YEAR N REVIEW 5748 YEAR IN REVIEW capitals to plead his cause, he also had to shuttle between the Prime Minister's office and the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem because Shamir and Peres no longer spoke to each other. Hussein's Bold Move SUPREME COURT TROUBLES beset President Reagan first when he appointed conservative Robert Bork, who withdrew when it became apparent he would not be confirmed by the Senate, and then Douglas Ginsburg (left), who was forced to withdraw when it became known that he had smoked marijuana in the 1960s. Reagan's third nominee, Anthony Kennedy (shown here with Reagan), won swift approval. SEN. DANIEL INOUYE (D-Hawaii) was forced to withdraw his sponsorship of a refugee aid bill to help North African Jews in France after it was criticized by the State Department and others. The Sephardic Jews are not classified as refugees by either France or the United States. BLACK-JEWISH RELATIONS were tense this year, often revolving around Jesse Jackson and his campaign. In Chicago, where the late Mayor Harold Washington is shown visiting a Jewish neighborhood following a graffiti espisode, black-Jewish tension increased to the point that leaders of the two communities met and issued a statement callling for an end to anti-Semitic acts. Peres spent much of the year drumming up sup- port for his own peace plan which, like Shultz's, hinged on Israel negotiating with a joint Palestinian-Jordanian delegation. But his diplomatic and political aspirations ap- peared to be dashed this summer when Jordan's King Hussein, in a dramatic announcement, severed his kingdom's 40-year link with the West Bank. Hussein said he was breaking Jordan's legal and administrative ties with the Israeli-occupied territory and ending the unity between the West Bank and the east bank of the Jordan River — his own Hashemite kingdom. Besides severely damaging the delicate for- mulas devised by both Peres and Shultz, both of which were predicated on a Jordanian-Palestinian partnership, Hussein's bold move presented a direct challenge to Yassir Arafat and the PLO. While the monarch acknowledged that the PLO was the "sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people" and supported its call for an independent Palesti- nian state, many Mideast analysts felt Hussein was trying to outflank his long-time enemy, Arafat. Hussein's motive appeared to be, as usual, sur- vival. He is clearly troubled by Israel's inability to solve the intifada, and worried about 850,000 restive Palestinians calling for their own homeland. His reasoning may well be to allow the PLO to come in and demonstrate how disorganized they are — incapable of serving the Palestinians politically or economically. According to this gamble, once the West Bank inhabitants realize that they are stateless and poorer, living under Israeli rule and denied access to visit relatives in Jordan, they will call for Hus- sein to return as their champion and the PLO will be forced to oblige. The Next Move Is The PLO's ISSUES BRITAIN'S CHIEF RABBI, Immanuel Jakobovits, became a member of the House of Lords in February. He thus became the first Chief Rabbi of Britain to be ennobled since Jews were allowed to resettle in England in 1656. Pressure is building, then, on the PLO to take up the challenge. Its leaders will be meeting in the coming weeks to decide whether or not to declare their organization a government-in-exile, and there have been reports that it even may consider recognizing Israel in return for a Palestinian state on the West Bank and Gaza. Such speculation calls to mind the words of Ab- ba Eban, who once said that the Palestinians have never lost a chance to miss an opportunity. But there is growing concern in Israel that if the PLO does call Jerusalem's bluff — an admittedly big "if ' — the Israelis will be at a loss to respond positive- ly while the United States would jump at the op- portunity to talk to the PLO. No major political par- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 123