I CONTENTS U.S. Should Give PLO A Deadline For Peace ABRAHAM H. FOXMAN I t has been one year since the United States opened a dialogue with the Palestine Liberation Organization — and the government of Israel has repeatedly called for ending the dialogue on the ground that the PLO has neither end- ed terrorism nor accepted peace with Israel. The United States, on the other hand, while not indicating any substantial progress in its talks with the PLO, or respon- ding to Israeli charges of con- tinuing PLO terrorism, has insisted that the dialogue go on. - The truth is that there has been no serious effort by Washington to set standards for PLO behavior in order to determine whether it has changed. This despite the fact that when George Shultz an- nounced U.S. intentions to open talks with the PLO last December, he was careful to say we would be watching PLO behavior closely in the months ahead. The time has come to put the PLO to the test. The op- portunity exists because there is a peace initiative on the table — indeed, it has been on the table since last May when it was presented by Israel. This Israeli in- itiative, among other things, called for elections in the ter- ritories to begin the peace process. For months there was no response to the proposal by the Palestinians. Then came President Mubarak's clarifications and Secretary Baker's points, which shifted attention from the Palesti- nians to the Israelis. But none of the present complications would have Foxman is national director of the Anti-Defamation League. CLOSE-UP arisen had the Palestinians simply come forward to begin the process by accepting the proposed elections. It is one of the disturbing elements of the process that the Palesti- nians have not said yes dur- ing the past six months, ap- parently waiting for a green light from the PLO while the PLO has sent out a reverse signal — through teams of assassins who murder Palestinians accused of being forthcoming to peace. There is a way out of the stalemate. The time has come for the United States to tell the PLO it must make up its mind: accept Israel's peace initiative by a specific date to allow Palestinians in the ter- ritories to participate in the Israeli elections proposal, or the U.S. will suspend the dialogue. This is not simply a ques- tion of the United States pressuring the PLO, but rather a serious effort to determine whether the PLO is interested in peace and change or merely in rehtoric. For the PLO to accept the American challenge and per- mit the Palestinians to begin the process of elections which will lead to negotiations will speak volumes about the PLO and the value of the dialogue. For them to say no, however, will indicate that the dialogue has become simply a cover for PLO intransigence and, in fact, a deterrent from permitting any kind of Palestinian peace leaderhip to emerge. Either way, we will be bet- ter off after the ultimatum date. If the PLO reaction is af- firmative, hope for peace will have been strengthened. If the answer is negative, the United States can shift its ef- forts elewhere while forces within the Palestinian world will be able to look hard at their real options for peace. ❑ Lights! Camera! War! ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Hollywood filmed the glamour but never the Jews of Germany. AROUND TOWN Thankful Hoe-Down Thanksgiving provided perfect weather for a day at camp. FINE ARTS By The Numbers VICKI BELYEU DIAZ Jewish participation on cultural boards has grown. ENTERTAINMENT Like Father, Like Son? STEVE HARTZ Disc jockey Dave Fogel soars through the air waves. FAMILY Two Block Rule RICHARD NEWMAN I could drive my daughter to the party, if no one saw. SINGLE LIFE LISA JACKNOW ELLIAS Flirting is practiced widely, but not too well. LIFESTYLES Romeo Farmer CARLA JEAN SCHWARTZ Ruby Goldstein keeps the apple presses churning. DEPARTMENTS 34 42 50 53 54 58 Inside Washington Insight Mitzvah People Community Synagogues Sports 62 96 124 130 136 158 Business Cooking Engagements Births Classified Ads Obituaries CANDLELIGHTING Friday, December 15, 1989 4:43 p.m. Sabbath ends Dec. 16 5:49 p.m. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 7