CLOSE-UP ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ Wyoming ❑ Colorado Alberta ❑ Alaska ❑ Ontario Michigan U.P. White water rafting Caving ❑ Sea kayaking Rock climbing Back country camping Waterskiing Shabbat POWER ❑ ❑ 28-46 days of ❑ Fun ❑ Friendship and ❑ Adventure for entering 9th-12th graders. Informational Meeting February 11th 7:30 p.m. Call 313 661 0600 for details - - 6600 West Maple Road West Bloomfield, MI 48322 Photos by Craig Terkowitz AMERICAN SIGN SHOPS - ONE SER V ICE SPEEDY SIGNS AT BUDGET PRICES® * * * * * Magnetic Signs Real Estate Signs Parking Lot Signs Point of Sale Signs Job Site Signs Banners for all occasions Letters for do-it-yourselfers Car and Truck Lettering Window & Door Lettering Directional Signs * * * * * 15% OFF ANY SIGN $100 Maximum Discount With Coupon Expires 2.28-92 29179 Northwestern Hwy, at 12 Mile Rd. Next to Blockbuster Video in Franklin Plaza (313) 355-3320 Beautiful Legs! No spider & varicose NOW is the time to begin treatment Veins COVERED BY MOST INSURANCE PLANS General Dermatology Liposuction Chemical Peels Dermabrasions Electrolysis - Ms. Avery Permanent Makeup MosXCard ROLAND DERMATOLOGY GROUP Bloomfield Hills (313) 338-6400 (313) 752-4100 Romeo (313) 667-9000 Lapeer 26 FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1992 Henry Siegman: "We benefit in two ways." group's mandate. So ferocious was the response that NJCRAC was forced to terminate the consultant. But few observers doubt that NJCRAC will try again to establish itself in Washington. Varied Voices T he burgeoning number of Jewish lobbyists plying their trade on Cap- itol Hill also means that the com- munity no longer speaks with a single voice on some key issues. This growing political pluralism has been most evident in three areas: church- state separation, civil rights and support for Israel. "On Israel, we're hearing a much more nuanced approach from the Jewish groups," said one congressional aide. "The strong support is still there. But it's not automatic. Jewish lobbyists are no longer always in lock step with the gov- ernment in Israel. "We still hear from AIPAC, but we also hear a lot from Peace Now and groups like that." This growing diversity is a mixed bless- ing for the pro-Israel community. "Our credibility is enhanced, because people in Congress understand that while there's still a fundamental unity on core issues, the community is strong enough to have diversity — and to express it in the public arena," said David Cohen, co- director of Washington's Center For Is- raeli Peace and Security. But it also means that congressmen whose support for Israel is marginal, or who are genuinely unsympathetic to the Jewish state, are not as easily persuaded to support pro-Israel legislation. "They can always say, 'Hey look, the Jewish Peace Lobby is also knocking Shamir,' " said another congressional source who argued that the varied new viewpoints are confusing to legislators. "Politics is still a game of numbers. Members [of Congress] look at the Jewish community and see a community that can really come down hard on some basic issues. If the community is seen as fragmented, some of that power just e- vaporates." The growing political diversity of Washington's Jewish establishment is even more evident on domestic issues. When the administration announced its long-awaited education reform package last spring, most Jewish groups quickly condemned proposals that would allow public funding of parochial schools. But Agudath Israel of America strong- ly supported the president's plan, which the White House energetically pointed out in its initial efforts to sell the measure to Congress. Agudath, joined by the Orthodox Union, also supported the nomination of Judge Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court, while groups like the American Jewish Congress and the Union of Amer- ican Hebrew Congregations weighed in against confirmation. A decade ago, there was an overwhelm- ing Jewish consensus on church-state questions like school prayer. Today, with growing activism by the Orthodox groups in Washington, the community no longer presents a solid front on these issues. ill