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July 19, 1938 (vol. 48, iss. 19) • Page Image 2

Student Religious As- sociation is quoted as saying that "Jews are as harsh and feel as strongly in their anti-Arab sentiment as the Nazis in Germany do toward Jews. So much feeling is shown that the Arabs

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY AT, - _ r E ]HIGAN DAILY Letter Answers Charges 'On. ArabJew Struggle DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the…

… University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session until 3:30; 11:00 am Saturday until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. .,4 ' ' Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under…

… atmosphere especially created to parallel that of a real French home, more than 40 students of French gather each evening to converse in French, to become versed in French customs and to learn to appreciate…

… are winning the support of some Christians, people who in their time have suffered at the Arabs' hands." This is so rank an untruth, and does the Jewish people so grave an injustice, that I wish to…

… plight in the present dis- turbing world situation should not be made hard- er by Christians. The truth of the matter is that Arabs them- selves have not made such rash statemnts as Mr. Morgan is quoted to…

… have uttered last Tues- day. Arabs who are mobilizing forces against the reconstruction of the neglected Holy Land by Jews out of nationalistic motives admit that Jews have brought prosperity to the land…

…. They admit that Jewish efforts are responsible for raising the standards of the Arab masses in Palestine whose position is as, a result of these efforts far superior to the status of their kinsmen in…

… Egypt, Trans-Jordania, Iraq and other Arabic countries. We have yet to encounter among the arguments advanced by the Arabs against Jewish colonization the fantastic statement accredited to Mr. Morgan…

…-that the attitude of the Jews of Palestine to the Arabs is comparable to that of the Nazis to the Jews. Not only is Mr. Morgan's rash statement con- trary to fact, but the opposite is true. The fact. that…

February 19, 2018 (vol. 127, iss. 78) • Page Image 1

… Performing Arts to attend Arab Xpressions — the University’s annual showcase of Arabic culture. Xpressions is organized by the Arab Student Association, and featured Arab dances, skits, poetry and…

student talent to celebrate the beginning of Arab Heritage Month. It is the only Arab culture show produced on such a large scale at the University of Michigan. LSA seniors Jad Elharake and Haleemah…

…-start built into most undergraduate classes at the University. Michigan time is a MAYA GOLDMAN Daily News Editors Event Arab Xpressions showcases dance, skits CAMPUS LIFE Event by Arab Student

… had similar stories to her, and that it doesn’t have to be a stigma.” On Saturday night, close to 1,400 students, faculty and community members flocked to the Power Center for the…

… Aqel were the hosts of the event. On stage, they described how Arab Xpressions had transformed in terms of attendance and venue, year by year. Starting in the dorms, it was later moved to the…

March 19, 1990 (vol. 100, iss. 111) • Page Image 4

… disabilities and to strengthen their legal rights. Arab stereotypes need to be fought. By Dina Khoury Suppose a survey were conducted of University of Michigan students to deter- mine their attitudes towards…

… community, such results should be met with alarm and despair. Such a survey was recently conducted on campus, but instead of testing student attitudes about Blacks, the survey was concerned with Arabs

…Page 4 -The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 19, 1990 aE Lidjigan arIt EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Viewpoint Eating bugs…

…. Roughly 90 percent of those responding agreed that Arabs were both intelligent or competent and hard- working or diligent. And roughly 90 percent disagreed with the statement "Arabs are unclean." However, a…

… core group ranging from 20-35 percent of the respondents consistently agreed with negative statements such as "Arabs are terrorists," "Arabs are warlike," and "Arabs hate Jews." While these statements…

… might cause other ethnic groups to bristle, the Arab- American Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), the group conducting the poll, was somewhat encouraged by the results. Khoury is an LSA junior. The…

… racist stereotypes. This can only breed further tension on campus. The ADC conducted the survey to de- termine what stereotypes are most preva- lent among University students and there- fore in what ways…

… we must educate the community to help end these stereotypes. The survey was conducted by phone and the respondents were chosen at random from the University student directory. The students were…

… replies. Our goal is to humanize Arabs in the face of traditionally dehumanizing media portrayals. To have 20-35 percent of those polled holding such negative attitudes to- wards Arabs in an educated…

… community is unacceptable. In order for us to move for- ward to an atmosphere of greater tolerance, we must strive to understand one another rather than condemn in ignorance. Anti-Arab stereotyping is not a…

July 19, 1958 (vol. 68, iss. 18) • Page Image 2

students on campus, who con- that the United States attempts to sup-. not Nasser, but Arab nationalism: at nationalism is one of the most powerful ences in today's world scene can be denised by those who are…

…"Baghdad On The Subway" Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER 'AUTIIORITY. OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICA'T'IONS BLDG…

…. x " 1 r . -,~ir ! ..-t f wt 7 Y, JULY 19, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: EDWARD GERULDSEN I Think Foreign Students. should Be Kept in The- Place' Negotiated Settlemen Necessary in Mideast By WALTER LIPPMANN…

… and usband-to-be. As a University student, iquired at the Office of Student Affairs. 'ing copied a list of "apartments for rent" the bulletin board, she set out armed automobile, map and hope. went…

…'t have- any single girls in my apart- , 'though," she continued garrulously . . any foreign students, neither. I think{ n students should be kept in their place," aiq. won't mix them with the Americans. I…

… addressed the landlady, "but I don't think my fiance and I would be interested in your apartment. You see, we're Jewvish." AN UNUSUAL situation, perhaps, but evi- dently not infrequent in Ann Arbor. Student

… United States and Britain could hardly defend their action if it were directly solely against Arab 'nationalism and the Arab desire, clearly demonstrated, to be free of outside domination. The more they…

… attempt to keep the lid on that, the more the pres- sure will rise within the pot. BUT to defend the Arabs against theirlown haste, to save them from an exploitation worse than the exploitation they have…

… 'grim prospect that the British and the Americans will find themselves holding on to beachheads on the fringes of the .Arab countries'of the Middle East. In no Arab country, except the Lebanon which is…

… about half Christian, does the West have any strong friends. As the cards now lie, t4abest that President Eisen- hower can hoe for is that the big- ger Arab nations can~be contained by a holding…

May 19, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 159) • Page Image 4

… right of free association guaranteed by the United States Constitution." Last week at Columbia University this doctrine was given a neat twist by the Committee on Student Organization which 'decided to…

… angle. It said simply that "Columbia wished to protect the student's freedom to select' friends and associates ac- cording to personal interests and tastes against interference by persons or groups…

… was devoted to contemporary composers, primarily Amer- To The Editor: THE NEED for an impartial court to review Arab claims was fulfilled in 1946 by the establish- ment of the Anglo-American Com…

Arab point of view for' various reasons. To cite a few examples, Wilfred Crick, an intimate friend of Ernest Bevin, R. H. S. Crossman who later' reviewed his feeling as based on "ignorance and oil…

… subordinate to the fact that the Arabs were able to present their case in an eloquent fashion at times before a commis- sion which, at the outset, if not impartial, was sympathetic to their viewpoint. -Jacob…

… Lassner *" * * Arab Ghetto ..-. To The Editor: T MAY BE interesting to the "peace loving" Israelis and their sympathizers to read what Hal Lehrman, a Jewish correspondent for the New York Times wrote af…

September 19, 1958 (vol. 69, iss. 4) • Page Image 2

…I' THE MICHIGAN DAILY _y UE tl DURING SUMMER CONGRESS: Fundamental Rights of Student Press Demanded by NSA By JOAN KAATZ A declaration of the fundamen- tal rights of the student press was…

… proposed and passed at the United States National Student Associa- tion (USNSA) Congress held this summer. Delegates at the meeting at Ohio Wesleyan University in Dela- ware, Ohio, further condemned any…

… information purposes and will upon request furnish many students with an explana- tion of the NSA position toward the Festival. The delegates reaffirmed its position condemning the French people'for their…

… College. Both students participated in an exchange program of student edi- tors between Russia and the United States last spring. Eckstein. commented on the uni- formity of intellectual opinion: among…

October 19, 1988 (vol. 99, iss. 30) • Page Image 5

… The Michigan Daily -Wednesday, October 19, 1988- Page 5 Pre-law caravan rolls into Union BY MARK MENDELIS Perry Mason step aside. These are the '80s and law students have changed, as have their…

… options. For one thing, it's becoming in- creasingly difficult to get into law school. Also, women and minority students are gaining more acceptances to law schools than ever before. And lastly, alternative…

… occupied West Bank, Arab hospital officials said. An army spokesperson confirmed the deaths and said five people had plastic bullet wounds, including American photographer Neal Cas- sidy, the first foreign…

Arabs launched the uprising Dec. 8. Six Israelis also have died. The 5-year-old boy died after he was hit with plastic bullets in the chest, stomach, and left hand as he played in a schoolyard near his…

… home, according to officials at Al Ittihad Hospital. The child, identified as Deyaa Fayez, was shot when Israeli soldiers opened fire on a nearby group of stone-throwing Palestinians, Arab reporters said…

… published in Oakland. Also yesterday, the Israeli Supreme Court barred U.S.-born Rabbi Meir Kahane from running in the Nov. 1 election saying his anti- Arab Kach movement is racist. Panel talks about racism…

March 19, 1998 (vol. 108, iss. 95) • Page Image 18

Students Assoc. IMPAC Citizens Action Group Environmental Theme Semester A'subuhi Multicultural Council Tau Beta Pi Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers (SHPE) Skull and Obelisk Arab Jewish Cult…

…18A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 19, 1998 PAID ADVERTISEMENT http://www.umich.edu/~vote o for a teYes!Y tiuden 9 w w' es:e R Reen 1. A . We're this close to having a Student

… Regent at UofM. We need your help. A Student Regent is not a new idea; UofM is the only public school in the Big Ten without a Student Regent. For thirty years Michigan students have struggled to change…

… that. Now we can. Voting Yes! Yes! Yes! on the Student Regent ballot question will supply the funds necessary to put the Student Regent question to Michigan vot- ers. A recent poll conducted by the…

… Governor's Office reported 73% of Michigan residents support the drive for a Student Regent at UofM. All we have to do is let them vote. All you have to do is vote Yes! Yes! Yes! 0 y 4 ; J ,t, ,0 6…

… Hillel Project SERVE Inter-Fraternity Council United Asian American Org. (UAAO) EnAct The Friars Student Dispute Resolution Process (SDRP) Singapore Students Association Student Book Exchange Taiwanese…

….Awareness Anti-Daily Arab American Anti-Discrim. Committee Rainforest Action Movement Jewish Feminist Group Michigan Biodiversity Project Jewish LGBT and Friends Collective (AHAVA) Recycled Notebook Project…

… Environmental Issues Comm. Women's Issues Comm. Students' Party Michigan Party College Democrats Al 1. 5. 9. 1f aL 1C 2( 2 2 2 2 2C 3 3d S 3 3 4 U 4 al 4j S 4 4 YeYes!Yees! Cross dPuz> by Andrew Wright and Bram…

…Yes! Yes! Yes! Drive for a Student Regent... Matthew Shultz MSA Rep. - MSA President - Erin Carey Pharmacy Vice President Heidi Lubin Matt Curin Trent Thompson Ozell Xiante & Sarah Chopp Mark Sherer MSA Rep…

November 19, 1977 (vol. 88, iss. 63) • Page Image 4

…-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Woodyon the grid I TLOOKED extremely rocky for the Red and Gray that day; The score stood two to zip with but one minute left to play. So, when…

… been shut out. - Jim Tobin (with the usual apologies to E. L. Thayer) SADA T VISITS THE KNESSET Israel and the Arab reaction By ROD KOSANN The Mideast has become an area of the world in which con…

… recognition as a possible turning point in an ongoing state of hostility that has marked Arab- Israeli relations for decades. If Sadat's visit achieves the "dialogue" that Menahem Begin says he is looking for…

… laun- ched by diverse elements in the Arab world. Arab claims that his visit is a stake aimed at the heart of Arab solidarity have been widespread, not withstanding Sadat's assurances to the con- trary…

…- sive meetings between the two leaders, called on Arab nations to "shoulder the responsibilities in facing the dangers inherent in an Arab leader's trip to Israel." Re- leasing such a statement, Syria…

… effectively closed ranks with Iraq and the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) who respec- tively branded Sadat's trip a "deviation" from Arab Unity, and a "flagrant defiance of Arab popular will." The…

… PLO also cited the visit as a "dangerous turning point, and a gain for intrigues of international Zionsim and the United States." To accept too readily Arab claims of unity is to accept along with it a…

… not find solidarity. The fact rm~ains that the strongest bond ihthe Arab world is a mutual .;lWtility tohe Jewish state. If it is not Arab unity, what then lies below the surface of Arab an- tagonism to…

… a Sadat visit? Ex- cluding the notion of internation- al intrigue, it is a far more funda- mental issue - specifically, Is- rael's very right to exist. Being the first Arab leader to visit the…

… jcountry since it gained statehood in 1948, Sadat has now lent his tacit approval to that right. It is this gesture which the Israelis hail, but the more radical Arab elements deplore. THE SYRIAN statement…

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…

December 19, 1947 (vol. 58, iss. 75) • Page Image 5

…, that our Arab students here are gathered. They have come to latrn American t cechn ology, not I II at ii mw. en ibring progress to t hen' yountt' but only.vs> that ucy osn muou <-i tii-ni ,' epu'es t is…

… all who saw the film that it con- tains nothing un-American, but rather a philosoplfy and credo which is distinctly a part of de- mocracy. -Harriet Likovsky I Arab Partition 'To the Editor: ONE MORE…

… deceived! Mr. El Gamal's letter puts him in the ranks of the poor Arabs who are now "educated" by the "respecta- ble" ex-Grand Mufti. Egypt, Iraq, Trans-Jordan, etc., re facing crises in the Middle East…

… Husseinis inPal- estine. We would also like to mention here that all the members of the Arab Higher Committee have been unanimously elected by one an- other; they, therefore, represent *,. one another. .o If…

… rest of a typically partisan ar- ticle. Its author was a member of the Arab Club. The analogy to which I refer was to the effect that the varying reactions of, Jew and Arab to the United Nations plan to…

… mother. The Arab organizations concludes that the intent of the Bible Story is to portray the grief of the real mother and the joy of the false one. But, it must be remembered that the gist of that Bible…

… story is that a true mother's love for her child is sufficiently great that she would rather give up the child than see the child put to unneces- sary pain and suffering. Would the Arab give up even dart…

… of Palestine in order to see leace come to the troubled land, which is holy unto him as unto Christian and Jew? Is it not the Arab who is Avill- ing to see this land, "his child," bathed in blood, and…

… committed by the UN against the Arabs whose only crime was to have opposed the al- lied cause during the last war. Yes, as Mr. El Gamal so well, emphasizes, the Arabs are rising in righteous anger, and let no…

… some corner of the Middle East that is forever Arab. -Joseph Dresner Add Up? To the Editor: THIS IS MY first save-the- world-letter-to-the-editor. I have just seen "Crossfire." My condition can probably…

January 19, 1993 (vol. 103, iss. 61) • Page Image 4

… GEOFFREY EARLE AMITAVA MAZUMDAR Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles…

… tensions between Arabs and Israelis persist in the Middle East, members of the Jewish and Muslim communities here at the Uni- versity are attempting to put their differences behind them and promote greater…

… understanding. By cooperating to form Jews and Muslims for Better Understanding (JAM), students are taking an important step in bridging the perceived cul- tural chasm between the two groups. JAM was formed when…

… the University's Is- lamic Circle contacted Hillel, the University's Jewish student organization, and expressed its concern about the recent anti-Semitic vandalism at the Hillel building. The two groups…

… called JAM Session, and even and attend each other's religious services. Various field trips, such as one to an Ann Arbor mosque, have also been considered. The Arab-Israeli conflict in the Middle East has…

… naturally been the central cause of continued ten- sion between the Jewish and Muslim communities (recognizing, of course, that not all Arabs are Mus- lim, and not all Muslims are Arabs). The perpetual…

… ' cultures have common ground. The immigrant experience inAmerica ofthe two communities have striking similarities. Both Jews and Arabs have faced oppression and discrimina- tion in the United States. It is…

… disappointing to see the Arab-Israeli conflict -although, certainly a serious issue - create enemies of potential allies. The ideals enacted by those who formed JAM is a model worthy of examination by other…

… game. We hope that in the future Michigan will exercise greater care in hiring competent officiat- ing personnel. Brian Blanchette Engineering first-year student Brett Cooper LSA first-year student David…

… Scott LSA first-year student Deportations violate international law To the Daily: Thanks to the Daily for the editorial ("Deportations endanger peace," 1/13/93) about Israel's deportation of 415…

March 19, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 133) • Page Image 1

… proposal to alleviate overcrowding at Huron High by busing high school students living on North Campus. The. board is considering seven alternatives to the bus- ing plan, and School Superintendent Harry…

… Howard claims it must take action quickly to avoid scheduling difficulties for the students. 0 'Uncle' killers sought Southfield police said yesterday they have no clues or suspects in the apparent slaying…

… Kahler reviews last week's basketball action in Tusca- loosa. r. Arabs retain By AP and Reuter The five month old Arab oil boycott, imposed on the U.S. as a political weapon to win favorable peace terms…

… in the Mideast, ends today in the wake of yesterday's meeting of major Arab oil pro- ducers. A spokesman for nine key Arab states said the oil ministers of the Arab countries would review their…

… decision at a June 1 meeting in Cairo. The United States was getting about 10 to 14 per cent of its oil from Arab producers before the boycott was imposed. Oil experts said it would take between six and…

… eight weeks for Arab oil to reach the United States. SPEAKING AFTER the minis- ters' meeting, Saudi Arabian oil minister Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yam- ani said the United States will get enough oil for its…

… requirements. He said the United States will be getting at least one million barrels a day from Saudi Arabia alone and more supplies from other countries. He indicated the totalArab ex- ports to the United…

… and how much." The Arab oil ministers had said they intended to keep their crude- oil prices at the present inflated levels for at least three months, but no word was forthcoming on whether production…

… 85 per cent of September levels. THE LIFTING of the embargo would not have any effect on the U.S. supply at least "until early See ARABS, Page 8 lift oil embargo* pressure pri°ces, proper and…

…. Onlyca small audience of concerned city resi- dents attended, with few students to be seen. The Human Rights Party (HRP) First Ward candidate Beth Brunton addressed the crucial issues of the city's budget…

November 19, 1977 (vol. 88, iss. 63) • Page Image 1

…-Israeli war, declared a national day of mourning, and about 20 Arab students attacked the Egyptian Embassy in Athens to protest the trip to Israel. OIL-RICH Saudi Arabia, which bankrolls Sadat's impoverished na…

…)-Israelis decked the city with Egyptian flags and cheered Cairo's ad- vance men yesterday on the eve of President Anwar Sadat's historic visit to Jerusalem. Syria, Egypt's ally through three decades of Arab

…- tion, broke silence and declared itself "surprised" by the Eyptian presi- dent's decision to become the first Arab leader ever to visit the Jewish state. A statement issued by the Royal Palace in Jedda…

… said King Khaled sent Sadat a message "making clear" his stand "in a very clear and definite way. The message was not quoted, but t h e government communique's strong endorsement of Arab solidar- ity…

… indicated Saudi opposition to the trip. It was not known whether that position would influence the flow of Saudi aid to Egypt. MOST ARAB opposition to the trip has centered on fears Sadat may seek a separate…

… peace with Israel, shattering the solid Arab front. Sadat has denied he will do so. In his speech tomorrow to the Knesset, Israel's parliament, the Egyptian is expected to restate pan-Arab de- mands…

… .- Israeli withdrawal from See ISRAEL, Page 3 S adat - e--m- Confusion prompts MSAvote, recount By MARK PARRENT Ballots cast for representatives on the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) were recounted last…

November 19, 1987 (vol. 98, iss. 51) • Page Image 4

…U OPINION Page 4 Thursday, November 19, 1987 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Racism: By Tim Huet Vol. XCVIII, No. 51 420 Maynard St: Ann Arbor…

… term that the student body has largely ac- cepted as an adequate response to the anti-racist movement; promises like these, usually unkept, are historically used to quell student movements. This campus…

… be focusing on is the discomfort that white stu- dents experience from students of color (both in the 11/16/87 issue). Many white students say that they are tired of hear- ing about racism here. They…

… percent Black en- rollment. It has had more than enough time to attain that. Today, only five percent of the student population is Black American. Those students back in 1970 and in 1976 (BAM II) should…

… have never let up when the administration started making promises. Now, in 1987, students who are opposed to the racist in- equalities at this university need to reaffirm their commit- ment to working…

… against them. Involvement during this critical time is desperately needed. Also, students should do more to support and attend anti-racist events and actions. Today at 4:00 in the Fleming Adminis- tration…

… still concerned students on this campus who are watching to insure they keep their promises. We need every- body's support. Then at 8:00 in the Kuenzel Room of the Union, A. Sivanandan, editor of Race…

… your support. -Dave Fletcher U.C.A.R. November 18 U I 'White boys' is racism against whites Contingent maliCe , PRESENTLY, THE United States "world communism." Al] -has amassed enough warships in Arab

… activists, and evil a' the Persian Gulf to raise the sea INS wanted their Arab-sy level a few inches in the words of views shut up. Unfortui one Reagan official. In this political the INS (but not for the a…

… Washington the country. Under the R "D.C., which exemplifies racist atti- ministration, it is therefc " Lides and poses a threat to the civil fetched for the INS toI liberties of Arab-Americans. deporting…

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…

October 19, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 38) • Page Image 4

… Mf rtigan uaitu Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Madison Avenue: The biggest pusher 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104…

… dilemma. can com Proposal By DIANA MILLER with her (TATED SIMPLY, and it would of course not be simple to im- QUITE plement, this plan would require for Arab the Russians and the Americans tensions to bring…

… er. to the crisis area. The on Israel and the Arabic countries tion with would be brought to a status quo againstI as far as their supplies of arma- ians wh( ments are concerned. The actual ments fo…

… fighting instead that the of allowing it to go on until one obtaining side (the Israelies) temporarily so that t finishes the other is that it would bargainin be better for Arab pride if both ten days it and…

… its adversary were told to ister Mos quit instead of being badly beat- would be en once again. back atI AND IT IS ARAB PRIDE, or so Sinai ifT they have informed us, that has conducte moved them to…

… energy embarrass- ing ten y ment. If the Russians do not need igtny Arab oil now, that does not rule ture synth out their use of it in the future: the west and, as the Arabs have shown, that has b they can…

… play games with the Rus- attention sians as well as with the U.S. Before t I HAVE BEEN told b7 "ex- of Good perts" that the Russians are inter- Arabs ha ested in the Arab states not at all attentionI for…

Arabs have shown It would in the past, as mentioned above, if they c that they are not interested in good uset bearing the weight of more im- now, but perialists on their backs. In 1956, from us, Nasser…

… sheeri conquest and rule by foreig 1 pow- will be fo ers and the Arab nationalist move- truly defe ment feels it is time for Acabs to themselves Impossible. After all, most adult minds are unable to…

… and possibly losing pow- ly ones in the whole sita- any right to complain Israel are the Palestin- o, used by Arab goven- r political purposes, were e temporary UN shelters granted citizenship…

May 19, 1961 (vol. 71, iss. 164) • Page Image 4

…"Just Want To Give You a Little Ballast, Boy" Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD N CONTROL OF STUDENT

… PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, Mcu. Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t…

… have spects, be supported in their formulation indicated that these reports are extremely and use of confidential residence halls evalua- valuable to them in serving the students. They tion reports to…

… provide better personal and explain that secrecy is necessary in order to academic counseling for students. assure that the dorm or quad counselors may It is to be sharply questioned, however, feel free to…

December 19, 1957 (vol. 68, iss. 76) • Page Image 4

… areas of Palestine that these refugees now occupy." -Arab-Israel League for a Free United States of the Middle East nTl. tem by the student is an indi- cation that he is an adult." Both of these…

…The Very Generous Santa Strauss Sixty-Eighth Year LDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG…

… between the singers and the orchestra. This stands as one of the finest opera performances I have wit- Honors System Merits Student Concern I)IK(VUw° ;_ THE RECENTLY proposed literary college honor…

… system merits serious consideration on the part of the student body. This concern was certainly not evidenced by the attend- ance at Tuesday's literary college steering com- mittee conference. The special…

… meeting was held for the purpose of discussing the prob- lems, disadvantages and advantages of initiat- ing an honor system in the literary college. Only 40 students and members of the faculty regarded the…

… proposal serious enough to war- rant their attendance. Perhaps this lack of concern is an indica- tion that the student body does not desire an honor system. Members of the literary col- lege administrative…

… board, the group respon- sible for the final decision to have an honor system, was certainly not impressed by this lack of concern. Fortunately, the students and members of the faculty in attendance…

… voiced enough serious comment on the proposal to make the meeting very worthwhile. To have an effective honor system, the whole-hearted support of the students parti- cipating in the program is necessary…

…. Every student would have to regard the honor system as his own personal responsibility. This would necessitate the acquisition of a "sense of honor" on the part of the student. Without this "honor," an…

… honor system would be mean- ingless. Every student would be obliged to report any infraction of the honor system to a special judiciary body. In this case, an honors council composed of students and…

April 19, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 134) • Page Image 8

… PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 19, 1953 -Daily-Betsy Smith PASSING THE PLAQUE-Joseph Yakir, '54E, presents a plaque on behalf of University Israeli students to Esson Gale, director…

… Fifth Birthday By JANE HOWARD Waging a grim, back-to-the-wall struggle for economic survival and still in the grip of an Israeli-Arab cold war, the tiny state of Israel will observe its fifth anniversary…

… today here on campus. * * * * ISRAEL'S INITIAL challenge as a nation was to withstand the invasion of neighboring Arab states who claimed part of the territory. Armistices with each of the states…

… followed. However, Prof. N. Marbury Efi-? menco of the political science de- per cent are Arabs. There are also er cent are Arabs. Therenare also partment indicated that thes problems have not ended. "There…

… is still no prospect for peace between Israel and the Arabs," he said. "Largely anti- Israeli opinions in Egypt and Syria leave little hope for any- thing bMt continued cold war for some time." Soon…

… after the Arab armistices were completed Israel tackled the next problem-that of lifting Brit- ish immigration restrictions. Knis- set, the country's 120-member leg- islature, proclaimed that Israel…

… 4 o'clock only, 4th floor, University Museums Building. La Petit Causette will meet tomorrow from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the North Cafe- teria, Union. All interested students in- vited.. Economics Club…

…, Address, "Reflections on Socialism in Postwar Britain," Pro- fessor Ben W. Lewis, Department of Economics, Oberlin College, Mon., Apr. 20, 8 p.m., Auditorium D, Angell Hall. All staff members and students

… members are encouraged to attend. Young Democrats. Attention all mem- bers. Meeting, Tues., Apr. 21, 7:30 p.m. In the Union. Election of officers for next year and planning of future activi- ties. Students

… interested are invited to attend. The Episcopal Student Foundation eseveral flourishing American Jew- ish settlements, Arnon said. About the same size as Rhode Island, Israel has had no easy time…

March 19, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 133) • Page Image 8

… committee.. Arabs end boycott; retain high Prices., (Continued from Page 1) May,"* one company official '*re- ported, due to the time it would take to resume shipping Arab crude oil to U.S. refineries. This…

… whether it will be enough to meet demand is still up in the air." CONCERNING THE continuation of the boycott in Europe, Arab spokespersons said that exports to West Germany and Italy will also increase to…

… did not ask for the complete withdrawal of Israel" from Arab territories occupied in 1967. The move to end the boycott had been led by Egypt and Saudi Arabia in recognition of American peace efforts in…

… the Mideast. IN WHAT appeared to be a sig- nificant split in the Arab view of the use of the oil weapon, Libya and Syria opposed lifting the em- bargo. Yamani said their opposition was "a question of…

… timing." He said all Arab countries had agreed to the move in principle. Algerian oil minister Belad Ab- desselam said Syria and Libya did not think the proper time had come to reward the United States…

… Out Our NEW Stock Items: 0 Student Office Furniture By DAVID LIEBERMAN circulation in 40 to 50 central cam- The ECTF has been meeting Do you freeze while studying at pus buildings. since September and…

… dimlylit off. in will take bids this summer for a Task Force (ECTF) last month. tSting in is Aci y-ies Bu ice in C e n t r a 1 Environmental Control the Student Activities Building, Orr System (CECS), which…

… CAMPUS DR. BORDEN W. PAINTER, JR. Director Hartford, Conn. 06106 (203) 527-3151, Ext. 218 'GRADUATE STUDENTS WELCOME! GRAD I ' 613 E. WILLIAM-665-3763 Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 9-1 I 111'r- FA N0 HOUR…

… of Music: Trumpet Student 100 HH, 4:15 pm. Recital, Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. Psych Film Series: "Up is Down", Mat: J. Serrin, Univ. of Minn., "Ax- "Eye of the Storm", "Reggie", "The iois of .Classical…

… Mechanics", 3212 AH, Orange and the Green", Aud. 3, MLB, 3 pm. 4:30 pm. Arch & Design: M. Flinn, "The Law School Student Senate: Seminar, Sense of Greece and Rome", "Odyssey j"The Rights of the Accused", 120…

April 19, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 160) • Page Image 4

… , hMii ryiil ir rriir tri Mw rwn... r r.rr.r ii tr SzI rn Badi ightyFour Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan lettersletters…

… was being shown by a group supposedly dedicated to freeing oppressed peoples. Students no longer had to go to the tacky stag movie houses of Ypsilanti w i t h their unsavory clientele and steamy…

…, acceded to t h e Arabs' demands that Jewish immi- gration be halted by issuing the White Paper of 1939 which undid the Balfour Declaration. But immediately following t h e war, the Jews actively moved, both…

… diplomatically and via the under- ground, to establish a Jewish state. At the same time Arab national- ism was on the increase, so colli- sion was inevitable. After several years of continuing trouble, the United…

… Nations concluded that the only solution the partition of Pal- estine into a Jewish and Arab state. The Jews accepted the resolu- tion. The Arabs didn't, with the 1948 War resulting. Eventually the fighting…

… British were, for the most part, openly pro-Arab. By limit- ing immigration, the number of Jewish dead rose in Europe. Also, until the British departure from Palestine in 1948 they jailed any Jew found…

… carrying a weapon, de- spite the fact that the Arabs within and outside of the area were open- ly arming and warning that they would forcibly prevent partition. The statement that "Palestine was never…

… hostile to Jewish immi- gration" is interesting. Perhaps O'Donnell, if he wants to learn more of the facts, should read the statements of the Arab League in the 20's--40's and the accounts of the Arab riots…

… procedure for the student-designated revenues from the profits off the Coke machines in the houses and the procedure used to appoint Resident Directors and Advisors for next year. In December North Campus…

… Area Direc- tor Ed Salowitz began enforcing a Hous- ing Office policy stating all "coke" money spent by students must have the approval of a house student government. Up until this time the money was dis…

October 19, 1956 (vol. 67, iss. 27) • Page Image 4

…q. We've Got Something For Everybody, Too" Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT

… two. With the growth of the University since 1837 has come an increase in the University's bureaucracy. One hundred years ago, students and faculty played relatively larger roles in campus life compared…

… with .administrators. Now, owing to the necessity of coordinating this conglomeration of 21,000 students and 2,000 faculty members, the students learn, the faculty teaches, and the administrators run…

… things. Also, through time and the increasing con- cern with social sciences and political issues, student thought has fragmented into various and often warring camps. This has manifested itself in the…

… replete with threats and counter- threats, defiant declarations, charges and counter-charges. Israel, though faced with a threat of pos- sible annihilation at the hands of her Arab neighbors, is…

….e. Egypt's Nasser. The Arabs are apparently solidly united against Israel, but are nevertheless embroiled in a struggle for power, and squabbling among themselves, especially over the Baghdad pact, a pro…

…, a Western conspiracy to undermine Arab unity, and part of a plan to overthrow the Egyptian government. THE blame for the tension cannot be laid to any one party. Israel pleads that she is the victim…

… Israel is virtually inviting attack, in the belief that the West, especially the United States, would intervene and perhaps destroy the Arab threat to Israel for years to come. Such intervention seems to…

… be Israel's only chance for survival in event of war, despite the courage and determination of her people. The Arab nations appear only too ready to accept Israel's challenge. They have made repeated…

July 19, 1962 (vol. 72, iss. 17) • Page Image 2

…~~~~~1 brg 0an va tsity Seventy-Second Year EDTED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNivERsrrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where opinions are Free STUDENT

… these governments sat together at the same table and agreed upon a plan. Previously, no Arab government would discuss any problem with the government of Israel. They did not approve of the establishment…

… starch in their thinking, now, too. -GERALD STORCH some of the Arab states would be willing to break the Israel boycott. But pressure from Egypt through the Arab League has blocked moves in that direction…

… natural resources, and a monarch who is being kept on the throne by the sup- port of Great Britain. Before the Arab-Israel conflict, Jordan had access to the port of Haifa. THE CLOSED frontier also poses…

… interrelations of the Arab States to deal with before any close cooperation can be accomplished. The competition between Cairo and Baghdad is an ancient and ever-present fact. Both Kassim and Nasser are vying for…

… the top position in the Arab world and they con- centrate on wooing the various uncommitted Arab states into their camps. At the present time, Iraq appears to be under Communist in- fluence, while Egypt…

… is walking the narrow tight-rope between East and West. HOWEVER, regardless of their position in the Cold War and their alignment in the Arab world, the unifying 'factor for the Arab League has been a…

… accomplishment. Now that they are not really bound to live up to the stand of the Arab League, individual Arab countries may go about making their peace with Israel. Jordan has cast the first stitch on what could…

… Kenneth Winter's recent editorial about the Alumnae Council resolution on the Office of Student Affairs re- port. He takes exception to the fol- lowing statement in our resolu- tion: "We believe that the…

… adequate criteria. THEN, what principles should guide students in order to make the formative undergraduate years as effective as possible? In at- tempting to answer this I am bound to express some…

October 19, 2001 (vol. 112, iss. 15) • Page Image 4

… peace-loving peoples of the Arab world. ALMAN MACKIE Rackham The letter writer is also student in the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy. MSA not legitimate governing body TO THE DAILY: This past…

…4 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 19, 2001 OP/ED Ulbe **irbijjuu DZiIQ 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily.letters@umich.edu EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF…

students under- stand about the sponsors of today's rally - that BAMN is a divisive force in the defense of affirmative action and a Trotskyist organiza- tion controlled by non-student activists. Obviously…

…- son will have no one to blame but himself. LSA senior Jim Secreto, former vice president of the Michigan Student Assembly, is a member ofthe Daily's editorial board. Livshiz' viewpoint 'hurtful,' full…

… indicts the entire "Arab" population, which spans 22 countries, about 250 million people and is rich with cultural and religious diversity, as individuals who are trained to not only "hate" the U.S. but to…

… terrorists" camps. Livshiz purposefully ignores, inter alia, how Arabs from Algeria to Yemen and their governments, have been unequivocal and categorical in their condemnation of the Sept. 11 atrocities…

… that Sept. I1 had nothing to do with the Palestinian struggle for indepen- dence. This strategy of blaming "Arab" society as the root cause of terrorism is not only dangerous, but is hurtful. Most of us…

… brutal oppression of Palestinians are a direct result of portraying Arabs as no more than terror- ists. Livshiz may want to evaluate his educa- tion first before casting these empty accusa- tions at the…

… profits. AMER ARDATI Medical Student feeling on campus without going to imprac- tical extremes such as polling the students. The only ways to determine the feeling of the student body and campus community…

… been made public even just 24 hours in advance, that meeting would have been filled with Uni- versity students who would have voiced their opinions. Two hours is not enough time for a rep- resentative to…

September 19, 1974 (vol. 85, iss. 13) • Page Image 2

…. CHARGES BIAS Student (Continued from Page 1) currently acting division direc- tor, and Program Manager Bishop, allegedly discouraged the hiring of blacks. In her affidavit, former em- ploye Kathleen…

… Levin still strongly opposes. "THE JURY is still not in on marijuana," he said. "We still do not know its long-term effects and I am opposed to its legali- zation." OPPRESSION- JEWISH CITIZENS IN ARAB

… ARBORLAND-97 1-9975Ito trek down to State street or MAPLE VILLAGE-761-2733 as _ one student described it, E. LIBERTY-668-9329 "take their lives into their own I E. UNIVERSITY-662-0354 had. -'--- bands." ALL…

…. Ford blasts Arabs (Continued trom Page 1) Ford's remarks. needy countries and boost tech- "I couldn't agree with ever nical aid to their food produc- thing he said," commented S tion programs. He also…

… Baroody o HE TURNED to the energy Saudi Arabia said he told For question with blunt words for at a recention later that "i the Arab countries: "Now is the costs me $11 just to have lunc time for the oil…

… producers to whi. for $10 he can buy enoug define their conception of a gasoline to drive his car for global policy on energy to meet week." the growing need-and to do Several non-Arab diplomat this without…

… and re- ,economic problems. "I naturall cent oil price and production hope that it will1soon be possibl decisions." for the U.S. government to sa ARAB DIPLOMATS reacted more concretely what they t with…

April 19, 1988 (vol. 98, iss. 135) • Page Image 1

… two frigates that fired missiles at American planes, U.S. officials reported. Iranian naval forces responded with attacks on Arab oil facilities: U.S., British and Cypriot commercial vessels, and on a…

…- ties and commercial vessels at the Mubarak oil field off the Sharjah emirate, and hours later assaulted a Cypriot freighter leaving the United Arab Emirates with a load of fertilizer. Carlucci said a…

… international waters as well as its continued military Daily rnoto Dy DNIEL SIEEL University students hold a "Peaceful Palestinian Protest" outside the Michigan Union yesterday. The studen- ts are protesting the…

… Bank and Gaza in which 17 Palestinians were killed and more than 100 wounded. It was the blood- iest day in the territories since the rebellion began. In a message to Arabs in the oc- cupied lands…

… MARINA SWAIN Members of the Campus Broadcasting Network formed a committee to communicate with the Univer- 4 sity administration - which said it may consider cut- ting the student-run radio station…

…'s funding - in an emotionally charged meeting last night. Board members argued about steps they shouli ake to respond to Interim University President Robben Fleming's statement that the Office of Student

… station may not be here next year," he said. "They (the administration) want to hear real solid rea- sons why this place should stay a student-run radio station." Fleming has questioned the value of having…

… both CBN and the University-operated WUOM. He said the Office of Student Services may decide to channel the money into other areas, such as handicapped services. The decision, however, will be left to…

… Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson. Instead of having a student as general manger of the station, Johnson told LaZebnik he may consider appointing a professional for the position. "We…

… would like to find out specifically what their grievances are against us," said Emily Burns, an LSA junior and incoming WCBN general manager. "They say they don't feel a student general manager can…

September 19, 2001 (vol. 111, iss. 147) • Page Image 3

… Louisiana after leav- ing Michigan State University, where he also helped fund an academic facil- ity for student athletes. Washington, D.C. campus receives terrorist threats Bomb threats and false alarms at…

… George Washington University have kept students fearing for their safety and out of classes throughout the last week. Students evacuated a class last Thursday afternoon after a man wear- ing a large black…

… backpack entered and walked to the front of the classroom while the professor lectured. The man asked the professor sev- eral questions, and the 70-person class became silent. Two students, worried that the…

… bag might contain a bomb, grabbed their belongings and left quickly, and the rest of the class followed. Some students called the university's police department as the professor talked with the man. The…

… man was taken into custody and later released after telling officers he only wanted to add the class to his schedule. In addition, George Washington students were forced to evacuate three other…

… buildings on Tuesday, two because of a bomb threat and the other after two "suspicious" packages arrived at a campus build- ing. UNC students have to pay higher bills Some students at the University of North…

… Carolina who thought they had paid their tuition will be receiving a second bill. This second bill is a result of a legislature-mandated 5 percent tuition increase for students across the state to aid in…

… offsetting the state's financial shortfall this year. Administrators at the university sent the first stack of bills out to students at the standard time and had expected to send out a second bill when…

… about $200 for out- of-state students; a 4 percent Board of Governors approved increase and the newly approved 5 percent legislative increase applied across the state. In-state undergraduate students will…

… feel the lightest hit to their wallets, as their bills will only total $28, with in- state graduate students bearing only a $29 hit. Out-of-state undergraduate students will be forced to pay an addi…

April 19, 1975 (vol. 85, iss. 160) • Page Image 4

… public meeting, at which all the promises for Jews in the secu- lar democratic state were laid out by the Arabs. But when Is- raeli students asked about the concrete plans for Zi nist Jews, the response…

…~I1LA £14an Dail# Eighty-Five Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Runaways: Caught in court' Saturday, April 19, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420…

… Campus Day Care Center lo- cated in the School of Education. Staffed by volunteers, the center operates on a nonprofit basis and services the children of students as well as faculty and community mem- bers…

… order to bus students in Boston shows that the fight is not yet over. The bitter racial rioting which has plagued Boston indicates that neither equal education or un- derstanding between the races have…

… been achieved. The National Student Coalition Against Racism (NSCAR) has or- ganised a massive march on Boston for May 17. NSCAR hopes that the march will be as effective as the mass civil rights marches…

… financial boost and it needs it now. We feel the SGC day care ballot proposal is a legitimate and necessary measure, and we encourage students to ensure its passage next week. By CLIFFORD BROWN RUNAWAY. It…

… in an editor- ial which preached freedom of speech under all circumstances. This week the editorial entitled "Eye to Eye" related the ob- servation of "clear and open" animosity between Arabs and…

… tragic Mideast confrontation. Yet we must point out that there are numerous examples which belie the characterization of relations among Arabs and Israelis as consuming hatred. The impli- cation that…

… failure to communi- cate between Israelis and Arabs in Ann Arbor is because of per- sonal feelings would be false. The absence of intellectual de- bate, as we see it, is because the Palestinians have an…

… themselves wih the Arab cause. The real test of movement is in its action, not its rheo-"i:. We shall trv to show 'hot be- vond rhetoric and incidentd =d- hoc convergence of enmi-, to- wards the establishment…

November 19, 1974 (vol. 85, iss. 65) • Page Image 3

…, shouting and throwing stones in the second day of 3rd floor, Student Health Service pro-guerrilla protests. free, individual contraceptive counsel- In Hebron, Arab rioters set a' restaurant aflame and stoned…

… ensure the army will not intervene in the country's political life. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 65 Tuesday, November 19, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News…

… AP and Reuter JERUSALEM - Arab high school unrest switched to East: Jerusalem yesterday after two days of demonstrations in towns! on the Israeli - occupied west bank of the river Jordan. t Teenagers…

… TRIP to Utah WEEKEND TRIPS to Boyne and Collingwood students threw stones at the Is- the Eyrian port of Latakia from raeli - run labor office and Nov. 20-25. smashed its windows, with more It said Vice…

…- Israeli leaders have said the Saturday, when one teen-aged loading military supplies. trouble was sparked off by last Arab girl was killed by a blow Rabin warned Syria against week's address to the United…

… in the head and 50 Arabs were any unilateral arms buildup Nations by Yasir Arafat, lead- arrested. and his comments have been er of the Palestine Liberation Tass, the official Soviet news interpreted…

…, "Present State of the History Palestinian guerrilla base near { age, senate rules com. hearings, of Science," 214 w. Eng., 4:30 pm. the Arab refugee camp at Ra- confirmation of Nelson Rockefeller!Houe,r7e s…

….noon.TeNx iiiain"Le al security forces. Music School: Trumpet Student Rackham, 8 pm. In Cairo, meanwhile, the po- Recital, Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. Phychiatry: Richard L. Grant, U. litical weekly Rose al Youssef…

… Kissinger's proposal for an- ontraceptive ounseling other interim Israeli withdrawal in Sinai. and Education Service In Israeli - occupied Jordan, Arabs marched through three Gynecology Clinic cities…

… "LEMANS" starring STEVE McQUEEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY, 7:30, 9:30 NAT. SCIENCE AUD. $1.00 UAC, a non-profit student entertainment organization, would like to start several new activities this year, but we…

May 19, 1960 (vol. 70, iss. 163) • Page Image 4

…Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD'IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truths WillPrevail" STUDENT

… said recently. The fiscal problem will be most LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Protests Arab Advice on Aid To the Editor: I WAS 'interested to learn from a recent letter that two gentle- men, Mssrs. Hayara and…

… Manna, speaking for Arabs, are "most anxious to maintain friendly re- lations with the United States when we receive proper encour- agement." By "encouragement," they mean the "encouragement" of Dictator…

… Security Council, has repudiated these principles," as stated by Senator Douglas. The Arabs ask the United States to be "neutral" in the Arab-Israel conflict. They seem to believe that the United States will…

…- criminated against. By supporting international law, the United States, according to the Arabs, will be taking sides with Israel. THE TWO ARAB gentlemen seem to agree that the' Arabs are in violation of United…

… Nations resolution and would be "more than happy to comply" with those resolutions concerning free pass- age of Israeli ships through the Secretary-General for a realistic solution of the Arab refugee prob…

…- lem, which was squelched by the Arab states. In any case, I fail to see what resolutions involving Israel have to do with freedom of the seas and the right of the United States to send surplus food to…

… underde- veloped countries, in this case the UAR, in whatever ship she chooses. The Arabs, of course, want the agricultural surpluses, but are angered when the Senate objects to our letting the Arabs tell…

… the American people how we may ship our economic aid. -David Whinston,1'61 Satisfaction. To .the Editor: IN TUESDAY'S Daily, an edi- torial exhorted Negro students to further the cause of integration by…

… few stu- dent activities purport to serve the community. The Ski Club, the Sailing Club, the Folklore Society. student activities prevents "a true estimate of the relationship be- tween the white and…

January 19, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 91) • Page Image 3

Arabs might relent, the Federal Energy Office (FEO) announced that the Arabian embargo on oil impots to the United States was "nearing full effectiveness." The White House, meanwhile, an- nounced that…

… Secretary Ger- ald Warren indicted the speech was not intended to disclose any new programs, such as gas rationing. He also denied any speculation that the President might announce that the Arab boycott would…

… be lifted because of an agreement for troop disengagement in the Middle East. In its "petroleum situation re- port" for the first 11 days of Jan- uary, the FEO indicated that the "leakage" of Arab oil…

… Sawhill described the Arab boycott as "fully effective." But he held out hope in a statement issued Thursday night that it would be lifted soon. VICE PRESIDENT Gerald Ford also predicted Thursday that the1…

… embargo would be lifted because of recent developments in the Middle East. The embargo, imposed after the outbreak of the Arab-Israeli war three months ago, severely cut into the 7 million barrels of oil…

… that previously was imported into the United States. But leakage through third countries, which Sawhill identified as primarily Venezuela and Canada, continued' to bring Arab oil into the United States…

… during the early days of the boycott. Sawhill said that Arab oil em- bargo has reduced U.S. petroleum supplies by almost 14 per cent below expected demand. "Thus," he said, "while there has been some…

… "techni- cal" violation of a federal law requiring Martin to pay a trans- fer tax before selling the wea- pons. MARTIN, a premedical student at the University of California at Los Angeles, was arraigned…

… H I.GlAwj OPEN DAILY 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 thws Casfed v~ c THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, Number 91 Saturday, January 19, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of…

March 19, 1991 (vol. 101, iss. 114) • Page Image 8

…Page 8-The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, March 19,1991 'U' course offers students summer in the Rockies , Court to rule on school 0 by Jami Blaauw Daily Staff Reporter Instead of suffering through…

… Biblogy 152 for those much' needed natural science credits, some University students will be spending their summer in the Rocky Mountains studying the unique geblogy. , For the past 15 years, stu- dents…

… always working on some- thing' - Tracy Robinson LSA first- year student About 45 to 50 students - 30 percent of whom are incoming first-year students - participate in the prggram each summer at Camp Dadis…

students visit geo- logic locations. Students camp in these locations for a few days, taking time to explore minerals, * rocks, and fossils in natural set- tings. The course is taught by three professors and…

… two or three TAs. During the first week of the course, students spend most of their time in the classroom learning the fundamentals of ge- ologic study. The remainder of the course is spent in the field…

…, both at Camp Davis and surrounding ar- eas like Yellowstone National ~ - -t l University students can opt to spend the summer in the Rockies to study geology hands-on. They earn natural science credit…

… Davis begins with breakfast at 6:30, with class work beginning at 8 a.m. Students spend only a couple of hours during the morn- ing in the classroom and the re- mainder of the day is spent in the field…

…. The students return to camp just before dinner and have the evening to study, hike, and socialize around the camp- fire. On weekends, students may go to the nearest town or hike around the area. During…

… first-year LSA student who took the course last summer before her first term. "I had never been out West. It was a nice experience and I learned a lot." Buses leave from Ann Arbor July 5 and return August…

… 20. All interested students are encour- aged to contact Dr. Joyce M. Budai at the Department of Geo- logical Sciences for further in- formation and an application. prayer r WASHINGTON (AP) - The…

October 19, 2005 (vol. 116, iss. 13) • Page Image 2

… could determine the out- come are apparently among the regions that need investigation. The audit comes as Sunni Arab lead- ers who oppose the charter claimed that voting was fixed in the two key provinc…

…- es - Ninevah and Diyala - and else- where to swing them to a "yes." Both provinces are believed to have slight Sunni Arab majorities that likely voted "no" in large numbers Saturday, along with…

… 20 percent rejected. The questions about the count further raised tensions over a referendum that has polarized Iraqis. Sunni Arabs large- ly reject the draft constitution, saying it will split Iraq…

… attack in Baghdad and elsewhere, including an adviser to the indus- try minister, one of the country's top Sunni Arab officials, police said. The handcuffed and mutilated bodies of six Shiites were found…

… Dulaimi told The Associated Press he would ask during today's opening session for more time to prepare Saddam's defense and arrange for Arab and West- ern lawyers to join him in the defense team. - Compiled…

… percent of the vote in the Michigan Student Assembly presidential elections last winter. It should have said he won with 75 percent of the vote. Please report any errors in the Daily to corrections…

May 19, 1977 (vol. 87, iss. 12) • Page Image 2

… Labor party yesterday in an effort to present a unified na- tion to the Arab world. There was no immediate word on whether Labor would accept the offer to form a coalition government, which came as Arabs

… angrily denounced the Likud election victory Tuesday as a threat to Middle East peace. ARAB state-controlled radios branded Begin a "notorious ter- rorist" with whom negotiations would be impossible. They…

Arab armament pro- grams. THE CONSERVATIVE victory also left deep political divisions in Israel. Yosef Sarid, a top Labor official, said he doubted there could be any coalition with the Likud. "Such a…

… withdrawal - on the other fronts for less than a full peace treaty. In the West Bank, Arabs re- ceived the news of Begin's tri- umph glumly. "Begin is a man of war, not of peace," said Kerim Khalaf, mayor of…

… MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 12-5 Thursday, May 19, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann ArbarM lehigan 48109…

September 19, 1958 (vol. 69, iss. 4) • Page Image 12

… another. And perhaps the most important to date was the union of Egypt and Syria in, and federation of Yemen with, the United Arab Re- public. Writes Philbsophy in Bookf In the manner of Adolph Hit-+ ler…

… study reflecting . . . asking myself: What is our positive role in this troubled world, and where1 is the place in which we should fulfill that role? It seemed to him, Nasser wrote,t that the Arab circle…

… fu-i ture (and, however he tries toc change his disguise, the same ene-f my)--so long as this is true, why do we scatter our efforts? Arabs Have Three Strengths The Arab circle, Nasser said, has three…

…. The book is sched- uled for publication during Janu- ary, 1959. GAMAL ABDEL NASSER--Egypt's chief has three dreams: The unification of the Arab Republic into a strong force; a voice in the future of…

… CHUCK WAGON Extends a hearty welcome to the University students His restdurant is open to YOU from 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. Fine Salads & Sandwiches - PIZZA' CLOSED TUESDAYS I COTTAGE INN PIZZERIA, FREE…

September 19, 1967 (vol. 78, iss. 17) • Page Image 8

…-thirds. This happened at the summer's emergency ses- sion on the Middle East, when no major resolution was adopted. Fortunately, the nations do not always vote by blocs. Except on WADI YUBAS, Jordan (A) - Arab

… not only food from what was their prime agri- cultural region but much-needed foreign curreftcy by selling it to other Arab countries. Moreover, one source said, both countries collect customs duties…

… ACCOMMODATIONS EXPO PASSPORTS EXPO GU I DEBOOK Limited Reservations, So HURRY! CALL JOHN GUNNING 761-1907 OR STUDENT TOURS 20930 Mack, Grosse Pointe Woods 886-0844 I a m SENIOR ICT ES WOIA 102.9 F.M. I…

…. LEE BAILEY Oct. 29-3 P.M. "The Defense Never Rests" TICKETS: Series Student $3.00 Non-Student $5.00 i. II ]OW&ImdunT41"vk lplui i …

November 19, 1993 (vol. 104, iss. 38) • Page Image 5

… Education, Schorling Auditorium, 11 a.m. U Israeli Dancing, beginners and advanced welcome, Hillel, 8 p.m. Q Palestinian Dabkeh, sponsored by Arab-American Student's Association, Michigan Union, Anderson Room…

…The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 1993-5 'U' College Club reaches out to local minority high school students By SARAH KIINO DAILY STAFF REPORTER The first question high school stu- dents ask LSA…

… senior Pamela Brown is not about SATs or financial aid, but ratherJalen Rose and Juwan Howard. Nonetheless, neither the Univer- sity students nor the students from the 18 high schools participating in the…

… Office of Academic Multicultural Initiative's College Club Program are long distracted from the program's purpose: to spark minority high school students' interest in college and pre- pare them to deal…

… with college-related issues. The 12 University students, or stu- dent leaders, involved in the program visit the high schools weekly in order Event tells students dangers of smoking By AMY MENSCH FOR THE…

… DAILY University students are breathing easier thanks to the Great American Smokeout, which took place on the Diag yesterday. The Great American Smokeout. a national event sponsored by the * American…

… Cancer Society (ACS), aims to help Americans stop smok- ing. University Students Against Can- cer (USAC) organized campus Smokeout events. Smoking is on the rise among col- Jege students, especially women…

… objective is that these people will stop smoking for the future. USAC distributed literature from the ACS about the causes and preven- to conduct workshops, give lectures and bring in speakers. The student

… leaders cover a variety of topics, in- cluding financial aid and the process of choosing a school. Program coordinator Onis Cheathams said the program, which is free of charge to the high school students

…, does not push the Univer- sity, but rather emphasizes that these students should go to the college of their choice. Some of the student leaders also provide one-on-one tutoring for the students, although…

October 19, 2018 (vol. 128, iss. 13) • Page Image 3

… it at least once a day.” Rackham student Yahya Alami Hafez, a graduate student instructor for Introduction to Arab-American Studies, said Offendum’s presentation showed how current artistic…

… mediums such as rap actually trace back to a long and rich Arab history. Hafez said before each discussion, he shows the class a music video from an Arab region to highlight this connection. “I think…

… culture is a really good entry point to engage student learning,” Hafez said. “Cultural production is political, it’s something that shapes discourse. When folks are studying history, they…

… poems and raps, often prompting the audience to participate by motioning to sing portions of the lyrics. Offendum opened the lecture by rapping “Damascus,” an Arabic poem he strongly identifies…

student members of the BSU, working on a history of the Black Action movements, asked if those records could be made more available through digitization,” McDonald said. “We prepared a digital edition…

… conversation on Twitter around the experiences of Black students in higher education. The movement staged protests on campus to bring further attention to their cause. According to the…

… 1969 to 1995. The entire collection can be accessed digitally by all University students, researchers, faculty and staff, and to the public in person at the Bentley Historical Library…

… and available online to students, scholars and community members,” Countryman said. LSA senior Kayla McKinney, speaker of BSU, said the group called for digitization of the Bentley records…

… to increase the accessibility of these materials. In addition, McKinney said the project grew out of the group’s desire to call attention to the relations between Black students and the…

… records digitized is important because student activism is often erased in U-M’s diversity effort.” The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com News Friday, October 19, 2018 — 3A MADELINE HINKLEY…

March 19, 1999 (vol. 109, iss. 99) • Page Image 3

… LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 19, 1999 -- 3 -MINIM, 42RIME Student reports harassment from custodian An East Quad Residence Hall resi- nt called the Department of Public Safety on…

… hands around her waist, then tickled her, DPS reports state. He asked the student if she had written a letter of complaint about his ~ iavior. Before walking away, DPS icials said the custodian complement…

… corridor of Huber house. ,The caller said the arguments are fre- quent between the resident of the room and his girlfriend, both of whom are University students. On this occasion, the shouting continued for…

… Daily Staff Reporter Marta Brill. TSA boycotts animated 'The King and I' By Yae Koien DailyStaff Reporter The Thai Students Association is urging students across campus and nationwide to boycott Warner…

… support from other campus organi- zations on campus, including the Arab American Anti-discrimination Committee. This is an example of "storytelling that ridicules the heritage of the East," said LSA senior…

… kids, because it is geared toward a younger crowd. Recently the ADC was angered by Arab Americans portrayal in the recent film "The Siege" Some TSA members are concerned with the social implications the…

October 19, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 40) • Page Image 3

… demilitarizing all Arab territory that Israel oc- cupied in the 1967 war. RADICAL JAPANESE STUDENTS invaded Prime Minister Eisaku Sato's residential compound where other student mili- tants were under arrest…

… Union may be Boa] a place for student organization Th offices, the bookstore, and regu- from lar after-class coffee breaks. " ' .,This is the "new Union" image runI presented by UAC President Wally to s…

… orga services than the Student Acti- ni to vities Building,' says Stromberg. tern The SAB would become an 8-5 " office building giving additiinal ona space to such offices as housing tow and admissions…

…. take A special study is now under the way to consider methods of gov- ion, erning the Union, and ways to as e finance its activities. Currently "B three students chosen by the UAC, stru three alumni, and…

… can be 8-studen to serve the people its meant board. erve is to have students, fa- The U y, and alumni in control," is the U Stromberg. primary owever, a committee headed Two y George Ladner '70 will…

… begin berg, th ting next week with student its food anizations, faculty and alum- The R o discuss their ideas for an al- bur Pie ative governing system. Financia We're basing much of our work re…

…-organ assumptions that the changes food sere ard greater student use will Harla place," says Ladner. He cites and me discount store, the credit un- studying and maybe the new bookstore the adm vidence of the "trend…

… o ° 'I THE 'WLAM WY[ER O 0 o FLAY STARK PRODUCTION Admission Today't $1.75 ~ ecommended that the Un- restructured to encourage by students and improve ncial status, suggested an t, 6-faculty member…

… responsible ebody," s a y s Stromberg. for students SUNDAY at 1:30 P.M. and 7:30 P.M. the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service ASPEN JANUARY 3-10 TOTAL COST-$230 (plus food) FINAL…

… phased fulfill- ment of an Arab-Israeli peace. The U.S. is keeping the door open for agreed adjustments of the Israeli-Arab frontier and a new status for the Gaza Strip. It has also suggested…

October 19, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 21) • Page Image 1

… Morphine Supplied To Students Asserted To Be Absurd Suspected Doctor AdmitsDrug Sale Federal, state and local authorities climaxed a two-month investigation yesterday with three arrests which it is believed…

… University students were termed "vicious and absurd" yester- day. "There is absolutely no connection between the sale of dope and the University of Michigan or students of the University," Prosecutor Albert J…

… Contestants Polling in the Student Senate elec- tions Friday will be conducted from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the League, Union, General Library, Engineering Arch, Angell hall and from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. in the…

… Law Club, Edward Magdol, '39, director of elections, an- nounced yesterday. Sixty students remain in the race for the 16 vacancies in the Senate since Irving Gerson, Bud Gerson, Elliott Maraniss and…

Arabs JERUSALEM, Oct. 18-(N)-A form of martial law to help 20,000 British soldiers crush the uprising of an esti- mated 10,000 Arabs was proclaimed throughout the Holy Land tonight by Sir Harold Mac…

… after four days of siege. It was officially announced that British troops would enter the Old City tomorrow to clear it of armed Arabs. The Palestine Police Force was placed under the British military com…

… and further punitive measures against Arab villages. County Set-up Topic Of Talk By Bromage Second Public Affairs Talk To Deal With Changes In Local Government Prof. Arthur Bromage of the po- litical…

… 1 l 1 In Curriculum, Say ,Students By MORTON L. LINDER and HARRY L. SONNEBORN Raised at the Spring Parley last year and now up for consideration be- fore the Student Senate is the ques- tion of the…

… believe, . however, that a course like this would not be viewed in the proper light by the students. It might very easily develop into a clinic for wisecracks." - , - , .. Lou Carpenter, sented in a purely…

November 19, 1981 (vol. 92, iss. 61) • Page Image 4

…4 " } OPINION Page 4 Thursday, November 19, 1981 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Wasserman Vol. XCII, No.61 420 Mynaord St. Ann Arbor, Mt…

… Israeli citizens-including Arabs and Jews-have the right to vote. Policies on the West Bank, even if the Daily deems them ex- cessive, do not change these characteristics of the Israeli political system…

…. Whether the Daily likes it or not, the West Bank is a disputed territory considered to be a war zone by all parties in the Arab- Israeli conflict. From its ivory tower on Maynard Street, the Daily chose to…

… perceptive analysis of Israel's overall policy toward the Palestinians. However undesirable the Israeli be brought about if represep-O tatives of the Palestinians and the relevant Arab states are willing to…

… negotiate with Israel. To think, as the Daily does, that Israel can unilaterally grant self- rule to the Palestinians is to show ignorance of the history of the Arab-Israeli conflict and traditional…

… procedures of conflict- resolution. The Egyptians and a few Palestinians knocked off ty the PLO for the moderate views, are the only Arabs to date willing to resolve the Palestinian problem through negotiation…

… oppressing the Palestinian Arabs. \ By doing so, the Daily has sunk to the moral level of those who prefer to perpetuate this myth as a propaganda device against Israel rather than to settle the root problems…

… of the Arab- Israeli conflict. If the Daily dislikes some of Israel's policies and believes Israel should be more forth- coming in resolving the Palestinian problem, why does it not just say so? By…

July 19, 1980 (vol. 90, iss. 42) • Page Image 14

… Khomeini's revolutionary regime, was unharmed in the attack, which he blamed on "professionals that the government in Tehran sent to France." Police said the captured trio all claimed to be Arabs - but they…

… could not be immediately identified. The Iranian revolutionaries have established close relations with some Arab militants. In Tehran, a group calling itself the Guards of Islam said in a statement read…

… told the Regents they doubted the University's high quality programs could be maintained without a substantial increase in the student portion of support for the University. Michigan Student Assembly…

… President Marc Breakstone said in a telephone interview yesterday he was upset by the tuition hike: "The thing I object to most is that students are bearing the greatest burden. It seems ironic that students

… are bearing the brunt of hard times but aren't being compensated proportionally in terms of quality of education. "It's just not fair that students are paying so much, and the money is going to some…

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…

January 19, 2012 (vol. 122, iss. 77) • Page Image 12

… really dynamic kicking," said LSA senior and UM Taekwondo Club president Sadegh Arab. "You have to be in great shape, and you have to be very flexible in order to be able to do it." Though students

… function- ality over flare. Godai ninpo pulls techniques from many pre- existing ninjitsu styles, combin- ing them into a utilitarian system TERRA MOLENGRAFF/Daily Students of karate and other martial arts…

… of the Godai Ninpo Club. It's a strict command and a thorough understanding of these elements of the self that allow students to truly progress in their study of martial arts. "The most demanding part…

students must mas- ter before advancing to the next belt. Though the ceremonial air of forms has a very different feel than the dynamic atmosphere of a live match, they are two halves of a whole - one cannot…

…." Still, many students enjoy one- on-one matches, which allow them to truly put their physical and mental discipline to the test. "Unlike a lot of other martial arts, where actual competition and fighting…

… use of footwork forces students of taekwondo to keep themselves in peak physical and mental condition. It is also one of the most sports-oriented martial arts practiced at the University and in the…

… encouraged to do so to enhance their practices. "We've seen that people that compete end up taking practice more seriously, and they stay healthier, and they try harder," Arab said. "So it's kind of like a…

January 19, 1969 (vol. 79, iss. 92) • Page Image 3

… Middle East crisis. Eban said, the crisis can be solved only by Israel and the Arab countries, not by "outside powers who have at most only a marginal . . . interest in the area." Eban also discounted a…

… proposal by the United States for Soviet-American talks on the problem, and a Russian pro- posal calling for acceptance of a UN peace formula, Arab recognition of Israel and Israeli withdrawal from Arab soil…

… week. its . . . STUDENT PROTESTS FLARED in West Berlin, India and Japan yesterday. In Japan, hundreds of students battled 8,500 police trying to drive them from buildings they held at Tokyo University…

…. Police fought the students with tear gas fired from guns and dropped from helicopters. Over 200 students were arrested, but others still held a campus auditorium. The trouble stemmed from protests last…

… January by medi- cal students, and subsequent disciplining of protesters. In Berlin, hundreds of students swept through the-down- town, smashing windows and stoning police on the fiftieth anniversary of the…

… murder of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Lux- embourg. Police posted 3,000 men, but confined their efforts to keeping protesters on the move. And in India, predominantly student mobs chased and stoned Deputy…

… JEWISH-ARAB RELATIONS 2 P.M.-Final Discussion-"Role of Minori- ties in Political Structures in the U.S.A. and Europe." approx. 3:30-Booksigning at Centicore- Beginning new series on: "RELEVANT ISSUES OF…

May 19, 1939 (vol. 49, iss. 166) • Page Image 6

… not only confront the op- position of the Jewish population already trained in the Havlaga or "self-restraint" movement, but also a firm reaction against many phases of the plan by the moderate Arabs

…' whose hopes in the future of Pales- tine will lead them to side passively with the Jews. "The moderate Arabs realize fully what the influx of Jews has done fot Palestine. They see that the Jews have…

… as social instit sor of Marketing at Tulane Univesi- tions. ..' .ty, will lead the discussion on "How Hospitals serve the communi t....I.Market Research Aids the Student" Mrs. Ketcham claims, by…

… Republics, at Washington, be a banquet at 6:30 p.m. in the Ketcham says, affords the ill D.C.-Unin, honoring seven students of "means of expression and exhan the School of Business. Those to be in learning…

… or cute ... sport- ng, swining, baseball, etc. A. time bound or date-time minded. It's graduate students and faculty are in the gala event we've planned for and oesrvall 095 by Saturday noo you…

… on sale at the Information Des] frmKirscoolness and smartness. of the Rackham Bldg. Prie: $1.50 summercoper couple. JUNIOR SIZES 9 to 17 The Lutheran Student Club wi hold its annual banquet in honor o…

… from the Starr Commonwealth Farm, the Commonwealth provides progressive education through the first 11 grades. Students Seek Posts In Campus Election (Continued from Page 1) may be cast at any one of…

November 19, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 66) • Page Image 2

…4 age 2--Wednesday, November 19, 1980-The Michigan Daily Israelis wound Arab protesters __IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and i RAMALIAH, Occupied -West Bank (AP)-Israeli soldiers fired…

… on bands of rock-throwing Arab youngsters yester- day, wounding 18 in melees here and in Bethlehem. The violence on the oc- ' cupied West Bank was the worst in five months and was triggered by an…

…,000 award each should pay. Nale was rehired after she filed the suit but was laid off last January. X MS MSA addresses Greensboro trial The Michigan Student Assembly last night passed a resolution which…

… by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during819 University year at 420 Maynard Street,, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 40 Subscription rates: $12 September…

February 19, 1998 (vol. 108, iss. 80) • Page Image 1

… lawsuit. Membc the coalition, including several national civil organizations and high school students from sout Michigan, said they want to intervene in the 1ause they have a direct stake in defending…

… during the program, members of the audience were removed from the arena by Secret Service agents and OSU police. One of those people was T.J. Ghose, a representative of the OSU African Student Union. Ghose…

… event under the impression that it would not be a com- pletely open discussion. "It was a staged media event," Ghose said. "We weren't going to be fooled." Some members of the OSU student body said the…

… Australia are in. But Arab powers and former partners Egypt and Syria are out. And front-line states Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have a foot in each camp. Seven years after the Persian Gulf War…

… Oct. 14, targeting its LSA admissions policies. U The University issued an answer to CIR's motion Dec. 3. Citizens for Affirmative Action's Preservation, a coali- tion that includes high school students

… Khan For the Daily Dressed formally in ties and skirts, nearly 1,200 University students sought summer employment yesterday at the annual Internship and Summer Job Fair in the Michigan Union. From…

… management and marketing insti- tutions to public relations and computer programming companies, students had about 70 organizations to choose from. Coordinated by Career Planning and Placement, the event is…

… one of many organized by CP&P that connects stu- dents with employers, said Judy Lawson, director of student affairs at CP&P "This is a great place for students to explore their options and it is always…

… encouraging to see such a turnout," Lawson said. "U of M students obvi- ously have a great interest in attaining opportunities like summer internships and the big turnout today reflects the EMILY NATHAN…

… Weiks. Students said they are glad CP&P …

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