I INSIDE WASHINGTON Malek Continued from preceding page appointments have generally disappointed Jewish activists. A break-in will really cost you. Odds are, one in every four American homes will be robbed. Yet, according to the FBI, almost every burglar will flee from a break-in once an alarm has sounded. Now Brink's can create a home security system to ensure the odds are in your favor. Now, for only $19.95 a month, plus a low one-time connection fee, you can have Brink's Home Security monitoring your home 24 hours a day through the Brink's state of the art Control Center. Your Brink's System includes: • Easy to operate control con- Perimeter door protection sole equipped with Police, sensors Fire and Medical assistance • Interior movement detection emergency buttons • Automatic warning. siren • Brink's warning identification Brink's, the security people for over 125 years, have finally made home security affordable. Remember, for only $19.95 per month you can join over 80,000 American homes now protected by Brink's Home Security. VISA elD At $1995 a month, can you really not afford us? Call 1-800-225-5247 now. IIIIIBRINKS HON. SECURITY BRINK'S HOME SECURITY, INC. 'Minimum term required 1988 Brink's Home Security, Inc. Announcing The Grand Opening of Saralyn Balan's JALARA COSMETICS LTD. Complete Skin Care* and Makeup For All Skin Types Normal, Dry, Oily, Sensitive Always Discounted 30% (Additional 10% Off with this ad) * Including A "First in Michigan" Skin Care Line 30 FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1989 Located at It's A Wrap 26561 W 12 Mile Knight Plaza #104 356-7020 "If he had actually provid- ed a list of Jews, if he had ac- tively been part of a purge, I don't think there would be any question of developing a relationship with him," said one Jewish activist who re mains wary of Malek. "But I don't see a pattern of bias; all I see is a guy who made a dumb mistake. So it would be foolish not to hear him out, to see if there is a possibility of a relationship." Jewish leaders who have dealt with Fred Malek admit that there is no way to know what is inside the man's heart. But the weight of evidence, they suggest, points to a lack of any pattern of anti-Semitism in Malek's past. And the fact that he is try- ing so hard to make amends with Jews, some insist, speaks well for his basic decency; there is speculation that he could easily win a White House staff assign- ment without bothering to heal his breach with the Jewish community. George Bush, after all, handily weathered the storm over-the choice of John Sununu as his chief of staff. And on the political balance sheets, Bush owes very little to a Jewish community that remained loyal to the Democrats. "I think it's clear that what he wants to do is say that peo- ple in the Jewish community understand who he is, and that he regrets what he did in the past," says Hyman Bookbinder, former Washing- ton representative for the American Jewish Committee and chief Jewish liaison for the Dukakis campaign. Book- binder was one of the Jewish leaders who has spoken to Malek in recent months. "It seems to me that he's doing an effective job of that, although I don't endorse him or anything. There should be a willingness to listen to him, to talk to him." Malek's case is also argued effectively by one of his cur- rent business associates, David Rubinstein. "Look, I'm a liberal Democrat and a Jew," says Rubinstein, partner in a large merchant banking firm in Washington. "When I met him, I had the traditional Democratic view of Fred Malek. I had worked in the Carter campaign in 1976; a lot of the campaign was directed at the excesses of the Nixon administration. I thought everyone connected with Nixon was persona non grata." Rubinstein, who served in the Carter White House as assistant to chief domestic ad- viser Stuart Eizenstat, sug- gests that some of his em- pathy for .Malek comes from his own experiences as a young, enthusiastic White House staffer. . "I was 27 years old when I was at the White House," he recalls. "When you're 27 and the president of the United States tells you to do something, and you want to keep working for the presi- dent, you don't tell him what's appropriate. You tend to say, 'this is the man 40 million people voted for, and I'm just a kid from Baltimore, what do I know?' Putting myself in his place, I can understand what happened. Fred may have gone further than I would have gone — but it takes a lot of courage to go back to the president and tell him you won't do something." Rubinstein, like many Washingtonians, is convinced Fred Malek will find his way into the inner sanctums of the Bush administration. Malek himself does not try to con- ceal his desire to take another crack at the White House. "These are the facts: I did make that report, and I felt a little uneasy, but I felt that the president was demanding it. I did not think this was anything that would go any further." "I'm 52 years old," Malek says. "I've had some unique opportunities. I've had the trauma of being part of an ad- ministration that was torn apart; I've had the opportuni- ty to participate in a great corporate adventure, and to help in the election of a presi- dent I admire and respect. I'm comfortable financially; I en- joy business, but I really, in my heart, I want to serve." He agrees that his effort to soothe Jewish suspicions is part of that quest. "I think it would be very difficult to have a meaningful role in public service if any important group in this country ques- tioned your morals or your ethics, or your attitudes towards them," he says. But not everyone believes the Jewish community should forgive and forget Malek's ac- tions during his years in the Nixon administration. In a recent Washington Post col- umn, Richard Cohen challenged Malek to say in public the things he has been saying to Jewish leaders. "His would be a bracing testimony — not only a chance for the Senate to ex- amine his character (it's the issue, isn't it?) but for the na- tion to be instructed in the perils of considering the presi- dent above the law." In fact Malek's consistent but soft-spoken arguments do not jibe with the images from the Watergate days. But sometimes, hints of the toughness come through. This is a man who wants to apologize; it's impossible to tell how much of this is because of the moral offen- siveness of the acts of which he was accused, how much of it is related to his desire to have a second shot at serving in the White House. In any case, his desire to seek forgiveness seems genu- ine. But just as clearly, he has no intention of begging. Each question about Fred Malek leads to twenty more. lb what degree was his recent fall the result of the normal hysterics of any campaign? How much of what happened in September was related to Malek's inextricable connec- tions to the presidency of Richard Nixon, a man who left a pall of anti-Semitism over the oval office? At what point should Jews forgive a person who sins against them? Some Jewish activists here point to what they see as a double standard. Fred Malek, who admits he obeyed a president who wor- ried about a "Jewish cabal" in a federal department, is already winning Jewish leaders to his side; Jesse Jackson, whose sins were en- tirely verbal, seems unable to penetrate a wall of Jewish hostility. Jewish activists are wrest- ling with these kinds of dif- ficult questions as Fred Malek's rehabilitation con- tinues. Malek himself seems satisfied with the progress of his quest. "I'm not interested in a quick score," he says. "It takes time to create impressions. I know how I feel in my heart, and I know that over time the truth and the reality of my feelings will come across. I don't expect it to happen over- night. ❑ 4 .14 -4