drapers boutique BATH, BED, BLINDS, LINENS, DRAPERIES... AND MORE! PLO GAINS page 53 SATURDAY & SUNDAY APRIL 16th and 17th TAX REDUCTION SALE WE PAY THE SALES TAX* 'on all in-stock, in store purchases L at onceim, buy and hang today! SOLID COLOR "LUSTRE" BROADCLOTH BALLOON VALANCES SOLID COLOR "LUSTRE" BROADCLOTH 5" SLEEVE VALANCES G SOLID COLOR "LUSTRE" BROADCLOTH 3" SLEEVE VALANCES t mix & match from 9 solid colors mix & match from 9 solid colors mix & match from 9 solid colors "WAVERLY'" FABRIC BALLOON VALANCE WINDOW buy and hang today! buy and hang today! WAVERLY® PRINT "SWAG SCARF" "WAVERLY"" FABRIC CAPE VALANCE N ine beautiful Waverly° prirrts to choose from • "Nantucket Stroll" • "Pleasant Valley • "Village • "Ford Flamestitch" • "Greenfield Parchment" e" Summertime Navy" 1" VINYL HORIZONTAL MINI BINDS COIVIPLET1E SELECTION OF IN-STOCK VERTICAL BLINDS Available in your choice of white or alabaster. Coordinating valances available for all vertical blinds db NOW! 3.88 5.88 6.88 8.88 8.88 12.88 8.88 ' 6.88 10.88 7.88 10.88 7.88 14.88 10.88 14.88 10.88 10.88 14.88 16.88 13.88 6.88 4.88 9.88 7.88 9.88 7.88 10.88 7.88 10.88 7.88 11.88 7.88 11.88 8.88 sz./w"x h" 23" x 36" 35" x 36" 47" x 36" 30" x 48" 35" x 48" 36" x 48" 46" x 48" 47" x 48" 48" x 48" 59" x 48" 23" x 64" 27" x64" 29" x 64" 30" x 64" 31" x64" 32" x 64" 34" x64" 78"w X 84"H 7 9 88 103"w x 84 - h 8' doorwall 108.88 "MATTE" C- CURVE P.V.C. fits 6" doorwall sz./w" x h" 35" x 64" 36" x 64" 39" x 64" 43" x64" 45" x 64" 46" x 64" 47" x 64" 48" x64" 52" x 64" 54" x 64" 59" x64" 60" x 64" 72" x64" db 11.88 12.88 13.88 14.88 14.88 15.88 15.88 15.88 16.88 17.88 19.88 19.88 22.88 NOW! 8.88 8.88 9.88 10.88 11.88 11.88 11.88 11.88 13.88 13.88 15.88 15.88 18.88 78''' X 84"H 3 4 88 85"w x 84"h 103"w x 84"h 109"w x 84"h fits6' doorwall fits 8' doorwall fits 100"w x 80"h 45.88 54.88 59.88 WIDE RODS Cr) LU sae 18" to 28" 28" to 48" 48" to 84" 84" to 156" LLI NOW! db 13.88.... ...... .6.94 8.94 15.88 12.94 22.88 34.88 18.94 LU LLI 54 size 18" to 28" 28" to 48" 48" to 84" 84" to 156" db 17.88 19.88 27.88 37.88 NOW! 9.94 11.94 15.94 22.94 NOVI NORTHVILLE FARMINGTON FARMINGTON HILLS WEST BLOOMFIELD BIRMINGHAM TROY BLOOMFIELD ROCHESTER CANTON PLYMOUTH LIVONIA STERLING HTS. WARREN UTICA Pepper Square 39253 Gd. River at Haggerty Rd. 478-3133 Orchard Lk. 14 Mi. Ct. 30854 Orchard Lk. Rd. S. of 14 Mile Rd. 626-4313 Venus Plaza 6046 Rochester Rd. at Sq. Lake Rd. 879-1010 Canton Corners 42775 Ford Rd. at Lilley Rd. 981-7400 Cross Roads Ctr. 37130 Van Dyke at 16 Mile Rd. 795-1500 reached in secret between Is- rael and the PLO. These include: • A Palestinian police force of at least 6,500 men, armed with up to 9,000 Kalashnikov rifles and about 100 machine guns, who will be deployed and be permitted to bring 30,000- 35,000 family members back to the territories with them. • A system of new "lateral" east-west roads in Gaza which will be policed by joint Israeli- Palestinian patrols and will pro- vide access to Israel for Gaza settlers, with all fixed Israeli military positions outside the Jewish settlements being dis- mantled and the PLO left in control of 90 percent of Gaza. • Four "safe passage" roads being constructed between the Palestinian negotiators once thought time was on their side; they now realize time is working against them. Gaza Strip and Jericho to pro- vide free movement between the entities for Palestinians through Israel and the West Bank. • Up to 80,000 Palestinians who left after the Six-Day War being allowed to return to Gaza or Jericho, with each applicant to be vetted by a joint Egyptian- Jordanian-Israeli-Palestinian committee. • Agreement on rules of en- gagement and conduct between the Israeli and Palestinian forces in Gaza and Jericho which are stipulated in written instructions governing the use of firearms to prevent the two sides from shooting at each oth- er. • A week-long "joint deploy- ment" during the hand-over pe- riod when Palestinian and Israeli forces will spend seven days alongside each other to avoid creating a military vac- uum. The Palestinian police will arrive one week before "Z-Day," as the PLO describes the Arafat-Rabin signature on the interim agreement, with the full deployment of the Palestinian police to be completed within two weeks. • A Palestinian-Israeli "Joint Security Committee" to be es- tablished with three coordinat- ing offices (in Gaza City, Khan Yunis and Jericho) to arrange joint mobile patrols on the Gaza lateral roads and other places of joint use. Despite these agreements, however, much remains unre- solved, evidenced by a foot-high stack of documents and maps in the Cairo office of Mr. Sha'ath, the chief PLO nego- tiator, that illustrate how far the talks must still go before the accord can be implemented. Agreement has still not been reached on the precise size of autonomous Jericho, the exact number of Palestinian police who will be deployed, the "safe passage" arrangements for the Gaza-Jericho link roads or the legal jurisdiction that will gov- ern Israelis and Palestinians in each others' areas. Nor is there agreement on the system of courts that each side will administer or the arrangements for apprehend- ing Palestinians or Israelis who are suspected of criminal activ- ity inside or outside the au- tonomous areas. Unresolved, too, is the depth of the Israeli-controlled zone st for the Gaza-Egypt border. Not least among Israel's con- cerns is the nightmare scenario of Lebanese-style Katyusha rocket attacks on Israeli towns and settlements, mounted from autonomous Gaza. An indication in the gap in perceptions is evident in the re- sponse of one senior PLO nego- tiator who blithely dismisses such concerns and sees no point in even debating the issue. "None of what we are doing will work if it's not an irre- versible march toward peace," he said. 'There is only one guar- antee against a Katyusha at- tack - that's the commitment of the Palestinians themselves that the peace process is worth- while. "The only way to stop Katyushas is for every Pales- tinian to regard anyone who fires a Katyusha as an enemy of Palestinian independence. What we are doing," he added, "is creating conditions that the Israelis would be stupid to re- verse." There is little chance that the Israelis would contemplate re- conquering Gaza or Jericho af- ter the pain they have endured in effecting the disengagement. But the $64 question is whether, when the crunch comes, the Palestinians will ac- cept the authority of Yasser Arafat and his unprepared bu- reaucratic apparatus - or whether unrealistic expecta- tions, conflicting ideologies and the tug of competing loyalties will cause the Palestinians to turn in on themselves and pro- pel the territories toward a fresh spasm of violence. ❑