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Next time you feed your face, think about your heart.
Go easy on your heart and start cutting back on foods that are high in saturated
fat and cholesterol. The change'II do you good.
66
"V American Heart Association
WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE
HOUSE
ven before the smoke
cleared after last week's
electoral mayhem, Repub-
lican legislators were
scrambling to win key commit-
tee posts. At stake is raw leg-
islative power, something the
GOP has not fully tasted in four
decades. And the outcome of all
that jockeying could have an
enormous impact on U.S.-Israeli
relations — and on the fragile
Middle East peace process.
The expected ascension of Sen.
Jesse Helms, R-N.C., to the chair
of the Foreign Relations Com-
mittee has touched off waves of
anxiety about Israel's $3 billion
annual allotment. But his com-
mittee is not a primary player in
crafting the aid bill.
For that role, the chair of the
House Appropriations Commit-
tee — the committee most di-
rectly responsible for shaping
each year's foreign aid bill — is
pivotal.
The Republican takeover
means demoting the committee's
current chairman, Rep. David
Obey, D-Wis., who has frequent-
ly locked horns with Israel's sup-
porters in Washington. But some
Republican prospects don't look
much better, from a pro-Israel
perspective.
Ranking Republican Joseph
McDade, R-Pa., is embroiled in
legal difficulties that will keep
from the chairmanship. Rep.
John Myers, R-Ind., is next in
line, but he has consistently op-
posed foreign aid. And he is re-
portedly not a favorite of
incoming House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, the Republican repre-
sentative from Georgia.
Pro-Israel groups hope the
post will go to Rep. Bob Liv-
ingston, a nine-termer from
Louisiana who has developed
good ties with pro-Israel groups
over the years.
Mr. Obey also was chair of the
critical Foreign Operations sub-
committee, a post that probably
will go to Rep. Jim Lightfoot (R-
Iowa), who has a strong pro-Is-
rael record.
The House GOP hierarchy will
become clearer after a series of
organizational meetings begin-
ning Dec. 5.
In the Senate, the Appropri-
ations job will go to Mark Hat-
field, R-Ore., a 28-year Senate
veteran who will take over from
one of the pro-Israel communi-
ty's least-favorite legislators: Sen.
Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va.
"Hatfield is no bargain, in
terms of aid to Israel," said an of-
ficial with a pro-Israel political
action committee. "But maybe
anybody is an improvement over
Byrd."
And the important Foreign
Operations subcommittee will be
headed by Sen. Mitch McConnell,
a staunch friend of Israel, who
will replace the erratic Sen.
Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.
Will Arlene Specter
Be The One?
W
ith Republicans riding
high, contenders are
just starting to line up
for the race for the
1996 presidential nomination.
On Monday, Sen. Arlen
Specter, R-Pa., announced the
creation of an exploratory com-
mittee. This is the usual first
step in a presidential bid.
The senator, a former prose-
cutor who still trades on his rep-
utation for toughness, hopes to
prove to the nation that there
is still a place in the GOP for
pro-choice moderates, despite
last week's evidence of a shift
to the right in the party. In fact,
Mr. Specter seems to be run-
ning against the Christian right
almost as energetically as he is
Arlen Specter