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It was sponsored by Al Fajr, the Jerusalem-based Arab newspaper considered a supporter of the PLO and funded also by the Australian Broadcasting Corp. and Newsday, the Long Island, N.Y., newspaper. But at a press conference Monday the poll, Newsday was not mentioned in the press release. Seltzer claimed that Newsday wanted the names and addresses of the 1,024 persons polled. However, this was denied by Peter Eisner, foreign editor of Newsday, who said News- day considers the poll to be accurate and plans to use it someday in a series on the West Bank and Gaza. The poll itself found that 93.5 percent believe the PLO "is the sole and legitimate representative of the Pales- tinian people." Of the others, 14.6 percent said Jordan represents the Palestinians while 4.2 percent chose Egypt, 2.1 percent Syria, 2.1 pecent "another Arab coun- try" and 77.1 had no choice. Asked which leader they prefer, 71.1 percent said it was PLO leader Yasir Arafat, 3.4 percent picked Hussein, and 2.3 percent Libya's Muammar Qaddafi. Syria's Hafez Assad and Iran's Ayatollah Kohmeini each were selected by 1.7 percent. The poll found that 80.6 percent considered that United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 should not be the basis for solving the Palestinian prob- lem. Of these people, 56.8 per- cent said the reason was that it does not recognize the right of Palestinians to self deter- mination, the official PLO position, and 33.4 percent said it was inadequate to solve the problem. Asked for their preferred solution, 77.9 percent wanted "the establishment of a demo- cratic Palestinian state in all of Palestine" and 16.9 percent wanted a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza. As an interim solution 49.7 percent would accept a Pale- stinian state in the West Bank and Gaza while 43.2 percent wanted to continute "the struggle" for all of Palestine. Only 6.3 percent opted for a return of Jordan- ian rule. The poll found that 78.4 percent consider acts of force justifed while 11.5 percent did not. In addition, 83 per- cent said the primary cause of violence was the struggle for self-determination rather than conditions under Israel, selected by 8.4 percent. On specific acts of violence, 87.6 percent said the hijack- ing of the Israeli bus on the Tel Aviv-Haifa highway was justified; 81.2 percent justi- fied the attack against the U.S. Marine compound in Lebanon in 1983; 60.5 percent approved of placing a bomb on an El Al plane and 20.7 percent approved placing a bomb on any civilian plane and 36.9 percent said the at- tacks on the Rome and Vien- na airports last December were justified. Both Shadid and Seltzer maintained that the poll demonstrated that Pales- tinians would be willing to ac- cept a compromise if it was negotiated by Arafat They argued for Arafat's inclusion in the negotiations, some- thing both the U.S. and Israel has rejected. Hammer Elected Minister Of Religious Affairs Jerusalem (JTA) — The Na- tional Religious Party (NRP) last week elected Knesset Member Zevulun Hammer as the successor to Dr. Yosef Burg as Minister of Religious Affairs. Hammer won 573 to 369 over Moshe Salomon, the Director General of the Ministry. It was not yet clear when Hammer would assume office, as Burg wanted to postpone his resignation un- til the rotation of the prime ministership takes place the middle of next month. The NRP would like to in- stall Hammer in the Cabinet as early as next week, The elections market not only the end of Burg's long political career (he has been a minister since the beginning of the state), but also a decline in the powers of his once dominant Lamifne fac- tion. Not only did the fac- tion's candidate lose to Ham- mer, but Rafael Ben-Natan, Burg's closest associate and formerly a strong figure in the , NRP, was defeated in his bid to be elected the party's political secretary.