s. THE LIMITED CONNELLY FURNITURE STYLE • 7 Foot • 1 Piece Site • Formica Cabinet • Chrome levelers Open Season For Terrorists? Various 5tyles .WcedTa • Inc. Equipment • Leather Pockets • 1 3/4" Framed Slate • $ 1095450 0 Only 6 POOL TABLES — ANTIQUE, MODERN, SLATE TOPS. OVER 100 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM STARTING AT $799 50% OFF 95 6 FT. AIR HOCKEY OVER 1/2 OFF! Reg. $599 SALE • The season of giving can't end with the New Year. For Ultimate One-of-a-Kind Gifts Complimentary Gift-Wrapping- sthers * JUORICR GIFTWORLD We Ship Worldwide At Sugar Tree Plaza • Just North of Maple • West Bloomfield (810) 932-3377 HOURS: Sun. 1030 - 5:30-, Mon., Tues. 930 - 6:00; Wed. 930 -7:00 Thurs. 930 -8:00; Fri. 9:30 - 230 • Closed Saturday Give blood. Give the gift of life. AT SPERBER'S YOU DON'T HAVE TO SPEND AN EXTRAORDINARY AMOUNT OF MONEY TO HAVE AN EXTRAORDINARY EXPERIENCE. WE MAKE EVERY EVENT ABSOLUTELY UNFORGETTABLE, REGARDLESS OF SIZE OR BUDGET. WE WORK WITH YOU, ITS THAT EASY. dim American Red Cross BEYOND EXPECTATIONS, AND WELL MTH!N REASON. 357-2910 Milt 661-5151 OFFICE 11 ■ 1/11 JEWISH CENTER Call 1-800 GIVE LIFE. Please bring some form of I.D. 1 During the abbreviated holiday recess, Jewish groups tried to turn up the heat on behalf of the faltering anti-terrorism bill. But inceasingly, the signs are pointing to a legislative dead end for the measure, which passed the Senate months ago, but stumbled in the House, where conservative legislators have fought provisions that would al- low increased surveillance of native groups like the para- military mili- tias. A recent com- promise that gutted many of those provisions failed to satisfy conservative op- ponents. The big question now in- volves the role of their leader, House Speaker Newt Gingrich, Newt Gingrich: R-Ga. At a recent Call to get tough. Mideast peace lobby day organized by the Na- tional Jewish Community Rela- tions Advisory Council (NJCRAC), Mr. Gingrich offered a ringing call for a tougher ap- proach to fighting terror. But the Speaker has been unwilling or unable to convince his rebellious freshman colleagues, who are backed by pro-gun groups, to get moving on the anti-terror bill. `The charitable interpretation is that he's lost control of his troops," said an official with a Jewish group that has been in the thick of the terrorism debate. "But there's a real question about how hard he's tried." The administration continues to back the omnibus bill. But the budget standoff and the increas- ing disarray in government means that it has not been a priority at the White House. Meanwhile, groups on the far right, like the Liberty Lobby, have been using their newfound influence on Capitol Hill to fight the bill. "People in Washington just haven't gotten the message," said Malcolm Hoenlein, execu- tive vice-chair of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. "If they fail to act on this bill, it will send a clear message to all the terror- ist groups that we're not serious. And then it will be open season here." `Religious Equality' Shows Advances It's an old story, but it gets stranger with each retelling: The religious right and their friends in Congress continue to bicker over their "religious equality" amendments. After months of internal wran- gling, two versions of the amend- ment were dropped into the hopper in November focusing on two different goals. One, sponsored by Rep. Ernest Jim Istook, R-Okla, specifically endorses student-led school prayer. Its introduction was de- layed beciuse a series of hear- ings around the country failed to establish that Christians and others are being systematically deprived of their religious rights because of recent Supreme Court decisions. But now, the amendment ap- parently has a good head of steam; in December, Mr. Istook gathered some 101 cosponsors, a tally Rabbi David Saperstein, di- rector of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, termed "very alarming." The other version, offered by Rep. Henry Hyde, R-111., has pro- voked resistance from some Christian groups because it fo- cuses primarily on government funding of parochial institutions, not prayer. The Christian Coalition, which made the amendment a top pri- ority in its Contract with the American Family, is not taking sides; officials of the group say they could support either. But their lack of visible enthusiasm has raised some eyebrows on Capitol Hill. Jewish groups continue to lob- by ferociously, making the point that tampering with the Consti- tution to address problems that may not exist is a bad idea. "The battle lines are drawn,"