I American Protective Alarm's own 24 hour, central monitoring station is the safest, smartest way to protect your home, business or property. Today's systems are more advanced, more affordable and simpler to use than ever before. Washington Who Was Winner With Baxter? JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT I Group Apartments for the Elderly A Jewish Family Service Program Since 1979 • Luxurious apartments, with private bedrooms, for shared living. • Supportive care provided by Geriatric Care Workers and Social Workers. If someone you know desires a family-like setting, please call Jan Bayer at 559-1500. pv; JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE T A X E X E Limited subsidies available. Endowed by the Coville-Triest Family Foundations. STOCKS TAX-FREE BONDS MUTUAL FUNDS First of Michigan Corporation Members New York Stock Exchange, Inc FoM Herman Schwartz Senior Vice President - Investments T T Branch Manager Travelers Tower / Suite 1020 26555 Evergreen Road / Southfield, Mich. 48076 (313) 358-3290 T C/) for a Sweet & Sappy N A INVESTMENTS T U Best Wishes F A L P A N N Passover Cantor Howard K. Glantz — Certified Mohel — 851-5100 (office) 851-7153 (home) N G Michigan Toll-Free 1-800-826-2039 TAX DEFERRED ANNUITIES IRAs When Clothes Make The Difference, We Make The Clothes. MONEY MANAGEMENT w Cr) LLJ O CC F- LU CI) LU 61 For The Finest Quality Diamond Settings and Gold Jewelry With Distinctive Styling... DARilkJIAN -*" Ard'Aieova.a7/4 Franklin Center Bldg • Suite 100 • 29100 Northwestern Hwy • Southfield • 356-7140 Advance Bldg • Suite 300 • 23077 Greenfield at Nine Mile • Southfield • 557-0616 Mon.-Fri. 10-4 Sat. 10-3 358-4085 Franklin Plaza 29107 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield (2nd entrance from 12 Mlle In rear) CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News ••■•■ ••• 354-5959 n Washington, when the sun rises there's a politi- cian ready to pounce and claim credit for the event. So it was with the Commerce Department's settlement last week with Baxter Interna- tional, the huge medical equipment supplier which gave information — in viola- tion of the 1977 anti-boycott law — to the Arab League about its dealings in Israel. Baxter was fined more than $6 million and prohibited from doing business in Syria and Saudi Arabia for two years. Some Democratic partisans were spreading the word that it was the change in admin- istrations that brought forth the settlement. Not true, say several administration sources and officials with Jewish groups. The adminis- tration simply continued a ne- gotiating process that has begun long before President Clinton's team came to town. "It was fortunate timing for the Clinton people," said a congressional source. "But the fact is that it was the Bush administration's Commerce Department that did most of the work." That doesn't mean Jewish activists aren't delighted with the administration's strong interest in quashing the boy- cott. "It is fair to say that [Com- merce Secretary] Ron Brown and other members of the new administration have made it clear... how deter- mined they are to combat the boycott," said Jess Hordes, Ron Brown: Wants to end Arab boycott. Washington director for the Anti-Defamation League. This, he said, "sends cues to the U.S. business commu- nity and to Arab countries that enforce the boycott. But this settlement was the result of an investment that was a long time developing." In recent weeks, several ad- ministration officials, includ- ing Secretary of State Warren Christopher, have highlight- ed the anti-boycott effort and indicated that Arab move- ment on the issue could ad- vance the peace process. Also, Mr. Brown has sig- naled his desire to talk with Jewish leaders about the next step in the fight to end the boycott, which has signifi- cantly damaged the Israel's economy. Russian Aid Vs. Israel's Billions The chaos in Russia and the sudden interest in helping Boris Yeltsin is adding to the jitters of pro-Israel activists here, who worry that the cri- sis may be another wild card in the upcoming debate over next year's foreign aid budget. Most Jewish activists in the capital dismiss the possibili- ty of any organized legislative effort against Israel's $3.2 bil- lion in aid in this year's dis- cussions. What's keeping them up at night is the possibility of amendments calling for across-the-board aid cuts when the overall aid budget comes to the House and Sen- ate floors. Such amendments might be hard to defeat in a political climate in which for- eign aid is about as popular as acne. "There a sudden surge in interest in aid for Russia be- cause Congress and the ad- ministration have belatedly started to understand the po- tential for disaster if Russia falls," said a congressional staffer involved in the foreign aid process.