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But this week's compromise formula, crafted in a House-Sen- ate conference committee, is un- likely to satisfy some Jewish groups that support the under- lying goals of the legislation, but reject a tacked-on provision lim- iting the habeas corpus rights of death row inmates. This latest twist in the strange odyssey of the anti-terror bill came when Rep. Bob Barr, R- Ga., author of an earlier com- promise that he abruptly abandoned in the face of strong pressure from pro-gun groups, joined with a number of Repub- lican leaders to restore much of what the House had stripped. That includes provisions al- lowing the administration to des- ignate groups affiliated with terrorist organizations and to freeze the funds of those groups. The bill will make it a crime to do- nate money to or accept funds for foreign terrorist groups, and it in- cludes new procedures that will make it easier to bar suspected terrorists from this country. The bill also contains contro- versial provisions allowing the government to conduct deporta- tion hearings of suspected ter- rorists and their allies using secret evidence. But provisions aimed at Amer- ican terrorist groups like right- wing "militias," a key element of the original bill which was in- troduced in the days after the Ok- lahoma City bombing, were not fully restored. Rep. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., termed it the "barely better than nothing terrorism bill," and im- mediately introduced a new mea- sure aimed at restoring more of the deleted provisions, especial- ly those aimed at domestic terror groups. "It's sad that one year after the Oklahoma City bombing this Congress had to claw and scratch its way to a mediocre bill," he said. The conference compromise, which was announced at a Mon- day news conference featuring victims of the Oklahoma City blast and families of Pan Am 103 victims, was good news for the Anti-Defamation League, which promoted the original legislation and stuck with the bill even when strong civil liberties concerns emerged. "We feel we got virtually every- thing we were looking for that was removed by the House," said Jesse Hordes, ADL's Washing- ton director. "This revised lan- guage goes a long way to restoring provisions that will make this a serious instrument in the fight against terrorism." But other groups, including the American Jewish Congress and the American Jewish Corn- mittee, remained concerned about the habeas corpus provi- sions. Collusion Charges Investigated T he Senate Banking Com- mittee, under the auspices of its pit-bull chairman, Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R- N.Y., is about to sink its teeth into the meaty issue of Swiss banking — and, specifically, into charges of collusion between Swiss bankers and Nazi Ger- many. And the preliminary hearings, scheduled for next week, may shed some light on the question of billions of dollars in Jewish as- sets stashed in Swiss banks in the frantic days before the Nazi onslaught and never recovered. Currently, the World Jewish Congress is involved in troubled negotiations with Swiss banks and with the government in Bern in an effort to help aging sur- vivors of the Holocaust recover long-lost assets. The Swiss contend that only $32 million can be traced to pre- war Jewish accounts; Jewish groups estimate that the num- ber is well into the billions. Swiss foot-dragging on the question of restitution, congres- sional sources say, may lead to a wider enquiry into the role of Swiss banks in laundering Nazi plunder money. Rep. D'Amato has scheduled intensive hearings for early this summer. Next week's prelimi- COLLUSION page 126