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January 19, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 90) • Page Image 2

… Church St.-769-1222 r ' * U S RedUCed Rates fr:i BILLIARDS Everyday to 6 pm at the UNION OPEN 10 am' I I . I AHMED, a member of the Organi- zation of Arab Students, said most Arab students here feel that…

Arab critics and gain back some lost prestige." Added Ahmed: "Maybe he's hop- ing that after this show of force, the concessions will seem less harsh." JOHN DIRECTOR* coordinator for the Student Union…

…Page 2-Thursday, January 19, 1978-The Michigan Daily SRegents topics: student housing. minority drop By BRIAN BLANCHARD 506 ('73) to a low of 349 ('74). The Regents face two gloomy After more than a…

… decade of inac- reports at this afternoon's meeting in tivity, the University has begun to the Administration Building - one consider the possibilities of more noting a sharp drop in minority student

… MINORITY status report have held 769 students but the shows a decline in minority enroll- building was "not in good physical ment in the Literary College to the repair" and already houses some stu- 1972…

… level of 6.6 per cent of total en- dents. rollment - a drop of 0.6 per cent in " St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, re- the last two years. The number of cently purchased by the University minority students has…

… fallen to 424, after a great deal of repair, might from last year's figure of 488. Over have served 700 students. the last five years, the minority " University Towers, on South population has ranged from…

… a high of University, already has 700 students livinginde . "nr ......rnrn..... ..j The January meeting will continue W Htomorrow morning beginning at 9 UWATCH FOR .m. JIM REMPE----- February 2nd The…

… lowest retail price on record in i ma the United States for potatoes was 12 Pocket Billiard I cents for 10 pounds in 1896, reports the U.S. Census Bureau. SExhibition -- : E h ioMore than 2,000 students

…-determination, but said Arabs "have self-determination in 21 sover- eign Arab states." . Begin went on to compare Palestin- ian self-government with Hitler's expansionist policies during the 1930's. KAMEL, TAKEN aback…

November 19, 1978 (vol. 89, iss. 64) • Page Image 9

…- .... *--*-*-~---,--- - - - ,. _ . Page 12-Sunday, November 19, 1978-The Michigan Daily arabs (Continued from Page 11) he sells: "That's my new cash register. There's my new sign," he points…

… Hazimia an "Uncle Ahmed," a colloquialism meaning an Arab who has sold out to the American establishment. Swanson says the city has assumed a paternalistic attitude toward residents of the South End. "The…

… of the South End community and other Dearborn' residents is nearly non- existent. City officials, too, see little of the community except census figures. "Arabs are gregarious, they like to meet on the…

… an excerpt from a letter written by a Dearborn woman which said the Arabs are "terrible people who drag their kitchen chairs out and sit on the main sidewalk." Last November, however, Hubbard left…

… themes of sexuality and evil merged with a revelatory and concretely powerful effect. In The Fury, De Palma's Grand Guignol deaths were supported by a thematic famine, and the picture stagnated. The pseudo-Arab

… reception proved a harbinger of the movies to come. Although film students and other aspiring highbrows relish the dichotomy between art and entertain- ment, Spielberg's technical virtuosity was so…

… spicy Arabic foods and to hear the chants from outside the mosque, you would think the community has remained en- trenched in the old ways of Lebanon, Syria, or Yemen. Yet, in many ways the…

Arabs have been initiated more quickly than most into the American way. he remarked, 'We were all ready to start building and thought we had the support of the community. At this point we're just trying…

… the city should ask the area residents what they want. Even though Arabic immigrants make up 13 per cent of Dearborn's 110,000 population, the rest of the city is solidly white and middle-class. For 30…

… years Mayor Orville Hubbard reigned Arabic foods and to hear the chants from outside the mosque, you would think the community has remained entrenched in the old ways of Lebanon, Syria, or'Yemen. Yet, in…

September 19, 1978 (vol. 59, iss. 11) • Page Image 1

… agreement doubtful Settlements issue still unresolved TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - The great unresolved issue of the Camp David Mideast summit is the future of about 100 Jewish settlements on occupied Arab land…

Arabs, each settlement is a constant injury to their pride and an intolerable Jewish presence on Arab land. The settlements, mostly small outposts of 100 families or fewer, contain only about 10…

… Prime Minister Menachem Begin embrace during Sunday's announcement of an agreement reached at the Camp David summit. REGENTS SEEK STUDENT INPUT Search for new president eg in agreement is silent. THE…

… OFFICIAL, who asked not to be named, said that after all the terms of the agreement are examined, other Arab countries will recognize that Sadat achieved "many of the long- desired objectives of the Arab

… completely disregard committee recommendations. "I was told that with a careful search process, there would be few surprises at the end," said Livermore. J. 1 Students and alumni will also form a committee…

… to propose candidates to the Regents. Methods of selecting mem- bers of the student committee will be discussed tonight at the Michigan Student Assembly meeting, to be held at3909 Michigan Union at 7…

…:30 p.m. SACUA will select 15 faculty mem- bers for their committee, in accordance with the desires of the regents. The student and alumni committees will each have 10 members. THISvSELECTION PROCESS is…

September 19, 1978 (vol. 59, iss. 11) • Page Image 6

… finally be achieved. Professor Raymond Tanter, an expert on Mid-Eastern politics, told a group of political science students yesterday that he is "upbeat, prayerful, and hopeful" that Egypt and Israel will…

… to step up terrorist attacks against the Israelis in an effot-t to torpedo the negotiations, but Tanter warned that the Israelis must not retaliate against the Arabs, because it would strain relations…

… seemed perplexed about just how close peace really is. In the rest of the Arab world the reaction ranged from rage to silence. Moscow was sharply negative, and Western European leaders cautioned against…

… bankroller of Egypt, Syria Said trave and other poorer Arab states. "Maybe I'mj The Camp David documents a thing, but envision, after further negotiations hope that it is over the Sinai Peninsula, the signing…

… c nntUil l liti La Tanter Tanter also views the hard-line stance of the Arab states as a cover, and expects Jordan and Saudi Arabia to join the peace process at a later date. In Washington, Rep…

… illustrate American contentions that Sadat, too, had achieved some of the Arab world's goals in its 30-year con- flict with Israel. These were: * An end to Israeli military occupation of the West Bank and the…

… Gaza Strip. Israel will withdraw all military forces from the Sinai. . * Palestinian Arabs living on the West Bank and in Gaza will have "self- governing authority with full autonomy" and civil self…

… PLO, the umbrella Palestinian organization committed to dismantling the Jewish state. American officials said any West Bank Arab, regardless of PLO af- filiation, could participate in the' process. But…

… begin until a "self- governing authority" has been established in those regions. THERE WAb also potentla poutcai trouble at home/for Sadat because o the growing gap between Egypt and tf rest of the Arab

… with us and they'd hate gotten something." . THE SOVIET news agency Tass, in a harsh attack on Sadat, said the Egyptian leader had "betrayed" his fellow Arabs and had accepted the dictates of Israel and…

January 19, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 90) • Page Image 1

STUDENT LOBBY See editorial page .: '1 Sir4 1O UlQ MIDDLING High --22 Low-40 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 90 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, January 19, 1978 Ten Cents Eight Pages U…

…'s two key negotiating demands - total Israeli withdrawal from occu- pied Arab lands and self-determination for the Palestinians. THERE WAS no immediate Israeli comment on the development. The Israeli…

… over Pales- tinian rights to a homeland and Israel's 11-year occupation of Arab lands. THE TALKS were "continuing in a vicious cycle," Egyptian Information Minister Abdel Moneim el Sawy said in…

… from Arab lands and self-determination for the Palestinians - have not changed. The decision "is part of its (Egypt's) clear and frank stand in facing this situation," Sawy said. "EGYPT LEAVES the…

… being a 'skeleton' report." See HOOVER, Page 8 By DIANE ROBINSON Although dismayed by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's sudden decision to cut short Mideast negotia- tions, interested students and faculty…

… Henry, who teaches a class in the Arab-Israeli conflict. HENRY SAID that if peace talks are to continue; there must be a better comprehension of the Egyp- tian stance. "I don't think Egypt wants to break…

May 19, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 13) • Page Image 4

… 19, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Jets block peace B EFORE PRESIDENT CARTER assumed of- fice he promised Americans that the United States would not remain the global…

… sophisticated F-5Es to Egypt. The administration had lobbied hard to quash public fears that Arab nations would use the planes against Israel in any future war. Carter warned senators that denial of the sales…

… terms of attempts at peace in the Mideast. With greater arms, the Arabs and Israelis can afford to be even more inflexible. The U.S. has demonstrated that if peace negotiations are stalled it will provide…

… are too drunk to drink any more, Div. of Office of Student Svces. ,UT, as Frazier and Pawlik, the authors of one of , 207 Flefcher t1 q nd iio'spublicaions_ on alcohol note "sin- Onn Arbor, Mich, 48109…

July 19, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 46) • Page Image 38

… a professor. The buyer said Ulrich's pays professors for books at the same rates that apply to students - which means a Nebraska. University Cellar pays comparable rates. "There's certainly money in…

… raise the price to around $10.20 a barrel by 1981. The present world price, by contrast, is about $13.50 a barrel. Now, four years after the Arab em- bargo, there is no immediate U.S. shor- tage of oil…

March 19, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 133) • Page Image 1

…'re still in a double bind. We have to be more knowledgeable than men in the same positions." A MAJORITY OF the 650 women atten- ding the conference were community women and not students, a fact which…

… surprised many organizers and par- ticipants. "There is a big need for this infor- mation," said Barbara Anton, one of the organizers. "There is a need by both community women and students." Anton said the…

….N. peacekeeping force there. 3,798 tuets who wonlthe lottery ist in the Housing Information British Ambassador Ivor Richard, to return to University housing Office at 1011 Student Activities servig as president of…

…-controlled television said the new lines put Israeli troops within three miles of the closest Syrian forces near the Litani River. f THE SYRIANS are part of an Arab peace-keeping forces that monitor the end of the…

July 19, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 46) • Page Image 2

… Countries suddenly quadrupled world oil prices while its Arab mem- bers temporarily cut off oil shipments to the United States and other friends of Israel. Faced with this sudden shortage and steep price hike…

… by students at the University approval. o: Michigan. News phone 74-0562. Se:ond class Marcuss said that technically, the oil postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michgan orn routineqimntws0u9 h Published…

October 19, 1978 (vol. 59, iss. 37) • Page Image 8

student convicted of belonging to a Palestinian guerrilla organization, has been granted an early parole and will be deported from Israel in a few days, his attorney said yester- day. Esmail, a Michigan…

… State University graduate student, was ordered expelled from Israel with five months left of his 15-month prison sentence, attorney Felicia Langer said. SHE SAID the Israeli parole board acted on a…

… lived in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River. He was convicted in June of membership in the Popular. Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a radical Arab group. Prosecutors said Esmail…

… SOUP-n-SANDWICHES-$.50 NOON LUNCHEON: Friday, Oct. 20 CHRIS THOMAS * KEITH HEFNER * MACEO POWELL present a slide show and discussion on the eleventh world festival of students and youth in Havana, Cuba…

November 19, 1978 (vol. 89, iss. 64) • Page Image 3

…The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 19, 1978-Page 3 'Al IFmtXJffSEEs KVMCAL'DAIlY SOC: By BETSY MANN The name of the newly-formed Student Organizing Committee (SOC), a party pushing its ticket in…

… tomorrow's Literature, Science and the Arts Student Government (LSA-SG) elections sounds familiar to those involved in campus politics since the second-hand name group has borrowed its handle from a party…

… formerly active in the, Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), according to Debra Goodman, a member of the original SOC. Goodman said she objects to the revival of the name, because the students now calling…

… themselves'SOC do not have anything to do with the Nursing Who's Who Twenty-seven students at the University School of Nursing have been selected to appear in the 1978-79 edition of who's Who Among Students

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