DETROIT'S HIGHEST RATES 8.400% 8.668% 12 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT Effective Annual Yield* Minimum Deposit of $500 8.500% 8.775% Effective Annual Yield' Minimum Deposit of $75,000 •Compounded Quarterly Rates subject to change without notice This is a fixed rate account that is in- sured to $100,000 by the Federal Sav- ings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC). Substantial Interest Penalty for early withdrawal from certificate accounts. FIRST SECURITY SAVINGS BANK MAIN OFFICE 1760 Telegraph Rd. PHONE 338.7700 (Just South of Orchard lake) EOM HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 39 FRIDAY,AUG.U,ST.26,1988 FSB HOURS: MON.-THURS. 9:30-4:30 FRI, 9:30-6:00 INSIDE WASHINGTON 1"-- Jewish Democrats Seem Pleased With Quayle Selection JAMES DAVID BESSER Wsahington Correspondent W hile the rest of the nation is arguing over Sen. Dan Quayle's military service record and Vice President George Bush's judgment in picking the Indiana conser- vative as his running mate, Jewish politicos are scrambl- ing to figure out how the nomination will play in the Jewish community. Jewish Democrats were pleased with the selection. "Bush could have picked up some Jewish votes by picking a leader in congressional sup- port for Israel," said one member of the Dukakis team. "From our point of view, Jack Kemp would have posed the most trouble for us. But Sen. Quayle's record on support for Israel is mixed, at best!' "lb the Jewish community, he's a big zero," said Democratic consultant Mark Siegel. "He reinforces all the cultural and political reasons Jews have been hostile to the Republican Party for 50 years!' On the Republican side, Jewish activists were attempting to put on their best face, stressing Quayle's leadership in winning impor- tant anti-tactical ballistic missile contracts for Israel. But several acknowledged that Quayle's foreign-aid record and his close ties to the religious right would pose some problems as the cam- paign moves into high gear. March Should Be Peaceful Thanks to the promised ap- pearance of presidential can- didate Michael Dukakis, the 25th anniversary of the civil rights march on Washington will probably take place without much pro-Palestinian sentiment. Several months ago repre- sentatives of the Union of American Hebrew Congrega- tion, the American Jewish Congress and the American Jewish Committee were con- cerned about reports that a spokesman for the Palestin- ian cause would be featured at the Aug. 27 gathering on the Mall in Washington. Although groups support- ing the Palestinian cause lob- bied hard to put Mubarak Awad on the program, input from the Dukakis camp ap- parently tipped the scales against the expelled Palestin- co 0 CC Republicans Dan Qualye and George Bush: less trouble for Democrats than a Kemp candidacy, ian dissident, who will be in town to address the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. "The only possible point of friction we're aware of now is the speech planned by Jesse Jackson," said one Jewish ac- tivist who has been helping hammer out the details of the march. "And we think that his appearance could repre- sent a step towards healing some of the wounds opened by the Democratic primaries." The march will begin at 10:30 a.m. at the Sylvan Theater, just south of the Washington Monument, and move across the mall to the Lincoln Memorial, site of the Rev. Martin Luther King's historic "I have a dream" speech. Group Urges Cooperation In Arms Sales In the wake of this sum- mer's fight over Saudi Arabia's massive arms deal with Great Britain — a deal which some administration officials have blamed on the loud opposition of the pro- Israel community to arms sales to Arab countries — one group is working to change the way the United States uses weapons sales as an in- strument of foreign policy. Shoshana Bryen, director of the Jewish Institute for Na- tional Security Affairs (JIN- SA), said the United States and its allies should coor- dinate the sale of advanced weapons in ways that con- tribute to peace and stability in the Middle East. Bryen points to the recent- ly signed agreement to limit the export of sensitive missile technology as a model for coordination among the West- em nations. "I think we could do the same thing with other kinds of weapons sales," she said. "Now, if we turn down an arms sale, they'll just go someplace else." Bryen said the end of the Iran-Iraq war offers a good op- portunity to begin this pro- cess. "The war raised many new security concerns for Arab governments. With the war over, now might be a good time to reassess arms policies, on the basis of the fact that those threats are now great- ly diminished." Bryen agreed that coordina- tion will not be easy, but said coordination may ultimately serve Israel's interests. Cur- rently, the United States at- tempts to limit the spread of offensive technology to na- tions hostile to Israel, but other exporting nations, like Great Britain, put almost no controls on the types of weapons sold. "Working for this kind of arrangement is far better than taking the high moral ground, knowing the stuff will get sold by somebody else," she said. Pro-Israel PACs Analyzed A group of retired foreign service officers with a distinctly pro-Palestinian bias is flooding Capitol Hill with copies of their analysis of pro- Israel Political Action Com- mittees (PACs). And to back up their cam- paign, American Educational Trust (AET), a non-profit foundation which includes George Ball, former undersec- retary of state, is offering readers bumper stickers ac- cusing Congress of being a tool of the Jerusalem N c-/