By Holding Out, The PLO Scored Big INA FRIEDMAN ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT W 4 They're very friendly and convenient for me. They're open Saturdays. . . > 9 JOE MACHIORLAM Mr. Joe's Bar Southfield Franklin Bank continues to win friends, with features people tell us are important to them. Like caring financial professionals who take the time to understand your needs. Banking hours that work with your schedule. And commercial checking with the lowest fees in metropolitan Detroit. When you're a small business or practice, you appreciate the importance of personal service and attention to customer needs. So do we. Come in or call today to be a part of the good things happening at Franklin Bank. Franklin Bank N. A . 358-5170 FDIC INSURED Southfield • Birmingham • Grosse Pointe Woods rcniturcEgfini itt Lig and Eltowitio12 adtomJ aintl, aft Covezin gl and (Window gTECitil2Entl 1 FREE IN-HOME ESTIMATES gh e ants/it, 204 _S. ( 11Vooclaxcer,c1, Oak ( c gaJi JVcyztfi 0/690 3/3- 41 8-P515 *MENTION THIS AD FOR 10% OFF ANY PRODUCT OR SERVICE hile Israel's eyes were focused on ceremonies mark- ing the 50th an- niversary of the Warsaw ghetto uprising and Yom Hashoah, an interesting development took place in the Middle East peace process. Unable to wring additional concessions out of Israel as their condition for returning to the peace talks, the Palestinians obtained them instead from their fel- low Arabs In Cairo, on Monday, the PLO received assurances from Saudi Arabia that it would resume its financial aid to the organization that had been halted as a result of Yassir Arafat's support for Iraq in the Gulf War. The Saudis also pledged to encourage other Gulf States to follow suit. Accompanied by Farouk Kaddoumi, Feisal al- Husseini and Hanan Ashrawi, Mr. Arafat, the PLO chairman, then flew to Syria for a meeting with President Hafez al-Assad. Such things don't happen to Chairman Arafat every day. In fact, in his long career at the head of the PLO, he has been imprisoned, shelled, and expelled by the Syrians, and his meeting with President Assad came after yet another period of being shunned by Damascus. But the parley signaled that Syria would not sign a sepa- rate peace with Israel and leave the Palestinians out in the cold — and is therefore being hailed as an achieve- ment for the PLO and its leader. Both needed a boost after the four-month hiatus in the peace talks, during which the situation on the Israeli- Palestinian front deteriorat- ed appreciably. Publicly, at least, Israel's contribution to getting the Palestinians back to the bargaining table came in the form of a dis- tinctly muted reaction to the PLO's latest stratagem. No one sounded inordinately miffed. Certainly no one was interested in heating up the already charged atmos- phere. It's almost as if the Rabin government were playing down the mini- drama as no more than a hiccup in what at any rate has come to be perceived as a drawn-out political belly- ache. At the same time, in an interesting symmetry, the members of the Palestinian delegation did their best not to provoke the Israeli gov- ernment and concentrated instead on conveying the complexity of their position. "People are complaining that things are worse now than before the talks start- ed," Mr. Husseini explained in a statement to Israeli state radio. Syria would not leave the Palestinians out in the cold. And as if to underscore the point, newspapers this week reported on threats, by fellow-Palestinians, against Mr. Husseini and Saeb Erikat, the negotiator best remembered for stating on the eve of the Madrid Conference — against all the rules and tacit under- standings — that the Palestinian delegation rep- resented the PLO. Back then, Mr. - Erikat was regarded as practically a Palestinian national hero. That he is now being threat- ened for his involvement in the peace process is a telling indication of just how angry mood in the territories has become. It's, therefore, not unlike- ly that the PLO's bid to hold up the talks was mere grandstanding aimed as much at the Palestinians in the territories as anyone else. It's no secret that the organization is practically broke and has therefore slashed financial aid to its supporters that was lavishly accorded in the first years of the intifada. Identification with Hamas remains high (up to 45 percent in the territories, according to Tel Aviv University professor Shim- on Shamir. PLO page 12 E/\