Samuel Untermyer, president of the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League to Champion Human Rights, in a letter to General Charles H. Sherrill takes issue with his statement that no discrimination will be practiced against German Jews in connection with the 1936 Olympic Games.
“It is not,” Mr. Untermyer writes, “a question solely of whether, in order to secure the great prestige and patronage of having these games held in Berlin the Hitler regime is willing to relax, for the purpose of competition in these games and for that purpose only the brutal, medieval laws and rules it has enacted against Jewish athletes, among others. The question goes far deeper. In that connection perhaps you will answer the following questions:
“1. Are you not aware that Mr. Brundage accepted the humiliating and disgraceful condition that the fact of German Jews being permitted to participate was not to be published in Germany?
“2. That since the German government on June 7, 1933, made certain pledges with respect to the participation of German Jews in the games, it has been guilty of thirty-two specific acts of breach of that understanding, which I outlined in my letter of September 26 to the president of the American Olympic Association and his asso-
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