that a walk around the main building of the University of Vienna would reveal little except anti-Semitic posters and literature of the lowest kind, including the Protocols of the Elders of Zion , which was on sale everywhere with the rector's approval. To the reporter of Austria's most venerable liberal newspaper it seemed as though the students were interested in nothing but the "Jewish question." This was especially true for members of the Deutsche Studentenschaft, whose numbers and influence were constantly growing. The hate propaganda was finally forbidden by the academic authorities in October 1925, much to the indignation of Nazi students, but only the rector of the College of International Trade was strict about enforcing the new rule.
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The anti-Semitic violence in Vienna's institutions of higher learning of the early postwar years abated only slightly in the middle and late twenties. The Anatomy Institute of Professor Julius Tandler continued to be a favorite target of völkisch students, being spared attacks only in 1928 and the first ten months of 1929. 13 In May 1925 Nazi students broke into the institute and demanded that Jewish students get out. One of the Nazi students then made a speech in the entry hall of the building in which he called for the murder of leading Socialists such as Karl Renner, Otto Bauer, and Julius Deutsch. This incident caused the Austrian government, which had the ultimate authority over Vienna's higher academic institutions, to close them all. The federal chancellor, Rudolf Ramek, very possibly responding to a complaint contained in a long letter from the Israelitische Kultusgemeinde, and mindful of the World Zionist Congress that was to meet that summer in Vienna, also issued a stern warning to the leaders of the Deutsche Studentenschaft. 14
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Another anti-Semitic brawl took place at the College of International Trade in March 1927 when two hundred to three hundred students from other Hochschulenled by Robert Körber, who by this time had graduated and become a businessman but had lost none of his interest in radical student politicsinvaded the building and attacked anyone who looked Jewish with rubber clubs and sticks. The director of the college, Dr. Grunzel, was called a "Jewish pig," a "dirty pig-Jew," and a "stinking Hebrew," whereas the police who arrived on the scene to restore order were called "Jew lovers." Körber delivered a short speech in which he denounced Grunzel for not allowing any anti-Semitic posters. 15
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During observances in November 1927 celebrating the founding of the republic, Nazi students with the help of thirty men from the Sturmabteilung attacked the predominantly Jewish Socialist Student Association at the University of Vienna. After ten minutes eight Jewish students had to be carried away to receive first aid while the Nazi students triumphantly sang a party song.
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