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December 05, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 76) • Page Image 14

… miscalculation." S now available 11 U I Checking NOVEMBER 29: A TRAGIC DAY IN HISTORY FOR THE PALESTINIANS. The Arabs have rejected a British report call- interest may hurt a ing for dividing Palestine…

… into two states, one NOVEMBER 29, 1937 Jewish and one Arab. Arab revolts against the NOVEMBER 29, 1947 British continue, killing many Jews and Arab moderates. The U.N. Security Council votes to…

… divide Pales- tine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab, but the Arabs reject partition and launch a war to claim all of Palestine. Jordan and Egypt annex much of proposed Palestinian homeland. After…

… higher balance in checking accounts, which would serve to increase banks' money supplies. Students and others who typically keep a relatively low balance in thei checking accounts are better off with…

… the interest, and may even lead to losses, she said. CHARLES LAHEY, an Ann Arbor Bank and Trust executive, said the in terest checking accounts would be best for "those students who have $1,000 to…

… deposit." But, he added, "experience has shown that the average student just doesn't keep that much in his account." Local credit unions have 'been allowed to offer interest on checking accounts for the…

… past five years. In- terest rates at the credit unions are lower than those of commercial banks' but restrictions are fewer. The Ann Arbor Co-op Credit Union open to all University students, offers a…

… checking service with interest called a "Share Draft Account" that has no minimum balance and no service charge. "Students shouldn't be penalized for withdrawing their own money," said Leo Murray, manager of…

… in regular checking," said Robert Hofmann, manager of the University of Michigan Employee's Credit Union. 'U' drafts housing plan' for foreign students tcontinued from Page NOVEMBER 29, 1980 of our…

… people." (Damascus) Intransigence still keeps the Palestinians out of the peace process. THE TRUE TRAGEDY OF THE PALESTINIANS: 43 YEARS OF OPPORTUNITIES FOR A PALESTINIAN HOMELAND LOST THROUGH ARAB

December 06, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 77) • Page Image 1

… shoppers, it's Christmas shopping as usual, despite economic conditions. JERUSALEM (AP) - The Israeli government yesterday expelled to Lebanon two Arab mayors from the oc- cupied West Bank of the Jordan…

… and Palestinians warned the expulsion would "heighten tension." Israeli troops shot and wounded 11 Arab youths in the last two weeks when dispersing Palestinian demonstrations. "The gulf that separates…

Arabs and Jews will widen," said Bethlehem mayor Elias Freij. Jewish residents of the West Bank welcomed the move. The expulsion ended a seven-month fight by the mayors, who were initially exiled to…

… Lebanon in May,.hours after Arab terrorists attacked Jewish set- tlers in Hebron, killing six. Daily Photos by MAUREEN O'MALLEY SHOPPERS (ABOVE) GET in some early Christmas shopping at Kiddieland on Main…

… See MOSCOW, Page 2 By PAM KRAMER' Some 500 students were rather skeptical of the "new, improved" CRISP yesterday morning when the class registration system was shut down for two hours due to an…

… equipment failure. But by 3:30 p.m., students with 3 p.m. appointments were going through the com- puterized registration, and University Associate Registrar Tom Karunas said he did not anticipate any…

… problems in catching up com- pletely. CRISP workers told studen- ts who had to leave before the system was repaired to leave an envelope with their course requests or to have their Student Verification…

… Forms stamped-allowing them to register later without having to reschedule an appointment. ABOUT 100 students left en- velopes, Karunas said, and CRISP workers estimated about 200 people opted for the…

… Engineering, waited an hour to register for classes. "It really went fast (CRISP) once they opened the system back up," he said. "They're catching up really fast. "THE students who left may hold us up a little…

… when they come back to CRISP next week, but I think we'll be able to handle it," Karunas said. The new computer ter- minals, wired directly to a Data Systems Center central computer, process students

December 03, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 74) • Page Image 4

…f' OPINION Pa0e 4 Wednesday, December 3, 1980 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Will China's Gang of Four trial end the revenge cycles? Vol. XCI, No…

… SAID victory encouraging TUDENTS HAVE GOOD reason more and better student represen- I to be optimistic in light of the tation in the administrative decision- ults of last week's LSA-Student making that…

… will be crucial in the vernment elections. Sue Porter, coming year of University financial rgaret Talmers, and the entire restraints and budget cuts. We may ket of Students for Academic .and also expect…

… progress toward improved titutional Development have been recruitment and retention of minority ept into the leading council positions students and a higher level of quality a tide of intelligent…

… progressivism. among graduate teaching assistants at en Tim Lee, the presidential can- the University. ate for Student Alliance for Better LSA students have wisely rejected presentation who was buried in the the…

… comment on David Brief's letter of November 21, in which he attempts to lay the blame for the Palestinian problem on the other Arab coun- tries. In a country where the Jewish lobby is so strong it is…

… drinking water? The problem began with the formation of the state of Israel. For years, the Jews and the Arabs lived together peacefully, until the British mandate ended with the birth of a new state and…

December 04, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 75) • Page Image 7

… Damascus indicated the Syrians were still marshalling their, forces at the frontier. However, there was no indication Be an angel - . Read o 2 Ba lvi 764-0558 that the two Arab countries, their troops faced…

… have to go back to point zero." LSA Junior Chris Hodge, a student board member, was surprised to hear of-Nissen's remarks. "It'll never be a two- thirds majority," he said. "There was a distinct division…

… between the students and the'faculty. It will always be like that." A STUDENT may presently drop a class between the four- th and ninth weeks of a semester with a counselor's approval, but a "W," signifying…

… a withdrawal, will appear on the student's transcript. After the ninth week, a student must appear before a com- mittee of three counselors who determine whether the drop is justified.. After…

… yesterday's vote was taken, the student members had planned to review studies from past LSA student gover- nments that concerned student opinion on drop-add deadlines. One popular alternative for the new…

…, such as the extension of the drop-add deadline, would have to be approved by the LSA faculty at its monthly meeting. .Administrative Board student members object to the "W" recorded on transcripts when…

…, students drop a class in the fourth to ninth week period, and contend students are justifiably concerned with grades'. "I THINK everyone (faculty members) tends to say that grades don't matter. But if you…

… ask the students, or if you ask me, the grades do matter," said LSA sophomore Emily Gale, a student representative on the board. But faculty members on the Board contend an extension of the so…

…-called "free" drop-add affords students the oppor- tunity to manipulate their grade point. Board Chairman Hugh Green, a professor in the English department, was quoted in the minutes of last week's meeting as…

… saying that extending the deadline allows "some sort of bail-out after the student has an idea of where he or she stood in the class." BIOLOGY PROF. John Allen said yesterday that students should be more…

December 02, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 73) • Page Image 1

…. Tension between the two Arab neigh- bors.built up as a result of their conflic- ting positions on the Iran-Iraq war and Syrian charges that Jordan was sup- porting Islamic fundamentalists trying to…

…<.... v.. .. w.. .... ..... ..- ...<. .,s '.e'a{i ....> M.-IM SAID takes top LSA-SG BY CHARLES THOMSON Sue Porter and Margaret Talmers of Porter Talmers elected the Student Alliance for Institutional…

… Development won by more than a two- " " to-one margin the presidency and vice- in highest turnout ever presidency of the LSA Student Gover- neti lcin edls ek nment in elections held last week. Turnout for the…

… election was the for the council were elected. One of the SAID, student input into budget cutting heaviest in LSA-SG history. Of the more independents, Mark Bonine, received decisions. than 2,300 ballots…

… approximately 16 per- Porter attributed her victory to SAID that she saw a value in the diversity of cent of the 13,000-plus member LSA party campaigning and organization. views which she thinks will be student

… the 1,500 valid ballots. was really solid." Student Alliance for Better Represen- BESIDES CAPTURING the THE SAID campaign emphasized tation, said he thought the new counci: executive positions on the…

student student involvement in future ad- members would work well together anc } government, SAID candidates ministrative budget-cutting decisions, said the views of the council members dominated the…

… candidates who lost were SABRE candidates. Yesterday Adams dropped a lawsuit he had filed with the Michigan Student Assembly Central Student Judiciary in which he claimed that the LSA-SG elec- tion code had…

… association spokesman said. Students with previous archeological experience have been invited to join an international team on a dig of the impor- tant medieval city of Northhampton and the Anglo-Saxon cemetery…

… in Norfolk. Experienced volunteers, the spokesperson added, will receive free room and board for their efforts. Interested students can contact the society at 35 screaming Blue zealots. "Tradition…

December 11, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 81) • Page Image 2

… accepting a $25,000 bribe from undercover FBI agents in their Abscam sting. FBI videotapes taken in a Washington townhouse showed Jenrette and Stowe dealing with agents posing as represen- tatives of an Arab

… with it a period of heavy book selling by students- ULRICH'S would like to review with you their BUY-BACK POLICY. Used books fall into several categories, each of which - because of the law of supply and…

… "culmination of an editorial policy that has been pursued over the past few months, (making the newspaper's editorial page) inac- cessible to the student population." "SO, YOU have a paper that pursues a…

… reactionary editorial policy and students have no access to it," Watson continued. "The point is that there is no way for a student on this campus to voice an opinion (in the newspaper)." Watson said the…

… dismissal of the two editors, Burnett and Managing Editor Mike Nuttle, who wrote the Greensboro editorial, would probably make the newspaper's editorial page more responsive to student opinion. THE COMMITTEE…

… also sought the endorsement of the Michigan Student Assembly during the University gover- nment's meeting Tuesday night. Although the Assembly wold not 'of- ficially endorse the committee, eight MSA…

… of the students because of the editor's "policy of not allowing an open forum for the discussion of issues." Watson said a rally demanding the ouster of the editors was held yesterday on the WSU campus…

…," Watson said. "I think the outlook is good." Although the WSU Board of Gover- nors and the WSU Student Newspaper Publications Board do not have any control over the editorial policies of the South End, the…

… benefits would be a recruit- ment tool. Volume XCI, No. 81 Thursday, December 11, 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and- managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through…

December 10, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 80) • Page Image 2

… being placed on teaching students how to find jobs and making sure they get practical ex- perience in college. WHILE HOLDING a degree "still makes a difference as far as em- ployment is concerned," it is…

… fictitious Arab sheiks willing to pay bribes to politicians in exchange for special favors. Kelly and two co-defendents, Eugene Ciuzio of Longwood, Fla., and Stanley Weisz of Smithtown, N.Y., are on trial for…

… private immigration bills for fictitious Arabs. Interest rates keep rising NEW 'VORK-Interest rates continued to climb toward record levels yesterday, and the surge is not over, Henry Kaufman, da leading…

… 10, 1980 The 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…

December 06, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 77) • Page Image 4

… our informer program. (Ring, ring) Oh, there's a . die nIdsaU aiy Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Clarifying facts in PL0-Israel dispute Higgins I…

… German Jews" during 1944. The root cause of many problems in the Mideast is direc- tly attributable to British inter- ference and manipulation of the White Paper. The Arabs had no reason to kill Jews, and…

… likewise the Jews had no interest in killing Arabs. However, under the direc- tion of British Generals like Glubb Pasha in Transjordan, the Arabs were trained, equipped, A differe To the Daily: and…

… Larry Clarke Sally Eibert Julie Miller Ce a ODE TO THE TIRED STUDENT (to the tune of "Another One Bites the Dust") Another grade bites the dust Another grade bites the dust And another one bombed, and…

December 03, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 74) • Page Image 8

… university, Carlen said he Hale McMenam "has a responsibility to both my forcement divisio players and to the university that our telephone intervie student-athletes not become involved whether the organ in…

… PLO as the sole representative of the Palestinian people since he accepted it at the 1976 Arab summit in Rabat, they said. The observers saw Hussein's accep- tance as a goodwill gesture toward Syria…

… American High School Students," said they sent questionnaires to 50,000 students and received respon- ses from 24,000. THE POLL results mirrored the conservative swing in last month's elections. Eighty…

… to church regularly. THE STUDENTS answering the poll are among 340,000 listed in the latest edition of the "Who's Who Among American High School Students," no relation to Marquis' "Who's Who." Teen…

… unit, :;aid yesterday. BRIAN CATLIN, 17, of Palatine, and a 16-year-old boy-both described by their principal as "B" students-are charged with theft of services, authorities said. Catlin is to appear Jan…

… said the students gained access to a "minicomputer" which was han- dling student payment records and professors' research but no records were destroyed. The school's main computer, which handles most of…

…Paul computer from one of the high school's three teletype terminals. Those ter- minals are designed for students to use by, telephoning computers for science and math help, he said. Police became aware of the…

… computer buffs. After reviewing reams of the ser- vice's printouts, police found a message' boasting that two high school students had shut down DePaul's system. Police contacted teachers in the area, and ac…

…- cording to Ellis, they "knew right off the bat the couple of kids we had in mind." Ellis said the program devised by the students enabled them to enter three- digit random numbers into the De…

December 02, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 73) • Page Image 4

… were studying in the libraries when furor erupted in Israel over the transplanting of a Jewish kidney into an Arab girl. About the only thing these stories do is make one think. I read the hit-and- run…

… horrible. The headline in Saturday's Jr rGoto John Wayne Gacy Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Editorial ignores PIR GIM facts Vol. XCI, No.73 420…

… reproduced the argumen-. ts advanced by the two conser- vative Republicans on the Board. The position endorsed by the Public Interest ResearchGroup in Michigan, Michigan Student Assembly President Marc…

… Breakstone, and the majority of the Regents deserves a similar review. The University, has an established procedure byswhich student groups can win the right to collect voluntary contributions at CRISP. PIRGIM…

… fulfilled the requirements of this policy in 1972 when more than 16,000 University students petitioned the University to establish a fun- ding system whereby students could voluntarily contribute to PIRGIM…

… at CRISP. Any other student group that can demon- strate similar student support is also entitled to collect con-' tributions at registration. The Daily betrays its ignorance of these crucial facts…

… with its ironic suggestion that a student group might prove its worthiness to collect contributions "by cir- culating petitions among the prospective contributors." As for the recent decline in the…

… volume of contributions PIRGIM has received, the Daily inex- plicably failsetoenote that the nation's severe economic recession has limited the finan- cial options of many students. Moreover, there exist…

… school, one expects to find coun- selors who will be able to help students through their years of education. However, during my freshman year last year, I lear- ned that one of the counselors was not…

December 02, 1980 (vol. 91, iss. 73) • Page Image 9

… and beneficiaries of federally assisted education programs," most often students. SEATTLE University, a private school, was warned in June 1975 that it had become the target of an in- vestigation by…

…- sidered among the most trusted Arab allies of the United States, said it would turn Jordan into a "flaming inferno to burn every aggressor." Jordan strengthened its forces on the border to counter the…

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