=11111111111111111111111111111111114: AWARD WINNING PHOTOGRAPHY BY tit RONALD'S HAIR & CO. BUD HOLZMAN AL TOGR.APHERS 851-3590 HAIR FASHIONS BY RONALD 284 S. HUNTER BIRMINGHAM - 48011540 - 6922 1111111111111111111111111111111111 23720 Southfield Rd. Southfield, Mi. 557-0680 Open 7 Days • Eves. By Appt. Oopoi These stores were not listed in our previous ads. ARTISTIC SPECIALTIES • ilona and gallery LADIES • Sherri's Zoeivnza4z,76 HUNTERS SQUARE/TALLY HALL ORCHARD LAKE ROAD AT FOURTEEN MILE • FARMINGTON HILLS • 855-3444 HELEN DAVIS THE STADIUM 855-4460 ORCHARD LAKE & 14 Landscaping • Design Service • Unusual Plants 851-5440 Open 7 days a week 10 minutes from Downtown Birmingham _ 5899 W. Maple Rd. • V3 Mi. West of Orchard Lake Rd. 42 Friday, May 1, 1987 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS PLO Unity: A Victory For Hardliners Special to The Jewish News AT HUNTER'S SQUARE West Bloomfield ANALYSIS 30878 Orchard Lake Rd. Farmington Hills, Mi. erusalem — The dra- matic reconciliation between the moderate and rejectionist wings of the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization (PLO) last week has killed any chance of an early breakthrough in Middle East peace, according to senior Israeli political analysts. It has also provoked spec- ulation that the stunning vic- tory of the PLO's hard-line rejectionist elements may inspire a long hot summer of violent political upheavals among Palestinians from both inside and outside the West Bank and Gaza. Israeli analysts are clearly alarmed, though not entirely surprised, that PLO chair- man Yasser Arafat has for- mally abandoned his path of "diplomacy" and "modera- tion" in favor of the dogmatic "armed struggle" approach of the rejectionists. The rapprochement, which was cemented at a meeting of the Palestine National Coun- cil in Algiers, has ended more than four years of bitter rivalry and estrangement be- tween Arafat and the hard- liners, who reject any political compromise as a basis for attaining their goal of an independent Palestinian state on the ashes of a vanquished Israel. Observers note that while two headline-catching rejec- tionist leaders—Abu Nidal and Ahmed Jibril—were ab- sent from the Algiers meet- ing, seven other faction leaders, including the heads of the two major groups, Dr. George Habash and Naif Hawatmeh, were present. Dressed in olive-drab military uniform, Arafat received a tumultuous recep- tion from delegates at the plush Algerian conference center when he reverted to the old rhetoric of the rejec- tionists, describing the meeting as "a session of unity and steadfastness:' The PLO leader pledged to continue the armed struggle against Israel until the Palestinians had returned to their homes and established an independent state with Jerusalem as its capital. At the same time, he ex- pressed support for the pro- posed international peace conference on the Middle East. But he insisted that the PLO must participate as a full partner, a condition that sli Arafat: The PLO leader has rebounded from seeming defeat — again. is unacceptable to both Israel and Jordan and thus effec- tively torpedoes any further discussion on the subject, procedural or substantive. Observers believe that Arafat's uncompromising rhetoric, which followed a week of tough preparatory meetings between the PLO leader and the rejectionist leaders, is evidence of a new direction in PLO policies. The split within the PLO was caused when Arafat, ex- pelled from his headquarters in Beirut along with his fighters after the Israeli inva- sion of Lebanon in 1982, threw in his lot with the moderate leaders hi the Arab world. He established close rela- tions with President Hosni Mubarak, who is reviled for upholding Egypt's peace treaty with Israel, and he ex- pressed a readiness to pursue a diplomatic solution to the Palestinian problem in tan- dem with King Hussein of Jordan. Among the most immed- iate effects of Arafat's new hard-line approach has been the announcement last week that the PLO is abrogating a 1985 agreement with King Hussein on a joint strategy for achieving Middle East peace. The essence of the accord was an agreement by Arafat and King Hussein to jointly negotiate an Israeli with- drawal from the West Bank and Gaza, which would form a homeland for the Palesti- nians in confederation with Jordan. King Hussein suspended the accord in February last year after Arafat apparently reneged on a promise to