Bulletin Board
| WRMEA Archives 1994-1999 - 1997 October-November |
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, October/November 1997
Bulletin Board
Compiled by Janet McMahon
Convenings
The Sisterhood is Global Institute (SIGI) will convene "Rights of Passage: An International Conference on Women's Human Rights Education" at The American University's Center for the Global South in Washington, DC Sept. 26 and 27. For complete information contact SIGI, 4343 Montgomery Ave., Suite 201, Bethesda, MD 20814, phone (301) 657-4355, fax (301) 657-4381.
The Association of Arab-American University Graduates will hold its 30th Annual Convention, on "Arabs, Arab Americans, and the Global Community," at the Georgetown University Conference Center in Washington, DC from Oct. 31 to Nov. 2, featuring keynote speakers Edward Said and Huda Abdel Nasser. For information and registration contact AAUG, 2121 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20007, phone (202) 337-7717, fax (202) 337-3302, e-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Opportunities
American Friends of Neve Shalom/Wahat Al Salam, a national tax-exempt organization providing finacial and other support for the village in Israel where Palestinians and Jews have lived together for over 20 years, is seeking a New York-based executive director with fund-raising experience. Applicants should send by Sept. 15 a r’sum’, cover letter and salary requirements to: Chairman, Search Committee, American Friends of Neve Shalom/Wahat Al Salam, 121 Sixth Ave., #505, New York, NY 10013, e-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) is organizing two Rebuilders Against Bulldozer teams to spend 12 days in Israel/Palestine focusing on the issue of house demolitions. Participants are asked to raise $1,700 to cover costs, and to communicate their experiences to local congregations and the media upon their return. Delegation dates are Oct. 7-19 and Dec. 10-22. For additional information or an application contact CPT, P.O. Box 6508, Chicago, IL 60680, phone (312) 455-1199, fax (312) 666-2677, e-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Appointments
The American University of Beirut has announced that, effective at the end of this year, its new president will be Dr. John Waterbury, director of Princeton University's Center of International Studies, Princeton's William Stewart Tod Professor of Politics and International Affairs, and editor of the quarterly journal World Politics. Dr. Waterbury earned a B.A. in Oriental Studies from Princeton University and a Ph.D. in Political Science from Columbia. He studied Arabic as a Fulbright scholar in Egypt, conducted three years of dissertation research in Morocco and served for six years in Cairo as the Middle East correspondent for the American Universities Field Staff. Dr. Waterbury will succeed David S. Dodge, who has served as acting president since December 1996 and is the great-grandson of AUB founder Daniel Bliss.
Edward S. Walker Jr., current U.S. ambassador to Egypt and former number two to then-U.N. Ambassador Madeleine K. Albright, is expected to be named Martin Indyk's successor as U.S. ambassador to Israel. Daniel Kurtzer. longtime assistant to Middle East coordinator Dennis B. Ross and most recently at the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research, is expected to be nominated as Walker's replacement in Cairo, and William J. Burns, a former deputy to Ross, is expected to be nominated as U.S. ambassador to Jordan. Career foreign service officer and former U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan Richard Dale Kauzlarich has been confirmed as the new ambassador to Bosnia, replacing John Menzies. Named as new U.S. ambassador to Kyrgystan is Anne Marie Sigmund, currently counselor of the U.S. Information Agency.
Deaths
Mohammed Mahdi Al-Jawahri, the Iraqi poet known as "the Singer for the Sunlight," died July 27 in Damascus, Syria at the age of 97. He had lived in Damascus since 1979, when he fled Iraq following a government crackdown on dissidents. Prior to 1958 he was a courtier of Iraqi King Faisal, later becoming an independent journalist writing against the monarchy and its British protectors.
Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Mohammad Rouhani, a leading Shi'i cleric whose espousal of the separation of religion from politics distanced him from Iran's ruling clergy, died July 25 in Qom, Iran, of internal bleeding from an undisclosed ailment at the age of 78. A native of Qom, he was a student of Shi'i spiritual leader Grand Ayatollah Abul Qassim al-Khoel, who died in 1992.
Ahmed Mahmoud Qutub, an Arabic writer and editor with the U.S. Information Agency, died in Annandale, VA of a heart attack at the age of 58. Born in Tulkarm, Palestine, he was an information specialist with the USIS in Tunisia from 1963 to 1983. He joined USIA in Washington in 1983, and in 1995 received Vice President Gore's Hammer Award for government reinvention. Survivors include his wife, Nadia, and three children, Mahmoud, Husam and Yamena.
Marlen Eldredge Neumann, a civic activist and the wife of retired U.S. Ambassador Robert G. Neumann, died July 15 of a pulmonary disorder at Washington Hospital Center at the age of 81. Born in Miraj, India to American parents, she graduated from Rollins College in Winter Park, FL, and earned a master's degree in diplomatic history from Yale University. She accompanied her husband to assignments in Afghanistan, Jordan, Morocco and Saudi Arabia, among other posts, and served as chairman of the Foreign Diplomatic Wives Association and on the board of the Association of American Foreign Service Women in the 1960s and 1970s. In addition to her husband, she is survived by their two sons, U.S. Ambassador to Algeria Ronald Eldredge Neumann and Gregory W. Neumann of California, and five grandchildren.
Mildred Alice Vardaman, a retired foreign service officer and Middle East specialist with the U.S. Information Agency, died June 26 of pneumonia in a Sylacaua, AL nursing home at the age of 92. A native of Alabama, she graduated from George Washington University in Washington, DC, and began her government career in 1934 as a placement officer. She worked for several agencies before transferring to the State Department in 1945 and to the U.S. Information Agency when it was created in 1953. Her assignments included cultural affairs officer in Beirut and cultural center director in Athens, as well as several positions in USIA's Washington area office for the Near East and South Asia. Retiring in 1967, she was a life member of the Middle East Institute and of Diplomatic and Consular Officers Retired.
Kathryn F. McAndrew, a neonatal nurse practitioner and former clinical supervisor in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of the Saudi Aramco base hospital in Dhahran, died March 13 at the University of Tennessee Bowld Hospital of cardiogenic shock, at the age of 40. A member of numerous professional organizations, she was a 1978 graduate of the College of William and Mary, earning a bachelor of science and nursing from the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing at Case Western Reserve University in 1980 and a master of science degree in nursing from the University of Tennessee-Health Sciences Center in 1993. She worked at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston from 1981 to 1987, in Saudi Arabia from 1987 to 1991, and was a neonatal nurse at the Regional Medical Center at Memphis at the time of her death. Her parents, Thomas and Constance McAndrew, live in Tucson, AZ, where they retired after a number of foreign service assignments including Beirut and Basra in the 1960s.
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|

