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Lieu's office said a decision was expected Wednesday or Thursday on whether to proceed with the boycott. Lowe's said company officials are trying to make arrangements to talk directly to Lieu about his concerns and clarify the company's position. Suehaila Amen, whose family is featured on "All-American Muslim," said she was disappointed by the Lowe's decision. "I'm saddened that any place of business would succumb to bigots and people trying to perpetuate their negative views on an entire community," Amen, 32, told The Detroit News on Sunday. Dawud Walid, Michigan director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said his group felt "extreme disappointment" at Lowe's "capitulation to bigotry." Walid said he has heard expressions of anger and calls for a boycott by Muslims but said a key to resolving the Lowe's advertising controversy will be how non-Muslim religious leaders and others react to Lowe's decision. "I will be picking up the phone tomorrow to some of our friends and allies to explain the situation to them," Walid said Sunday.
[Associated
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