Sandy,
Apparently my effort at accuracy has stirred also stimulated lots of
misunderstanding of my point. I did not, do not, could not disagree with
you and wasn't trying to suggest otherwise.
Steve

Prof. Stephen E. Gottlieb
Albany Law School
80 New Scotland Ave.
Albany, NY 12208
518-445-2348
FAX 518-472-5878
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 05/27/03 12:09PM >>>
"In fact Jews and others could not walk through the door in
many areas prior to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. "


Having grown up, quite happily, in a small North Carolina town in the
1940s and '50s, I can testify from personal experience that there is
simply no comparison between the treatment of Jews and of
African-Americans prior to the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  I can remember
one time when I was not allowed to join my many Christian friends in
swimming at a country club pool.  That's it for any experienced
anti-Semitism.  I also received Duke's highest scholarship, in 1958, at
a time when Duke was still rigidly segregated.  (It does me no merit to
admit that that didn't stop me from accepting the scholarship.)  Perhaps
things were worse elsewhere in the South, but, frankly, I doubt that
there was a single community, even in the most benighted hamlets in
Alabama or Mississippi, where the treatment of Jews even came close to
the daily humiliations visited upon African-Americans.

sandy

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