January 1989, Page 50
TIE Exchange: Training, Information, & Education Exchange
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Dr. Abdelaziz Hamzaoui, former Tunisian Permanent Representative
to the United Nations in Geneva, presented his credentials as the
new Tunisian Ambassador to the United States on November 8th. Dr.
Hamzaoui has served as ambassador of Tunisia to the European Economic
Community, Iran, Pakistan, and Canada. He has a Ph.D. from Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy and is a graduate of the Harvard Business
School.
Dr. Stephen Buck, a Department of State Foreign Service
Officer, and former deputy chief of mission in Oman, has been named
Director of the Sultan Qaboos Center of the Middle East Institute
for one year.
Scholars doing research on contemporary Tunisia are invited
to propose topics which they would be interested in reporting on
at an international conference on the Political Economy of Tunisia
to be held at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International
Studies in Washington, D.C. Apr 7-8, 1989 (tentative). Interested
participants should send a topic and one-page abstract to: Professor
I.W. Zartman, SAIS, 1740 Mass. Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036.
For the first time, a Western political periodical is appearing
in Arabic translation, almost verbatim and simultaneously. The respected
monthly Le Monde Diplomatique, an offshoot of the French Le Monde
daily, made its Arabic debut in October, with a print run of 45,000
copies.
King Fahd of Saudi Arabia recently laid the foundation stone
to mark the expansion of the Holy Mosque in Makkah. The $2 billion
project will expand the structure to four times its present size
and permit the accommodation of 650,000 pilgrims.
Egypt and Algeria announced the restoration of diplomatic
relations on November 24. Only Lebanon, Libya and Syria remain without
diplomatic ties to Egypt.
Thomas R. Pickering, a career foreign service officer, has
been named ambassador to the United Nations. Pickering just completed
a 3 1/2-year assignment as ambassador to Israel. He has also served
as US ambassador in Jordan, Nigeria, and El Salvador.
The Arab Industry ministers agreed in November to reinstate
Egypt in the Arab Organization for Industrial Development.
The United Palestinian Appeal celebrated its tenth year
of humanitarian aid to the Palestinian people this month. Because
of the intifadah, more funds are needed than ever before for such
programs as supplying clinics with equipment and medicine and financing
projects for the handicapped. Donations may be sent to UPA, 2100
M St. NW, Suite 409, Washington, DC 20037.
PUBLICATIONS
"A Touch of Genius- The Life of T.E. Lawrence,"
by Malcolm Brown and Julia Cave. J.M. Dent and Sons, London, 1988.
"Crosscurrents in the Gulf," edited by H. Richard
Sindelar III and J.E. Peterson, Routledge, London, 1988. Available
from The Middle East Institute, Washington, D.C.
"The Arab Gulf States. Steps Toward Political Participation,"
by J.E. Peterson. Center for Strategic and International Studies,
Washington, 1988.
"Atlas of the Middle East," Macmillan, New York,
1988.
"Iran and the United States," a Cold War Case
Study, by Richard W. Cottam, University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh,
1988.
"Asad: The Struggle for the Middle East," by Patrick
Seale. I.B. Taurus, London, 1988.
"For Lust of Knowing. Memoirs of an Intelligence Officer,"
by Archibald Roosevelt, Jr. Boston: Little Brown and Co., 1988.
TRADE AND FINANCE
The Department of Commerce is sponsoring the U.S. Products
for Development Catalog Exhibition to be held in nine countries
in North Africa and the Middle East, Jan-June 1989. Themes include
agricultural equipment and supplies, food processing and packaging
equipment, building products, construction and oil field equipment,
computers, and many others. For information, contact Louis Quay,
Dept of Commerce, HCHB 2119, Washington, D.C. (202) 377-3973.
CONFERENCES, LECTURES, AND SEMINARS
The Middle East Institute, the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
International Studies and the Royal Institute of International Affairs
in London will cosponsor a major conference on "The Iranian
Revolution Ten Years Later: What has been its Global Impact?"
in Washington, D.C. Feb 3-4, 1989.
The Textile Museum, in Washington, DC, will feature a lecture,
"The History of the Art of Palestinian Embroidery" by
Hanan Munayyer on Jan. 21 at 10:30 a.m. A number of dresses from
different parts of historic Palestine will be exhibited.
LANGUAGE COURSES
Georgetown University has announced an intensive Arabic
Language Institute program to be held June 12-August 18, 1989. The
Arabic Department, the School of Languages and Linguistics, and
the Summer School, in cooperation with the School of Advanced International
Studies of the Johns Hopkins University in Washington, D.C. will
offer: Basic Modern Standard Arabic I and II; Intermediate Modern
Standard Arabic I and II; Media Arabic I and II; and Formal Spoken
Arabic I and II. Session I runs June 12-July 14; Session II July
17-August 18. The program is open to graduate and undergraduate
students and to persons who are not academically affiliated but
need a knowledge of Arabic for professional or other valid reasons.
For application forms and information, contact: Karin C. Ryding,
Director, Arabic Language Institute, Arabic Department, Georgetown
University, Washington, D.C. 20057. (202) 687-0100.
TRAVEL
The Smithsonian Associates are planning a tour to Turkey's
''Eastern Reaches," June 7-24. Travel east from Ankara and
rediscover the ancient Orient, land of the Hurrians, Hittites, Georgians,
and early Turkic tribes. For information, contact Smithsonian National
Associates, I 100 Jefferson Drive, SW, Washington, DC 20560 or call
(202) 357-4700.
Material submitted by Exchange readers will be considered
for publication as space and circumstance allow. "Facts &
Figures" items from "old Middle East hands" especially
welcome. Editor: John T. Haldane. Write to TIE Exchange P.O.
Box 53062, Washington, DC 20009, or call 202-939-6050 or 1-800-368-5788. |