The ZOA initially criticized President Mandel’s weak response, characterizing the rejection of WIFI as not merely political, but also anti-Semitic because it targeted and discriminated against the group because of its support for the Jewish state. Moreover, suggesting that WIFI settle for something less than what it was entitled to was insulting, the ZOA stated. In a letter to Williams College, the ZOA urged the administration to exercise its authority by overriding the College Council’s decision and recognizing WIFI as an RSO.
Morton A. Klein, the ZOA’s National President, and Susan B. Tuchman, Esq., Director of ZOA’s Center for Law and Justice, applauded the administration’s recent decision to grant RSO status to WIFI: “The ZOA is pleased to see that President Mandel and her administration did the right thing and remedied the College Council’s astounding discrimination. Williams has shown that it is genuinely ‘committed to being a community in which all ranges of opinion and belief can be expressed and debated.’ And Williams’ new pro-Israel group will now truly have the same rights and privileges as every other registered student organization on the campus, which it unquestionably deserved.” |
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