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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowAnti-Semitism has been in remission, but it’s not dead, and Mickey Maurer points that out very compellingly from time to time [Feb. 3 Maurer column].
The ultimate chemotherapy for anti-Semitic cancer is likely to be the growing realization that those who may have been victims of anti-Semitism are now leading our community in the most generous and visionary philanthropy. The names Maurer, Glick, Simon and Eskenazi, to name a few, have represented lives very well lived—lives that should shape the culture of Indiana in a new uplifting and positive way for generations to come.
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Jerry Bepko
IUPUI chancellor emeritus, Indiana University trustees professor
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