December 01, 1977 (vol. 88, iss. 69) • Page Image 1
… arter urges Arabs to joi airo peace talks; names envoy eN n~1 A 0TTII Mf X7 n'% D . A..,.+ 0-14:. .l4L.c ... .i1A& - I WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter said yesterday that the United States is no…
… longer the "dominant intermediary" in the Middle East. But he offered support to all Arab countries that decide to negotiate directly with Israel. So far only Egypt has seized that initiative. That action…
… was described by Carter at a news conference as an "historic breakthrough." BUT CARTER said he was con- vinced all of Israel's Arab neighbors - Syria, Jordan and Lebanon - want peace with the Jewish…
… was that the United States then might support a separate settlement between Egypt and Israel, which some Arabs are convinced is already in the making. "BUT," CARTER went on, "we certainly have not…
… reached that point yet. I think the other Arab leaders do want peace with Israel." Carter began the news conference with an announcement that Alfred Atherton, the assistant secretary of State for the Near…
… Department's top Middle East expert to the Arab-Israeli negotiations. Ath- erton's post with the department is an unusually sensitive one, and asso- ciates say one of his major achieve- ments is that he has…
… Thomas Danko finally has a representative's seat on the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA). School of Library Science student government president Roger Tachuk said he "temporarily" appointed Danko to the…
… school's seat on the Assembly even though Danko is not a library science student. MSA'S CONSTITUTION states, "The Assembly shall have one voting representative from each school or college." Danko maintains…























