
Both Wildcat squads have seen some of the historic sites from the Old City of Jerusalem, the Western Wall, Yad Vashem, as well as Bethlehem, and the Church of the Nativity.
According to the survey, not only have two-thirds of Jewish students faced antisemitism, but one-in-five have actively avoided campus to escape such bigotry.
Last year, head coach Bruce Pearl and his Auburn squad participated in the “Birthright for College Basketball” trip which allowed the players and staff to immerse themselves in the Holy Land.
The participants all described feeling marginalized because of their Jewish identity and perceived Zionism.