INSIDE WASHINGTON DETROIT'S HIGHEST RATES 12 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT 8.200% 8.456% Effective Annual Yield' Minimum Deposit of $500 8.300% 8.562% 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 TSB MAIN OFFICE PHONE 338.7700 1760 Telegraph Rd. (Just South of Orchard Lake) 352.7700 OUAl HOUSING OPPORTUNITY an FRIDAY. OCTOBER 7.19_88 HOURS: MON.-THURS. 9:30-4:30 FRI. 9:30-6:00 AIPAC Helps Secure Revised $300 Billion Defense Bill JAMES DAVID BESSER Washington Correspondent W hen Congress passed a revised defense authoriza- tion bill last week in response to an earlier presidential veto, pro-Israel lobbyists won an important, if very quiet victory. The authorization bill is the companion to the defense ap- propriations bill, which ac- tually appropriates the $300 billion in defense dollars for the fiscal year which began last week. The appropriations bill also includes goodies for Israel—including a variety of joint military research and development projects and cooperative ventures. When the bill was vetoed earlier, Democrats quickly sought to lay the blame on the Republicans — and on their standard bearer, George Bush. The case was made that the veto represented the triumph of politics over na- tional security — and over the interests of Israel. But pro-Israel lobbyists, in- cluding staffers from the American Israel Public Af- fairs Committee (AIPAC) played a cagey game. After the veto, AIPAC lobbyists sought to keep the provisions of the bill relating to Israel out of the deadly crossfire. In- stead, they worked gingerly behind the scenes to ensure that the pro-Israel provisions did not leak out of the gigan- tic bill. Anti-Semitism Charges Leveled By Dems, GOP To hear Washington Jewish activists talk about it, the dominant issue of the 1988 presidential campaign revolves around charges of anti-Semitism and anti- Zionism in the top echelons of both parties. Last week, the charges con- tinued to fly. Republican ac- tivists were busy distributing reams of material on the three new members of the Democratic National Com- mittee who have ties to the bizarre politics of Louis Farrakhan. Over on the Democratic side, there were continuing reports that Frederic Malek, the Republican national com- mittee bigwig who resigned after revelations of about his work in the Nixon ad- ministration, is meeting quietly with Jewish leaders in an attempt to smooth over the crisis. But under the charges and counter-charges was a grow- ing uncertainty about whether the increasingly nas- ty campaign for Jewish hearts and minds means will actually translate into votes. Allen Lichtman, a political scientist at American Univer- sity in Washington who has developed a reputation for predicting presidential elec- tions, is convinced that these salvos will do little to affect the final tally of the Jewish vote. "At this point, there's prob- ably stronger ammunition on the part of the Democrats," he said. "But it's not very credi- ble, portraying Bush as an anti-Semite. This just isn't likely to be a major factor in the Jewish vote." In the Jewish community, ' he said, exchanges of accusa- tions will likely prove less im- portant than traditional Jewish voting patterns. tion to the underlying U.S. labor policy than with any hostility to Israel. But the broader Jewish community, he suggested, takes the matter more seriously. "They see it as an outrage," he said. "The idea of putting Israel on a list of na- tions along with Haiti and Syria is so totally outrageous that it's touched off some real deep feelings." Hearings on the charges are scheduled for mid-November. No Visa For Arafat Yet 'Dade Bill Hearing Is Issue For Jewish Group Sometimes, the Jewish grass roots move in directions that surprise activists in the peculiar, inward-turned world of Washington. Such may be the case in the controversy generated by the action of the U.S. Trade Representative Clayton Yeut- ter placing Israel on a list of nations to be investigated for alleged labor abuses. According to several con- gressional offices, the trade representative flap has been at the top of the list for visiting Jewish groups. "We had a UJA group in last week," said an aide to one legislator. "They sort of caught us unawares by their strong interest in the issue; to be honest, it was something my own boss hadn't really looked at." Another aide on the Senate side reported a strong output of letters on the issue from Jewish communities around the country — an outpouring apparently unrelated to any organized effort to generate mail. Washington activists, this aide suggested, tend to view the issue in the context of the political game. According to this view, Yeutter's actions had more to do with his objec- Rep. Jack Kemp: No to Arafat. The jockeying over a visa for Yassir Arafat becomes more complex every day, despite the fact that the PLO leader has not clearly an- nounced his intention to visit this country in November to address the United Nations. The State Department con- tinued to refuse to say whether it would grant a visa to Yassir Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation Organi- zation, if he decides to address the United Nations General Assembly this fall. "He has not applied for a visa," State Department spokeswoman Phyllis Oakley said. "We don't speculate on hypothetical cases." Her comments came after 51 senators sent a letter to Secretary of State George Shultz urging him to deny a visa to Arafat. A similar let- ter was being circulated in the House by Rep. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.) Among the signers of the Senate letter, initiated by Sens. Charles Grassley (R- Iowa), Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Dennis DeConcini (D-Ariz.) and Alfonse D'Amato (R-N.Y.)