July 20, 1962 (vol. 72, iss. 18) • Page Image 4
…r' Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY oP MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OP BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where OpinIos Are 2mSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN…
… A"'oR, MIcH. Phone NO 2-3 241 Truth Will Prevail'" LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Asks A liternative Solution To Arab-Israel Dispute THE MIDDLE EAST still remains that part of the world least under- stood by…
… only signifies they will die hard. It has no more significance than that. --MICHAEL HARRAH City Editor cation that the Arab parties rec- ognized Israel's legitimacy. What were the indications that' "in…
… the past . .. some of the Arab states..(were) willing to break the Israel boycott . . . (but for) pressure from Egypt through the Arab League?" Initially Egypt was the least concerned with Israel…
… }precious, then I suggest that she swap guarantees to its access from the Arabs in re- turn for the property and land seized from the near-million Arab refugees who fled in the 1947 wary! Does Iraq appear…
… the sorry plight of the Arab League. But again, I must point out that this is nothing new, that there is no new reason why the Arabs in or out of the League' should be more disposed to deal with Israel…
… today, than they were yesterday. Only by recognizing the acute and persevering severity of the Arab-Israeli dispute can we base our hopes on realistic grounds and our suggestions on a practical level. We…
… Arabs want a lasting peace in our area just as much as the world citizen wants it between the Great Powers; but like everybody else we want negotiation from strength, and on a base that we feel will…
… protect our interests. The Arabs will negotiate with Israel only when strength and prosperity denudes us of our inferiority com- plexes.; -Anthony Shebaya, Grad... Democacy OTH houses of a state legis…

