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September 15, 1958 (vol. 69, iss. 1) • Page Image 16

… Center. Pictured Is part of last year's Arab display. p - II II N ill ladies' casual wear and accessories C? K. ttHILL4 / Gin's ~rrw.ww 4 4 .W.~ 1 STUDENtS QHURCH 4 LAS BICY.~'LE s ~ . r.~ 0.P E…

…- - dents eachi fall for the World's Fair. By JANICE GEASLER Providing a "home away from home" for international students and an opportunity for American students to become acquainted with students an…

…M customs of many countries, the International Center sponsors many events to enable the interchange of cultures. Working closely with the Center is the International Students As- sociation, which Is composed…

… of all the University's foreign students and all American students who are interested. The Center, located behind the Union, starts its program each fall with an orientation camp at Camp Storer near…

… Ann Arbor. For three days before registration, interna- tional students hear panel dis- cussions concerning campus life. Each evening a social program is provided. Week Scheduled Early in November the…

… represented several times throughout the eve- ning. Clubs Affiliated The nationality clubs, most of which are affiliated with ISA, are the African Union Club, the Arab Club, the Brazilian Club. the Chi- nese…

Student Club, the Greek Stu- dents Association, the Canadian Students Club, the India Students Association and the Indonesian Club. Also represented are the Israeli- American Students Club, the Japanese…

Students Club, the Korean Club, the Latvian Club, the Pakistan Students Association, the Philippine-Michigan Club, the Thai Associatidn of the University of Michigan, the Tut'kish Students Club, the Ukraiian…

Students Club, the Hawaiian Club, the Puerto Rican Club and the Scan- dinavian Students Club. Climaxing the week is the Monte Carlo Ball. Student Comments After the International Week last year, an Indian…

student said that he thought the fair was a "wonderful opportunity to bring the cultures of the world to the Americans and other nationalities and further their understanding of the ,world. This will…

March 25, 1977 (vol. 87, iss. 138) • Page Image 4

Arab states and the superpowers will get out of Geneva," a Palestinian student at Bethlehem University recently said. "But what's in it for us?" The Palestinians - who see themselves as the greatest…

… response to criticisms of its treatment of the Pal- estinians. It is that the Arabs have treated the Palestinians even worse. There 'are no mass graves of slaughtered Palestinians in the Gaza, as in Beirut…

…- ceded in his report critical of the Palestinians, "the lack of tolerance shown by the middle-class Jew toward the Arab citi-. zen ... can amount to real hatred." But that hatred is muted in contrast to…

…-, ecutive Committee Secretary-General Mohammed Nashashibi said, "There are two kinds of Palestinians, those ruled by Israel and those ruled by Arabs. Why do you think we (the PLO) get such support from both…

… strategist and one of the founders of Fateh, the Palestine National Liberation Move- ment. "The struggle against the Israelis gets the most atten- tion. But the struggle for Arab recognition of our rights has…

… been much more costly." . PLO officials in Beirut say twice as many Palestinians have been killed by Arabs as by Israelis since their struggle began. And AI-Wazi points out that the first casualty of the…

… Palestinians as the beginning of their struggle for emancipation. Arab opposition to independent Palestinian action has had another important effect. "Israel destroyed our national rights," one PLO official said…

… disenchantment with the Arab states. Yet Lebanon does not appear to have been as devastating a$ Black September. "The Palestinians still have a force in being," one high- ranking U.S. diplomat recently observed…

… certainly without liking it very much, both Israel and the Arabs long have found themselves drifting toward accord on the Pales- tinian problem, and toward similar policies of repression against the…

… which they have little remaining sympathy and even less national interest. Yet Israel continues to predicate its security requirements on the assumption that it faces a unitary Arab menance, not separate…

February 03, 2004 (vol. 113, iss. 88) • Page Image 1

… Shuttarl (left), member of the executive board of Muslim Student Association and LSA senior Salah Husseini, President of the Arab American Anti Discrimination Committee and Vice Chair of Students Allied for…

…, tapping of phone lines and access to personal records to better protect against future terrorist attacks. Many Muslim and Arab students claim the Patriot Act comes at the cost of every- one's civil rights…

… Freedom and Equality, have changed their views on President Bush. Renewal ofPatrot Act may cost Bush Arab, Muslim vote have been expanded under the new budget. Bush requested that the maxi- mum amount for…

… individual Federal Family Education Loans rises from $2,625 to $3,000, according to the White House website. Additionally, students would see increases over 2004 in the Teacher Loan Forgiveness program, an…

… initiative Bush proposed in 2002 that pardons college loans for students entering the teaching profession. More than $170 million "(Bush) is making a lot of Republicans angry; however, I think he's making do…

… the election. "The fact that he has spent so much in the past term will definitely harm By Farayha Arrine and Michael Kan Daily Staff Reporters As the election year begins, the Arab and Muslim…

… and particularly their own. Because the Sept. 11 attackers were of the Islamic faith, many Muslim students said they feel that U.S. officials have used the Patriot act to target Muslims. Last week…

…'s State of the Union address has only caused more frustration as Bush told Americans they must renew the Patriot act, alarming some Muslim student groups who were awaiting the expiration of certain parts…

… faces today," said Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), a leading presidential con- See BUDGET, Page 7 Students meet to discuss, oppose SAPAC changes By Aymar Jean Daily Staff Reporter As Southern primary…

… approaches, activist " stresses civil rights Responding to recently announced changes in the administration of sexual assault services, students and advo- cates met yesterday to voice opposition to the plan…

November 15, 1988 (vol. 99, iss. 49) • Page Image 1

… some condi- tions the United States has set for dealing with the Palestine Liberation Organization. The Arab League formed the council in 1964, but it has assumed the role of PLO legislature. Behind the…

… to make a "tremendous effort" to achieve dialogue with the Arabs. In parliamentary elections Nov. 1, nei- ther Likud nor its rival, the center-left Labor party, won enough parliament seats to gain a…

… activities and courses at the University, but the student groups want the report recalled. Groups BY LISA POLLAK The University's 1987-88 minority af- fairs report will be removed from circula- tion until its…

…-five students, representing 10 student groups, met with Duderstadt yes- terday to demand a recall of the 96-page annual report. The meeting was scheduled after some 50 students protested the docu- ment at the…

… Fleming Administration Building Friday. Duderstadt apologized for the errors, and demand recall repeatedly called for increased student input to help avoid such mistakes. But he re- fused to recall the…

… report; instead, he said, it will be distributed again with an "errata sheet" of corrections - as soon as the students submit such a sheet. The students, however, said they were frustrated and dissatisfied…

… done with an errata sheet... The report is so bad that the errata sheet could be longer than the report," said Anne Martinez, a member of the Socially Active Latino Student Association and the Chicano…

… Graduate Students Association. "We're also not satisfied that we're re- sponsible for any change that has to hap- pen. We're paying tuition for the Office of Minority Affairs to find out these things," said…

… Martinez, who represented the students during the meeting. Duderstadt agreed that the burden of the corrections shouldn't rest on the students. But he would not grant their repeated re- quest for another…

… meeting to discuss er- See Report, Page 5 .College GOP calls for Phillips to quit BY NOAH FINKEL The resignation of Michigan Student Assembly President Mi- chael Phillips will be demanded at tonight…

March 02, 1988 (vol. 98, iss. 101) • Page Image 1

… See MICHIGAN, Page 11 Israeli heads debate peace offering Peres: Land should Doily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN University employee Carl Levine addresses a group of students and workers picketing the…

…( Soldiers shot an Arab protester in Badah in the c the shoulder at Sebastiva, a West slammed him ag Bank town near Nablus, hospital of- wall. ficials in Nablus reported. A leaflet distributed by leaders of…

… -Dr. Yas what Arabs call "the uprising" - the violence that began Dec. 8 - urged Palestinians to intensify an economic Arab protesters hav boycott of Israel through strikes and tals as hiding places dui…

… back of aid, "get e hit D r. hest an d gainst the ssir Obeid e used hospi- ring 12 weeks d West Bank -e 1.5 million east 76 Arabs violence, ac- and hundreds e broken into times. Some bs stay away…

… [. ,Page 2 He said they d 10 and 11, other at the on confirmed Palestinians, showed both al's entrance. were beaten, By JIM PONIEWOZIK Thirty workers and students picketed yesterday in front of the…

…, as well as another supervisor who they claim prevented the worker from filing a grievance. The group, which called itself the Ad Hoc Worker and Student Committee Against Racism, also accused the…

… privately told two student officials three weeks ago that he would send the first draft of his anti-discrimination policy to the University Council for review. But when he released a second draft on Monday, a…

… proposal that might be adopted by the University's Board of Regents later this month, the council had not seen the document. Michigan Student Assembly President Ken Weine and Vice President Wendy Sharp said…

… Fleming told them three weeks ago that he Minority ~leadrs c larify stance By STEVE KNOPPER Several minority leaders on campus said yesterday they favor an anti-racism policy with sanctions for students

… stance is still at odds with those of others students opposed to a code of non-academic conduct. Those would reconvene the council with a one-month deadlineto create a new policy that would deter student

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…

May 17, 1985 (vol. 95, iss. 1) • Page Image 3

… last Tuesday. and hiring a full-time coordinator for The initial funds will go toward the fall term. Although directly under starting the office and hiring one full- the auspices of the Office of Student

… for the first sodium vapor system which should six months," said Jennifer Faigel, an give off 25 percent more light. This LSA junior on the Michigan Student change "will probably take a couple Assembly…

… like to her what I have morals" Hillel that racism in Israel is a threat to say," Yermiya said. to the existance of Arabs as well as Jews. DAVID Weinstein, a junior Yermiya's movement for the co- Dov…

… Yermiya, a co-chairman of the majoring in Judaic studies and existence of Arabs and Jews in Israel Committee Against Racism in Israel, political science, came to hear Yer- aids the education of Israeli and…

Arab is on a 19-city national tour sponsored miya's views on civil rights in Israel. youths, intervenes at the government N O TES by the New Jewish Agenda. "I came because as a Zionist and as a level to…

… fight racism, and mobilizes YERMIYA is trying to eliminate Jew, I am very interested in the against aggression directed towards racism and chauvinism against Arabs Israeli peace movement which he Arabs

…. in Israel. "Jews should appreciate (Yermiya) is a part of, and because Home burglarized Arabs as a people, their language and what he is fighting for is what I Yermiya has branched out in his culture…

… Appropriations Com- (in building maintenance and lab as upperclassmen, the University students. Responding to state mittee early next week. equipment)." would gain $12.2 million. Currently, pressure, the regents…

October 17, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 36) • Page Image 3

… being rushed to Israel is in itself wor- thy of particular note. It might even cause eyebrow - raising New govt. forms in Thailand as troops battle with students By AP and Reuter BANGKOK - Sanya Tham…

…- masak, appointed Thailand's Prime Minister in the midst of violent clashes between troops, police and students, yesterday formed a new government as peace returned to Bangkok. While jubiliant students re…

student leaders and were widely hailed among the thousands of youths w h o took to the streets to confront police and troops at height of the revolt. The overthrow of Thailand's three military strongmen n o…

…-Marshal Thanoms Son, was the students' last demand as they demonstrated, for a return to democratic rule. Thanom, Prime Minister since 1969, led the military in intro- ducing rule by decree in 1971. The new cabinet…

… under the former premier. The new government was an- nounced soon after student lead- ers called off the demonstrations, in which troops and police back- ed by tanks opened fire on the, students and…

… be in Taipei, but the where- abouts of the marshal remained a mystery. among ardent Arab nationalists. The question is whether there is a takeoff point in what Sadat had to say. Possibly the very…

…-fire on the princi- ple of Israeli withdrawal "from all occupied territories" to posi- tions held before the 1967 war, whereupon he would be prepared to urge other Arabs, including Palestinians, to join him…

… control of such points as Syria's strategic G o 1 a n Heights, or the former Arab sec- tor of Jerusalem. Thus, Sadat's proposal might, at first look, seem hard-line. Cairo ever since Resolution 242 has been…

… demanding Israeli with- drawal from all occupied areas. The statemate lay in the fact that Israel refused to makefany move at all without prior face- to-face negotiation with the Arabs and the Arabs refused…

December 06, 1947 (vol. 58, iss. 64) • Page Image 4

… campus - independents, dorm residents, affiliated students, AVC, SRA, IRA - EV- By STEWART ALSOP HE DRAMATIC DECISION in the Uni- ted Nations to partition tiny Palestine into Jewish and Arab states was a…

… and managed by students of the Unl- tersity of Michigan under the authority of the Board' in Control of Student Publications. John Campbell ...................Managing Editor Nn cy Helmick…

…. Leiersli IT'S HIGH TIME the responsible and truly representative groups of our student body went into action to prevent IRA from wreck- ing their own chances of reaching a just and equitable solution of the…

… present bar- ber shop issue. Let's admit it took the howling of IRA to open the eyes of the student body to the flagrant discrimination that is being practiced. While it is a sad and sorry -com- mentary on…

… zenith and every picket mile it has marched since then has done nothing but build up antipathy against the movement itself instead of winning support for its underlying principles. The Student Legislature…

…, congress of the student body, has gone on record as favoring the principle of "Operation Haircut" but not its method. The Legis- lature should go further, it should take upon its shoulders the solution of…

… of the wise and aging Chaim Weizmann. The real threat to that government's continued existence will come of course, from the large Arab minority within the Jewish state, from the new Arab state which…

… the United Nations has brought into existence, and from the surrounding Arab nations. The Zionist leader believes that King Abdulla of Transjordan will almost certainly gain control of the Arab fragment…

… of Palestine. He reports that the British and American governments, and the Jewish Agency as well, have quiet- ly let Abdulla know that his ambitions to add the Arab area to his own some- what sleazy…

… the fabulous British sol- dier of fortune, Glubb Pasha. Because of these ambitions, Abdulla has been notably less fanatical about partition than the leaders of other Arab states. Yet even with Abdulla…

September 17, 2001 (vol. 111, iss. 145) • Page Image 4

…4A -The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 17, 2001 OP/ED Uwe E iigzu & tig 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily. letters@umich.edu EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF…

… experience he had while battling the Soviets in Afghanistan, in a 1997 interview with Robert Fisk The interview appeared in the Sept. 21, 1998 issue of The Nation. Th~ere I*: no room ffor Arabs nA~e1c kick…

…, criti- cized, and contributed to. So, as an Arab-Ameri- can, as an individual who owns parts of two distinct cultures, I was acutely affected by last Tuesday's tragedies. Of course, I felt the same kind…

… of grief and horror at the loss of life as any right-minded human being would. But as an Arab-American who disagrees with much of America's foreign policy, I find the kind of hysteria that our…

… government and media are whipping up very disturbing. For too long, in almost all arenas of our society, Americans have accepted types of bigotry against Arabs and Muslims that would be intolerable if…

… directed against almost any other, group. As a direct product of our govern-. ment's foreign policy, Arab and Muslim her- itages have been painted in direct counter-distinction to American values and culture…

…. This constant barrage on these cul- tures has desensitized the American public to the humanity of Arabs and Muslims. Take for example the widespread belief that Palestinian mothers send their children to…

… die in return for money and exposure, or that all Palestinians celebrate the deaths of American civilians. Arabs become animals, incapable of human emotion, and worthy of destruction. As a result…

…, American politicians, media and the talking heads that so ineptly occupy our air- waves possess some of the responsibility for the backlash Arab and Muslim Americans are now undergoing and will continue to…

…- ronment in which hate-crimes and harassment towards Muslim- and Arab- Americans are perpetuated. Kyritz's statements stand in sharp con- trast to the words of many government offi- a 0 0 Ufe goes on at…

November 09, 1967 (vol. 78, iss. 61) • Page Image 6

… "cannot in any circum- stances give any consent,, support or cooperation" to the Indian plan, which calls for the withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from "all the territories" seized in the Arab-Is- raeli…

…. .avaawa wrr wa as vaa wav vwt+vuavu Arab territory was an essential first step to any Middle East set- tlement. He urged the council to show the world that "aggression does not pay." Irrational' Arab View…

…. The Arab refusal to negotiate peace with Israel, he said, was "an unprecedented act of extremism." Arabs Blaimed Asked how long Israel was pre- pared to' wait for direct talks with the Arabs, he replied…

… that "if the Arabs are not prepared to talk, it is they, in effect, that want to perpetuate the situation." His criticism of the U.S. reso- lution was centered on its failure to give t proper emphasis to…

… THE UGLI MULTIPURPOSE ROOM 8 P.M. SPONSORED BY THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION EVERYONE IS WELCOME-ADMISSION FREE (Continued from Page I) Some proposals have been made by students toward improving…

… the efficiency of the automated closed reserved system. The most ob- vious and most popular concerns the staffing of helpers behind the desk. Students feel that if there were more helpers behind the…

… people for short periods of time to absorb the rush of students at the desk which oc- curs at the begining of every hour. Another solution proposed by students is to make up a list of those books and…

… periodicals which are not available at a given mo- ment. This will enable students to avoid waiting in line just to find out that all the copies of a book or article they need are being used. ,The way this…

March 26, 2014 (vol. 124, iss. 90) • Page Image 12

… important it was to connect it to my personal identity." Founas is a member of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality - a campus organization thatpromotes activismregardingissues related to Palestinian…

… social justice and human rights. She said her experiences with identity politics and Arab- and Muslim-American issues at the University pushed her to get involved in the Arab-Israeli debate on campus. For…

… many students, the history and politics of the conflict between Palestine and Israel might have been issues that were made familiar to them by their upbringing. But for others, these topics may be…

… and challenges faced by Arabs and Arab-Americans. Kherallah, SAFE's Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions chair, became motivated to engage in issues related to the conflict as a freshman in response to the…

Arab Spring, a wave of government-topplingcivil protests that started in Middle Eastern countries in 2010. As a Syrian, Kherallah said he wanted to learn more about the region and even his own identity…

…. "The Arab Spring, what it really spurred me to do is just to engage with things and figure out what can you do on a concrete basis to improve situations, and stand up for my rights and other people…

… it starting in high school and then growing in Israel because I was able to explore it firsthand as much as I could." Other students did not become involved in the issues of the region until they came…

… where the funds of the University are going to these companies, there's a much more direct link." However, for most University students, what's going on in the Middle East or how it may factor into their…

… lives as students isn't something that they're often exposed to. In the early hours of Dec. 10, SAFE members and supporters went to six residential dorms and slipped mock eviction notices under the doors…

… evicted in order to make room for the Israeli civilians who inhabit the settlements, and asked students to imagine themselves going through the same experience. Overall, the goal of SAFE's Boycott…

March 09, 1987 (vol. 97, iss. 107) • Page Image 1

…Racism pervades black student life By EUGENE PAK First in a five-part series In dormitory cafeterias the separation is visually striking: Black students sit with black students; white students

… sit with white students. Laws relegating blacks to separate, often inferior, public facilities and institutions were repealed more than 20 years ago, but a separation along racial lines is still evident…

… today - both nationwide and at the University. Many say the separation occurs not because of racism, but merely because students stick with friends who share common interests. Marvin Woods, president of…

… the Black Student Union, said, "People get together based on their common interests and not so much physical similarity, even though that does play a part in it." The separation of black and white…

students "is a combination of a little bit of negative feeling against the other group and each group having its own set of interests and cultural values," Woods said. "It's more cultural interest than…

… racial animosity." Nevertheless, it is clear that many black students feel alienated from the rest of the University community, both socially and academically. Both minority and majority students must…

students. She added, however, that it may be necessary for white students to take the initiative. "It's very hard for you to be black in this world and not know about white (culture), but you can be white in…

… this world and not know about blacks," Royster said. Part of the problem stems from a cultural clash. Many of the black undergraduate students on campus are from Detroit, while many white students are…

… from the surrounding suburbs or northern areas of Michigan where few blacks live. In 1985, 81.1 percent of black undergraduates were from Michigan (compared to 71.1 percent for white students), and a…

… great majority of these students came from the southeastern part of the state. Of the 176 black Michigan freshmen in 1985, 109 came from Wayne County. Thus, even before they arrive on campus, many white…

September 15, 1958 (vol. 69, iss. 0) • Page Image 68

… throughout the eve- fling. Clubs Affiliated The nationality clubs, most of which are affiliated with ISA, are the African Union Club, the Arab Club, the Brazilian Club, the Chi- nese Student Club, the Greek…

… International Center. Pictured is part of last year's Arab display. h. .1 v7~~ lades !adescasual wear and accessories g, K V STUDENTS eEST BICYCLE- SHOPE(UN VER S~ Your Bicycle Headquarters I *.. exciting…

… 3-4013 Convetdent Backr Door Entrance From City Parking Lot By JANICE GEASLER Providing a "home away from home" for international students and an opportunity for American students to become…

… acquainted with students and customs of many countries, the International Center sponsors many events to enable the interchange of cultures. Working closely with the Center is the International Students As…

…- sociation, which is composed of all the University's foreign students and all American students who are interested-. The Center, located behind the Union, starts Its program each fall with an orientation camp…

… at Camip Storer near Ann Arbor. For three days before registration, interna- tional students hear paniel dis- cussions concerning campus life. Each evening a social program is provided. Week Scheduled…

… Stu- dents Association, the Canadian Students Club, the India Students Association and the Indonesian Club. L Also represented are the Israeli- American Students Club, the Japanese Students Club, the…

… Korean Club, the Latvlan Club, the Pakistan Students Association, the Philippine-Michigan Club, the Thai Association of the University of Michigan, the Tur-kish Students Club, the Ukrainian Students Club…

…, the Hawaiian Club, the Puerto Nican Club and the Scan- dinavian Students Club. Climaxing the week is the Monte Carlo Ball. Student Comments After the International Week last year, an Indian student said…

… peace much desired over all the world." At Thanksgiving Americans are invited to share their holiday with a student from abroad. For many of the newcomers, this is the first introduction into home and…

January 18, 1989 (vol. 99, iss. 77) • Page Image 1

… BY JOSHUA MITNICK AND ANNA SENKEVITCH Four University students were ar- raigned in 15th district court yester- day on charges of harassing two women on campus earlier this month. The women filed the…

…- fendant does not admit guilt. Ann Arbor Police Det. Mark Parin, who investigated the case, said each student will likely be placed on six-months probation, during which time they would serve 50 hours of…

students have no further violations during the next six months and fulfill their probation requirements, the crime will be erased from their records. Senior Associate Athletic Direc- tor Jack Weidenbach said…

… 2 Report accuses Meese Former Attorney General's actions found unethical JESSICA GREENE/Daily Hands on LSA sophomore Heather Wolf and Vassar University student Zoey TV monitor at the Ann Arbor…

…-year students won Hopwood Awards, totalling $2925, in essay, fiction, and poetry categories. Three other awards were also presented yesterday by the English Department: The Academy of American Poets Prize, The…

… civilians and three of the 280 police officers called to the scene were injured. DETROIT (AP) - Yasser Arafat's acceptance of a Detroit at- torney's invitation to speak at a gathering of Arab-Americans in…

May 02, 1946 (vol. 56, iss. 129) • Page Image 1

… Finland, the foreign ministers were reported ready to take up to- morrow remaining points of differ- ence with regard to the Italian set- tlement. Students To Discuss Food Saving Plans Delegates from…

student residences and organizatios will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in Lane Hall to discuss proposals for saving food and for helping with European relief. All dormitories, League houses, so- rorities…

… as the one which sends cattle to European families. The Student Religious Association will sponsor the movement, Miss Sie- gan said, until the next student gov- ernment -is sufficiently organized to…

… University negotiations for acquisition of Willow Run Inquiry Committee's Report Arouses Protest of Jews, Arabs Anglo-American Policy Asks Immigration Into Palestine, Disbanding of Illegal Armies By The…

… Associated Press LONDON, May 1-Britain bid today for United States military and fi- test over the British-American inquiry committee report threatened to erupt in violence. Jews and Arabs alike assailed the…

… report, and Jerusalem dispatches said Arabs in Palestine proclaimed a symbolic general strike for Friday in pro- test, urging neighboring Arab states to join them. The Arab higher committee sent cables to…

… Jess, Great Britain; and clockwise:. Russian Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov; V. N. Pvlov, Russian interpreter; Fydor Gusev, USSR; James New Students To Pay 'Acceptance Fee 'inFall Deposit To Be…

…. Harvey, Great Britain; and British Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin. University Delegates Praise Foreign Student Conference ( } The University look its first step toward meeting enrollment demands for the…

… fall semester yesterday as Herbert G. Watkins, secretary of the Board of Regents, announced that a $25 "acceptance deposit" will be required of all new students. The deposit will enable the Uni- versity…

… to estimate its new-student enrollment with greater, accuracy, Watkins said. A University spokesman said that enrollment estimates have been "way off" in the past, The Medical School and the School of…

June 06, 1967 (vol. 77, iss. 23) • Page Image 3

… proclaimed its neutrality in the conflict between Israel and the Arab nations. Then prices slipped back part of the way. Dow Jones Loses The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials fell 15.54 points to 847.77. Its…

… Correspondent Another dense cloud of confu- sion is descending over the Arab East. Before it lifts, the area may lose one or more of its three re- maining kings. At this moment their future is not bright. The…

… fact of war can mute inter-Arab rivalries and hos- tilities, but it cannot end them. The kings are in danger if the Arabs appear to be losing the war with Israel or if any foi'eign in- tervention forces…

…. The Syrians, the most volatile and warlike of all the Arab nations in this crisis were on their side. Young Hussein of Jordan is in trouble whatever happen,. At best, now, he can survive by the grace of…

… Nasser, who once again has placed himself in the role of Arab hero. f Past Crisis With each succeeding crisis, the crowns of the Arab East are in more peril. The Jordanian and Saudi thrones were targets of…

…'s Zionists. With a war on his western bor- ders and his crack Arab Legion troops committed to it, Hussein again will be in danger. Idriss of Libya faces a sticky problem. Libya has rich new oil discoveries and…

… the country is booming. The king would like to continue to market that oil. But if he does so he faces Arab con- demnation as an agent of im- perialism. Syrian propagandists as late as the end of last…

… because he wants to honor his pledges to U.S. oil companies. In a time of full-scale war, such propaganda is potent among the volatile Arabs. Should there be a cease-fire and nothing to show for the Arab

January 23, 1991 (vol. 101, iss. 80) • Page Image 1

… overall resolution passed 20-11 after See MSA, Page 2 War causes fear tension among Arab students by Matthew Pulliam As apprehensions mounted last week because of the escalating war in the Persian Gulf…

… war. I think what (Saddam Hussein) did is wrong, and I condemn the occupation of Kuwait," said Civil Engineering graduate student Fadi Alkhairi. Many Arab-Americans support the U.S., MSA condemns…

… See GULF, Page 2 Students a sit-in to protest research by Marc Ciagne .g.. ~ DRDA discloses "4>s ~research tied to, funded b by Ronan Lynch Daily Research Reporter y Army Thirty-five students

… statement released by the group. The occupation, scheduled to last 24 hours and organized by U of M Students Against U.S. Inter- vention in the Middle East (SAUSI), began at noon when the protesters entered…

… their plans, to assure them of their non-violent inten- tions. The group did not release the time and location of the sit-in un- til Daniel Kohns, publicity chair JOSE JUARE2 Students sit-in in the…

… graduate students dis- closed the University had con- ducted research as part of an Army project to develop solid fuel-air explosives (SFAEs). A week ago today, the Daily reported that University Aero- space…

…, Kauf- fman denied that he was con- ducting military research, saying "All of our research involves safety in the workplace." Yesterday morning, as part of the Students Against U.S. Inter- vention in the…

… Persian Gulf (SAUSI) protest at the Division of Research Development and Administration (DRDA), two physics graduate students, Matt Green and Mike Massey, re- quested that they be allowed to review…

… information at a press conference at the Cube moments after students entered the building. The aims of the sit-in include the following: To encourage the Univer- sity not to aid in the prosecution of student

… education to people of color and the economically disen- franchised. To gain access to informa- tion regarding the extent of the University's involvement in mili- tary research and development. The students

May 26, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 18) • Page Image 4

… 26, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Plymnouth refor-m must come now N EARLY March, after the Detroit Free Press reported that residents of the Plymouth Center for…

… its own. INFLATION 16 RAMPANT AND CARTER S NOT DOING ANYT ING BUT HANPING OUT LOANS ABOUT VOLUNTAR ENIA ACION I YU WN 'rro Students must endeavor to redistribute power in 'U' Educational reform…

… community. THE UNIVERSITY has failed to provide for adequate student space-for example, in the Michigan Union, where the vitality of the student community could be greatly bolstered by some serious planning…

…: The Administration, in fact, has reclaimed the student-financed Student Activities Building for administrative functions-again, a closed decision having no mandate from the student body. Research into…

June 17, 1965 (vol. 75, iss. 31) • Page Image 2

…event-T ahird Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Vherc Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN…

… with which universities ave had to contend for some time. Num- rous techniques such as teaching by ma- hines have been introduced with the :ea of acquainting students with infor- nation more quickly…

… literally deluged with re- uests for grants to help carry out these ursuits. Basically the problem of this explo- ion of knowledge can be considered on wto levels: that of the student who is ac- uiring an…

… of work being done at other universities. It can give teachers current information to give to their students, it can give grad- uate students and scientists information to help design experiments. As a…

… the republican govern- ment, thus setting all of Yemen solidly against him; a victory un- der such conditions would be the military occupation of another Arab country, not likely to set well with the…

… many Arab nations weaker than Egypt. Nasser's best move would be to accept the present Yemeni govern- ment as the best compromise solu- tion to his dilemma. To force the issue further might give him mili…

November 30, 1972 (vol. 83, iss. 69) • Page Image 4

… aliens, especially students, and U.S. citizens of Arab origin. ALONG WITH thousands of in- dividuals of the Arab-American community in the United States, in the past several weeks a number of Arab students

… harrassed and intimi- dated, not only the individuals di- rectly involved, but the entire groep of Arab students on campus. WE HAVE NOT been able to find any other national minority on campus or in the area…

… Jerry De Grieck, a city councilman, are members of the Human Rights Party. eeking viable social changes .0 Are Arabs civi'l liberties endangered? By RIAD AL-AWAR IN AN EDITORIAL (Sept. 29) The…

… Daily made one exception to "foreigners with civil liberties" - "countries where Palestinians and their sympathizers are harbored." This means, apparently, that t h e Arabs are beyond the pale of the…

…-level "committee on terrorism," repre- sented by several federal agencies, including the FBI and the Immi- gration Service. This committee has had as its exclusive aim the surveillance and interrogation of Arab

students have been asked questions regarding their private lives which do not directly relate lo the issue of visas. Others, although it has not yet happened on this cam- pus, have been asked about their…

December 02, 1982 (vol. 93, iss. 69) • Page Image 4

…, he supports throwing all Arabs out of Israel. For another, he condemns the Jewish leadership in- America. Kahane spoke with Daily staff writers Rob Frank and Kent Redding last month about his…

… certain that the Atab students were unhappy that I was ging to speak, but they don't have the land of clout to have me barred. "Daily: What about the bomb threats accompanying your appearance? Kahane…

… been taken out of context. What, for exam- ple, was your explanation for the Beirut massacre? Kahane: I don't have to explain anything. Arabs killed Arabs, let the Arabs explain why. What I said was…

… solution to the Palestinian problem? Kahane: I don't know. They can form their own state in any one of the 22 Arab countries. They can go to the West. There are any number of possible answers. I'm ready to…

… possession. Daily: Do you think then that all Arabs should be thrown out of Israel? Kahane: Yes. I think that the Arabs in Israel hate Israel, and if I were an Arab, I would hate Israel. I don't have contempt…

… for the Arabs as the liberals do. I don't call them bad, I call them proud and nationalistic. If they stay in Israel, they can never love Israel as a Jewish state, especially when they were once a…

… majority and now they are a minority. Daily: How do you suggest removing them? Kahane: We should offer them more than they offered the 700,000 Sephardic Jews who were thrown out of Arab countries. I wonder…

… why people don't weep about that. I say we should have an exchange of populations. In ex- change for the Sephardic Jews, we offer the Arabs, and give them full compen- sation for their property-if they…

… feature the Daily Opinion Page. of ,.. - T- ,.., Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Wasserman I Vol. XC1II, No. 69 420 Maynard St. An~n Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials…

October 16, 1977 (vol. 88, iss. 34) • Page Image 4

…. 34 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan (elease of pay hike good, vhether selfishsympathetic THE UNIVERSITY this week agreed to give the Graduate…

… rest of the contract controversy stands in its own mire. GEO was given some ,momentum by a Michigan Em- ployment Relations Commission (MERC) decision earlier this year that defined graduate student

… assistants (GSAs), as employes of the University, and not just students. The administra- tion has, in effect, appealed that rul- ing, and will not return to the bargain- ing table to sign a GEO contract until…

… defensible borders for Israel. A close look at this policy, how- ever, shows that it is merely the offering up of the life of a small nation, Israel, to appease the Arabs just as Great Britain of- fered up the…

… life of a small nation, Czechoslovakia, to appease Hit- ler. The root cause of the continu- ing threat of war in the Middle East is not the problem of Arab refugees or Israel's holding on to conquered…

Arab territories. The real cause is the fact that after each of the four wars that the Arab countries have waged against Israel, the Arab coun- tries did not live up to the terms they agreed to in the…

… in the Middle East," by R. E. Tyrrell Jr. in the No- vember 1976 issue of Harper's magazine. )aii Now that the Arabs are import ant to the Great Powers becaus of their oil, they can play off the Great…

… Powers, against one another, as much as they please. It is therefore inevitable that the Arabs will not live up to an commitments they make now or in the near future. As long as Israel's Arab neigh- bors…

… do not live up to their agree- ments, putting an Arab state in the center of Israel, to give the Palestinians a homeland, will merely be putting a dagger at Israel's heart, to be plunged intq it by the…

Arabs when they choose to do so. And no amount of elec tronic devices to sound the alairn of invading Arab armies will giv Israel defensive borders. The Carter policy is therefore not a sound basis for…

September 29, 1988 (vol. 99, iss. 16) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Thursday, September 29, 1988 Page 4 The Michigan Daily 4 Eie m dtgan t t Mi Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Abolish capital punishment Vol. I C No. 16…

…- termines whether you live or die, but how much you are worth and what color your skin happens to be. In talking to people about what I did Kenneth Wittenberg is a second-year law student at the University…

… Israel is currently living in Warren, Michigan and the author of the editorial. Golden for the most part, contends that Israel is not to blame for the Arab refugee - problem and that the Arab countries are…

…* the ones responsible for creating the prob- lem in the beginning. He specifically states, "...historically the Arab refugee problem cannot be blamed on Israel." He later says,"Why is it that the Arab

… suggests that the Arab refugee problem is a direct result of the Israelis hostile takeover of hundreds of thousands of homes and villages since 1948. Men, women and children were forced to leave their homes…

… Palestinian Arabs were uprooted from their homes and sought refuge in the pallid "refugee" camps in the Gaza Strip, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. These were the lucky ones; on April 8, ; 1948 the Irgan, terrorist…

…- tinian Arabs to seek refuge. History embedded in 1967 also substan- tiates the argument that it is Israel's ag- gressive actions and not the Arabs them- selves that are creating the refugee prob- lem. In…

… 1967, the Jordan West Bank, the Gaza Strip, the Syrian Heights, and Sinai fell to Israeli strongholds. As a result, 410,000 new Palestinian Arabs were forced to leave their homes in the Jordan West Bank…

Arabs were needlessly evicted from their homes when the death of a 15 year-old Jewish girl was blamed on a group of Palestinian Arabs. In reality, the girl was shot accidentally by an Israeli soldier…

…. Immediately after the shooting, Israeli forces moved in and bombed 13 homes randomly so as to intimidate any opposing brute forces the Arabs might conjure. These homes supposedly have belonged to the girl…

June 09, 1967 (vol. 77, iss. 26) • Page Image 4

…ri irrrr i r mee ir.r wu,. r ir ri a r i W _i . r z. aloe icl~igau &Daily FEIFFER Seventy-SixthYear EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrr IOF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD m…

…I CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free, Truth WM Pnvaal 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MIcH. NEws PHONE: 764-0552 r Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual…

…: -Recognition by the Arab states of the legality of the state of Israel and its territorial boundaries. At this late date, 19 years after the creation of the tiny nation, the Arabs must realize the futil- ity and…

… absurdity of their quest to throw the Jews into the sea. Israel obviously disagrees, as do all the Western powers. Instead of turning their attention toward jihads, the Arab nations should concen- trate on…

… never hope to be devel- oped if Israel does not have an outlet to the sea and markets of the East. The Arabs must realize' that future threats of blockades will be met with military ef- forts similar to…

… (or, perhaps, estab-w lished), the nations of the UN must respect one anothers' ter- ritorial and maritime rights. COLONIALISM and imperialism are favorite epithets used by Arab supporters, and there is…

… countries (specif- ically the USSR) who so loudly decry colonialism were themselves without colonies in the last cen- tury not because of lack of will, but because of lack of strength. Both Arabs and…

… Israelis have committed aggressive acts. To find peace in the area, both sides must make concessions. But the pre- requisite to all of this is the sim- ple acknowledgement by the Arab nations that Israel…

… does, and has a right to, exist. Without this acknowledgement, no peace can be achieved. And without peace and cooperation, the teeming pop- ulations of the Arab world will continue to face economic…

… and we had reached it by walking right through the border. The taking of Latrun pinched off a deep Arab salient into Is- rael where the Jews lost 500 in 1948. In that war it was an Arab stronghold on…

November 16, 1988 (vol. 99, iss. 50) • Page Image 4

…6 OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, November 16, 1988 The Michigan Daily &be id igaut aigW Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Aid provides Israeli security Vol. IC, No.50…

… mandated that all state funded agencies divest) or students, faculty, and staff. The regents could have made a principled statement that the University would not accept state interference in its curriculum…

… regents routinely make belligerent anti-student and anti- education remarks at their meetings. Baker has said he cannot tolerate the lesbian and gay male students on campus and claimed that students

… of limitations on student protest at University events. Moreover, all of the regents have ac- cepted without comment brutality on the part of University of Michigan Public Safety officers. Harold…

… Marcuse was attacked last year; students were reprise brutalized at President James Duderstadt's inauguration; and, last Friday, Public Safety locked people in the stairwell of the Fleming building…

October 06, 2017 (vol. 127, iss. 5) • Page Image 1

…Thursday marked undocumented immigrants’ last day to submit renewals to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program — but undocumented students at the University of Michigan…

students. After President Donald Trump’s successive travel ban orders in January, and again after the repeal of DACA in September, University President Mark Schlissel stated the University will not…

… disclose students’ immigration statuses voluntarily. Schlissel also formed an Immigration Working Group to monitor and analyze gaps in resources. Thursday’s rally, organized by the Student

… central staff liaison between undocumented students and the University and improving accessibility for prospective students. In October 2016, the University of Michigan launched its five…

…-year Diversity, Equity and Inclusion plan — an extensive initiative designed to promote a more diverse and inclusive campus through increasing staff diversity, retention of underprivileged students and…

…. Two student panels, consisting of 25 undergraduate and graduate students each, convene every month to discuss new strategies and ideas with DEI leaders. Though the plan was created to…

… white supremacy to racial slurs written on students’ dorm room doors — the past year has weighed heavily upon both administrators and minority students. Diversity Peer Educators As part of the…

… traditional identity binaries, especially in the historical context of the Arab communities’ presence on campus. “I know that historically when efforts (target) this same issue, our needs are not…

… community and our historical presence on campus only further the severity of the issue and disempower the Arab The Ann Arbor Downtown Development Authority approved $150,000 to install chain…

January 11, 1953 (vol. 63, iss. 78) • Page Image 4

…'s immediate problems are two- fold-improving its economy and its rela- tions with its Arab neighbors. Israel needs money to realize extensive industrial schemes with which it hopes to raise the country's living…

…, the biggest block to Israel's economic welfare still lies in the fact that Israel cannot trade with its Arab neigh- bors. The members of the Arab League have maintained a fairly effective embar- go on…

… states cannot be resumed until a peace treaty is signed. Central to the entire situation and ren- dering it particularly difficult of solution is the problem of the 800,000 Palestinian Arabs displaced by…

… the Israelis during the war of independence. These Arabs, after fleeing Israel, created a severe problem in the Arab states and are now living in camps where they have proved fruitful pickings for…

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

September 27, 1970 (vol. 81, iss. 22) • Page Image 4

… &4411 an 3 t Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The…

… HEART of the matter in the present Middle East situation is the fate of the 2.5 million Pales- tinian Arabs; some 600,000 are scattered through the refugee camps in Egypt, Jordan. Syria and Lebanon…

…; othershave done well in these countries and else- where in the Arab world; some live under Israeli rule. In 1948, when the UN proposed partition of Palestine into a Jewish state and an Arab state, the…

… Palestinian Arabs did not seize the moment. They have been literally stateless since then. The fedayeen are Palestinian The Middle East impasse Arabs. The urban terrorists are Palestinian Arabs. The men mov…

…- ing across the deserts of Jordan Are Palestinian Arabs. For too long the older generation of Israeli leaders (especially those of Golda Meir's age, the Eastern European Zionists) have refused to…

… long with- out success about the Viet Cong. The Palestinian Arabs might call themselves Marxists, Maoists, or any of a dozen other names; but in essence they are nationalists. Like the Israelis, they…

… both the Palestinian Arabs and the Israelis. The Arabs will have to gave up the nut rhetoric abofit driving the Israelis into the sea. That is not going to happen; the Israelis are there to stay. But the…

… Israelis would have to cooperate too. Those Palestinian Arabs who lost their homes and properties -in 1948 would have to be compensated for, their losses. But more important , the Israelis would have to rec…

…- ognize the legitimacy of the Pales- tinian Arab government. ,* SUCH A SOLUTION would have mutual advantages and some large dangers. The ?alestinians are pro- ducts of the olitics of grievance (as, in…

… Israelis and the U.S. government, might object to a Jordan that is Marxist or radical; but the Pales- tinian Arabs are already led by Marxists, and have, already been radicalized. The difference now is that…

March 12, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 115) • Page Image 1

… but said from the United Arab Republic, at the same time Moscow would be said last night there is no real agreeable to a meeting of foreign conflict between the interests of ministers if it was not…

… possible to the United States and the goals set up a summit session. Yester- of Arab nationalism. day's communique called for both. FOUR YEARS: Senators Pass Draft WASHINGTON MP)-The Senate voted 90…

…'s resolgtions, dennounces war and stops the large scale immigration into their country. Expect Neutral Position The Arabs expect the United States to maintain at least a neu- tral position between the Arab world…

… rate of almost a million dollars a day. "Another sign would be for polit- ical leaders to take the issue of Israel out of domestic partisan platforms," he added. Want Friendship "The aim of the Arab

… na- tions," he said. He- added that it is in the interest of the United States and the West to support r these aims. Nothing but friendship and un- derstanding Is wanted by the Arabs, Kamel claimed. He…

… Re-. publicans voted against taking up the bill., -Daily-Len Brunette IN FAVOR-Panhellenic President Mary Tower, flanked by other Student Government Council mem- bers, spoke in favor of fall rushing…

February 05, 1996 (vol. 106, iss. 68) • Page Image 4

…, unfair to Arabs Graduate student instructors, holding white picket signs and wearing yellow buttons, protested across campus Thursday for higher wages, more benefits and better treatment from the…

… well-re- searched article on the Near East. RAMI KISHEK RACKHAM STUDENT Arabs are victims of racism To THE DAILY, In a recent edition of your newspaper, you decided to print a biased, misinformative…

… LSA SOPHOMORE M ideast article inaccurate TO THE DAILY: - I am an officer with the Arab-American Students Association. The campus Arab community is shocked by the Daily's printing of an editorial last…

…4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 5, 1996 e £ibtwigdiHE ltl 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan RONNIE GLASSBERG Editor in…

…, the sooner it'll be over.' - GEO member Monika Cassel, explaining why graduate students were protesting Thursday JIM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST P4ARLBO KO COUNTR -i1_ -- - -- LETTERS To THE EDITOR Viewpoint…

… University. By meeting the demands of the graduate students, the administration will create a better environ- ment for both graduate and undergraduate students. Since the University is primarily a re- search…

… institution, graduate students are re- sponsible for most of the actual teaching. Many undergraduate classes - such as low-level language, math and writing courses - are taught entirely by GSIs. They also lead…

…; part of the cost. Graduate students, most of whom face big debts, do not have readily available alternate sources of income. Thus, if they cannot earn a decent living by teaching, they are forced to take…

students tends toattractthe best applicantstotheUniversity's programs - and the best teachers. In light ofthese facts, GEO's demands are more than reasonable. The union's request for a 15-percent wage…

…, especially for international, non-English speaking students. Currently, these graduate students are given three weeks of English language training over the sum- mer. However, the University fails to provide…

September 07, 1989 (vol. 100, iss. 1) • Page Image 31

…The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition - Thursday, September 7, 1989 - Page 7 :Coalition of Students with *Disabilities The coalition is an umbrella group for several organizations: 1. Learning…

… learning disabled student. 2. Sighs of -the Times, a sign language club for beginners and advanced signers. 3. The Barrier Free Computer Users Club, which explores the latest adaptive hardware and software…

… technology on campus. 4. Diabetic Network, a support group for students with or interested in diabetes. Committee for Campus Unity The committee's purpose is the promotion of a diverse and culturally…

… pluralistic campus environment at the University. They try to provide culturally diverse programs and financial assistance to encourage minority recruitment and retention. English Department Minority Student

July 09, 1948 (vol. 58, iss. 181) • Page Image 1

Arabs, Egyptians Resume Natinwid RaZiroad spute S PRICE FIVE CENTI' Var in Palestine 15 1-2 Cent Increase Grarnted Trainmen A greee ta tt erl(e1 Af ter Plan (ii IPres id(ellt's Fiaer-Fi Id(iin Board…

… The Arabs flashed orders to the ....n r.**.**.when the truce ended. The secreta Abdel Rahman Azzam Pasha, said the Arab nations are passing through a big test. The Jews said in Tel Aviv that the Arabs

… offi- $900 million German exports may cials and guards could leave the not meet, he explained, war zone. ti "Unless the American taxpayer 2 t s gong o cotinallysuport 2. The Arab League announcedL s…

… agreement on Jeru- d Changes have been made in the salem. o ectures next week by Camille 3. Arab Legion artillery and ar- U Gutt, chairman of the board of mor moved up to Jerusalem from U lirectors and…

… attack M Students for Slosson, an or- apparently was aimed at Isdud, sa anization to coordinate student where an Egyptian force waso upport for the Congressional truce temporarly before the in andidacy of…

… o ampaign will be handled at the oR v ieeting, according to Tom Walsh, ac ho called the meeting. "We expect that students willLa lay a major part in the political LONDON, July 8-(rP)-Colonial ye cene…

… of stopping it and tried in- es from destruction. den, the mediator, announced at on again." The truce had only a midnight <CST) tonight. nd the truce 30 days; the Arabs ir soldiers to prepare for…

… action ry-general of the Arab League, * ** .S . Advises JN To Invoke Armed Force Deputy Jessup Asks Arabs To Reconsider LAKE SUCCESS, July 8-(AP)- he United States said today the ecurity Council shouid…

November 09, 1992 (vol. 103, iss. 30) • Page Image 4

… AMITAVA MAZUMDAR Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan StL-ACK' MAH- 1. SPACE worm COPS BEAT !- 5'LACK M'AN-- G-o 6/4 CKa 3 PAC F=S 6 Unsigned editorials represent a majority…

… ast month, the "Campaign for Michigan" be- gan a fund-raising program called the "Case for Student Financial Aid." This is a multi-faceted program designed to compensate for dwindling federal support…

…. At a time when the federal govern- ment has dropped the ball, the University Undergraduate Stu has taken appropri- U ate steps in finding innovative solutions 75.00% to bring students of all incomes to…

… the University. For the past de- cade, the financial needs of non-resi- dent students have outpaced the University's ability to cover the cost. Currently, the under- 52.00% graduate self-obliga- tion…

… - the amount each students is re- sponsible for - for non-residents is $14,000. For many eco- nomically-disadvan- L institutional Aid taged students, this amount puts the Uni- State Aid versity out of…

… reach. ® Federal Aid This year, almost 1,000 non-resident students could not Source: Office of Financial Aid attend the University because there was simply not enough aid avail- able. In the long run…

…, more and more quality students who want to attend the University will be shut out for lack of support. Administrators have decided the best way to solve this problem is through the "Campaign for Michigan…

…," the University's $1 billion fund-rais- ing campaign. University fund-raisers will solicit donations on behalf of the "Case for Student Financial Aid." Alumni are being encouraged to make contributions…

… to funds specifically designed for non-resident financial aid. This will allow students with demonstrated need to shoulder less of the burden for attending the University. dent 1 ial aid gap But the…

…, appropriating $12 million. This increase rep- resents a commitment to restoring accessibility to all students regardless of financial need. The University is Aid Expenditures by Source responding to in- tense…

January 23, 1991 (vol. 101, iss. 80) • Page Image 2

… future be used to kill human beings.' - Matt Green Physics graduate student "The force of the FAE explo- sion detonates the dust explo- sive, increasing the destructive power," Green said yesterday. "This…

… of force at every exposed portion of his body si- multaneously." Unidentified University students peer out of the ISR director's office. About 35 students participated in the sit-in. 01 I Calvin…

…HIR&C EVRYONr POaS IN "ME 6AflE LANXAb. " '0r~9 0Q~9 ?09 -C- by Judd Winick "x CAN $sm BY? Yo .,R C 4- MY F7RlENPV CQFE P-c* JI fONE. 7#4Nb Gc.'T0 KWNC#*4 N 'y PLEASE- .J WH - /N STUDENTS Continued…

… violence against those of Arab-American descent now living in the United States. Reports of bomb threats, racial slurs, and physical violence against citizens in the Detroit area have height- ened tensions…

… among all. "I saw a sign in Dearborn that said 'The only good Arab is a dead Arab,"' said Khalil. LSA senior Timothy White, who is not an Arab-American, lives in a predominantly Arab- American…

… neighborhood in Detroit. "Some Arabs were pulled over in Detroit just because they were Arab and were suspected of trying to poison the water supply. Ameri- cans have the idea that this (terrorism) will never…

… unique po- sition of living among Arab-Amer- icans, not relying on the media for images of 'the enemy.' I think we should try to see the situation of the Arab-Americans from their point of view, and not…

… label then with the demonic image seen in the media." "One thing that I think is a key' element is... the American public needs to understand that this group (Arab-Americans) has assimilated into American…

…. "Students are justifiably con- cerned about the war and frus- trated because they do not have a way to influence American pol- icy," Harrison said. In response to the accusations made by SAUSI, Harrison…

… protesting the soldiers?", Goeke asked. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates…

November 21, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 66) • Page Image 3

… Foreign News Analyst Beyond the questions of cease- fire, prisoner exchange and Is- raeli withdrawal from occupied Arab lands is another so far receiving little attention but pos- sibly the most difficult…

… in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war and hav- ing been caught up again in the 1967 war. The Arab-Israeli wars all have been emotional, religious and poli- tical. And among the refugees living in camps - 85…

… extreme of the guerrilla leaders. AT ANY RATE, it is a prob- lem that has defied solution for 25 years and cost around $1 bil- lion, most of it coming from the United States. The Arabs have insisted the…

… East Jerusalem, w h i c h Israel annexed two weeks after its 1967 victory, it has offered to compensate Arabs for 1 o s t property on the basis of assess- ed value in 1947 plus 25 per cent. The cost has…

… lo lc ..r "::"..,....J ..... . ....",>:".J~r..,.....edited...and imanagedandbynastudentsdetsaa Wednesday, November 21 Student Accounts: Your attention the University of Michigan. News phone DAY…

…: "Students shall Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published vices Research: Its Implications for pay all account due the University not daily Tuesday through Sunday morning a series of high level Israeli conferences…

…: ceseir lne ad fllr isnggeen o frcs.guage," Lane Hall, noon, ;however, student loans not yet due Ohio): $12 non-local mail (other states' Psych. Film Series: "Up Is Down;" are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at…

…; Emergency Clinic (fee will be I be issued. "(b) All students owing such -- ISRAEL BELIEVES that one purpose of the Egyptian map is to charged Nov. 22-23) open Nov 22 & 23, prove that the Egyptian Third Army…

March 09, 1971 (vol. 81, iss. 127) • Page Image 3

…Wednesday & Thursday March 10th & 11 th Department of Speech-Student Laboratory Theatre presents GEORGE WASHINGTON CROSSING THE DELAWARE- by KENNETH KOCH AND THE INDIAN WANTS THE BRONX by ISRAEL…

… term "blatantly racialist." CEASE FIRE ENDED: ySyrian leader calls on Arabs to mobilize By The Associat-ed Press I Ls ye r as Lffy were ast yed. Syria's strong man, Lt. Gen. Hafez Assad, called on the…

Arab world yesterday to mobilize for a "war of liberation" against Israel. A BOMB THREAT closed the State Office Building in Columbus, Hours after he issued the call, Israeli sources ig Tiberias said a…

… five complaints including charges of ra- fired by Palestinian guerrillas. No casualties were reported. cism in the schools, charges of unfair punishment of black students, Hafez addressed a mass rally in…

… Damascus as guerrilla leaders and and a demand for black administrators in predominately black schools.: Arab newspapers throughout the Middle East expressed jubilation over The protest ended after…

… Sunday. -- -------- - - "The only way 'left open for the Arabs to recover their occupied 7-WEEK STRIKE ENDS land is that of armed combat," As- sad told cheering thousands in the Syrian capital. British…

… started Jan. 20. to dictate surrender on the Arab their rounds yesterday after a seven-week strike Post Office officials maintained an international countries under the pretext of that left 71 million…

… entire recovery operation was complicated "asdeadly an enemy of the Arabs on basic wages of $36 to $65 a week. Now they by Britain's new decimal currency and by higher as Israel." are at the mercy of a…

… cent forces of the Arabs in the coming While the returnees were sorting 11 million pieces ceiling on wage increases. liberation battle," he said. assaulted the tiny Vietnamese village during an infantry…

… Vietnamese rice farmer was thrown into a well and shot- either by Calley or one of his men. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan.News phone: 764-0552. Second Class…

October 09, 1968 (vol. 79, iss. 35) • Page Image 10

…Page Ten THE Mir HIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 9, 1968 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 9, 1968 Auditor withdraws criticism of funding WELL ARMED, FINANCED: Arab guerillas vow to…

…, o P i enlarg esn , Voice split (continued from page 1) almost unanimously, to take part in sponsoring a Nov. 4 teach-in on the national elections. The group also called for a student strike on…

… adopt guidelines for the expenditure of student fees. "If the Legislature were to say what student fees could be used for, it would be a serious problem for the Regents asfar as their authority to run the…

… shouldn't have them." Smith defended the authority of the Regents to determine the way student fees are spent. "The dele- gation of authority to the Regents to run the University was done to provide…

… are currently about 3,000 strong, with no shortage of recruits or money to buy weapons. Jordan officials describe them as a problem for the Arab gov- ernments. Leaders of Al Fatah, most effective of…

…- ly engage in sabotage and fight- ing with the Israelis. "If we lose two even five, men for every Israeli it doesn't matter," said the Al Fatah spokesman. "There are 100 million Arabs and only two or…

March 29, 1966 (vol. 76, iss. 150) • Page Image 4

…Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ABOR, MICH…

… decisions of the Board except in the sense that an assistant to Vice-President for Student Affairs Richard Cutler sits on the Board in an ex-officio capacity. BIG TEN RULES state that athletics must be under…

… "student-athletes" is no longer the exception but rather the rule in inter- collegiate athletics. And the fact also re- mains that intercollegiate athletics, al- though they serve no more than a sub- sidiary…

…-collegiate athletics, how does it stack up for the average student who pays $10 a year athletic fees from his tuition, $12 for football tickets which at many other schools are free to stu- dents, and a dollar a game for…

… basket- ball, swimming and hockey? Further, intramural facilities at the University are grossly inadequate, as even Crisler himself admits. The IM building was designed for a student body about half the…

… size of the current one. It is also worthwhile to note that there is no place on campus, with the exception of a small parking lot behind South Quad, where students can play basketball out- side. Vice…

… is paid off, which will be a period of many years. THUS THE STUDENT is supporting the brunt of the athletic program, and he seems to be only benefiting slightly from it except in the sense that there…

January 30, 2007 (vol. 117, iss. 86) • Page Image 1

… the American-Arab Anti-Dis- crimination Committee, "It's not correct. They're giving terrorism a religion. Terrorism is a concept, you can't put a face or a religion on it." - Kamelya Youssef, co…

…-founder of the Arab Unity Movement he is worried about the effect this event will have on the public impression of Islam. "We can't take terrorists and put them through rehab and make them role models," Hamad…

… ENCOURAGING ENTREPRENEURS Public Health graduate student Nastassia Gurganus calls Bursley Hall res dents to rem od them aout the start of the M-FLU study yesterday. I BY THE NUMBERS T~H F R S NN THE PAPER…

… MASK Fl st [u prevention Anatomy extras as surgical facemasks and hand sanitiz- udy kicks off er were doled out yesterday afternoon. in dorms The students were prepar- ing for their first day in the k…

students participat- tion, began when University ing in the M-FL study Health Services reported the season's first diagnosis of influenza. One group of stu- dent participants is required to wear masks in the…

…. The College of Engineering hosted an open forumon entrepreneurship last night for all engineering students interested in the business aspects ofttheir fields. The newly-created Committee on…

… Entrepreneurial Environment and Pro- grams for Students got feedback from students about how to incorporate busi- ness into the engineering curriculum. "It's about the marriageof technology and marketing…

… aims to transformstudent ideas and innovations into opportunities for busi- ness growth. "A lot of engineers have the good ideas but don't know what to do with them," Vicars said. Students proposed…

October 13, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 28) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Monday, October 13, 1986 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan History behind By Daniel Blank Vol. XCVII, No. 28 420 Maynard St. Ann…

… Middle East EVERYBODY WANTS to blame divides them should be s somebody in the Arab-Israeli pragmatically and quickly. V conflict. The Israelis blame the hope, however, that all par Arabs. The Arabs blame…

… the the conflict understand two Israelis and the United States. The realities, even if they ,United States blames the Arabs, acknowledge them publicly: 2but it also takes a few jabs at the *Israel is…

… ;invoke their cause. states and what amounts to g Each of the above groups has warfare by the. PLO. Ini :their proponents in Ann Arbor. Arabs and Palestinians swo The Middle East wars are carried they would…

… that mu a back seat to ideology and dogma.- least recognize that Israe One student said Zionism is a continue to exist because it h "badge of honor and pride, while support of the United States. its…

… antithesis"-Palestinian *The Palestinians are mor nationalism-"is a badge of a propaganda tool for the shame." The writer condemned the states. That doesn't mea Palestinian nationalist movement as Arab

… countries don't us nothing more than a front put up by. Palestinians as pawns i the Arab states to undermine Israel. conflict-the fact is that Jord The Daily also receives letters control over the West Bank…

… also clear tha the conflict. One letter called the Palestinian cause is n massacres at Sabra and Shatila in fabrication of the Arab states Lebanon "the logical outgrowth of Palestinians cannot be Zionist…

… the leadersd the Arabs, Israelis, and to deal with political reality i alestinians will suddenly realize of dogmatically rejecting the Gone day that the conflict that side. 2 PBS independence settled…

… We can ties in 3basic don't away. Israel against Arab uerilla tially, re that nto the now. those ast at l will has the e than Arab .n that e the n the an had from once stinian at the ot a . The dis- re…

January 29, 1999 (vol. 109, iss. 69) • Page Image 3

… Committee will be heilding a conference beginning tonight and lasting through the weekend. -Conference Coordinator and Treasurer of AAADC Amer Ardati cribed the event as "Arab-American students' activism…

… events unraveled, including the formation ofa human chain across South University Avenue to block the driver's path. Members of the Deadwings League B University intramural hockey team - the eight students

… various stops. According to a Department of Public Safety incident log, the bus driver said she could not pick up students at the first Nite Owl stop because of bad road conditions, and when she approached…

… another stop, the students began to hit the bus with their hockey sticks. At that point, the bus driver refused to let the team members on the bus, the DPS log states. After the team's I I p.m. hockey game…

… at Yost Ice Arena, LSA first-year student Kevin Bettsteller said "all we wanted to do was to get back to (Mary) Markley" Residence Hall. After their game ended around mid- night, the Deadwings waited…

… for the Nite Owl at the Yost stop on Hoover Street with bags and their hockey equipment, members said. Nite Owl bus 702 soon approached but stopped about 15 seconds after passing the students, allowing…

… snow squabble. One of the two students who got on the bus, team manager Chris Fortunato, an Engineering first-year student, and the bus driver asked if he was getting on the bus and Fortunato asked her…

… second time hit the bus with their. hockey sticks. "We were just trying to get her to stop'" LSA first-year student Ben Erickson said. Deadwings member Nate Greenberg, an Engineering first-year student

… the authority to ban people from the Nite Owl. DPS spokesperson Beth Hall said the students involved were banned from the Nite Owl that night and no police report was filed. After their meeting…

… offurther educating the University Community. w a Superbowi Sunday 't0 1O"'C h "' ec firee lvery AAADC to host conference By YaeI Kohen Daily Staff Reporter -The Arab-American Anti- Discrimination…

January 21, 1997 (vol. 107, iss. 57) • Page Image 8

…8-A.- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 21, 1997_ . MLK DAY 1997 Panel reviews cultural tensions By Heather Kamins Daily Staff Reporter For centuries, the African American, Jewish and Arab

… that exist within these communities. "For us to deal with a possible future prospect of working together with the Arab community, as with the Jewish community, the issue of justice must be forefront…

…." Abdurrahman said the relationship between African Americans and Arabs is more recent but more confrontation- al than the tensions with the Jews. "In Detroit, 90 percent of stores are owned by Arabs. One owner…

… told me that the relationship between the two communities is one of intense hatred," Abdurrahman said. The explanation of this hatred stems from the Arab struggle to be recog- nized as white in this…

… country, Abdurrahman said. "In the Arab racial etymology of people, blackness is considered pretty much a curse;" Abdurrahman said. "(Being an Arab that is considered white in the United States) means relat…

… important to promoting diversity By Susan Port For the Daily Attempting to apply the far reach- es of Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream, a small cluster of professors and graduate students gathered in Rackham…

… approach problems from different perspectives. Demond added that many women and students of color come to her for guid- ance. Nola Pender, associate dean for Academic Affairs of Research, said panelists…

… discussed salient points. Pender said a large part of promotir9 diversity is "honoring learning styles of- diverse students." Speakers emphasized that points of view change after students interact with others…

… from different backgrounds. They also said that professors have an influence on their students that allows them to conform students' views. LSA first-year student Nicole Rushivoch said her professors ha…

… the relationship between professors and students. Each person takes their own experi-' ences along with them and develop their own style of learning, "allowi students to go about approaching prob- lems…

March 18, 2004 (vol. 113, iss. 115) • Page Image 4

…6 4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 18, 2004 OPINION 420 MAYNARD STREET U0ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 t dopinion.michigandaily. comr tothedaily@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS

… regarding the Arab-Israeli conflict, but lack a sophisticated understand- ing of the situation. Rabbis need to educate their congregations on the conflict, as they encouraged their congregations to embrace…

… the civil rights movement and not harass black families trying to move into predomi- nately white neighborhoods decades ago. In this year's campaign, Kerry will have additional support from Arab

…-Americans, as they have become disenchanted with a presi- dent that had significant Arab-American support in 2000. American Jewish and Arab- American interests have converged approaching the election. A…

…-Israeli conflict has support in both communities as well. Jews and Arabs have had a contentious relationship for centuries. But in this year's elections, they will vote together. Pesick can be reached at jzpesick…

…@umich.edu. 6 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 6 LSA-SG presidential elections need to remain democratic, not insulated TO THE DAILY: As a former elected representative of the Michigan Student Assembly, three-term MSA…

Student Rights Commission chair and Central Student Judiciary justice, I am deeply trou- bled by the ballot initiative appearing on the ballot of the LSA Student Government elec- tions this week. If…

… Monday (Reforming Government 03/15/04) that the proposal would "ensure that executives are elected based on compe- tence, not charisma," I think the real effect would further insulate student government…

… from the student body. I view the proposal as a thinly-veiled reac- tion to the election of Monique Luse and Tim Whalen as LSA-SG president and vice presi- dent in winter 2002, both student government…

… Whalen won the votes they received. As long as we profess democratic princi- pals, electoral upsets will happen. The proper reaction of the other members of student gov- ernment should be to educate and…

January 19, 1978 (vol. 88, iss. 90) • Page Image 2

… Church St.-769-1222 r ' * U S RedUCed Rates fr:i BILLIARDS Everyday to 6 pm at the UNION OPEN 10 am' I I . I AHMED, a member of the Organi- zation of Arab Students, said most Arab students here feel that…

Arab critics and gain back some lost prestige." Added Ahmed: "Maybe he's hop- ing that after this show of force, the concessions will seem less harsh." JOHN DIRECTOR* coordinator for the Student Union…

…Page 2-Thursday, January 19, 1978-The Michigan Daily SRegents topics: student housing. minority drop By BRIAN BLANCHARD 506 ('73) to a low of 349 ('74). The Regents face two gloomy After more than a…

… decade of inac- reports at this afternoon's meeting in tivity, the University has begun to the Administration Building - one consider the possibilities of more noting a sharp drop in minority student

… MINORITY status report have held 769 students but the shows a decline in minority enroll- building was "not in good physical ment in the Literary College to the repair" and already houses some stu- 1972…

… level of 6.6 per cent of total en- dents. rollment - a drop of 0.6 per cent in " St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, re- the last two years. The number of cently purchased by the University minority students has…

… fallen to 424, after a great deal of repair, might from last year's figure of 488. Over have served 700 students. the last five years, the minority " University Towers, on South population has ranged from…

… a high of University, already has 700 students livinginde . "nr ......rnrn..... ..j The January meeting will continue W Htomorrow morning beginning at 9 UWATCH FOR .m. JIM REMPE----- February 2nd The…

… lowest retail price on record in i ma the United States for potatoes was 12 Pocket Billiard I cents for 10 pounds in 1896, reports the U.S. Census Bureau. SExhibition -- : E h ioMore than 2,000 students

…-determination, but said Arabs "have self-determination in 21 sover- eign Arab states." . Begin went on to compare Palestin- ian self-government with Hitler's expansionist policies during the 1930's. KAMEL, TAKEN aback…

October 30, 1973 (vol. 84, iss. 47) • Page Image 7

ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT keynote speeaker: ABDEEN JABARA Arab attorney, activist & author TUES., OCT. 30, 7:30 p.m. Assembly Hall, Mich. Union Sponsored by: Organization of Arab Students, Young Socialist…

… does not withdraw completely from all oc- cupied Arab territories and fails to restore the rights of the Pales- Rezoning attacked <Continued from Page 1) "TO ME IT sounds like ICC is property became…

… alterrna- ACCORDING TO Frederick, two tives possible for the structures- buildings in the R2B zoning area especially since 1960 when the are presently being operated illeg- number of students living in room…

June 10, 1967 (vol. 77, iss. 27) • Page Image 3

… power held some 1,500 angry Arab, Cuban, and North Vietnamese stu- dents back from the U.S. and Brit- ish embassies yesterday, frustra- ting a planned Middle East dem- onstration. "Johnson is a dog," the…

… picket lines. They were forcibly restrained by student leaders and, apparently, some Russian plainclothesmen who insisted they must obey the new Kremlin rules for demonstra- tions. The last similar…

… demonstration which got out of hand was in March 1965. Then North Vietnam- ese, Chinese and Cuban students battered the U.E. Embassy with stones and ink bottles, and had to be dispersed by hastily called soldiers…

… more than 1,100 Red Army soldiers lined up two deep with their back to army trucks parked bumper to bumper. The students waved their fists, then waved their shoes, and chanted slogans at the embassy. The…

… slogans were lost in the noise of traffic. Signs and banners in Arabic, Russian, French and Spanish de- nounced U.S. and British policy in the Middle East. The Vietnamese carried signs accusing the United…

… the Mid- dle East and to assist in relaying information concerning the eva- cuatin of the U.S. dependents and other citizens from the Arab-Is- raeli war area." The converted World War II Victory ship…

… Press News Analyst The apparent downfall of Egypt's Gamel Abdul Nasser indicates new woes for the Arab world and new troubles for the big powers in their search for some semblance of stability in that…

… sensitive part of the world. Nasser, for all his shortcoming, has dominated the Arab Stage. No Arab at this moment could take his place or even approach the stature he has enjoyed. That means a prospective…

… vacuum of leadership promising turmoil. The history of Nasser is a his- tory of tragedy. He was the per- sonification of Arab dreams-in Court Decides Florida Must Repay Seminoles for Lands WASHINGTON (M…

…- ered by Spanish grants. a modern world-of recapturing some of their lost ancient glories. The search for a Pan-Arab identity, at best an elusive goal, was the motivation behind Nasser. He described his…

May 03, 1946 (vol. 56, iss. 130) • Page Image 2

…PAGE TWO T HE MICHIGAN DAILY Arabian Committee Threatens Britain % By The Associated Press JERUSALEM, May 2-The power-' ful Arab Higher Committee told Brit-' ain "in the next thing to an ulti…

…- matum" today that Arabs now 'would proceed with organization of forces and prepare all means for defense in order to resume the national struggle," a committee official de- clared. He said the "national…

… Ann Arbor Art Associ- ation, is open to the public daily ex- cept Sunday from 2-5 p.m. and 7-10 p.m. through May 23. Defieent Students May Obtai aTutors Students deficient in their studies may now…

… obtain tutorial services for a standard rate by applying at the Union Student Offices. Any student with a final grade of "A" in any subject or a "B" in his field of concentration may qualify as a tutor…

…. Students desiring a tutoring job, as well as those who are inter- ested in the service may visit the Union Student Offices for further information. adopted a White Paper limiting Jewish immigration into…

… Palestine. Report Opposed The Arab committee opposed the report of the British-American Com- BAGHDAD, May 2 - (lP - The newly-formed National Peoples De- fense Committee called tonight for a joint necting of…

…. mittee of Inquiry, which recom- mended immediate authorization for the immigration of 100,000 European Jews and that Palestine should be' neither an Arab nor Jewish state. Earlier, the Arab group named an…

… 'emergency" body to study a possible civil disobedience strike-similar to tactics in 1936-and methods for mo- bilizing Arab youth in Palestine. It also appealed to Arab rulers of Middle Eastern countries for…

… had called a one-day strike tomorrow by Arabs in Palestine and throughout the Mid- dle East to protest the joint report. Union Oficials Bolt Railroad Campus Strike Parley lahl<;agellelit's Offers…

… letter describing conditions at the University ,of the Philippines, which University students adopted last semester, was received yester-' day by Barbara Stauffer, chairman of the World Student Service…

March 17, 1959 (vol. 69, iss. 119) • Page Image 4

… P oo rc. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Student Defends A cademirc'Grind" ONLY SURFACE CORDIALITY: Nasser. Arab Col By The Associated Press DAMASCUS, Syria - Six potent words repeated over and over by…

…Sixty-Ninth Year - EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ni Opiniona Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS nth Will Preva]Il STUDENT PUBLICATIONS…

… audience for the candi- dates. The council rejected the plan for the open house, unanimously. THE LACK of interest in listening to the candidates is mirrored by the low percent- age of students voting…

… an interest in campus-wide affairs, and they must attempt to pass on this interest to their con- stituents. Then there is the individual student. So many of they view student 'government as "Mickey…

…-Mouse." In part this is the fault of student government, but some must rest with the students. Student government does have a function, and its ability to carry this out depends upon the interest of its…

… President Gamal Abdel Nasser spell out the main lines of his attack against Arab Communists. Nasser has talked himself hoarse in marathon speeches since Pre- mier Abdel Karim Kassem's Iraqi government…

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