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Sitting Pretty $ COLLEGE TUITION GRANT FALL 1993 RETIREMENT SALE FINAL 2 WEEKS OAKLAND CENTURY LODGE 111111 OLARSHIP EVERYTHING MUST GO 60% - 75% OFF Student Requirements: Patio & Indoor Furniture, Tables, Lamps, Leather & Formica Furniture Layaways & previous sales excluded Permit #37 Evergreen Plaza 19747 W. 12 Mile, Southfield 552-8850 Hours: M-W 10-6, Thurs. 10-7, Fri. & Sat. 10-6, Sun. 12-4 358-2333 IM FRANKLIN PLAZA I of Southfield I r ; FILM PROCESSING • P ASSPORT SPECIAL $ 795 $ 1 4 95 1 set • 2 Sets "Must Be Done At The Same Time" 2 Photos per passport (with coupon) L J 1 102 I $3.00 OFF 36 exposures I $2.00 OFF 24 exposures I $1.00 OFF 12 exposures r 0% off on posters I (Greet for Annivereeriee & Bar Iiltzvahs) I 31/2 x 5 or 4x6 I No Restrictions on Processing Time! L or 2nd set of prints free. c-41 process only Not good with any other offer We transfer your old movies, prints & slides to video cassette. FULL PHOTO SERVICES INCLUDING: BLACK & WHITE, ENLARGEMENT, POSTERS 29215 Northwestern Hwy. at 12 Mile Rd. in Franklin Shopping Plaza MC0110 1 • Submit a grade transcript • Must be Jewish from the Metro Detroit Area • Attending a college or university • Have ONE FULL YEAR of credits towards a degree (sophomore or above) • Have superior scholarship • Demonstrate NEED for financial assistance • Show leadership qualities for future benefit of the Detroit Jewish Community • Campus participation and community activity showing established roots TYPED INFORMATION MUST BE RECEIVED BY MAY 3, 1993 For further info: 827-1919 Mail to: HAROLD J. SAMUELS, Chairman Scholarship Committee 26240 Inkster Road Southfield, MI 48034-2243 Mi The Real Impact Of Faisal al-Husseini Israel's decision to negotiate directly with the east Jerusalem Arab leader, will have a major impact on the PLO. DOUGLAS DAVIS FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT srael's decision to end the procedural fiction that so far has prevented "unofficial" Palestinian delegation leader and east Jerusalem resident Faisal al-Husseini, from taking his place at the negotiating table is likely to have far-reach- ing implications both for the peace process and for Palestin- ian politics. The move represents anoth- er break by Yitzhak Rabin's La- bor government with the hard-nosed dogma of its Likud predecessor, which feared that allowing Palestinian residents of Jerusalem at the negotiating table would undermine Israel's claim to unfettered sovereign- ty over an undivided Jerusalem. The Likud reservations were dismissed as "ridiculous" by Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, who has met Mr. Husseini sev- eral times in recent weeks and who conceded in an Israel Ra- dio interview that "in practice, he heads the delegation. He is invited to Washington. The United States talks to him. We are not deaf and blind. This is the reality and it is not hard to bear." Israel's concession appeared to be sufficient to convince the Palestinians to drop their long- standing precondition for the 396 Hamas deportees to be al- lowed home before they came to the peace talks in Washing- ton, scheduled to resume next week. Mr. Husseini is the 53-year- old scion of a family that mo- bilized Arab resistance to the pre-state Zionist movement and produced both its religious and military leaders: the Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin el-Hus- seini, and Abdel-Khader Hus- seini, hero of the war against the nascent Jewish state who was killed in the battle for the Kastel on the highway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Mr. Husseini's impeccable Palestinian credentials were en- hanced by his arrest almost im- mediately after Israeli troops swept through Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War, by periods of house arrest between 1982 to 1987 and by bouts of adminis- trative detention since then. But his elevation to the high table at the peace talks will be more than a mere symbolic con- cession. It will significantly up- grade the credibility of the I Palestinian delegation — and it will present the PLO leader- ' ship in faraway Tunis with acute dilemma. While Mr. Husseini is wide- ly acknowledged to be the most , senior PLO representative in \ the territories and while he rit- ually swears allegiance to the PLO, his new prominence will , inevitably strengthen the "in- -` ternal" Palestinians at the ex- pense of the "external" PLO, who have a different con- _ stituency and, in some impor- tant respects, a different agenda. The Palestinian intifada, which erupted in December 1987, was a decisive turning point in Palestinian history, a moment when the Palestinians under occupation finally de- spaired of the hollow rhetoric from Tunis and took their col- lective destiny into their own hands. Above all, it shifted the Pales- tinian balance of power from Tunis to the territories, a move that was accelerated by the cat- astrophe that PLO Chairman Yassir . Arafat visited on the Palestinians by his endorse- ment of Iraq's Saddam Hussein. To Palestinian nationalists Likud reservations were dismissed by Mr. Peres. in the territories, Chairman Arafat remains "Mister Pales- tine," a potent symbol of the Palestinian cause. However, Chairman Arafat is locked in a time-warp and, to the young movers and shakers of the '90s, his '60s-style revolutionary rhetoric has become an irritat- ing irrelevance. The "externals" are increas- ingly perceived as representing the interests of past generations — Palestinian refugees who fled into exile following the 1948 and 1967 wars — and their agenda is dominated by the "right to re- turn," an issue that is regarded across Israel's political spec- trum as a non-starter. While paying lip-service to their refugee brethren, the agenda of the "internals" has been sharply honed by the re- HUSSEINI page 104