INSIDE WASHINGTON r"' DETROIT'S HIGHEST RATES Minimum Deposit of $500 12 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT 8.00% 8.243% Effective Annual Yield* Compounded Quarterly. This is a fixed rate account that is insured to $100,000 by the Savings Association In- surance Fund (SAIF). Substantial Interest Penalty for early withdrawal from cer- tificate accounts. Rates subject to change without notice. FIRST SECURITI71 SAVINGS BANK FSB PHONE 338E7700 352.7700 MAIN OFFICE 1760 Telegraph Rd. (Just South of Orchard lake) .0 4,1(*** ** ** as Deposit. Federally Insured to S100,000 Is** eF * B,KA titt .n.ra MOUSING I Ot. OPPORTUNITYY 28 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1990 -Crick eh * * HOURS: MON.-THURS. 9:30-4:30 FRI. 9:30-6:00 Artwork by Barbara Cummings. Copyright° 1990, Barbara Cummings. Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Split Between Jewish Groups Threatens Major Civil Rights Bill JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent A major split among Jewish groups threatens the solid coalition which hopes to push through a major civil rights package in the cur- rent session of Congress. The bitter debate involves efforts by the American Jew- ish Congress to add "religious accommodation" language to the civil rights bill. The added language would make it easier for workers — including Sabbath-observing Jews — t o work out "accommodations" with their employers if their re- ligion forbids them from working on certain days. But the Leadership Con- ference on Civil Rights, the key organization in the de- velopment of the bill, has re- jected any changes to the draft legislation, which is slated for introduction this week. And many Jewish activists who have worked with the Conference on the bill agree that the attempt to modify the measure could hurt its chances for passage, and ag- gravate black-Jewish rela- tions. "Over time, we reached the consensus that on this bill, we would pursue a narrow focus, and address these other issues on a separate track," said one of- ficial with the Leadership Conference. "Otherwise it would become un- manageable." The bill, this source said, was tightly focused to ad- dress a series of Supreme Court decisions last year which limited the ability of employees to prove discrim- ination by employers. In the process, the group rejected pleas from a number of minorities for additional protections. Among the Jewish groups, the matter came to a head at a recent meeting in New York at which the AJ Con- gress suggested the addi- tional language. In the heated debate, the group accused other Jewish organ- izations of being insuffi- ciently concerned with pro- tecting the civil rights of Jews; activists for the other groups accused the AJ Con- gress of throwing a monkey wrench into a carefully- crafted coalition. The American Jewish Committee took the lead in pressing for a separate re- ligious accommodations bill. "I consider it a waste of time getting into intergroup squabbles over who is doing the best job of protecting the Jews," said Judy Golub, the group's assistant Washing- ton representative. The American Jewish Congress sees things diff- erently. "The notion that all these other things are not controversial and that the religious accommodations language is, that it will somehow sink the bill, is so palpably false that it simply must be a cover for something else," said Marc Stern, co-director of the American Jewish Congress' Commission on Law and So- cial Action and the chief promoter of the additional language. "So we have the spectacle of Jewish groups going to the Leadership Con- ference and saying, 'don't put our issue on the agen- da.'" The other Jewish groups, Stern argued, opposed the provisions simply because they felt such additions would be "offensive" to the civil rights coalition. Currently, one religious accommodations measure is in the draft stage, sponsored by Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y. Activists Push Passage Of 'Motor-Voter' Bill Jewish activists got together last week for a big push on the Universal Voter Registration bill, legislation which could add millions of new voters to the rolls by making it easier to register. Currently, each state has different mechanisms for voter registration, even for federal elections. In some states, prospective voters are required to register in per- son, during business hours — an obvious inconvenience for working people.