OPINION CONTENTS CLOSE-UP 24 Back Door DAVID HOLZEL Children of mixed marriages find an easy way out of Judaism. SPORTS 52 Gridiron Judge MIKE ROSENBAUM Jerry Marekbreit's career spans touch football and the Super Bowl. BUSINESS 56 Kosher Survival SUSAN WEINGARDEN Sit-down kosher eateries continue to struggle in Detroit. PLO leader Yassir Arafat addresses the PNC: 'Implicit' recognition of Israel is meaningless. How Should The U.S. React To Palestinian Independence? DR. MITCHELL BARD A s expected, the Palestinian Na- tional Council (PNC) has declared Palestinian independence for the West Bank and Gaza. The media seized on the announcement that the Palestine Liberation Organization accepts United Nation Resolution 242 as a basis for negotiations as an indication that the PLO has finally recognized Israel's right to exist. The truth is that the PNC meeting has made no dramatic changes from past policy. Israel already has said as much, but the Palestinians expected a negative response. Their target audience was the United States, so it is President Reagan's reaction which will determine the success of their initiative. Reagan should not change U.S. policy toward the PLO because the PNC meeting in Algiers did not alter the PLO's tradi- tional positions. Yes, the PLO now accepts 242, but its interpretation of the resolution, unlike that of the United States, is that Israel must withdraw from all the occupied territories. In addition, the PLO still refused to ex- plicitly acknowledge Israel's legitimacy. "Implicit" recognition based on 242's references to Israel is meaningless. The PLO insists that a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital be established, yet both Reagan and President-elect Bush oppose the creation of such a state. The PLO based its declaration of in- dependence on Resolution 181, the U.N. resolution that partitioned Palestine and called for the creation of a Jewish and an Mitchell Bard is a foreign policy analyst in Washington. Arab state. This suggests that the PLO is not satisfied with an Israeli withdrawal to the 1967 borders, but expects a rollback to the 1947 borders. Those borders are no longer relevant. Israel has fought six wars since 1947 and cannot be expected to give up territory it acquired in the course of defense. The PLO renounced terrorism, but the organization reserved the right to "resist" in the occupied territories. This has been the PLO's policy for years. The assertion that it would not engage in terrorism outside of Israel has been frequently proved worthless; moreover, there is no reason Israel or the United States should be satisfied with a PLO pledge to restrict terrorism to the oc- cupied territories. Just days before the Israeli election, a bus was firebombed and a woman and two children killed. Does the PNC endorsement of such actions reflect evidence of moderation? The most significant outcome of the PNC meeting received no publicity from the American press. That was the failure to repudiate the PLO Charter which calls for Israel's destruction. The Palestinians displayed un- precedented unity during the meeting, but if the past is any indication, that facade will quickly dissipate. Several of the mili- tant factions expressed displeasure with the marginal steps the PNC took toward moderation and they will inevitably oppose them in the coming months. In addition, a number of Palestinian factions were not represented in Algiers. Several of these groups are allied with Syria and have routed PLO leader Yassir Arafat's supporters in Lebanon. Others are Muslim fundamentalist organizations that Continued on Page 10 EDUCATION 58 Quiz Kids HEIDI PRESS Waler Field's history quiz adds spice to education. 75 ENTERTAINMENT Nightflight HEIDI PRESS Jay Roberts has transformed overnight into a wake-up call. BOOKS Starr And Stripes 95 ELIZABETH KAPLAN The first Jewish president is kidnapped in this thriller. YOUTH 101 Keeping Faith STEVEN M. HARTZ Young local Jews are finding roots in Orthodox youth groups. DEPARTMENTS 34 36 63 66 70 75 90 98 106 112 114 142 Inside Washington Synagogues For Seniors For Women Here's To . . . Entertainment On Campus Ann Arbor Engagements Births Single Life Obituaries CANDLELIGHTING November 25, 1988 4:45 p.m. Sabbath ends Nov. 26: 5:59 p.m. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 7