I was in college from 1976-1980, so my tenure spanned the fall of the Shah and the capture of the US embassy. We had many middle eastern students in our civil engineering program, including some from Iran, some from Jordan, a couple from Lebanon, etc. My best estimate is about ten Iranian students in my class alone. We also had a few middle eastern women in our program, one of who I know for certain was from Iran ("M"). A couple of the others may also have been from Iran but I didn't remember now.
M was fairly western in her outlook (her father had a some position in the Shah's regime; her best friend in our program was an American gal). M was a very good student, very well-liked, and ended up graduating near the top of our class. A couple of the Iranian guys were also fairly western in their outlook (one even married an American gal) and they didn't seem to have a problem with M getting an education. However, the rest of the Iranian guys had a more "traditional" viewpoint. On the one hand they would criticize M for being "too American" (she wore contemporary American style clothes) and on the other hand they would contantly pester her for her class notes. (To be fair, they pestered a lot of us for our class notes. As you can imagine, these guys were not as successful as those of us who actually went to class all the time and took our own notes, but I digress.)
Several times I witnesses one or more of these "traditional" Iranian guys pestering M in Farsi for her class notes. Each time, her response would be "We're in American, we speak English." Then she would walk away and leave these losers with dumbfounded expressions. I don't think they ever figured it out.
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"Is it the only lesson of history that mankind is unteachable?"
--Winston S. Churchill