32 Friday, August 6, 1982 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS `Arabs Fear the PLO' OM % BOY s WOODWARD bet. 8 & 9 MILE • Valet Parking • t 1: 4 al NEW! NEW! NEW! "WHO'S THAT WOMAN?" CABARET MUSICAL IN THE DOWNSTAIRS GREASEPIT FRI. & SAT. $6 per person For. Reservations: 399-1040 DOUG'S NOW OPEN MONDAYS FOR LUNCH 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. DRINKS 1 /2 OFF Mon. Only By DAVID FRIEDMAN WASHINGTON (JTA) — "I think there does seem to be a hesitation in many countries to accept in their country a group of people who have a pattern of arm- ing themselves and in effect forming a government within a government. It's not anything that a country that can help it will tolerate." This was the reply by Sec- retary of State George Shultz at his Senate confir- mation hearing when he was asked about the diffi- culty in finding an Arab country that would take in the approximately 6,000 Palestine Liberation Organization terrorists now in west Beirut. But Arab re- luctance may have been based on an even greater fear of the PLO than just an implied threat. An example is described by fon-her Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in his sec- ond volume of memoirs, "Years of Upheaval." Kis- singer reports on the PLO's willingness to accept Jor dan as a Palestinian state in return for the overthrow of King Hussein. In mid-1973, Richard Helms, then U.S. Ambas- sador to Iran, wrote Kis- singer that one of his aides had been ap- proached by an associate of PLO chief Yasir Arafat seeking a dialogue with the U.S. on the proposi- tions that "Israel is here to stay" and Jordan should be the place for a Palestinian state. Kissinger replied to Helms that the PLO should be told that while the U.S. was interested in hearing ideas from the Palestinians on how to promote a Middle East peace through negotia- tions, "the overthrow of existing governments in the Arab world was not accept- able; we are committed to the survival of the Kingdom of Jordan." Kissinger said that 10 days later the U.S. received a similar approach from the PLO through King Hassan of Morocco. Then, on Oct. 10, four days after the Yom Kippur War had started, Arafat in a message to the U.S. predicted that Israel would rout Syria and Egypt and said the PLO wanted to participate in the sub- sequent negotiations. This account demon- strates not only the PLO effort to use recognition of Israel as a tactical bar- gaining point as was seen during the Israeli siege of west Beirut, but as Is- raelis have often stressed, a Palestinian state on the West Bank would be more of a threat to Jordan than even to Is- rael. The Palestinian question only became an interna- tional issue after the 1973 oil embargo. "Before 1973, the PLO rarely intruded into international negotia- tions," Kissinger said in his memoirs. And he noted in another pagsage: "The issue of contacts with Palesti- nians was therefore not in 1973 a major policy problem for the United States . . . . The issue of a Palestinian state run by the PLO was not a subject of serious dis- course." JDC Aids the Lebanese NOW APPEARING That Great Group SKYWALKER COMPLETE DINING AND DANCING Lunches Served Mon.-Fri. From 11:30 Dinners Served Mon.-Sat. From 5 p.m. 29200 Orchard Lake Rd. FRANKLIN SHOPPING PLAZA 29145 NORTHWESTERN HWY. (CORNER OF -12 MILE) 356-2310 TRAY CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS OPEN EVERY DAY &A.M. — 9 P.M. SATURDAY TILL AFTER MIDNIGHT 851-4577. ALEXANDER'S Food 13400 W. 9 MILE & COOLIDGE • OPEN 7 DAYS DAILY LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS' 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. FROM $2.95 542-4414 Mon. Thru Sat. 7 a.m. to 11 Sun. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. -- 1 7 DAILY BREAKFAST SPECIALS I FROM 99c to $2.95 1-11 a.m. Mon-Thurs., Sat. & Sun. til 2 pin. 2 EGGS, TOAST & COFFEE 85' EXTRA INCLUDES: SOUP, YEG., COFFEE OR TEA OR 1 SOFT WAFFLE AND COFFEE $1.45 $1.10 DRINX BR 1 HOT CHOCOLATE AND DESSERT 411,7MR mock ••••••••••••••••••••• • • A COMEDY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • KNOCKS LIVE COMEDY AT ARK WEST Thurs. 9:00 pm *SHOWTIME* Fri. 9:00 & 11:00 pm Sat. 9:00 & 11:00 pm from New York and Los Angeles PAUL PRO VE NZA and SUZANNE SWEETZER August 5, 6, 7 12 MILE 4,0,? ARK WEST 1' 1-1 7/ 6,s 696 NEW TALENT NIGHT *Thursday - $2.50* Fri. & Sat. $4.50 Located in Southfield on Northwestern Hwy. dtvv. 12 I\.4.& Telegraph 353- HA- HA • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••• • • • ••0 00 ••• 0 0 * Drinks * Food * Casual Dress * Banquets & Parties * 24818 SOUTHFIELD AT 10 MILE I UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT SPECIALS ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER Offer Expires 10/15/82 deli 01114 A fr Ae: THE CLOCK 557-4324 $10.00 OFF YOUR NEXT PLAZA DELI PARTY THAY. WITH THIS AD . 10 PERSON MINIMUM. PHESENT COUPON BEFORE ORDERING. pla more than any other quality of the mind. —Rochefoucauld ' I Penetration or discern- ment has an air of divina- tion; it pleases our vanity 7 DAYS A WEEK — 24 HOURS FRIED CHICKEN ... : .. FISH & CHIPS The American Jewish Joint Distribution Commit- tee has distributed more than 3,000 foam-rubber mat- tresses and 700 cartons containing kerosene stoves, pots and pans, and eating utensils to Lebanese civi- lians in Tyre and Sidon. Actual distribution is hand- led by the Lebanese Ministry of Social Affairs. Former Track Star Honored By HASKELL COHEN (Copyright 1982, JTA, Inc.) The New York Road Runners' Club has awarded Abel R. Kiviat the club's newly executed President's Medal. Kiviat, 90, is the only man ever to have held world records indoors at 600- yards, 1,000 yards and one mile. Kiviat ran 1:14.0 for 600-yards in 1911. He bet- tered the world record for 1,000-yards three times, running 2:16.2 in 1911, 2:15.8 in 1913 and 2:15.4 in 1914. He ran 4:18.2 to break the world record for the mile in 1913. Kiviat won the silver medal in the Olympic 1,500-meters in 1912. He was the first American to hold the world record out- doors for 1,500-meters, as a mark of 3:55.8 which stood as a world record for five years and as an American record for 16 years. Out- doors he ran 4:14.6 for the mile, only one-tenth second off the world record. . .$2.99 1.99 Includes: Choice of potato, cole slaw and homemade bread - OTHER 24-HOUR SPECIALS BAKED 1/2 CHICKEN BAR-B-Q 1/2 CHICKEN Includes: Choice of pot., cole slaw and homemade bread $2.99 $2.99 BREAKFAST SERVED 24 HOURS FROM $1.09 BREAKFAST— LUNCH—DINNER 24 HOUR SERVICE BIGGEST VALUES ANYWHERE!