King Faisal Assassinated

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

King Faisal Assassinated o.i> (Ejmttrrttrut iatlg (Sampita Serving Storrs Since 1896 VOL. LXXVIII NO. 102 STORRS, CONNECTICUT WEDNESDAY. MARCH 26. 1975 5 CENTS OFF CAMPUS King Faisal assassinated BEIRUT- (UPI) Saudi Khalid underwent heart surgery sacred cities of Mecca and monarch was wounded and Washington said the 31-year-old Arabi's King Faisal, spiritual in Cleveland, Ohio, three years Medina. hospitalized. Then. a .issassin was son of King Faisal's leader of the world's 600 million ago. t c a r - c h o k c d .innounccr half brother. Prince Musaid. The nephew walked the Moslems and master of the Faisal was killed while holding broadcast the news that Faisal Mideast's largest oil fields, was court in his Palace to mark the length of the hall apparently had died. Immediately all radio They said in 1966 he studied assassinated Tuesday as he sat on mniversary of the birth of intended to greet the seated King stations switched to readings of English at San Francisco State a golden chair in the mirrored Prophet Mohammed the with the customary kiss on both the Koran and thousands of College, and the following year hall of his palace by a deranged founder of the Islamic religion checks. Instead, he pulled a Saudis. (Tying and spreading he enrolled in a course in member of his own family. whose 600 million followers revolver from beneath his their arms in Uriel, surged into mechanical engineering at the Faisal, 68, died of wounds revered Faisal as their spiritual flowing robe and fired. the streets of Riyadh. University of Colorado at after his American-educated leader and custodian of the At first Radio Riyadh said the Diplomatic sources in Boulder. nephew, Prince Faisal bin Musaed bin Abdcl Aziz, shot him down with three bullets fired at point blank range during a holy Moslem ceremony, th e official saudi Arabian Riyadh Death leaves Mideast unchanged radio said. The radio said the assassin, a By D.M. MOSLF.Y Mideast relations, said the death "visibly active" in government, David G. Edcns, an associate former student in Britain and at Associate News Editor of King Faisal, who was Keed said, but will probably professor of economics who the Universities of California and The death Tuesday of the assassinated by an allegedly "very much try to continue the served as a consultant to the Colorado during the 1960's, was Saudi Arabian monarch will not deranged nephew, "adds more policies of the highly respected .Saudi Arabian government in the "mentally unsound" and acted significantly change relationships uncertainty to the Arub world," Faisal." 1960's, called the late Faisal "a alone. between the oil-rich Persian Gulf but added that "in the short run The king's younger brother, nation and the United States and there probably won't be any big This continuity will be a key very strong personality," adding Crown Prince Khalid, 62, was Israel, according to a U Conn changes." factor in determining how I here are forces in the country quickly chosen by family expert on the Middle East. important Faisal's death will be- which want to change the members and high officials to Howard A. Reed, a professor The successor to Faisal, Crown on relationships between absolute monarchv which rule. succeed faisal, the radio said. of history specializing in modern Prince Khalid, has not been Mideast countries, Reed said. Continued on Page 7 2,000 students fast to aid world hungry By STEVEN HULL about 500 commuters to fast. News Editor How much will be donated will not Aboul 2000 students in Associated be known for two weeks, when the Student Commissary (ASC) dormitories checks from the 60 ASC dormitory fasted for all or part of Tuesday, saving kitchens arc received and processed. The aboul $3,000 that will be used to aid amount each dormitory will contribute starving persons throughout the world, depends on the cost of the meals served according to fast chairman William Brennan. Tuesday and the number of students who fasted. The last Committee also received S278 in contributions from Hilltop ASC coordinator Kent Banning said Council, commuters, non-ASC Tuesday about $2.25 per student would dormitories and faculty members. be available if the student skipped all Although Brennan predicted Sunday three meals. But Brennan said a majority 2,500 students would fast, he said the of the students planned on missing two low turnout was due mainly to a poor meals. showing by commuters. The Fast There were two reports of students Committee received S49 in who had signed up to last, but tried to contributions from about 45 fasting eat anyway. Giles Mercier, chef in commuters. Brennan said he expected Hollistcr B, said many students, who were supposed to be fasting, ate hamburgers for lunch. Metanoia Schedule A random survey of 10 ASC 10 a.m. G. W. SazamaJ dormitories indicated that support for Department of Economics, "Hunger* the fast was widespread. A majority of in America," Commons 310. the stewards and stewardesses contacted 1:15 p.m. Seminars in S.U. 306.! said about half of the dormitory 3:30 p.m. Panel discussions in '■ residents missed each meal. Commons 310. The highest turnout appeared to be in 7:30 p.m. G. S. Borestrom.; the Intentional Democratic Community Michigan State University, "Hungry! (IDC) where about 100 of the 120 Planet," S. U. Ballroom. residents fasted for all or part of the day. Troops and civilians flee Hue SAIGON (UPI) A rear guard of dodged North Vietnamese fire along a thousands of government troops and body-littered six-mile route to the civilians scrambled for safety Tuesday harbor and many swam to boats waiting under Communist gunfire and swam to to carry them to Da Nang, 50 miles to boats in a desperate struggle to escape the south. the fallen city of Hue. Those who reached Da Nang, the only remaining government bastion in the [See related stories on Page 8] northern third of the country, told U.S. and South Vietnamese officials many refugees drowning in the scramble said they were readying the largest airlift to reach boats waiting offshore because in history in a plan to carry 10,000 of shallow water and sandbars. refugees a day from Da Nang to Government troops arriving in Da Camramh Bay, 185 miles northeast of Nang with all their gear and artillery Saigon. were immediately sent to the front lines, READY, SET, PULL: Chuck Fisher bites his lip and bears down as he leads Thousands of South Vietnamese where Communist troops launched two Russell B to victory Tuesday in the first night of Intramural Tug-O-War action. soldiers and civilians who were among minor attacks only five miles from the Russell B, last year's National League champion, defeated Goodyear B in two out the unfortunate last to leave Htfe refugee-swollen city. t>f three tugs. (Photo by Buzz Kanter.) .-, . OPINION conferred with any Daily Campus member But all that time, effort and careful planning resulted in only a 15-line proposal regarding his feeling toward the function-and Hot air that shocked and angered many of his fellow responsiveness of the paper. Gerald Sazama, an associate professor oi senators, who can only recommend, and not But Sazama's biggest prohlem is that he economics, has proposed to create what enact, such a proposal. appears to have misread the First Amendment amounts to a new constitution lor the Daily They weren't upset because Sazama put in of the Constitution. His proposal suggests that Campus. We're flattered that this member of all that lime and effort because they knew editors be chosen by either the student body the University Senate could take lime out he didn't. They weren't upset because Sazama or the student government. from his husy schedule to make such a did his homework because they knew he He ignores almost 200 years of proposal to the Senate Monday. didn't. Constitutional history vigorously supporting Surely he must have put in a lot o! time, Rather, they were upset because Sazama the freedom of the press to censure the effort and thought to produce a constitution was waiting the Senate's time. government, not to be censored by it. The lor a daily that employs more than 100 David Ivry, acting director of planning, press is the watchdog ol government. students annually and operates on a SI00,000 said, "There have been so many inaccuracies Government is not the watchdog of the press. yearly budget. It must have taken weeks to presented that I think it would bore the And if Sazama seeks more "independence" pore through the current Daily Campus Senate to continue debate." for the student paper, he should take off his constitution as well as other documents that Ivry said, "There is a magnificently free blinkers and ask himself: have molded the Campus over the past 78 press as far as the Daily Campus is Can access of expression be guaranteed by 1 years. concerned.* putting a political gtoup in charge of the This new constitution, taking much ol Ivry was not speaking from instinct. He was paper? What would prevent a candidate for S.i/.ima's Tree lime, must surely purport to he speaking from sometimes bitter experience. the board from making campaign promises to better than the one the Daily Campus has As chairman of the cooperative bookstore influence or censor editorial policy? been operating under since April 90, 1<)72. committee, Ivry tried to ram a massive report The Daily Campus is not averse to any The current constitution was the past the editors and into print.
Recommended publications
  • Saudi Arabia Under King Faisal
    SAUDI ARABIA UNDER KING FAISAL ABSTRACT || T^EsIs SubiviiTTEd FOR TIIE DEqREE of ' * ISLAMIC STUDIES ' ^ O^ilal Ahmad OZuttp UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF DR. ABDUL ALI READER DEPARTMENT OF ISLAMIC STUDIES ALIGARH MUSLIM UNIVERSITY ALIGARH (INDIA) 1997 /•, •^iX ,:Q. ABSTRACT It is a well-known fact of history that ever since the assassination of capital Uthman in 656 A.D. the Political importance of Central Arabia, the cradle of Islam , including its two holiest cities Mecca and Medina, paled into in insignificance. The fourth Rashidi Calif 'Ali bin Abi Talib had already left Medina and made Kufa in Iraq his new capital not only because it was the main base of his power, but also because the weight of the far-flung expanding Islamic Empire had shifted its centre of gravity to the north. From that time onwards even Mecca and Medina came into the news only once annually on the occasion of the Haj. It was for similar reasons that the 'Umayyads 661-750 A.D. ruled form Damascus in Syria, while the Abbasids (750- 1258 A.D ) made Baghdad in Iraq their capital. However , after a long gap of inertia, Central Arabia again came into the limelight of the Muslim world with the rise of the Wahhabi movement launched jointly by the religious reformer Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab and his ally Muhammad bin saud, a chieftain of the town of Dar'iyah situated between *Uyayana and Riyadh in the fertile Wadi Hanifa. There can be no denying the fact that the early rulers of the Saudi family succeeded in bringing about political stability in strife-torn Central Arabia by fusing together the numerous war-like Bedouin tribes and the settled communities into a political entity under the banner of standard, Unitarian Islam as revived and preached by Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab.
    [Show full text]
  • Us Military Assistance to Saudi Arabia, 1942-1964
    DANCE OF SWORDS: U.S. MILITARY ASSISTANCE TO SAUDI ARABIA, 1942-1964 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Bruce R. Nardulli, M.A. * * * * * The Ohio State University 2002 Dissertation Committee: Approved by Professor Allan R. Millett, Adviser Professor Peter L. Hahn _______________________ Adviser Professor David Stebenne History Graduate Program UMI Number: 3081949 ________________________________________________________ UMI Microform 3081949 Copyright 2003 by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved. This microform edition is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ____________________________________________________________ ProQuest Information and Learning Company 300 North Zeeb Road PO Box 1346 Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346 ABSTRACT The United States and Saudi Arabia have a long and complex history of security relations. These relations evolved under conditions in which both countries understood and valued the need for cooperation, but also were aware of its limits and the dangers of too close a partnership. U.S. security dealings with Saudi Arabia are an extreme, perhaps unique, case of how security ties unfolded under conditions in which sensitivities to those ties were always a central —oftentimes dominating—consideration. This was especially true in the most delicate area of military assistance. Distinct patterns of behavior by the two countries emerged as a result, patterns that continue to this day. This dissertation examines the first twenty years of the U.S.-Saudi military assistance relationship. It seeks to identify the principal factors responsible for how and why the military assistance process evolved as it did, focusing on the objectives and constraints of both U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Chapter (PDF)
    x ISRAEL WEST BANK IRAQ Jerusalem Amman Eup GAZA hrates IRAN Basra JORDAN Shiraz KUWAIT Al Jauf Kuwait Cairo Sinai P e Bandar Abbas r s i a Tunb Islands n G u OMAN l f Abu Musa Dammam Manama Ras Al-Khaimah N QATAR Ajman il Sharjah e Buraydah Dubai BAHRAIN Doha Abu Dhabi Muscat EGYPT Riyadh UNITED Medina ARAB EMIRATES R e Aswan d SAUDI ARABIA S e a N A Jeddah Mecca M O SUDAN Port Sudan 0 miles 250 Indian Abha Ocean 0 km 400 YEMEN Map of the Arab Gulf States 1. Muslim pilgrims circumambulate (tawaf ) the sacred Kaaba during sunrise after fajr prayer in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. 2. President Nixon and Mrs Nixon welcome King Faisal of Saudi Arabia on a visit to the United States in May 1971. 3. Henry Kissinger (left), the US Secretary of State, meets the Shah of Iran (right) in Zurich in early 1975. 4. Sheik Yamani talks about oil and the Palestinian problem during a press conference in Saudi Arabia in July 1979. 5. Crowds of Iranian protestors demonstrate in support of exiled Ayatollah Sayyid Ruhollah Khomeini in 1978, the year prior to the revolution. 6. Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein addresses members of his armed forces shortly before the invasion of Iran in September 1980. 7. Saudi Arabian soldiers prepare to load into armoured personnel carriers during clean-up operations following the Battle of Khafji, 2 February 1991. The Battle of Khafji was the first major ground engagement of the 1991 Gulf war. 8. Palestinian women demonstrate with Palestinian and Iraqi flags and portraits of Yasser Arafat and Saddam Hussein in the West Bank during the Kuwait crisis of 1990–91.
    [Show full text]
  • Rivalry in the Middle East: the History of Saudi-Iranian Relations and Its Implications on American Foreign Policy
    BearWorks MSU Graduate Theses Summer 2017 Rivalry in the Middle East: The History of Saudi-Iranian Relations and its Implications on American Foreign Policy Derika Weddington Missouri State University, [email protected] As with any intellectual project, the content and views expressed in this thesis may be considered objectionable by some readers. However, this student-scholar’s work has been judged to have academic value by the student’s thesis committee members trained in the discipline. The content and views expressed in this thesis are those of the student-scholar and are not endorsed by Missouri State University, its Graduate College, or its employees. Follow this and additional works at: https://bearworks.missouristate.edu/theses Part of the Defense and Security Studies Commons, International Relations Commons, and the Near and Middle Eastern Studies Commons Recommended Citation Weddington, Derika, "Rivalry in the Middle East: The History of Saudi-Iranian Relations and its Implications on American Foreign Policy" (2017). MSU Graduate Theses. 3129. https://bearworks.missouristate.edu/theses/3129 This article or document was made available through BearWorks, the institutional repository of Missouri State University. The work contained in it may be protected by copyright and require permission of the copyright holder for reuse or redistribution. For more information, please contact [email protected]. RIVALRY IN THE MIDDLE EAST: THE HISTORY OF SAUDI-IRANIAN RELATIONS AND ITS IMPLICATIONS ON AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY A Masters Thesis Presented to The Graduate College of Missouri State University TEMPLATE In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Science, Defense and Strategic Studies By Derika Weddington August 2017 RIVALARY IN THE MIDDLE EAST: THE HISTORY OF SAUDI-IRANIAN RELATIONS AND ITS IMPLICATIONS ON AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY Defense and Strategic Studies Missouri State University, August 2017 Master of Science Derika Weddington ABSTRACT The history of Saudi-Iranian relations has been fraught.
    [Show full text]
  • Lumsden, George Quincy.Toc.Pdf
    The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project AMBASSADOR GEORGE QUINCEY LUMSDEN Interviewed by: Charles Stuart Kennedy Initial interview date: January 11, 2000 Copyright 2006 A ST TABLE OF CONTENTS Background Born and raised in New Jersey Princeton University% Georgetown University US Navy Entered the Foreign Service in 1957 Educational Exchange Program Officer, New -ork .ity 1957-1959 State Department, FS0% German language studies 1959 01mir, Turkey% .onsular Officer 1959-1921 Environment 3arriage Government Bonn, Germany% Economic Officer 1922-1925 Export .ontrol President 6ennedy visit Junior .ircle of Bonn Diplomats Amman, Jordan% .hief of .onsular Section7Political Officer 1925-1927 Damascus anti-Assad demonstration 0mmigration visas US military assistance Environment Palestinians asser and Arab call for Arab Unity Arab-0srael 1927 war Riots Black September 6ing Hussein US Arab70srael Policy 1 Beirut, Lebanon, FS0% Arabic language studies 1927-1929 Environment Saudi students at American University of Beirut Ethnic and religious groups Palestinian refugees asser Arabic language program 6uwait% Economic Officer 1929-1972 Wealth Oil Production eutral 1one division Relations Education Environment Gulf Oil .ompany 0ran 0raq threat 6uwaitis Palestinians Egyptians British Border issues State Department% Desk Officer for 6uwait, Bahrain, Qatar 1972-1975 And United Arab Emirates Paris, France% Economic Officer 1975-1979 0nternational Petroleum Agency Oil .risis 0ranian Revolution France>s world role
    [Show full text]
  • Saudi Aramco: National Flagship with Global Responsibilities
    THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY RICE UNIVERSITY SAUDI ARAMCO: NATIONAL FLAGSHIP WITH GLOBAL RESPONSIBILITIES BY AMY MYERS JAFFE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY JAREER ELASS JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY PREPARED IN CONJUNCTION WITH AN ENERGY STUDY SPONSORED BY THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY AND JAPAN PETROLEUM ENERGY CENTER RICE UNIVERSITY – MARCH 2007 THIS PAPER WAS WRITTEN BY A RESEARCHER (OR RESEARCHERS) WHO PARTICIPATED IN THE JOINT BAKER INSTITUTE/JAPAN PETROLEUM ENERGY CENTER POLICY REPORT, THE CHANGING ROLE OF NATIONAL OIL COMPANIES IN INTERNATIONAL ENERGY MARKETS. WHEREVER FEASIBLE, THIS PAPER HAS BEEN REVIEWED BY OUTSIDE EXPERTS BEFORE RELEASE. HOWEVER, THE RESEARCH AND THE VIEWS EXPRESSED WITHIN ARE THOSE OF THE INDIVIDUAL RESEARCHER(S) AND DO NOT NECESSARILY REPRESENT THE VIEWS OF THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY NOR THOSE OF THE JAPAN PETROLEUM ENERGY CENTER. © 2007 BY THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY OF RICE UNIVERSITY THIS MATERIAL MAY BE QUOTED OR REPRODUCED WITHOUT PRIOR PERMISSION, PROVIDED APPROPRIATE CREDIT IS GIVEN TO THE AUTHOR AND THE JAMES A. BAKER III INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC POLICY ABOUT THE POLICY REPORT THE CHANGING ROLE OF NATIONAL OIL COMPANIES IN INTERNATIONAL ENERGY MARKETS Of world proven oil reserves of 1,148 billion barrels, approximately 77% of these resources are under the control of national oil companies (NOCs) with no equity participation by foreign, international oil companies. The Western international oil companies now control less than 10% of the world’s oil and gas resource base.
    [Show full text]
  • May 15, 2012 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — HOUSE H2687 Koreans
    May 15, 2012 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — HOUSE H2687 Koreans. I even had the privilege to work EXPRESSING SENSE OF HOUSE RE- (2) has characterized Iran as the ‘‘most ac- closely with the late Congressman Solarz, who GARDING IMPORTANCE OF PRE- tive state sponsor of terrorism’’; was Chairman of the East Asian and Pacific VENTING IRAN FROM ACQUIRING Whereas Iran has provided weapons, train- Affairs, the same subcommittee of which I am A NUCLEAR WEAPONS CAPA- ing, funding, and direction to terrorist the Ranking Member today. I am grateful for BILITY groups, including Hamas, Hezbollah, and Shi- ite militias in Iraq that are responsible for his leadership and understanding of the Asia Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Mr. Speaker, I the murders of hundreds of American forces Pacific region. move to suspend the rules and agree to and innocent civilians; Just as Ambassador Lilley and Congress- the resolution (H. Res. 568) expressing Whereas, on July 28, 2011, the Department man Solarz worked hard to protect the human the sense of the House of Representa- of the Treasury charged that the Govern- rights of the North Korean people, we must re- tives regarding the importance of pre- ment of Iran had forged a ‘‘secret deal’’ with main vigilant in helping the people of North venting the Government of Iran from al Qaeda to facilitate the movement of al Korea who struggle daily to escape the op- acquiring a nuclear weapons capa- Qaeda fighters and funding through Iranian pression and tyranny of the North Korean re- bility, as amended. territory; gime. The Clerk read the title of the resolu- Whereas in October 2011, senior leaders of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Again, I thank Chairwoman ROS-LEHTINEN tion.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to Material at the LBJ Library Pertaining to the Middle East
    LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON L I B R A R Y & M U S E U M www.lbjlibrary.org January 1993 (updated June 2011) CO 1-6 MATERIAL AT THE LBJ LIBRARY PERTAINING TO THE MIDDLE EAST (including Aden, Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Palestine, Quatar, Saudi Arabia, South Arabia, Syria, United Arab Republic, and Yemen) INTRODUCTION This guide lists the principal files at the Johnson Library that contain material on the Middle East, but it is by no means exhaustive. While most of the collections listed in the guide have been processed and are available for research, some files may not yet be available. Researchers should consult the Library’s finding aids to locate additional material and to determine whether specific files are available for research. Lending copies of finding aids are available by mail, and some finding aids are on the Library’s web site (http://www.lbjlibrary.org/). Researchers interested in this topic should also consult the Foreign Relations of the United States. This multi-volume series published by the Office of the Historian of the Department of State presents the official documentary historical record of major foreign policy decisions and diplomatic activity of the United States Government. The volumes are available online at the Department of State web site (http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/johnson). NATIONAL SECURITY FILE (NSF) This file was the working file of President Johnson's special assistants for national security affairs, McGeorge Bundy and Walt W. Rostow. Documents in the file originated in the offices of Bundy and Rostow and their staffs, in the various executive departments and agencies, especially those having to do with foreign affairs and national defense, and in diplomatic and military posts around the world.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Thesis
    This electronic thesis or dissertation has been downloaded from the King’s Research Portal at https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/ Saudi Arabia-Iran relations 1929-2013 Al Saud, Turki Bin Khaled Bin Saad Bin Abdulaziz Awarding institution: King's College London The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without proper acknowledgement. END USER LICENCE AGREEMENT Unless another licence is stated on the immediately following page this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ You are free to copy, distribute and transmit the work Under the following conditions: Attribution: You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). Non Commercial: You may not use this work for commercial purposes. No Derivative Works - You may not alter, transform, or build upon this work. Any of these conditions can be waived if you receive permission from the author. Your fair dealings and other rights are in no way affected by the above. Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact [email protected] providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 04. Oct. 2021 A Historical Study of Saudi Arabia – Iran Relations and Regional Order 1929–2014 by Turki bin Khaled al-Saud A Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctorate of Philosophy Middle Eastern and Mediterranean Studies Programme King’s College University of London 2015 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I feel very fortunate to have met many great people, who have turned this long, challenging, and sometimes difficult journey into a wonderful and rewarding experience; many of whom I hope will continue to be lifelong friends.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of Selected Speeches by Anwar El-Sadat
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 281 249 CS 505 545 AUTHOR Littlefield, Robert S. TITLE The Rhetoric of Balance: An Ana ysis of Selected Speeches by Anwar El-Sadat. PUB DATE Apr 87 NOTE 24p.; Paper presented at the Joint Meeting of the Central States Speech Association and Southern Speech Communication Association (St. Louis, MO, April 9-12, 1987). PUB TVPE Speeches/Conference Papers (150) -- Viewpoints (120) -- Historical Materials (060) EDRS PRICE MFOI/PC01 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Discourse Analysis; Foreign Countries; *Foreign Policy; *Intercultural Communication; International Relations; Language Usage; *Persuasive Discourse; Political Power; *Rhetoric; Speeches; World Affairs IDENTIFIERS Egypt; Israel; Middle Eact; *Sadat (Anwar) ABSTRACT Anwar el-Sadat's speaking style became a key factor in his ability to maintain a balance between the goals essential to Egypt's future and the position taken by Israelis in the settlement of the Mideast conflict. Three speeches (two addressing the Egyptian National Assembly, one the Israeli Knessetl were examined to explore the rhetorical choices Sadat made as he addressed different cultural audiences. The study shows that as Egypt's position improved, Sadat's use of ornate language increased, and as he became more powerful and important in the settlement of the Mideast conflict, his speeches contained more personal references and fewer impersonal references to Israel as the "enemy." Sadat's ethos in Israel grew as a result of his speeches and his decision to address the Israelis in person. He balanced his personal philosophy with the points of view held by his separate audiences, and he was thereby able to pursue peace despite external Arab opposition.
    [Show full text]
  • Jacques Benoist-MéChin Papers
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt5g5027cm No online items Register of the Jacques Benoist-Méchin papers Finding aid prepared by David Jacobs Hoover Institution Library and Archives © 2008 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6003 [email protected] URL: http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives Register of the Jacques 2007C70 1 Benoist-Méchin papers Title: Jacques Benoist-Méchin papers Date (inclusive): 1909-1994 Collection Number: 2007C70 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives Language of Material: French Physical Description: 26 manuscript boxes, 1 oversize box(10.8 Linear Feet) Abstract: Acquired in 2007, the Jacques Benoist-Méchin Papers represent a significant addition to the existing holdings in the Hoover Institution Library & Archives relating to the collaborationist Vichy government in France during World War II. Although the papers are only part of the extant Benoit-Méchin materials in various depositories and private collections, the collection in the Hoover Institution Library & Archives contains important documents from all major phases of Benoist-Méchin's multifaceted career as a literary figure, politician, and historian. Creator: Benoist-Méchin, 1901-1983 Hoover Institution Library & Archives Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives Acquisition Information Materials
    [Show full text]
  • Imagereal Capture
    vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv Restitution, Public Policy and the Conflict of Laws Stephen Lee' BAILLB (Hons) (Qld), BCL (Oxon), LLM (Colum), Barrister-at-Law (Qld), Attorney-at- Law (NY). I. Introduction In recent times, and particularly during the last few decades, considerable attention has been devoted to restitution in the conflict of laws as a unified topic. Much of this attention has failed to resolve the confusion that reigns in this difficult and complex field. Some of it has added to the confusion. In fact, a cursory comparison of some of the literature with the decided cases leaves one wondering whether they are addressing the same subject. The subject of restitution in the conflict of laws has a long history, although its component parts might traditionally have been referred to by other labels. Yet commentators frequently assume that restitution in the conflict of laws is a 'new' subject. There seeins to be a sense that one is able to liberate oneself completely from traditional choice of law categories and rules, and interpose a new choice of law category with a new choice of law rule(s). As a result, the choice of law rules for restitution advocated by some writers do not reflect what the courts are doing in practice. A principal feature of those commentaries is that they overlook the topic commonly known in the conflict of laws as the doctrine of public policy. Commentators simply disregard forum public policy as having a significant role to play in resolving restitution choice of law problems. The law of restitution is concerned largely with the entitlement to wealth when things go awry, or not as intended, or, as Mansfield put it, when a defendant ought ex aequo et bono to disgorge an enrichment to the plaintiff.
    [Show full text]