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January 20, 1988 (vol. 98, iss. 76) • Page Image 4

…OPINION 'Page 4 Wednesday, January 20, 1988 The Michigan Daily LETTERS: 4 E0e mtu atTenity Mil Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Israel's rights violated Vol…

… will also consist of two students appointed from a list compiled by the Michigan Student Assembly. This should create a pool of potential honorees that will more closely resemble the sympathies of the…

… following logos: it takestwo to tango; there are two sides to every story, and(even in the West Bank) it is ta two-way street. The Daily has failed to provide its readers with an accurate history of the Arab

… is. still determined to silence the oppressed with gunfire and more oppression. What the Israelis fail to realize is the fact that their occupation of Arab territories has reached its end. The fact of…

… twenty years ago remain the saihe despite Israel's attempts to slowly expel indigenous Arab populations while confiscating their lands. In the case of the Palestinian people, their struggle has been…

… aspects of the Arab-Israeli conflict do not exist. These distortions are preposterous and irritating. Reading the Daily has become analogous to having a single eye: one is only able to see half of his…

… Member of Tager January 19 one too far of hundreds of Arab youths and the deportation of Palestinians in defiance to the Geneva convention accords. At this critical stage in the Palestinian struggle we…

… each occasion. In 1948, and 1956, the surrounding Arab nations attacked Israel with the intent of "driving the Jews into the sea." Then, in 1967, when Israel saw its sea lanes illegally blockaded and the…

… their Arab allies and attacked Israel. Then and only then did Israel retaliate against Jordan and gain control of what today known as the West Bank. Between 1947 and 1967 Jordan had control of the West…

… Bank region which was part of the land designated as a Palestinian homeland. Why didn't Jordan give control of the land to the Palestinians during those twenty years? How can the Arabs now turn around…

April 20, 1988 (vol. 98, iss. 136) • Page Image 4

… if] they are social. Are women able to make demands in the other Arab states? In Egypt in terms of political rights to vote, the end of polygamy, and divorce rights, these have been addressed. In Syria…

… taking care of children. Nursery schools, for example, have been organized; these have been unknown in the Arab countries. Palestinian women have organized themselves for some minor economic in- national…

… smaller numbers than men. . Are there problems for women students? Yes, there are lectures at night and women cannot leave the home at night unless she is accompanied by a male rela- tive. There is no such…

… thing as dating. In general, Palestinian women face more re- strictions than men. What will improve women's rights in the Arab states? Revolutions arise from objective condi- tions, and so far the Arab

… countries have not produced those conditions, such as an economy which needs women to work. 4 S1 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVIII, No. 136 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor…

… slobs to rule over. These fellers'd just love it here, what with that spankin' new code of student conduct and the opposition ra- dio's already on the road to bein' shut down. Ain't that usually the first…

… young students fillin' the ranks around here. But all I can see is this joint becomin' an eli- tist place where ain't but rich folks can come. What's worse, the younger genera- tion seems so damn…

… prepare. (Actually the admin- istration does choose to count Saturday and Sunday as study days.) To allow only one day between the end of classes and the first day of finals dne nnt nrnvide students with ad…

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