Israel Moves Closer To PLO Talks OPENING SOON! Featuring yarns by: Anny Blatt (Top Club Boutique), Dyed In The Wool, Missoni, Trendsetter, Tahki and others. 1-800-787-4777 or (313) 355-1400 im in nit Quality Yams, Kits & More APPLEGATE SQUARE • Northwestern Hwy Between 12 & 13 Mile Rd., Southfield. TRUNK SHOW Friday, August 20th Saturday, August 21st Come & meet these designers! Lainie Designs - Fabulous decorative sweaters, sweats & fall tee shirting. Great selections in sizes ranging from 1-X up to a generous 7-X accommodate everyone... Lainie will be here to work with you! Sharon Phillips Designs - Upscale designer of blazers & fun suiting. Sizes up to 4X... Come meet Arlene Abrams! Dero Leathers-- Full selection of coats & jackets... Come meet Maria from Dero, w Wine Sr Cheese will be served! w (2) Applegate Square • Southfield • 354-4560 CC LU I 112 w F- I Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel has moved a step closer toward direct talks with the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization by saying it will con- tinue to negotiate with three members of the Palestinian delegation to the peace talks who have been appointed to the PLO committee monitor- ing the talks. The three negotiators — Faisal Husseini, Hanan Ashrawi and Saeb Erekat — were among seven Palestin- ians who were named last week to the PLO steering committee for the peace negotiations. Although most members of the Palestinian delegation to the talks have now become official PLO representatives, the Israeli government seemed unconcerned by the move. At the weekly Cabinet ses- sion, most ministers argued that the new appointments have not caused a substan- tial change in the status quo. They stressed that the PLO communique on the ap- pointments did not specifically state that the Palestinian delegates had joined official PLO organs and that the move was de- scribed merely as a step toward improving the handl- ing of the peace negotia- tions. Cabinet Secretary Elyakim Rubinstein made clear that there is no change in Israel's attitude toward the PLO and that the government is standing by its principle of negotiating only with representatives of the residents of the ad- ministered territories. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres also em- phasized that Israel is adhering to its original con- ditions for participating in the peace process, one of which was no direct contacts with the PLO. The two, nonetheless, fail- ed to rule out the possibility of eventually negotiating directly with the PLO. Cabinet Ministers Yair Tsaban and Yossi Sand of the dovish Meretz bloc open- ly applauded the PLO com- munique. "The latest development in the PLO is desirable and positive," said Mr. Sarid. "PLO-Tunis cannot survive without PLO- territories and vice versa, and the tighter Shimon Peres: Stick to original conditions. the connection between them, the better it will be for the peace negotiations." Israel's apparent indif- ference to the changes comes in sharp contrast to the last Israeli government's refusal to meet with Palestinian delegate Erekat in December 1991 after he declared that he was a mem- ber of the PLO. Only after Mr. Erekat retracted his statement did the Israeli government, then headed by the more hard- line Likud party, accept him back at the negotiations table. Likud . politicians and other members of the cur- !sael is adhering to its original conditions for participating in the peace process. rent opposition are, mean- while, furious over the latest developments. They are insisting that no negotiations be held with Palestinians who are official members of the PLO and they are calling for a special Knesset debate on the sub- ject during the legislature's summer recess. The mass-circulation daily Yediot Achronot wrote in a weekend editorial that most of the Israeli public is now aware of the fact that there is no way out of direct negotiations with the PLO. However, the paper added, the public would have pre- ferred a government that uses its readiness to talk with the PLO "as a means of