• L TE R 4e/cot- gm Of Harvard Row Designers of Fine Furs Complete Fur Service Abie Nathan Convinced Arafat Wants Peace W OLF BLITZER Special to The Jewish News W ashington — Israeli peace activist Abie Nathan has emerg- ed from a meeting in Tunis with Yassir Arafat encourag- ed that the PLO chairman is in fact very sincere in his quest for peace with Israel. "Absolutely," Nathan said in an overseas telephone in- terview from his room at the Tunis Hilton. "I am more con- vinced of this today than ever." Nathan expressed hope that Arafat would declare public- ly what he said privately to him in Tunis. "Arafat must appear before the television cameras and say it," Nathan said. "He must address himself direct- ly to the people of Israel. I told him that that was the only way anybody would believe him." The 61-year-old activist said that he had in fact prepared a draft speech for Arafat to deliver. "I gave him a copy > and explained to him how it would benefit the PLO," Nathan said. Nathan, who operates the "Voice of Peace" radio station off Israel's coast in the Mediterranean, said that he flew to Tunis on Friday, Sept. 9, after receiving word that Arafat was prepared to meet with him. Nathan, who tra- vels on a British passport, had spent several days in Tunis last month but was unable to meet with the PLO leader because he was then in Baghdad. After waiting in his Tunis hotel room for three days, Nathan received a telephone call inviting him to meet with Arafat. He he had almost given up on a meeting. "I had written an angry let- ter to Arafat," he said. "I had already signed it just when the call came through." According to Nathan, the PLO chairman is preparing to make some dramatic new an- nouncements in the coming weeks, but said that Arafat, while still in control of the PLO, was having his own in- ternal problems pushing through a new strategy. "I wouldn't want to have his political problems," Nathan said. "They're worse than ours." Nathan said that he was not concerned about the Israeli law barring Israeli citizens from meeting with the PLO. He said that that law was designed to prevent spying. "If the people think that I was spying then I want to go to prison," he said. "I have been there before." In 1966 Nathan flew into Egypt to meet with Gamal Abdel Nasser, and again on three other occasions bettwen 1967 and 1973. After one trip, he served 40 days in a Israeli prison. Nathan had met with Ara- fat once before, in west Beirut, during the summer of 1982, just before Arafat and his troops were forced to leave the Lebanese capital by the invading Israeli army. Nathan said that Arafat makes a much better impres- sion in person than he does in the news media. He said that Arafat actually comes across as a reasonable, moderate person. "We don't see the real Arafat on television in Israel," he said. "They won't let us!' Meanwhile, following ear- lier talks in Tunis with Arafat and other high- ranking PLO officials, an American Jewish peace ac- tivist has predicted that a Palestinian "Declaration of Independence" will be issued before the end of this year. Dr. Jerome Segal of the University of Maryland said the PLO has established two committees in Tunis to draft the statement which would lead to a "provisional govern- ment of Palestine!' In an interview Segal said the declaration would cite the 1947 United Nations parti- tion resolution which called for an Arab and a Jewish state in Palestine. "Israel's Declaration of In- dependence also cites the resolution," Segal said, in- sisting that the PLO saw the Resolution as something ex- tending "political legitimacy" to a Palestinian state. "It's one resolution that the whole world has accepted," Segal said. But the PLO, he added, would offer to nego- tiate new boundaries for the state along side Israel. Segal said the PLO's legal committee, chaired by Dr. Anis Al-Qasem, and its political committee, chaired by Khaled Al-Hassan, were also drafting what the PLO has called "a new political program." "Nothing is yet set in con- crete," Segal said, pointing out that the exact date for the next meeting of the Palestine National Council (PNC) has not even been firmly set. 11 MILE & LAHSER Phone: 368-0860 taNk. HAIR & CO. and Totally Unique Things for You! 626-1999 COLONY INTERIORS r - ;-- Hours: Mon. 9-3, Tues. & Wed. 9-5 Thurs. & Fri. 9-8, Sat. 9-4 HAIR & CO. 30878 Orchard Lake Rd. • Farmington Hills • 851-3590 TABLE CUSS PADS SAVE $18 ON ALL SIZE PADS Around the World r/P WE TRAVEL!! in Search of Exotic -I" STARTING SEPTEMBER 12th, 1988 WE WILL BE OPEN MONDAYS WM IL %%\ NW maul '1011111/41, 0/ • • 0 , ' 1 04 il $ 4 8 8 8 E' /I L - '. g - - Up to 42"x64" 2 WEEK DELIVERY F.O.B. 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Film Festival: September 25-October 12 "His People" (Edward Simon, 1925) September 19, 7 p.m. (Silent Film with organ accompaniment) September 25, 3 p.m. "The House of Rothschild" (Alfred Werker, 1934) "Crossfire" (Edward Dmytryk, 1947) September 28, 7 p.m. "Marjorie Morningstar" (Irving Rapper, 1958) October 2, 3 p.m "Good-bye Columbus" (Larry Peerce, 1969) October 6, 7 p.m. October 10, 7 p.m. "Next Stop Greenwich Village" (Paul Mazursky, 1976) "Annie Hall" (Woody Allen 1977) October 12, 7 p.m. Admission: $3.50 adults, $1.50 children and students with ID. Michigan Theater, 603 East Liberty, Ann Arbor, 668-8480. Sponsored by the Program in Judaic Studies of The University of Michigan and by The Anti-Defamation League of lYnai B'rith. For further information, call 763-9047. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 33