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JEWISH NEWS T-SHIRT 20300 Civic Center Dr. Southfield, Mich. 48076-4138 NAME This offer is for new subscriptions only. Cur- rent subscribers may order the T-shirt for $4.75. Allow four weeks delivery. ADDRESS CITY (Circle One) (Circle One) 12 STATE ZIP 1 year: $26 2 years: $46 Out of State: $33 Enclosed $ ADULT EX. LG. ADULT LARGE ADULT MED. CHILD LARGE CHILD MED. CHILD SMALL FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1989 Talks Must Include PLO, Secret Report Says Tel Aviv (JTA) — A secret Israeli intelligence report prepared for top government officials says a dialogue with the Palestinians is impossible without the Palestine Libera- tion Organization. The report, which says ,the PLO has undergone a sub- stantive change for the better, also concludes that the Palestinian uprising will not stop in the foreseeable future unless Israel engages in talks with the PLO. Details of the annual in- telligence report, whicb was recently submitted to senior government figures in Jerusalem, were leaked to the Israeli news media this week, possibly to coincide with Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's convening of an in- ternational Jewish solidarity conference in Jerusalem. Shamir has resolutely refused ever to negotiate with the PLO, a position that was challenged at the conference this week. The report was prepared by what were described as "authorized elements for ap- praisal," all of whom are said to have agreed that the in- tifada has been a catalyst for all political processes con- nected with the Middle East conflict. The report said that a real change has occurred in the PLO, which now sincerely desires to find a realistic political solution to the Israel- Palestinian problem. The report also said there are no leaders in the ter- ritories who are not directed by the PLO. This would quash Shamir's intention to negotiate only with Palesti- nian "moderates" in the territories. The report says that even the most fervent supporters of Jordan's King Hussein have fallen silent in face of the king's decision, unchanged since last July, to sever all ties to the West Bank and leave its destiny up to the PLO. The report's authors believe the United States and Soviet Union now have a common interest in settling the con- flict, and that this will necessarily bring about coor T dination between the super- powers on the problem. The report raises concern about the economic coopera- tion agreement signed recent- ly by Jordan, Egypt, Iraq and North Yemen and points out that the group's strength in the Arab world is increasing. It observes that if the political process were to run aground again, this con- federation could become a major threat to Israel's securi- ty, because Iraq would place its awesome military might at the group's disposal. The report's authors believe it is up to Israel to decide whether this alliance re- mains merely a basis for political and economic cooperation or whether it ex- pands to include hostile military coordination in the event of Israeli rejection of a political solution. Tourists Report Long Delays At Taba Border Tel Aviv (JTA) — Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak praised Israel's return of the Taba beach resort to Egyptian control last week as a model of Israeli cooperation with countries of the Middle East. But an Israeli hotelier alleged that Israeli authorities are now trying to block tourism to the area, and tourists complained of ex- cessive red tape at Israeli border checkpoints. Speaking from a special dais erected near the Taba Sonesta Hotel, gaily decorated with Egyptian flags and large portraits of the Egyptian president, Mu- barak said the resolution of the Taba dispute serves as a model of cooperation between Israel and the countries of the region, especially Jordan. But Eli Papushado, former owner of the Avia Sonesta Hotel and now manager of the renamed, Egyptian- owned Taba Sonesta, has call- ed into question whether the Israeli authorities. are in- terested in continuing the cooperation in Taba. Papushado criticized lburism Minister Gideon Patt for saying Friday that Israelis who continue to frequent Taba have to be "masochists." The minister expressed con- cern that large-scale tourism to Taba could draw tourists away from hotels in Eilat, particularly if Egypt opens a casino at Taba. He threatened to impose a travel tax on Israelis wishing to visit the area if Egypt made such a move. Papushado called Patt's remarks ridiculous, consider- ing all the effort the govern- ment had put into easing Israeli access to the resort area during negotiations with the Egyptians.