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May 24, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 16) • Page Image 7

… confiscate Arab-owned absentee property in the occupied area to enlarge Jewish set- tlements. In Jerusalem, Arab students at Israel's largest university began a three-day hunger strike to protest the school…

…The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 24, 1978-Page 7 Arabs turn out own weapons CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-The Arabs have gone into the arms business in the Middle East, and the fledgling industry already is…

… selling its Western-designed military hardware ins half-dozen coun- tries. The Cairo-based consortium is welding Egyptian manpower and fac- tories, Western technology and Arab oil dollars in an effor to…

… lessen Arab dependence on foreign arms makers. PRODUCTION and diversification of the four-nation Arab arms consortium still lags far behind that of Israel, which produces and sells jet fighters, tanks…

…, missiles and a wide range of their weapons. The Arabs see the gap narrowing significantlyin the 1980s, and they view the project as making them less vulnerable to foreign embargo. Egypt, the key producer of…

… because of mounting Egyptian ar- Arab mayor claims land-grab by Israel TEL AVIV (AP)-A tug-of-war over West Bank lands erupted yesterday as an Arab mayor claimed that the Israeli government is schemingto…

…'s ban on organized Arab cultural or political activity. ELIAS FREIJ, mayor of Bethlehem, said he was officially informed April 12 that about 80,000 acres of land around his town, owned by Arabs residing…

…-rich Arab states are quietly buying West Bank real estate to prevent Israeli seizure, but that has not been substan- tiated. The lands authority, which controls absentee property, said its only plans for West…

… government of Prime Minister Menachem Begin came to powera year ago. THE DAILY HAARETZ said Deputy 'Defense Minister Mordechai Zippori was examining means of seizing Arab land to expand existing Jewish set…

… run by the Arab Organization for Industrialization (AO I). AOI, an independent, profit-making company, says it plans to produce un- der license American Motors Corp., Jeeps, British helicopters and anti…

May 24, 1977 (vol. 87, iss. 15) • Page Image 4

Arab hardliners - called rejection- ists. And the biggest losers - bigger than the leaders of Is- rael's defeated Labor Party - may have been the moderate Arah powers who have staked their prestige on…

… fifth Arab-Israeli wat became inevitable. "All this talk of a- Geneva conference does is raise false hopes," the leider of the Pal- estine Liberation Organization (PLO> , Yasser Arafat, remark- ed early…

…-wing Likud Party's victory has changed all that. The Israeli electorate has not only voted into power a gov- ernment even less likely than its predecessor to negotiate a peace acceptable to the Arabs. It has…

… greatly strengthened the militant side of the Arab debate over how to deal with Israel's decade-long occupation of Arab territories and continued oppo- sition to the establishment of a Palestinian homeland…

…. The Israeli voters, in fact, may even have elected a gov- ernment that will alienate its foremost ally, the United States. Just as Israel's Arab neigh- bors are eager, for the first time in history, for…

… a res- olution unlikely, and Arab con- ciliation just encourages Israel to retain its conquests forever. Only mutual concessions can bring peace, Arafat believes. Even Israeli peace proposals that…

… have incurred major oppo- sition inside Israel itself, PLO leaders contend, offer the Arabs little except permanent Israeli annexation of its most important 1967 conquests. In response, moderate leaders…

… wipe out the guerrilla bases within its neighbors' borders. Israel's new Begin govern- ment faces a crucial dilemma. Will it offer some hope of peace- ful negotiation, thus cultivating Arab moderation…

January 24, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 95) • Page Image 4

… Iraq and back to Syria. When nevertheless now Egpytian President Sadat mentions "peace with Israel" we do not know whe- ther to trust him. We trust more the words of Arab students on this campus…

…Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan __ __ The INTER VIE W: Once (gulp) more 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone…

… education of high school students in the county, especially those who do not plan to go to college. Various studies of high school gradu- ates throughout the nation and locally have concluded that many, if…

… not most, high school students not planning on college graduate with few saleable skills. It is just such training, in a number of areas from business to transportation, that the center would have…

… state and federal governments to meet these needs. THOSE MOST HURT by yesterday's vote are those students who find that the emphasis on academic subjects in traditional high schools does not ade- quately…

… for their products, and write them a letter explaining why. It's OOL REFLECTION is required in the face of the controversy elicited by the advertisement "Arab Racism, Anti-Semitism" and the "Response…

… principle he sought to condemn in the ad, for his own re- ference to "Arabs as a people and collectively" confirms the proprie- ty of speaking about collectivities in history without being racist. The ad…

… the ad had generalized its statements to include Arab be- havior vis-a-vis other nations, or if it had spoken in terms of broad ethnic activity, that would indeed have been racism. But the ad merely…

July 24, 1980 (vol. 90, iss. 45) • Page Image 13

… two-dozen delegates before he spoke symbolizes the Arab refusal to come to terms with Israel's existence. All 21 members of the Arab League and about nine communist and non- Arab delegates left the…

… emergency session yesterday when Israel's Yehuda Blum rose to deliver an ad- dress. BLUM SAID THE walkout sym- bolized "the root cause of the Arab- Israeli conflict, that is, the refusal of the Arab world to…

…) 689-8980 Outside New York FE 1-800-223-7676 nter For Student Travel 1140 5roadway,N.Y.C, N.Y. 10001 r 8 46Year" WASHINGTON (AP) - Banks and other financial institutions are taking in millions of…

… book. We are not hard to find," he said. Iranian student steals a grp;faces trial From UPI and AP MONTGOMERY, W. Va. - An Iranian student has been charged with shoplifting one grape at a grocery store…

May 24, 1967 (vol. 77, iss. 16) • Page Image 2

… more important to the University, than the psychological effects on the students involved. -WALTER SHAPIRO WiL t- YOU af N3OON'4 WHO Y V Letters to the Editor Explaining the Arab Side of Middle…

… L Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MTCHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS FEIFFER Where Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail…

… as temporary lodgers in other peo- ple's rooms. However, far more than half of the displaced students will prob- ably be freshmen, since it is unlikely that any other students will tolerate this sort…

…. For it is doubtful that many psychology majors, even those living at Bursley, would want to attend lectures on music history. The academic effects of living on North Campus to these students will be…

…- pus, the time spent waiting for the bus, and the walk from the bus-stop, all add up to a considerable amount of time. Once a trip to the central campus ap- pears to students to be a major expedi- tion…

… they can't object-they have to live in the dorms. PERHAPS THE MOST significant as- pect of the Bursley situation is the lack of consideration by the University for the desires of the students and the…

…- tween the Arab states and Israel in the past few days. It is an unfortunate fact that the sources of such information- the radio, TV and most newspapers -give only bits and pieces of up-to-date news with…

… briefly the Arabs' point of view of the Palestinian problem. I hope that the reader will not consider this point of view as mindless of the total problem. They are the Arabs' point of view, and they are to…

… one million Arab refugees, that were the main con- sequence of the creation of the state of Israel. Second, it is a hu- man-psychological problem deal- ing with the right of men to their property and…

… and geographic continu- ity of the Arab homeland which Israel has disrupted. Fourth, it is a security problem because, Zionist Israel is necessarily expansionistic as a result of continued immigra- tion…

October 24, 2002 (vol. 113, iss. 35) • Page Image 2

… considered uninhabitable. They created new means of livelihood. Arabs flocked in to benefit from the Jewish developments. " After 1918, the British controlled Palestine. Their Foreign Office favored that…

… Palestine, should be in Arab hands. The British rulers of Palestine did their utmost to keep out Jews- even driving Jewish refugee boats back into Nazi hands, while allowing Arabs to enter freely " And yet…

…, before Israel's rebirth in 1948, for every three Jews that settled in Palestine, there were two Arabs that came for the higher wages and better living conditions. During World War II, the British brought…

… in tens of thousands of Arab migrant workers to build military roads and bases and serve the British forces. United National "Refugee" Camps " The Arab migrant workers were among the first to leave…

… better understanding of students' concerns than other candidates. He said he would like to see the creation of a student-run store where coursepa- cks can be traded without a middle- man, more parking…

… support among Arab states for a possible attack on Iraq. The U.S. plan would be implemented in three phases and closely monitored by the United States, the European Union, Russia and the United Nations. An…

… reports. 0 *I After the 1967 attempt by Arabs states to annihilate Israel failed--- A bogus history was fabricated to incite hatred of Jews and to justify Israel's destruction. It says Jews stole from a…

January 24, 1991 (vol. 101, iss. 81) • Page Image 2

… Y x+ 3f a.! , 'a at~ " a i 0v zra o f rras p¢ 1is vyafia vy rt4 Arab=Am. V w e r can harassment ' s or 4 , r tat' b''Y' Yes £ Ysf < a ,x ,w: rv. x ~. ," ., is v£2 ",rcu.'. §f, v.:: ^+ b e ti £'k+ 9tia…

….o n.v, ;,c- ...., .i...o< s~ . WASHINGTON (AP) - De- troit-area lawmakers yesterday ac- cused the FBI of harassing Arab- Americans by asking them about potential Iraqi terrorism, saying the interviews…

January 24, 1996 (vol. 106, iss. 59) • Page Image 4

… 4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 24, 1996 atje 3b~a O ar 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI Street 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor…

… credit hours by workload T he predicament is a familiar one. Many LSA juniors and seniors face an unenvi- able choice: overload their schedules or de- lay graduation. A student can take five diffi- cult…

… resemble five-credit classes in workload. On the other hand, 100- and 200-level classes, generally four credits, take less time and effort. Students trying to cram 18 credits into a term must take six upper…

… general ~HOW TO CONTACT TmHM 3, too much for even a student with no job and no extracurricular activities. After a student registers for a three-credit class and discovers the heavy workload, the only way…

… out is to drop the class. Credits cannot change in the middle of the semester -but the professor can change requirements once students have registered. The solution: The curriculum committee must…

… standards--but also would create a more efficient system for students and professors alike. The commit- tee should recognize the goal, and work to- ward achieving it. Each term the credit problem resurfaces…

…, and students complain. But they have re- signed themselves to the inept credit system -moreover, so has the administration. This time the curriculum committee needs to take the ball and run with it. ie…

… toward achievement and progress." This is forgotten by those who distort and manipulate Israel's struggle to survive in the world's harshest neighborhood. .Throughout Arab countries, women face degradation…

… and op- pression. Female literacy reaches a mere 3 percent in the Arab state of Yemen, and women aren't al- Roche is a sophomore at the University of Minnesota. This column was published yesterday in…

… The Minnesota Daily. lowed to vote in several other Arab states. Some Arab states have yet to ratify even one of many conventions concerning women's rights in society. For example, Arab women do not…

March 24, 1966 (vol. 76, iss. 146) • Page Image 4

… V. ol 4r mir4ligau Bal-Ig SOUND and FURY Taking a Second Look at Academic Policy Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN…

… CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Lere Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN APBOR, MICH. Trutht Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual…

… than water of higher temperature," the instructor said. "The needs of the students should come first," the source continued. "The depart- ment is definitely too weak if a few men in influential places…

… more intel- lectual meaning to the average student's university experience. Several major universities, in- cluding Princeton and Stanford, have already considered adopting partial pass-fail grading…

… grade. Hopefully, such a system would encourage students to take at least. one course per semester outside their basic specialization area. At the present time, many students shy away from these courses…

… be- cause they fear a low grade which would hurt their accumulated averages. BUT UNDER THE partial pass- fail system engineering students could take an art history course and humanities majors could…

October 24, 1969 (vol. 80, iss. 44) • Page Image 6

… preceding publication and by .? p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sun- day. Items may appear only once. Student organization notices a r e not accepted for publication. For iniormation, phone 764-9270. FRIDAY…

… evening, Oc- tober 29 at 7:30 to meet with students interested in the study of law, A re- presentative from aCse Western Re- serve Law School will be in the coun- seling office on Monday, October 27…

…. Students wishing to make appoint- merts should contact Mrs. Towle at 40312 or in 1223 Angell Hall. Placement Service. GENERAL DIVISION 3200 SAB ANNOUNCEMENTS Vista Week - next week. October 27- 31: If you…

… remodeled Dale Carnegie program", says Ned Dougherty, Assistant Di- rector in the Office of Student I Organizations who heads the program. Rather, he says, it 1 resembles a T-group sensitiv- I ity weekend…

… myself as a dynamic group member." Chris Kahan, former president of Stockwell, said that her group "just flipped out." Tom Clark also assistant director of the student organi- zations office, says he…

…. STUDY SHOWS FRICTION WITH ARABS: 0 Soviet power uncertain in Mideast I for leadership MAR' i International Affairs Committee cordially invites you to a reception for a group of U.N. 'Delegates…

… from Arab governments, a report pub- lished by the Institute for Strate- gic Studies has revealed. The report suggested that the; Soviet Union's Involvement in the Arab-Israeli conflict has placed new…

… responsibilities on the Rus- sians without gaining them a cor- responding ability to control events in the region. But the study by Robert E. Hunter said, "The Arabs-though still to Russian minds an a 1i e n people…

… Ethiopia Cyprus Poland Finland Equador Brazil Malta United Arab Republic Denmark Norway Argentina Libya Freland Spain of their being drawn into crises and wars not of their making or choosing, or even…

…. 26, 1969, 4to 6 P.M., Lawyer's Club, Law Quad __ __ ' STUDENTS Find Out What Is Happening on YOUR Campus! TUNE IN THE NEW "CAMPUS NEWS" 8:30 A.M. as much as $2 billion if bought sn the West. He…

November 24, 1999 (vol. 110, iss. 41) • Page Image 4

… community. And it may be the face that you see in the mirror. Think about it. (With thanks to Miles Davis for the term "Mighty Whitey.") CHRIS GODWIN RACKHAM STUDENT Arab-American Anti…

… managed by students at the University of Michigan HEATHER KA\Ilss Editor in Chief JEFFREY KOSSEFF DAVID WALLACE Editorial Page Editors ~' ~ Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion…

…. Expanding to other colleges would increase the effectiveness of Re-use-a- Shoe - if the program proves viable in Ann Arbor and Columbus, Ohio. Students can show their support of Nike's program through today…

… rivalry between the two schools away from destructive endeavors while inspiring students to par- ticipate in a good cause. Students are not only given the opportunity to show-up their rivals outside of the…

… Atopr- A- TUCy" ----.'t, T.'. , A ''- G + C, Stellar turnout Student government elections saw record voting T here is no doubt this week began on a high note for the newly elected Michigan Student

… Assembly and LSA- Student Government representatives. After weeks of preparation, they should be proud of their individual accomplish- ments. And the University student com- munity has something to…

… congratulate itself for, too - increased voter turnout. The voter turnout in this election noticeably increased. After the first day students could vote, the totals already surpassed those from last year. More…

… than 4,071 students voted in this semester's MSA elections, up from 2,249 votes last fall. Also, more than 2,421 students voted for LSA-SG elections, up from 1,127 votes last fall. Students and…

… candidates should be impressed by voter turnout that increased by more than 1,000 students in each election. Hopefully, the increase in voter turnout signals increased student activism and attention to student

… issues across campus. Despite the common myth, there are prevalent issues for today's students. Student government elections are one way for students to speak out on these issues. By voting in this year…

October 24, 1974 (vol. 85, iss. 43) • Page Image 4

… ;!4i:' ?\,' r tit r Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 52 Thursday, October 24, 1974 News Phone: 764-05 Who By KENNETH STEIN CINCE…

… THE October w last year the top i Palestine and the Palest has dominated the attent all parties in the Arab-I conflict. Where primary co on the part of Egypt, J and Syria after the June war was for…

… apart fr usual place within the deb the Middle East. And ag urged and battered about the Arab defeat in Pale 1948-49, the idea of estab a Palestinian governme exile had been raised. S concept has been…

… One which says that point th in the Palestine is an integral part of willing t mdi- the greater Arab homeland, Ar- commun stood ticle Two seems to question the of refu core right of the Kingdom of…

…." verbal a pt and This was an effort to placate the get the r war Arab claim that they had been neva pe some promised independence after the Sovi eanig World War I and support for an States a n fact…

… independent Arab Kingdom for what if imate their support of Great Britain what it against Turkey. The recipient of due out this kingdom was Husayn's what if e seg- grandfather, King Abdllah. terests move- t…

…- counter ihae iodically since then, PLO lead- taking u n the ers have challenged Husayn's tarfare unity, existence both as a monarch and curs, p as renresentative of an ?Arab litically Kiryat state to the…

… would 1967 as a broad working outline arger for reaching a solution in 'he T otners. Arab-Israeli conflict. That re- f con- snhltion has at least three points ings of among which apear open for contra…

…-chairmen. But the PLO fails to get perceives as its just of the UN debate? And local Arab national in- overcome the claim that se of the Palestinians is tral core of the Arab- conflict? .E IS a strong likelihood…

…- tion with the British connection and later with the United Siirtes has tended to taint the monar- chy's image in the eyes of fellow Arabs who have sought to throw off the dominant influence of foreign…

October 24, 1991 (vol. 102, iss. 19) • Page Image 7

…The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 24, 1991 - Page 7 Project SERVE draws students 'Into the Streets' by Uju Oraka Daily Staff Reporter Battling homelessness, hunger, and environmental hazards…

… are only a few of the many community ser- vice projects which students will be able to participate in through the second annual "Into the Streets" program on Nov. 1. The program, which is spon- sored by…

… the number of University or- ganizations involved in the event. "People from other student or- ganizations are sending people over, such as the Black Student Union and the Angel Club," Bohn said. one…

… condition of anonymity. "There will be total Arab coor- dination," said Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa. Egypt, which is to attend the peace conference only as an .observer and potential mediator…

…, plunged the Arab world into political disarray vhen it took its military might out of the Israeli-Arab equation with the Camp David accords. The conference is expected to break up into three sets of…

March 24, 1994 (vol. 104, iss. 102) • Page Image 5

… predicted rainfall, yester- day turned out to be a glorious day to spend in the sun, and students and faculty could be seen celebrating all over campus. The patches of grass near the RackhamBuilding and Hill…

…, Auditorium were peppered with classes being held outside for the first time in months as students relaxed in the soft breeezes while taking notes on Spanish or sociology. School of Music sophomore Ben…

…, harboring hundreds of walkers, bikers, dog walkers and frisbee throwers during the entire afternoon. It was even rumored that a bunny on a leash was hopping around in the sunny courtyard. Rackham student Eric…

… disciplined.' - Steven Fontana LSA junior neering senior David Zaret were entertaining themselves and others with their juggling skills. Both students have been practicing the art for about seven years. When…

… the last three or four days, and I decided to do nothing today," he added. When the afternoon began to fade into evening, the Diag emptied of frolicking students, and the grassy area was speckled with…

… weather and sun, a student has reattached a pinwheel to his bike outside East Quad. Right:The Diag, as seen from a nearby rooftop. MARK FRIEDMAN/ Daily 'Israel never anticipated Hebron massacre, military…

… commis- sion yesterday that the military never hxpected a Jewish settler to open fire on Arabs. But Lt. Gen. Ehud Barak - Israel's highest-ranking military of- ficer - flatly denied earlier testi- mony…

… from lower-ranking command- ers that Israeli troops were under or- ders not to fire on Jews, even if they were shooting at Arabs. Barak sug- gested that the commanders had mis- understood orders. "A…

… difficult task confront- ing the Israeli Defense Forces in po- licing Arab territory that Israel has occupied since the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, particularly since the onset of the intifada, or Palestinian…

… uprising. Under questioning by the commission's lone Arab member - the first time ever that an Arab justice was allowed to interrogate Israel's top military official - Barak appeared to reinforce earlier…

January 24, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 94) • Page Image 5

… grew out of a query posed Publicity Seminar for Student Organizations An introduction to the fundamen- tals of Publicity, covering a broad range of topics. WHEN: Wed., Jan. 25-2-5 p.m. WHERE: Conference…

… Rooms 1 & 2 Michigan Union CONTACT: Mandy Gordon Student Organizations Coord. 763-0077 * * *NO CHARGE* * * ngay ministers: by the New York City presbytery, the may take divergent courses on the local…

… forced out of Arab lan- ds shortly after the 1948 War of Inde- pendence. "They were never put into refugee camps for 19 years," he said. He also said 41 per cent of Israel's present day population 'is made…

… up of Jewish refugees from Arab countries who were "absorbed into the econo- my." GRAUEL ALSO defended the Israeli settlements in the Sinai desert which has been one of many barriers plaguing the…

… an accident, as Sadat offered to come to Israel and Begin accepted," said Grauel. Grauel, however, pointed out that Israel has recognized the existence of the Arab states for three decades and has…

… continuously offered to negotiate did notdirectly with the Arabs. did not d Israel has been saying for years it c body would meet with Arab leaders any- tifying where and suddenly Sadat comes along retaryand…

…. Conference Room FRIDAY, January 27 4-6 p.m. Office of Minority Affairs Rackhom Student Government TEST ANXIOUS? Does test anxiety cause you to -Freeze on exams? -Have trouble studying? -Do more poorly in…

… program for students specifically in- terested in the reduction of Math anxiety. (sta- tistics, economics.) FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL at Centicore 2-3 p.m. 764-6311 K-117 W. Quad Institute for Human…

January 24, 1974 (vol. 84, iss. 95) • Page Image 2

…. S. oil compa- nies cut off supplies of Arab oil to U. S. military forces last No- vember. Business Week magazine reported Dec. 1 that Saudi Arabia warned it would fight any flow of oil by tightening…

… con- taxes that oil companies can cre- trols." oir ion Applied in areas as a Tool nal Change" Rm. 2059 MKRI Mi., Rm. 1057 MHRI S ad at returns after touring Arab capitals N q SONY." STR-6036A…

…. A XI 336 South State 769-4980 Open unt see COED Frat! 761-6133 0 _ . , POSITIONS NOW OPEN FOR, Central Student Judiciary (All-Campus Supreme Court) WHO CAN APPLY? Any student at the University…

November 24, 1974 (vol. 85, iss. 70) • Page Image 3

… reflected in the stalemate between the two communities of Arab and Is- raeli students now at the Uni- versity. There are an estimated 100 Arabs and 50 Israelis on campus, and interaction between the two…

… apart as ever. One Arab student, who asked to remain anonymous, said that academic work often requires contact between the two groups. "But if you want to maintain a relationship with someone," he…

…-'.. ..-.....:., ...... An Israeli woman on campus says she has enter- tained Arab students in her home and has been invited into their homes. "But you don't go out drinking beer to argue politics," she said. "I have had…

… relations are at their best, there are guide- lines to be followed. An Israeli woman says she has entertain- ed Arab students in her home and has been invited into their homes. She has given and re- ceived…

… birth of Students for a Demo- cratic Society, seen by many stu- dents as a progressive, moving force, by many others as a bit too extreme, and by many of the more established elements in society as an…

… now lie in working with the community rather than with students. "T h e oppression of day to day life, like food prices and rent is the best way to radicalize people," he declares. And despite the fact…

…- eral faculty, the brightest students, people from the Daily, and SGC people. That's really limited." His only connection to his past now is working at Guild House, a progressive ecumenical organiza…

… the 1968 n be nc g u . e career Democratic convention. An SDS meeting in Ann Arbor in 1969. Arabs and Israells on campus: The quiet poitics of a voidance By HOWARD BRICK THE SCENE in Beit Shean…

…, their bodies were thrown out the windows and were trampled and burned by mobs in the street. After watch- ing television footage of the mob action, one student in Ann Ar- bor remarked, "There's enough…

… groups-even if cordial -is generally superficial. Politi- cal discussion, for the sake of tranquility, is nearly taboo. And a sampling of individual opin- ions shows Arabs and Israelis to be about as far…

November 24, 1976 (vol. 87, iss. 66) • Page Image 3

… try- ing it was about 47 per cent ir 1975 and for using it regularly Arab nations discuss c KUWAIT (1) - Ten Arab oil oil price increase would be a Iraqi Oil Minister Karim told nations began a search…

… the ed out its position but is thought n ' office. Arab group meeting here are to want the increase held to H 0 WA E V E R, Iraq Oil Mviin- a Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, about 8 per cent for fear of ister…

…, November 24, 1976 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a 1y Tuesday through Sunday morning…

… on what Kuwait Radio described as a 'mission "to communicate Car-' ter's views to the Arabs." Akins was quoted as saying on arrival that Carterasees the Middle East situation and the oil problem as…

…. a missing finger and con to of H itchcock's smoothE ain that doesn't let up. \ ---.---ririr ~rirW~~~~r -ir - STUDY AT TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY ACADEMIC PROGRAMS AMERICAN & CANADIAN STUDENTS ONE YEAR OR…

… EARLY BIRD MATINEES -- Adults $ .0o MON .TR SAT. ,0 A.M. TIL 130 P.M. SUN. & OL0121NOON TIL 1.30 P.M. STUDENT DISCOUNTS(Exe. Fri.& Sat. Eves.) The new Earth, Wind & Fire album is out - and it's great…

October 24, 2002 (vol. 113, iss. 35) • Page Image 15

…. DORFMAN Here's a synopsis of the law- suit I plan to file against LSA sophomore Rick Dorfman: Facts: Mr. Dorfman has, on occasion, sought criminal proceedings against certain Arab students for simply…

… Regents for filing a frivolous lawsuit against them. Mr. Dorfman should make a for- mal and public apology to the Arab students he claimed were threaten- ing him when they were doing noth- ing more than…

… the newly formed Michigan Student Zionists (the American Movement for Israel was- n't Zionist enough for him) is an incident that not many people know about but that I alluded to in my lawsuit. About a…

… week before the confer- ence, I was standing in the Angel Hall computer lab when I heard a deafening squawk that I quickly I Iszc OUN4 Students, Faculty, and Staff mention this ad and receive 15"/ off…

…-con- servative talking head whose ranti- ngs are posted on the website of the Jewish Defense League (for those of you that don't know what that is, it is, in short, "the only good Arab is a dead Arab"). Schlussel…

… and Dorfman went into the lab and got onto a computer. I called an Arab friend of mine (that probably makes me a self-hating Jew) and told him to come on over. I thought it would be fun to prove to them…

… debate, which she devilishly declined. In short, Rick Dorfman actually believes that if Arab stu- dents are within 40 feet of him, then he is being intimidated and threatened. This guy makes me want to sew…

… every time an Arab enters the room, the fighting is not going to stop. People like Dorfman need to reform themselves, but they're not going to do without reasonable people driving them to do so. -Ari Paul…

… of those in line were students some in college but most still in higl school. A few even got permission tc miss school. "I'm here just for the expe rience," said Kim Maes, 16. "My mon is the attendance…

March 24, 1968 (vol. 78, iss. 146) • Page Image 3

… Week Committee TODAY: BLACK STUDENT INVOLVEMENT AT A WHITE UNIVERSITY Aud. A-Angell Hall 3: 00 P.M. WASHINGTON (v) - Republi-, 1 can governors are abandoningi their efforts to line up supportj i for a…

… public debate here, Polish Communist leaders have been cri- ticized for supressing student demonstrations with undue harsh- ness. The East German press was chided for giving a one sided pic- ture of the…

… from Po- land. There also were reports of other travel restrictions and rigid searching of Czechoslovaks bound for the two countries. '.Polish Students End Sit-In Demonstration Nelson A. Rockefeller…

… WARSAW, Poland OP) - War- saw's defiant students ended three sit-in demonstrations yes- terday after gaining an appre- ciable measure of popular support. At Polytechnic College, 4,000 students yielded in…

… the face of threatened mass expulsionscand an awesome show of police force. At Warsaw University and the College of Agriculture, several thousand students abandoned 36 hour and 12 hour sleep-ins. The…

… protests were basically against alleged' police brutality in stopping demonstrations against what the students call "slander- ous and false" reporting of events in the state controlled press. . The students

… appealed to have their arguments receive publicity. Since a March 8 campus dem- onstration at Warsaw University, students across this Communist ruled nation have taken up the. crusade for more liberalization…

… of their socialist society. At the two day Polytechnic sit- in, students painted their resolu- tions and slogans on signs and draped them on the administra- tion building, which faces busy midtown…

students. School officials promised im- munity to the demonstrators if they broke up during the night instead of carrying the sit-in to its scheduled morning conclusion in defiance of the college rector and…

September 24, 2007 (vol. 118, iss. 15) • Page Image 3

… the 2006 GOP nomination and is serv- ing his last two-term in the state House. UNITED NATIONS Rice says Arab nations invited to Mideast summit Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said yesterday that key…

Arab nations, including Syria, would be invited to President Bush's planned Mideast peace conference this fall and expressed hope they would attend. Formal invitations haven't been issued yet but Rice…

… civilians, he added: "There are serious challenges to the sover- eignty of Iraq." In Arabic, he used the word "tajawiz" which can be translated either as "affronts" or "challenges." TOKYO Moderate Fukuda…

… year, we survey about 50,000 secondary school students and bring the name of the University of Michigan before them," Johnston said. "And that's the population from which our student body is drawn…

… drug abuse. "It's the only study that surveys certain grade-level students each year while also tracking the lon- gitudinalprogress of these people into the future," said Compton, who heads the Division…

…. This year the study will survey nearly 50,000 eighth graders and high school students throughout the United States. ALLISUNGHAM AN/Daily Michael Frosti, a contestant on "Survivor: China" and Traverse…

October 24, 1982 (vol. 93, iss. 40) • Page Image 2

… the actress, who remained in stable con- dition under intensive care after surgery at Northern Westchester Hospital Center. Arab king lists peace demands WASHINGTON- Morocco's King Hassan said yesterday…

… the Arab world will recognize Israel, if certain conditions are met, including Israeli sur- der of the territories occupied in the 1967 war. Hassan also said the Arab-Israeli conflict has "entered a new…

… Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan, Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109…

…-in-chief .......................DAVID MEYER Managing Editor ................. PAMELA KRAMER News Editor .................. ANDREW CHAPMAN Student Affairs Editor ...........ANN MARIE FAZIO University Editor .................... MARK…

April 24, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 144) • Page Image 4

…Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2…

… 24, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS BLUES Outside Pressures And SBX.Expansion TIT' THE State Legislature trimming the indicative of the student interest in saving University's budg'et, tuition raises and…

… money. hikes in dormitory room and board fees threat- Suggestions have been made that the pres- en to boost the cost of the "over-all education ent Student Book Exchange help the process package," about…

… which the Regents have ex- by expanding and selling supplies, an area pressed concern. wnere great savings could be made. A committee is already investigating the pos- As any student's parents realize…

… feeling on the part books. of the University against it." Worried about the last category, a Student A Board of Regents by-law prohibits the Government Council subcommittee examined University from engaging…

… in competition with the possibility of establishing a student book- Ann Arbor merchants. store on campus. While finding the price of Much work remains to be done by any com- text books in Ann Arbor was…

…- hampered by any outside pressures. mittee's work and their fine job is perhaps -MICHAEL KRAFT Questionnaires and the Calendar SOME 200 students, according to recent es- rHAT IS precisely the danger that…

… accurate student the faculty, student and administration mem- opinion in the area of the academic calendar, bers of his group, there is still a needkfor rep- the committee mailed questionnaires to 400…

February 24, 1970 (vol. 80, iss. 121) • Page Image 3

… Wednesday & Thursday February 25th & 26th 4:10 P.M. DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE presents scenes from THE CHANGELING -by THOMAS MIDDLETON THE FLYING DOCTOR -by MOLIERE ARENA…

… TAMMY JACOBS Daily News Analysis "We were innocent, of course," claims Marc Van Der Hout, executive v i c e president of Student Government Coun- cil. "But restricting a defense to solely our innocence…

… condemned the Arab governments yesterday for Arab terrorist attacks on civil air- liners, as the Israeli prime minister, seeking help to stop the attacks, met with envoys from 18 nations. The protests were…

… Frankfurt. West German Foreign Minister Walter Schell met yesterday with Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban, then announced that West Ger- many has sent messages to all Arab governments condemning the…

… government yester- day imposed sharp restrictions on the entry of Arabs into the coun- try. Only on humanitarian grounds and "where significant Swiss in- terest is at stake" will any Arab be allowed in…

… aspects of the crash. Government spokes- man explained that the only Arabs who will be allowed into Switzerland will be diplomats, big businessmen, a n d those coming for medical treatment or to visit sick…

July 24, 1962 (vol. 72, iss. 20) • Page Image 2

… Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG…

… stimulation of additional demand Si j. AS EVERYONE KNEW it would, Michiganc State University's Board of Trustees lastf Thursday became the last of the 10 state- supported schools to raise student tuition. c…

… so, all 10 institutions expressed deep regret, and they ought to express a lot more for the future. It is certain that university-Legislature re- lations are going to get a lot more strained. Student

students can still well afford. BUT, in order to get another $1 million, the University would have to raise under- graduate fees by about $100 per student, which is not so easily done. Nothing less than a…

… of women, there appears a little story which explains what the letter really meant. THE OFFICE of student affairs meant to say that if you have proven financial need-if you can show the $30 per year is…

…-passionate Middle 'East. Ever since the Palestine war of 1948, both the Arabs and the Israelis have been con- ducting an arms race that mirrors the greater one carried on between the United States and the Soviets…

February 24, 1957 (vol. 67, iss. 104) • Page Image 1

… EIGHT PAGES SWestern, Arab Leaders 4> Nasser Calls Arab Nations To Meeting Ike Determines Polcy Today on UN Sanctions' Sn Israeli Troop Crisis I Countries to Discuss Eisenhower Doctrine CAIRO…

… ()-President Game Nasser is conferring with three o thls Arab partners next week in ,summit meeting expected to hard en the Arab attitude toward the Eisenhower doctrine and Aqaba- Gaza issue. Syria's President…

… on his mission to Wash- ington, with emphasis on his an- alysis of what the F bhowe doctrine for the Middle East means to the Arabs. Common Bonds The wealthy Saudi Arabiar monarch has been visiting…

… Spair and the Arab nations of Nort. Africa since he left Washingtor two weeks ago. Common bonds of Egypt, Saud: Arabia, Jordan and Syria includ opposition to Israel and the pro- Western Baghdad Pact. But…

… a strain on their unity is sh wing up in differences over the Eisenhowei doctrine. Saudi Arabia and Jordan have responded favorably to the new 4 American policy. Egypt and Syria still preach Arab

… Britain. Dominated by a clique of pro- Soviet army officers, Syria has been the most hostile of the Arab nations toward the Eisenhower doctrine, although Kuwatly's gov- ernment officially adopted a wait…

…, and housing unit conferences. Collaterally, there will be public exhibition of religious art and music. The Conference grew out of a Student Government Council mo- tion last May. Persons representing…

… Curricu- lum," "What Are the Campus Gods?" and "Religion-a Hind- rance to Integration?" A faculty-student peopled panel will discuss "What Happens to God on Campus?" Auto Plates Change Near WASHINGTON (A…

… new Arab-Israeli war over the Gaza Strip and the Gulf of Aqaba." Hold West Awaits U.S. Action In Mid-East Assembly Recesses; Expects Israel Reply UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A)- Canada, Britain and France…

May 24, 1961 (vol. 71, iss. 168) • Page Image 4

… in other parts of the United States which directly affect each foreign student, regardless of whether he comes from the United Arab Re- public or Israel, from India or Sweden. ISA could serve as the…

…CEO *r~lallBath9 Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLIcATIONS BLDo. * ANN ARBOR…

…, MICH. 0 Phone NO 2-3241 FOREIGN STUDENTS: ISA Stumbles Forward' eOpinions Are Free uth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the…

… editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, MAY 24, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: PETER STEINBERGER HnRevision: Better Living or Selfraise? By GERALD STORCH Daily Staff Writer -NTERNATIONAL Students As…

…- sociation is at present barely adequate in its attempts to bring American and foreign students at the University closer together. In- ternal confusion and recent poli- cy statements from its new offi- cers…

… ought to 'mit it. If they are lifting it because they alize that students, like all human beings, ve a right to visit where and with whom ey please, they ought to admit this too. N EITHER CASE, the…

…. Most students have a fairly clearly defined set of moral standards by the time they reach college. If their standards are high, it is in- sulting to assume that students will lower them just because they…

… has been gained since it will be far morendifficult to enforce in its new form. It is very hard to pick freshmen out of a mixed crowd of students, and as long as parties are legal and need no longer be…

… shrouded in se- crecy, it would be an almost impossible task for the police to check each gathering to see' if any freshmen girls happened to be there. If the change is due to a realization that students

… modern foreign language. desirable for most. Please contact Bureau of Appts., 4021 Admin., Ext. 3371 for further informa- tion. Part-Time of the foreign student into cam- pus life. The recent suggestions…

February 24, 1970 (vol. 80, iss. 121) • Page Image 4

…"_' Qfi 51r414an sain Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Pompidou and French foreign policy 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich…

…. Although the black student community at the University has increased drama- tically during the last few years, the overriding impression of the University is still one of a school for rich white stu- dents…

… as the Green report characterized it in 1965. The BAM proposal for changing this condition is reasonable if not a bit con- servative. In a University of more than 30 thousand students, it demands that…

… only 900 black students be admitted next fall-450 freshmen, 150 transfer students and 300 graduate students. The demands also give the University three years to increase the proportion of blacks in the…

… University to 10 per cent - more than enough time: The demands also take into considera- tion the desirability of supportive services to insure that the admitted students graduate. UNFORTUNATELY, it is…

… pro- posals are theoretically desirable, the necessary financing is not available. It is noteworthy that the same admin- istration has proposed that students be assessed $15 per term for 30 years to…

…- mitted by Students for Effective Action (SEA). THE ADMINISTRATION'S lack of sup- port could be expected but the failure of the so called "liberal" University com- munity to provide significant support is…

… faculty assess themselves $15 and $25 respectively. Self-assessment is not a new idea, students will almost sure- ly vote for such a proposal in order to finance a student bookstore. ARGUMENTS THAT minority…

students can succeed at the University, not what type of creditials ,he has to get in. The inate ability of the students that would be admitted under the minority admis- sions program is no less than that of…

… the majority of students already here. With the help of supportive services to fill in the gaps that were caused by poor aca- demic backgrounds, not lack of intelli- gence, the majority of the students

September 24, 1978 (vol. 59, iss. 16) • Page Image 3

…, af- ter all, and the Assembly members still reacted favorably to the Board's decision to retain a mandatory live-in rule for first year students. Also ten years ago members of the all-black fraternity…

…, Jewish graduate students have planned an informal discussion on marriage between Jews and non-Jews at Hillel at 8. Rah, rah Beethoven's Missa Solemnis may be Heaven to some ears, but it won't sell many…

… A vX n sinn hill The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 24, 1978-Page 3 ARAB ANTI-ACCORD PLAN FINISHED Egypt cheers returning Sadat CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-More than 100,000 cheering Egyptians jubilant over…

… the new prospects for peace with Israel welcomed President Anwar Sadat home yesterday. But in Damascus other Arab leaders put the final touches on a "rejectionist" plan to undermine the Camp David…

… in Damascus with Syrian President Hafez Assad. Vance, who is trying to sell the Camp David accords to the Arabs, toured Saudi oilfields yesterday. Assad asked him to postpone his Damascus visit un- til…

… today because the Arab hard-line summit ran overtime. Sadat was swamped by thousands of well-wishers at an airport reception at- tended by the entire Egyptian Cabinet and all 360 members of Parliament…

… days talking with King Hassan II without winning that moderate Arab leader's public support. In the Syrian captial, the leaders of the Palestine Liberation Organization and four hard-line Arab states…

… the new Egyptian- Israeli agreements-that they do not provide for total Israeli withdrawal from Arab lands or for the right of Palestinians to establish their own state in those lands. He said he would…

November 24, 1953 (vol. 64, iss. 55) • Page Image 4

…-cooked food and a four day Thanksgiving weekend tempts students, train and bus stations already are crowded and University residence halls are beginning to be shrouded in quiet. The cam- pus exodus has begun…

…: the four day week- end becomes a five or six day weekend for many vacation-hungry students. A reminder is due those people planning to be absent from classes on Wednesday and Monday, however. It is by…

… virtue of the Student Legislature's recommendation to the administration tlat we are having a Thanksgiving holiday at all. More im- portant, the four day week-end was grant- ed on a two year trial basis…

…, of which this is the second experimental year. The con- ditions offered students, when the trial period began were: Friday and Saturday classes of Thanksgiving week would be omitted if classroom…

… day to report to President Eisen- hower on the toughest of all diplomatic jobs-building up long-range friendship between Israel and the Arab states. Johnston was asked by Eisenhower to go to the Near…

… East as his special ambassador, officially to settle the question of Arab refugees, but actually to settle the broader and more basic problem of Arab-Israel friendship. What Johnston took with him was a…

Arabs and Israelis, the Jordan valley could be made to bloom like a rose, and permanent peace and prosperity would prevail in the Near East. Arab refugees could be put to work on the project, thereby…

… removing a difficult thorn in the side of Arab-Israeli relations. At present Arab refugees, some 875,000 of them, live on the border of Israel, fed by the United Nations and costing American taxpayers about…

… were killed, Johnson reported to the White House, just during his brief stay in the Near East. *' ** * -JORDAN GUARDED- JOHNSTON reported that at first he was met with hostility from both sides. The Arab

… authorities, it calls for the cooperation of Israel with three Arab states-Lebanon, Syria and Jordan. The waters of the Jordan are to be impounded largely in Lebanon, with another dam at Lake Tiberias. From…

July 24, 1980 (vol. 90, iss. 45) • Page Image 9

… controversial bill making Jerusalem, including the annexed Arab sector, Israel's capital. Prime Minister Menachem Begin left his sickbed to appear for the vote and lead a 65-12 majority. The bill now goes to a…

… committee for final preparation for enactment. THE BILL HAS drawn strong criticism from Arab countries and other nations that maintain Israel has no right to claim sovereignty over predominantly Arab East…

… form of autonomy for Palestinians living in Israeli-occupied Arab territory. EGYPT REGARDS East Jerusalem as part of the West Bank of the Jordan River, and wants the city's 100,000 Arabs to vote in…

…. ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE members cited what they alleged to be Marwil's frequently intemperate behavior, as well as questionable scholarly production and worsening student evaluations, as reasons for the denial of…

March 24, 2006 (vol. 116, iss. 98) • Page Image 4

… incidents in recent years. It is useful to point out a few episodes that high- light the trend. Take the case of Arab students. For all admissions to the University, the checkbox for white students reads as…

…-simplistic, this categorization of Arab students leaves them powerless to even check the "Other" category, making invisible an entire community to counseling services and ethnicity-spe- cific scholarships and…

…,000 unsolicited campaign emails. Did this attack on your inbox make you feel better about student government or encour- age you to vote? The Michigan Progres- sive Party realizes that no one likes being besieged by…

… election spam." Now, I appre- ciate that the MPP realizes that people are sick of elections and sick of spam, but what I can't understand is why they would send me an unsolicited email accusing Students 4…

…- istration and the student body. Students of color, along with staff and faculty, have long been the casualties of discriminatory policies and - more informally but arguably more rampantly - the targets of…

…, there have been numer- ous amateur-style cartoons and articles published in the Daily essentializing all Arabs and Muslims, per- petuating the "camel jockey" and "terrorist" image. On April 8, in the…

September 24, 1993 (vol. 103, iss. 119) • Page Image 3

… The Springgans, Dominick's, 812 Monroe, 8 p.m. Q Arab American Students' As- sociation, mass meeting, Michi- gan Union, Wolverine Room, 8:30 p.m. U Chinese Christian Fellowship, meeting, Dana Building…

…The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 24, 1993 - 3 Entree Plus worries students By ADAM ANGER DAILY STAFF REPORTER More than 16,000 students use 'Entree Plus - the convenient form of "cashless…

…" payment for purchases at on-campus stores and restaurants. Andwhile users seem satisfied with the service, many students are skepti- cal about the security of their Entree Plus debit cards. Students may…

…. University Law student Luis Fuentes-Rohwer said he has stopped carrying his Entree Plus card because he does not want it to get stolen. "I don't keep (my Entree Plus card) in my wallet because (the vendors…

…, admitted his cashiers sometimes forget to check the photo- graphs on students' Entree Plus card. "We see people using others' cards a lot," Thomas said. Although many students use their friends' Entree Plus…

… cards, Thomas said, Ilittle Caesars has only seen one incidence of someone charging on a stolen card. Many students said they voluntar- ily let others use their Entree Plus card and have no problem. "My…

… roommate uses mine, and I use hers. I know (vendors) don't check the picture ID," said Birdie Goynes, an LSA junior. 'People start thinking of Entree Plus as a credit card,' - Luis Fuentes-Rohwer Law student

… University officials said they put Entree Plus money directly on stu- dents' ID cards for two reasons: to provide students with the convenience of carrying only one card, and to en- sure that a photograph is…

… incidences out of 16,000 Entree Plus accounts where problems have arisen with stolen cards used for charg- ing purchases. "If (the student) makes a police report, we can print the transaction to find the…

… locations," she said. "We will charge back the vendor and reimburse the student for those charges." Students do not have access to money once they have put it in their Entree Plus accounts. It can be used…

May 24, 1946 (vol. 56, iss. 148) • Page Image 4

… c/to DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Great Injustice There is a Renaissance in the Arab world. The Arabs are making efforts to understand the people of the world particularly the Americans. The Arab

… countries are sending their students to American and European Universities to study the academic lessons and the life of those coun- tries. The American people before believing anything should ask the…

… are objecting to the Jewish immigration, and that "the Arab popu- lation if canvassed honestly and impartially would declare itself overwhelmingly in favor of increased Jewish immigration." We do not…

… have "feudal landlords" in Palestine. It is the voice of the peasants that has made the educated Arabs defend their rights. It is the cry of the peasants for help from what harm foreigners have done to…

… them that has made the Arab leaders object. Mr. Arens morever says, "It is nonsense now to speak of a political consciousness among this vast group of illiterate peasants whose educa- tional process…

… begin mostly in Jewish schools." Education in Jewish schools is in Hebrew, and Arabs do not know Hebrew. During the fif- teen years I lived in Palestine I have never heard or seen an Arab going to a…

… and in the spring, make a total of twenty-weeks of vacation. The students work only thirty- two weeks. Because of the slack mental activity of the summer, the weeks at the beginning of the fall term…

February 24, 2006 (vol. 115, iss. 83) • Page Image 1

… Staff Reporter For many international students, visa complications are irritating at best. At worst, they can alter the course of someone's life. During winter break, Marta Cruz-Sojo, graduate student and…

… entry in a database of foreigners considered to be a security threat to the United States. The embassy refused to grant her a student visa, and instead, revoked her passport and visa, under which she was…

… Graduate Employees' Organization, the Uni- versity told Cruz-Sojo that it would only secure her position as a gradu- ate student instructor until Jan. 23 - a deadline that was later extend- ed to Jan. 27…

… consequenc- es of crises like Cruz-Sojo's, GEO is forming a group called the Inter- national Workers' Caucus to offer support and advocacy for interna- tional students. The group held its first meet- ing…

… Tuesday and plans to urge the University to adopt policies that guarantee job security and student status in cases of visa delays. "A request for intervention made by GEO to University President Mary Sue…

October 24, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 32) • Page Image 4

… have a hollow ring.. -PHILIP SHERMAN City Editor LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Arab Students Reject 'Any. Interference' To the Editor: N AN ARTICLE published in The Daily (Oct. 19), Mr. Storch failed to do…

students at the U of M reject any kind of inter- ference in the Arab domestic af- rairs by any group or groups of interested or non-interested par- ties." To an intelligent reader this means that Mr. Storch…

…'s conten- tion of no "burning Arab letters" on this score concerning Hillel is false. It is well understood why the Zionist Student Organization, as it turned out to be, was the only body interested in…

…1' TUITION HIKE: Smaller than You Think Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 'Where Opinions…

March 24, 2014 (vol. 124, iss. 88) • Page Image 3

… individuals and has been proac- -ive in removing anyne who would engage in intimidation tactics. SAFE members also said their group members, as well as other students perceived to be Arab, have been threatened…

…The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com DIVEST From Page 1A personally apologizes for the pro- posal's indefinite postponement, and the fact that the students felt silenced with both support- ers and…

… dissenters being unable to voice their opinions. He also apologized for not helping fos- tering a safe campus climate and expressed regret to any student who felt unsafe at the University because of their…

… Proppe's assertion that mem- bers didn't have enough time to attend was not true. They added that his apology was insufficient, as it apologized to students who were made to "feel silenced" rather than…

… firmly acknowledg- ing students were silenced. Despite the criticism of the statement's wording, members said the public statement now online is identical to the one brought to the sit-in Sunday afternoon…

… CSG's responsibility to not con- tribute to a hateful climate. Administrators visited the #UMDivest sit-in twice on Fri- day and once on Saturday night. Dean of Students Laura Blake Jones also spoke…

… privately with University of Michigan Hillel, the largest Jewish organization on campus. In the CSG chambers Friday, E. Royster Harper, vice presi- dent for student life, listened to DIVERSITY From Page 2A…

… how the decision comes out," Semana said. Marshall added that the presence of DAAP represen- tatives - and, potentially, a DAAP executive - on the CSG Student Assembly could - if the Supreme Court…

… guiding the University to enact the new policies "in a way that effectively increases minority enrollment and also increases the treatment and well-being of minority students." "It's just one thing to get…

… more minority students enrolled," he said. "But it's another thing to actually try to retain them, help take care of them and make sure they feel comfortable on a campus which has, in the past, showed…

January 24, 2003 (vol. 113, iss. 80) • Page Image 1

… Dismal housing conditions, a general lack of student awareness about tenants' rights and waves of complaints from stu- dents about their land- lords prompt- - ed the Michigan Student Assembly to P e act to…

… improve housing con- ditions for all students. At Tues- day's meeting, MSA created the Student Housing Taskforce to relay demand for better off-campus living between ten- ants, representatives, the…

… Vice President Joe Bernstein, information collected by the taskforce will go to Student Legal Services and the Ann Arbor Tenants Union - who in turn will provide students with legal counseling and advice…

… for dealing with landlords and obtaining housing. "We decided to place the counseling part in Student Legal Services," Boot added. "If that doesn't suffice after a fis- cal year, maybe MSA will seek…

…, African, Indian, Arab and numerous other cul- tural groups performed in support of diversity at the fifth annual Encompass show in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The show brought together different cultural…

… Buckle, vice-president of the African Student Association - whose group had never performed in Encompass before. "We hope that people left with at least a small taste of various African cultures" Buckle…

… tells the NIOUL: II:RWILLINGER/Daily Rackham student Brent Armendinger signs his name in support of Morgan Linen workers as part of a SOLE protest yesterday. PassWords may be at ri Computing site users…

April 24, 1958 (vol. 68, iss. 144) • Page Image 4

…e1 ldiitigau &xitg Sixty-EighthYear EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR…

… DREW PEARS4 THIS WEEK marks the tenth anniversay of a little country founded in tears and built in tra- vail - Israel. Twenty-four hours after it declared its independence, seven Arab nations attacked…

… never got to Tel Aviv. The Israeli Army eight years later would have got to Cairo had Eisenhower and Dulles not intervened. The fiery determination that stopped seven Arab countries in 1948 and which…

…- .e comes the usual late semester rush on fac- .ty counselors. In most cases, students have figured out their -ograms by one means or another. Now, they ust ask the "counselor" to stamp their elec- ons…

… this is a itisfactory approach. Many students areaable choose courses because they are clear on heir objectives and they have student and/or tculty friends to give them advice on courses aroughout the…

… SITUATION is not anybody's fault. With the vast number of students some counselors have, any personal counseling is al- most impossible. And students usually decide they all want to see their counselors at…

… from his side of the desk. By discussing courses outside his field with students who come to see him, he can develop a working, somewhat general pic- ture, on what is going on in the University outside…

… his department. The students' contribution here seems to be one of timing. If the student with problems would go to see his counselor earlier in the year, he could probably get more help. The situation…

… courses and an increasing number of students. But it does seem unfortunate that the stu- dent who really needs direction and help if his education is going to mean anything, is often the person who is…

… have to see the hospitals, where men like Dr. Haim Sheba pioneer new Near East medicine; where Arabs are given the same treatment as Jews; and where Egyptian wounded, taken in Sinai, were nursed back to…

October 24, 2007 (vol. 118, iss. 35) • Page Image 4

… book to analyze critically the book, affi post-Sept. 11 climate for Arab Ameri- academic cans. Graduate students at George- among dif town University read the book for a Howev class on Arabs and Muslims…

… a 4A - Wednesday, October 24, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor. MI 48109 tothedaily…

… section of the paper. Readers are encouraged to contact the public editor with questions and comments. He canbe reached at publiceditor@umich.edu. :T S The perils of plastic 'U' needs to educate students

… about dangers of credit cards For the average college student, the offer of a free pizza or a free sandwich is pretty tempting, and credit card companies know it. With a few quick signatures and a lot of…

… personal information on some seemingly trivial documents, many students unwittingly sign their way to free meals - and a lot of debt. Most students have no idea what they are getting into until that first…

… state- ment arrives in the mail outlining a cripplingly high interest rate. Although the University has taken modest steps to prevent credit card companies from scamming students on campus, the best rem…

… and more colorful than anything we have seen. Bryan Kolk can be reached at beakerk@umich.edu. Many college students, like most people, have to rely on credit cards for most their purchases, A study by…

… major student loan pFrovider Nellie Mae found that three- fourths of all college students have credit cards, and 40 percent of them that have at least four. The reason is obvious: Credit cards are simply…

… interest rates that skyrocket after the first few months. These hidden technicalities can doom unaware students to interest rates that are often more than 20 percent. A few late payments later, financial…

students about the risks of signing up for new credit cards. The goal of U.S. PIRG is to provide students with the infor- mation they need to keep themselves safe from credit scams. Because many students

May 24, 1958 (vol. 68, iss. 170) • Page Image 1

… -~ Q ore Cash Marked )r Student Loans cholarship Fund Also Established 'rom Grant of Former Graduate Arab Rebels Plan March In Lebanon Heyns Approved' As LS&A Dean By THOMAS HAYDEN Prof. Roger W…

… Try Special to The Daily_ GAYLORD - Student Loan Funds were increased by $200,000 cash yesterday by University Regents' action, The $200,000 cash gift to the University was part of a $505…

…. Mc- Graw Scholarship fund, to be used for student scholarships. The bequest will raise the total of the student loan funds to $1,- 300,000. However, $200,000 of this total is sharply restricted by…

… special -. . . stipulations. According, to Vice- President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, loan funds have been nearly exhausted this year. .... He thought the additional $200,- 000 would probably be…

… adequate Sfor next year. However, Secretary to the Presi- *...................~-dent Herbert G. Watkins noted that the amount of funds avail=- able to students niext year would depend on how suoccessful…

students * were in finding summer jobs. Repayment date for student t{ loans is not until next September, and pnly then will there be accu- rate information on needs for ............ ..next -year. '}.y…

… stu- dents were really interested in c t n them. There has been talk, he k T hre said, of a nationwide discount service for students. Ch " -Lewis told the board that there C airm en lwas even a…

… possibility there might be federal loan funds. Special to The Daily Have Been Good Risks GAYLORD Appointments of Students, according to Pierpont, thAeedeprtme-talpphirmeni have been good risks for loans. He…

…. Spuhler was He. suggested that a medical named acting chairman of the student could even make a ten- anthropology department, effective year loan. By The Associated.Press The Egyptian Middle East news…

… -conference that President Abdel Gamal Nasser's United Arab Re- public was moving men and arms into Lebanon "this very minute" to aid its aims at overthrowing tl e pro-West Lebanese govern- ment. Accuse U…

October 24, 1990 (vol. 101, iss. 36) • Page Image 1

… occupied territories completely sealed ff yesterday after a series of revenge attacks by both Jews and Arabs. Under Arens' order, the 1.7 million Palestinian resi- dents of the occupied West Bank and the…

… women soldiers and another Palestinian beat two Israelis with a hammer yesterday in part of a wave of attacks on *Jews in Israel, police said. The Arab was chased and captured by soldiers and' civilians…

…-throwing Palestinians at Jerusalem's hallowed OTemple Mount, killing at least 19 Arabs. - Clandestine leaflets have urged Palestinians to step up attacks on Jews, and the violence since Sunday's killings raised fears…

… officials predicted that the bill would easily pass the Senate. If passed, the bill will go to Pres- ident Bush for approval this week. The legislation requires that prospective students have access to…

… Baisden, supervisor of University crime prevention, em- phasized that statistics on campus crime and security policies have al- ways been available to students upon request. The bill would only increase…

… awareness among students, he said. The number of Part One crimes reported to the department in 1989 was 2,414. The total includes 30 re- ports of aggravated assault, 97 non- aggravated assaults, and 9…

… to publish crime statistics, the bill will require the release of gradua- tion rates. The original graduation rate proposal was aimed at student- athletes, but the provision was later changed. Bruce…

… stu- dent athletes in all our sports." He added that the disclosure of gradua- tion rates of all students, not only athletes, "can only help the Univer- sity." Walter Harrison, the executive di- rector…

… of University relations, voiced approval of the bill. As an effect of the bill, "a better educated prospec- tive student will make a better choice," he said. Harrison said he would not expect the bill…

… Sheldon (R-Second Ward) favors the ordinance, but said Ann Arbor should not be compared to Meiland. See RECYCLE, Page 2 'A better educated prospective student will make a better choice' - Walter Harrison…

March 24, 2009 (vol. 119, iss. 115) • Page Image 3

…, unleashing a huge fireball that killed at least 23 people in a northern town where Kurds and Arabs are competing for power. Also yesterday, Turkey's visiting president pressed the Iraqi gov- ernment to crack…

… American troop withdrawal by the end of 2011. The attack in Jalula was note- worthy because it points to ris- ing tensions in the north between Kurds and Arabs over control of a swath of territory that the…

… Kurds want to incorporate into their self- ruled region. U.S. officials believe Kurdish- Arab tension is among the major flashpoint issues threatening Iraqi stability now that the threat posed by Sunni…

… and Shiite insurgents has been diminished. Last August a suicide bomber killed 25 people, mostly police volunteers, in Jalula, a predomi- nantly Arab town where the Iraqi army forced out Kurdish…

…, a Sunni Arab orga- nization that typically carries out suicide bombings. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner watches President Obama during a meeting with small business owners at the White House…

… loans, student loans, (and so) that small businesses are able to finance themselves, and we can start get- ting this economy moving again." It was a huge gambit and one that came like a tonic to Wall…

… civilians. His government has been accused of unleashing Arab militiamen known as janjaweed against Darfur civil- ians in a drive to put down a revolt by ethnic Africans in the region. Up to 300,000 people…

October 24, 1991 (vol. 102, iss. 19) • Page Image 1

… editorial freedom Vol. CII, No. 19 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 24, 1991 coprl G:1991 heMi an Dily Shamir tolead Israel in summit DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Hard-line Israeli and Arab leaders…

… solidified their positions yesterday in preparation for next week's Mideast peace conference. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir announced he would lead the Israeli negotiat- ing team, and Syria sought Arab

… were immediately called into question by student ac- tivists opposed to campus police, in- cluding Michigan Student Assem- bly Rackham Rep. Jeff Hinte. "The fact that the committee does not do…

… accounts and the lack of citizen See COMMITTEE, Page 2 Save the LP LSA senior Stephanie Brail spins the disks for the University's radio station, WCBN, yesterday afternoon in the Student Activities Building…

…. Former S Carolina president charged with sex harassment by Gwen Shaffer Daily Higher Education Reporter Four former University of South Carolina students claim that ex- President James lHolderman made…

…. Holderman's term as president ran from September 1977 to June 1990. "The university's current presi- dent, John Palms, has requested that any students or faculty with infor- mation relating to the claims…

… their suspicions. In a written statement, Palms said, "I am most troubled and dis- tressed by this and by the possibil- ity that faculty, staff, or students may have been rebuffed in attempt- ing to…

March 24, 1986 (vol. 96, iss. 117) • Page Image 2

…A Page 2- - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 24, 1986 Conference Day highlights Israeli society By AMY GOLDSTEIN Seventeen student, University, and community organizations pooled resources to…

… - between European and Oriental Jews; religious - between different levels of religiosity; ethnic and religious nationalism - between Israeli Jews and Israeli Arabs; and political - the Arab-Isreali conflict…

…. THESE conflict areas not only have internal developments, Yaar said, but also interact with each other. The conference also included a display of educational opportunities for university students in…

… Israel. "There is no shortage of spaces" in Israeli universities, said Dov Kerem Ya'ar, the North American represen- tative from the Committee for University Studies in Israel. "The idea is that students

… will come for one year," he said. Israeli universities are among the most respected in the world, Ya'ar said, and students need not worry about their safety in the country. OF THOSE students who attend a…

… which University political scientist Zvi Gitelman ex- panded. Gitelman said that due to the high birth rate among Arabs living in Israel and the occupied territories and the relatively low birth rate of…

… Israeli Jews, which is typical of a modernized society, there will be an equal number of Arabs and Jews in Israel in the year 2015 if all factors remain equal. SUCH A balance would call the Jewishness of…

… MO NROE UA NN ARBOR, MI 48104 GUILD HOUSE WRITERS SERIES Monday, March 24 8:00 p.m. KATHRYN GLASGOW and ANDREW TANG READING FROM THEIR WORKS *Cosponsored by the Michigan Student Assembly FOR MORE INFO…

July 24, 1987 (vol. 96, iss. 10) • Page Image 6

students' tuition. This year, the hike will be 8.4 percent for in-state students and 9.7 percent for non- Michigan residents. As the cost of attending Michigan continually increases, two things are apparent…

… - little regard is given by the administration to the plight of financially-strapped students, and increased tuition merely exacerbates several already serious problems on campus. Tuition has steadily…

… will only magnify the disparities amongst the student body, and perhaps force out the remaining "few" who have difficulty affording the costs. Another reality of the annual tuition increase is that many…

students who wish to attend Michigan will undoubtedly, upon graduation, leave the University burdened with debt. This fact cannot be taken too lightly. During the 1985-86 academic year, students borrowed $34…

… "academic competition" with the Ivy League via the pocketbooks of Michigan students. DESPITE GREAT RESISTANCE by the regents, health services will hold a Safe Sex Day and provide much-needed information and…

… ser- vices to students. Publicizing the hazards of sex is the only way to help students deal with their sex- uality in a mature, responsible way. Pregnancy has always been a concern of sexually active…

March 24, 2003 (vol. 113, iss. 116) • Page Image 3

… sparkle paint. DPS has no suspects at this time. Subject threatens students, asks for money According to DPS reports, a subject was harassing students and communi- ty members on the Diag Thursday afternoon…

… college newspapers across the country - which some students say depict Palestinians as terrorists --has stirred debate about whether news- papers should continue to run the paid ads. Funded by campustruth…

… Bashar Al-Madani said the ads are offensive to the Arab and Muslim communities on campus. "The complexity of the world cannot be divided into right or wrong. The website is even more offensive and serves…

… of negative feedback received from students. "We must reconsider running the ads if the Universi- ty community does not want them," Valuck said. Yulia Dernovsky, who co-chairs the American Movement for…

student newspaper of the University of Illinois - issued a statement We must reconsider running the ads if the University community does not want them:' - Jeff Valuck Business manager, The Michigan Daily…

… deciding to continue running the ads, although there were student protests on campus in Decem- ber. The Daily Targum, the student newspaper of Rutgers University, adopted a disclaimer policy to place on…

… potentially controversial or advertisements of an offensive nature, according to a statement in November. The University of Chicago's student newspaper, The Chicago Maroon, decided to stop running the ads in…

… that The Daily has respond- ed to the concern of the students." Khalil said. Marcella Rosen, of the One Truth Foundation, which sponsors the campustruth.org advertisements and website, said in a December…

… intellec- tual intimidation and obfuscation and equating any pro-Israel fact or opinion with "racism," Rosen said. Patriotic pipes Students First claims 13 seats By Andrew Kaplan Daily Staff Reporter…

… After nearly 8,500 students voted in last week's Michigan Student Assembly elections - exceeding last year's turnout by more than 1,500 voters - Students First Party candidates Angela Galardi and Monique…

May 24, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 164) • Page Image 7

…HONORS SUPPLEMENT Y Sirrtn Daitir HONORS SUPPLEMENT ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1953 FOUR PAGES "'U' Students Gain Honors in Scholarship, Activities, Athletics During…

… hundreds of University students, who participate in campus activities, win academic distinction and recieve scholarships. Taken together, these achievements are an impressive tribute to both the University…

… Supplement which presents a record of student honors together with a description of the many activities in which these-students participated. Naturally, every club and campus group could not be included in the…

… pages of the supplement, so it was decided to list the officers of groups serving students outside of their own membership--in itself a very large category. Also included are those people who were named…

… to hon- orary societies for their superior service to the University. All of the students who received recognition in the Hon- ors Convocation are mentioned, as well as the many people who hold special…

… by each special honor mentionedI in the supplement. For The total list of students holding Regents Alumni Scholarships is about 1,200. This list represents only those who have maintained their schol…

…- jorie Black, '53BAd; Donna Blaze- vie, '54. Leland Boddy, '53E; Kathleen Bond, '53SM; Joanne Borros, '53Ed; Barbara Boyer, '53; Dor- othy Brand, '53Ed; Ardith Brask, Student Affairs Committee The…

November 24, 1948 (vol. 59, iss. 55) • Page Image 1

… reviewing officer. He was giv- en power to reduce but not in- crease the sentences. Photo of Lawyer Wins in West Quad Holiday Causes Student Exodus By DOLORES PALANKER The increasing vacancies in…

… classrooms and over-crowded trans- portation facilities indicate the annual Thanksgiving exodus won't leave too many students on campus to take part in the holiday festivities. Although University residence…

… time and many of the dorms will entertain foreign students at the traditional dinner. For Acacia Fraternity, tomorrow is one of the biggest days of the year. Following a Thanksgiving breakfast, the…

… football game, featuring a flexible goal line and an uphill path for the pledges will complete the afternoon. Martha Cook will play hostess to 12 foreign students and other guests at tomorrow's dinner, which…

… will precede a musicale featuring talented women from the dorm. HELEN NEWBERRY, Betsy Barbour and the Law Club are each entertaining six foreign students. East Quad, which houses approxi- mately 40 Latin…

… American students, will serve its regular "meal of the year" and West Quad has arranged to entertain all foreign students not invited elsewhere. Alpha Xi Delta will entertain one foreign student and other…

… guests at the Thursday dinner and -Sigma Delta Tau will be hostess to six students from the International Center Friday eve- ning. The three men's co-op houses are playing host to the women's co-ops with…

February 24, 2005 (vol. 115, iss. 89) • Page Image 1

… govt. pushes for Israel divestment Arab Student Union wants committee to study moral implications of investments in Israel By Michael Kan Daily News Editor While campaigns to divest from Israel at the…

…." Sponsored by the Dearborn campus's Arab Student Union, the resolution was introduced to SG yesterday through a pre- sentation detailing the human rights vio- lations and illegal practices of the Israeli…

… professors the Uni- versity plans to pursue. Although the donation will not affect many students directly, as visiting pro- fessors will primarily be concerned with conducting research, Connell said students

… Jewish studies," said Todd Endelman, director of the center. According to the University, more than 1,000 students take courses offered through the Judaic Studies center every semester. LSA junior Jessica…

…'t know what to do, because it's terrible. We can't live with it." Shaulis added that Vindicator Gen- eral Manager Mark Brown is bringing in See SCAB, Page 7A ELEVENTH TIME'S A CHARM Dearborn student

… University's Ann Arbor campus have so far gone nowhere, an outside initiative aims to ignite the movement once again. The student gov- ernment of the University's Dearborn campus voted yesterday to recommend…

… illegal under international law, the Student Govern- ment Senate unanimously passed the resolution. The resolution urges the University's Board of Regents - which presides over the Ann Arbor, Dearborn and…

… occupation. The divestment issue will be on the student government's agenda in its town-hall meeting on March 10, where the body will seek student and faculty input. Members of SG and ASU declined to comment…

… passed, in the Michigan Student Assembly. Most recently, the pro-Palestinian group Students Allied for Freedom and Economic Equality spon- sored a resolution at an MSA meeting in 2003, but the assembly…

… voted against it. MSA President Jason Mironov said he would not comment on SG's initiative until he had seen the resolution. Israeli Students Organization Presi- dent and LSA freshman Or Shotan said the…

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