I NEWS I ✓ttle/et/cc C ae /1/4/c SEE THE ALL NEW 1989 FLEETWOOD SEDAN and SEDAN DEVILLE SEVERAL NOW AVAILABLE IN STOCK Sedan de Ville Fleetwood Sedan T. < LONG ON STYLE AND LUXURY The 1989 Cadillac Fleetwood Sedan • New, longer design • Distinctive profile with fender • Luxurious interior ALSO • Increased legroom • Tufted seating areas • "Tiffany" carpeting t a LkEe Aadvantage so f our NO MONEY DOWN! NEW 1989 SEDAN DEVILLE Lease for 35 $430 Per Month Stock #9095 or purchase $24 for 9 500* Ly(teeket 7100 ORCHARD LAKE RD, WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI 48322 PHONE 851.7200 )u4.Grp,A) - The "Good Service" Dealer" l[pillsoginv-,:as OPIIIRAT MOTOR, CORPORATION $60 mo. closed-end lease for qualified customers. Lease payment based on 60 mos., 75,000 mile limitation. 10$ per mile for excessive mileage. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at lease and for $9,922.17. Lessee is responsible for excessive wear and tear. 1st payment in advance w/refundable security deposit of $450.00. To get total payments, multiply payment times 60. 4% use tax and plates extra. 'The invoice total includes factory holdback and advertising association assessments, and Is not a net factory cost price to the dealer. Invoice may also not reflect the ultimate cost of the vehicle due to the possibility of future rebates, allowances, discounts and incentive awards fr ,-- the manufacturer. •*Just add tax, title. 18 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1988 Arafat Continued from Page 1 338 and called for a resolution to the Palestinian refugee problem. A spokesman for the Israeli embassy in Washington said that no one would comment until the text of the declara- tion could be studied. Washington's community of Jewish activists, according to Jewish News Capitol Cor- respondent James Besser, reacted with surprise to the statements from Stockholm. The delegation that met with Arafat, representing the International Center for Peace in the Middle East, in- cluded New York lawyer Rita Hauser; Avraham Udovitch, a Middle East specialist at Princeton University; Mena- chem Rosensaft, a leader of the Labor Zionist Alliance and a leader of Holocaust sur- vivors activities; Drora Kass, executive director of the Center; and Stanley Schien- baum, an economist. Widespread reports that Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, a vice president of the World Jewish Congress, and Rabbi Alexander Schindler, presi- dent of the Union of Ameri- can Hebrew Congregations, were involved in the delega- tion, but withdrew before the Rita Hauser: Talks with Arafat. meetings in Stockholm, ap- pear to be incorrect. "We were asked to participate," said Hertzberg, "and we both declined. End of story." According to several sources, preliminary talks between the delegation, the Swedish government and the PLO had led the group to ex- pect a statement from Arafat on Israel's right to exist that would come closer to U.S. demands as a precondition for any contact with the PLO. "I think they went in the expectation of some kind of some kind of very forthright statement," said William Quandt, a top Middle East specialist with the Brookings Arafat-Jewish Statement "The Palestinian Na- tional Council met in Algiers from Nov. 12 to 15, 1988, and announced the Declaration of In- dependence which pro- claimed the state of Palestine and issued a political statement. The following explana- tion was given by the representatives of the PLO of certain important points in the Palestinian Declara- tion of Independence and the political statement adopted by the PNC in Algiers. Affirming the principle incorporated in those U.N. resolutions which call for a two-state solution of Israel and Palestine, the PNC: 1. Agreed to enter into peace negotiations at an international conference under the auspices of the U.N., with the participa- tion of the permanent members of the Security Council and the PLO as the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, on an equal footing with the other parties to the con- flict; such an international conference be held on the basis of U.N. Resolutions 242 and 338 and the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, without external in- terference, as provided in the U.N. Charter, in- cluding the right to an in- dependent state, which conference should resolve the Palestinian problem in all its aspects; 2. Established the in- dependent state of Palestine and accepted the existence of Israel as a state in the region; 3. Declared its rejection and condemnation of ter- rorism in all its forms, in- cluding state terrorism; 4. Called for a solution to the Palestinian refugee problem in accordance with international law and practices and relevant U.N. resolutions (including right of return or compensation). The American per- sonalities strongly sup- ported and applauded the Palestinian Declaration of Independence and the political statement adopted in Algiers and felt there was no further im- pediment to a direct dialogue between the United States government and the PLO."