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A zdzess/ 3 Days of Beaute 1 Seasonal Make-over including skin care products and cosmetics 2 Mornings at Kitty Wagner's 6 Facial Treatments 00. 1 Mini Day 0 1 Day of Beaute and Luxury 2 Seasonal Make-overs including skin care products and cosmetics. 4 Days of Beaute 5 Facial Treatments 3 Mornings at Kitty Wagner's $1400. 2 Days of Beaute 2 Body Massages 4 Facial Treatments 1 Morning at Kitty Wagner's stro-00. All "Royalty Club" packages offer a savings of fifteen to twenty percent. The "Royalty Club" and All Other Price-Ranged Beauty and Skin Care Services, are exquisitely presented with a "Kitty Wagner Gift Certificate". Visa & Mastercard Accepted — Limousine Service Available Hunters Square • Farmington Hills • 626-1231 40 Friday, May 1, 1987 NEWS THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Palestinian Council Takes Hard Line Jerusalem (JTA) — Thr- rorist attacks along the Lebanese border and in the administered territories escalated during the past week. Most observers here link the resurgent violence directly to the hard line taken at the Palestine National Council meeting in Algiers last week. Foreign Minister Shimon Peres expressed hope that with the Palestine Liberation Organization's mainstream, headed by Yasir Arafat, edg- ing closer to radicals and ex- tremists in an effort to achieve Palestinian unity, moderate elements in the ter- ritories would be strength- ened. His view arose from the no- tion that Palestinians would realize the PLO offered a dead end, not a way to achieve peace or advance Palestinian interests. But this has proven to be wishful thinking. Once again, the Arab political com- munity responded in accord with the internal politics of the PLO. The East Jerusalem Arabic press hailed the show of unity at Algiers although it under- cut whatever small progress was made in the past two years to bring Palestinians closer to the negotiating table. Slogans smeared on walls rejoiced over Arafat's ap- parent reconciliation with hard-line terrorists such as George Habash and Naif Hawatmeh and news that Syrian-backed PLO dissident who drove Arafat from Lebanon in 1984, were now back in the fold. Thrrorist elements in the territories expressed their approval by violence. Two gasoline bombs were thrown at Israeli vehicles in the mid- dle of Gaza, injuring a three yearold child. In another inci- dent, five Molotov cocktails were thrown at soldiers near the Dahaishe and El-Aroub refugee camps on the Jeru- salem-Hebron road. The Gaza incident aroused fury among Jewish settlers. They drove a motorcade through Gaza, openly dis- playing their weapons as a warning and show of force. Those developments, which coincided with the end of the PNC meeting, made it clear that Israelis would have to re- evaluate the political situa- tion. The severe blows in- flicted on the PLO in the Lebanon war and its frag- mentation during the years that followed, did not bring Palestinian moderates to the fore. Now, with the PLO seemingly reunited, the moderates have run for cover. Shortly before the PNC, the so-called Palestinian parlia- ment-in-exile, convened for its 18th session in Algiers, Peres met twice with local Palesti- nian leaders, some of them known PLO sympathizers. So did Abba Eban, chairman of the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Security Committee. Those meetings yielded no concrete results and Palesti- nians and Israelis now appear farther apart than ever. Boesky Pleads Guilty To Trading Charges New York (JTA) — Ar- bitrager Ivan Boesky, who was a leading Jewish philan- thropist until revelations of his insidertrading of stocks, pleaded guilty in federal court here last week of conspiring to "make false, fictitious and fraudulent statements" to the government. Boesky withdrew from his Jewish communal involve- ment here and cancelled a number of financial pledges last November after he was fined $100 million by the Securities and Exchange Commission for the insider- trading. He has chaired the annual campaign of the UJA- Federation of New York and was a board member and ma- jor contributor to the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, among other insti- tutions. His plea to a limited charge is seen as a shield from most lawsuits by stockholders of other companies who claim they were financially hurt by Boesky's activity. U.S. Assistant Attorney Charles Carberry told the court that Boesky originally - lied to the SEC when he said he had no secret agreement protecting him against losses when he bought shares of the Fischbach Corp. electrical contracting firm. Boesky, 50, was released without bail. At his sen- tencing on August 21 he could receive up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.