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He is expected to mount a major public relations offensive for the group, which has been pummeled by the reac- tion to recent cases of shootings at schools and growing public concern about the ease with which kids, crimi- nals and anti-government nuts can acquire sophisticated weapons. "The more people see of him in this role, the less good his fame will do the organization," said Mark Pelavin, asso- ciate director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, which has actively supported federal gun control initiatives. "I don't see any evidence he will make the group any less radical than his predecessors." That radicalism, Jewish activists say, is a major factor in the group's declin- ing membership — although nobody in Washington is ready to write off the NRA when it comes to gun legislation on Capitol Hill. Heston's election also didn't impress Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., the leading congressional advocate for tough gun control laws, who has been termed a "Jewish gun grabber" by pro- gun extremists whose arguments are sometimes tinged with anti-Semitism. Heston is "the NRA's new trigger man," he said this week. "With Charlton Heston the NRA has found a new actor but it's the same old script. It's a script that the American people have rejected as too harsh, too violent and too extreme. Frankly, if the NRA is mainstream then we live on the Planet of the Apes." Congressional Doings On Mideast Front Members of Israel's Knesset have joined with a handful of Capitol Hill machers to create a joint panel to study missile defenses — a subject that is getting increasing attention here and in Jerusalem in the wake of the South Asian arms race. On the roster: Knesset members Uzi Landau and Ori Orr, who were in town last week for preliminary meet- ings, and a bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers, including Sen. Jon Kyl, R- Ariz., Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., and Rep. Neil Abecrombie, D-Hawaii. A congressional source said that while the group's charter was general, it would look at the growing threat of missile proliferation in the region, as well as research on defensive programs and the Arrow anti-ballistic missile program, an Israeli project funded largely by Washington. On another front, a group of pro- peace process activists has written to the House leadership, complaining about what they see as a growing level of partisan rancor when it comes to Mideast issues. "We are deeply troubled by the provocative rhetoric that has charac- terized some recent congressional statements about the administration's attempts to prevent an outbreak of violence and to get the peace process back on track," they wrote. Although the letter was addressed to both House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., Capitol Hill sources said that it was clearly aimed at GOP leaders, who have accused the Clinton administration of blackmailing Israel into accepting a bigger troop redeployment that the Likud government feels is safe. The letter was authored by E. Robert Goodkind, Alexander Grass, Seymour D. Reich and Susan K. Stern, a bi-partisan group of Jewish lay leaders who have supported the peace process. A BigWin On Food Stamps Some rare good news for immigrants in these days of slashed budgets and anti-immigrant regulations: last week the House approved $818 million to restore food stamp benefits to some legal immigrants. The administration had originally asked for $2.5 billion, but Jewish groups were not quibbling.