UP FRONT 'Fury' Is A Four-Letter Word Whether or not James Baker used the 'F' word, relations between the administration and the Jews are dismal. JAMES BESSER Washington Correspondent T he most notable aspect of last week's flap over reports that Secretary of State James Baker had dismissed Jewish voters with a four-letter expletive is that nobody in Washing- ton seemed particularly sur- prised. The readiness of the Jew- ish community to believe the reports reflected a hard truth: the strains created by the battle over $10 billion in loan guarantees for Israel and the administration's single-minded pursuit of an Israeli settlements freeze go well beyond ordinary polit- ical dialogue. "The question of whether or not he said it may be beside the point," said Dan Mariaschin, director of international and public af- fairs for B'nai B'rith. "There's been a tremendous amount of tension built up over four years, and we're seeing a lot of that come out now. There just aren't a lot of people willing to give him the benefit of the doubt." And as the volatile elec- tions both here and in Israel get closer, that soured rela- tionship could produce new shocks to the Washington- Jerusalem alliance. Reports of Mr. Baker's ex- cursion into Nixonian phraseology during a private meeting of White House offi- cials, which had been churn- ing around the Washington rumor mill for several days in various forms, surfaced on Friday in a New York Post column by former New York Mayor Ed Koch. The State Department quickly dismissed Mr. Koch's assertions as "outrageous garbage." Mr. Baker forcefully repeated that denial to leaders of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations on Friday. And in a letter to the Anti- Defamation League, Mr. Baker said that he was "deeply offended by the false and malicious press story. Nothing could be further from the truth than that story, and nothing could be further from my beliefs and values." But the denials seemed almost beside the point. "The strains in the U.S.-Israeli relationship, and the administration's heavy-handed approach, are such that this kind of story almost seems to reinforce a view that has already been created about administra- tion attitudes," said Jess Hordes, Washington director for ADL. "That's one reason this story — along with Koch's standing in the Jew- ish community — was believed." "The conditions were right for it to be believed," said Shoshana Cardin, chair of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. "It's obvious- ly a very strained relation- ship." Those strains worsened in recent days as a result of Mr. Baker's harsh congressional testimony, and by the ap- parent failure of efforts to work out a compromise for- mula that would provide Israel with some of the guaranteed loans and defer the rest, pending a resolu- tion of the settlements con- troversy. "Baker The Bleep" is how the New York Post referred to the Secretary of State last Friday. Ms. Cardin's meeting with Mr. Baker on Friday was in- tended to ease some of those strains. According to Ms. Cardin, the meeting was not a re- sponse to Mr. Koch's charges. Instead, the session was hastily scheduled after State Department Policy Planning Chief Dennis Ross reported back to his boss on his Thursday meeting with leaders of the Presidents' Conference. Mr. Ross was reportedly shocked by the mood he en- countered as he discussed the controversial issue of loan guarantees for Israel — a mood several participants characterized as "more pain than anger." "He was hit with the very widespread feeling in the Jewish community that the matrimonial fact and folklore. For information, contact the U.A1-1C Press, 838 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y., 10021, or call (212) 249-0100. events "in the land of Jesus Christ, our savior." Seems Christian funda- mentalists, who have sided with Israel in its decades-old struggle for peace, are tuning in to news about just who's in charge of Jesus' bir- thplace. ROUND UP Program Focuses On Environment American Jewish leaders are meeting this week in Washington for the Con- sultation on the Envi- ronment and Jewish Life in Washington, D.C. Participants include Sens. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., and Arlen Specter, R-Penn., scientist Carl Sagan of Cornell University, and Shoshana Cardin, chairman of the Conference of Presi- dents of Major American • Jewish Organizations. The conference was con- vened by Rabbis Marc Angel of the Orthodox Rabbinical Council of America, Arthur Green of the Reconstruc- tionist Rabbinical College, Alexander Schindler of the Reform Union of American Hebrew Congregations, and Ismar Schorsch of the Con- servative Jewish Theologi- cal Seminary of America. The program will deal with such ecological dangers as global warming, the depletion of the ozone layer and deforestation. It repre- sents the Jewish commun- ity's first major effort to formulate educational and policy responses to the envi- ronmental crisis. With This Book, I Thee Wed The Union of American Hebrew Congregations has just published The Jewish Wedding Book, written by Detroit native Rabbi Daniel Syme, senior vice president of the UAHC. The book is filled with pages for wedding photos, for recording how the couple met and decided to marry, The Jewish Wedding Book li,x4 *Ad r),I, RAMII DANIEL 13 SYME. Rabbi Syme's new book. and for plans for the wed- ding celebration. It gives space for the family histories of the bride and groom. The Jewish Wedding Book also includes practical ad- vice on where to hold the wedding and what kind of rings to choose, and serves as a compendium of Jewish Post Hitches A Ride With The Watchman Thinking about subscrib- ing to an Israeli paper for the latest news from Jerusalem? For subscription information, tune in to .. . Christian broadcasting. The Jerusalem Post, an English-language daily published in Jerusalem, is trying to woo new subscribers from an alto- gether different audience. Listeners to Southwest Radio's "Watchman on the Wall" show last Monday could hear the Post seek subscribers who would be in- terested in hearing about Turkish Paper Debuts In Israel And speaking of news .. . A new newspaper, Haver, re- cently made its debut in Israel. Haver, which means "friend" in Hebrew and "news" in Turkish, covers news of interest to the 100,000 Israelis of Turkish background. The paper. in- cludes six pages in Turkish and two in Ladino. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 11