WHERE PROFESSIONAL. SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE! Yasser Who? • • • • Innovative designs Impeccable installation Incomparable service 17 years of experience Palestinian leader's visit to U.S. met with a ghrug. 248.855.8747 As* JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent Washington he most remarkable aspect of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's visit to Washington this week is how little inter- est it has generated. Arafat was due to arrive in Washington on Thursday; he will also travel to New York for the United Nations General Assembly session. On his schedule: a dinner under the auspices of the Center for Middle East Peace and Economic Cooperation and the Peres Center and a session with the United States Chamber of Commerce, at which he is expected to renew his pitch for accelerated private-sector investment in his nascent state. Like some pro-Israel lawmakers, he is expected to ask questions about the T International Studies. "He's welcome, he can come and chat, and every time he comes he doesn't have to produce headlines. Israeli sources say Prime Minister Ehud Barak is also planning a White House one-on-one when he swings through town on his way to the United Jewish Communities General Assembly in Atlanta in mid-November. 'VRItri1W4MIZEIMI ,, 0/Petting Interests Everyone seems excited about the recently signed Sharm el-Sheikh agree- ment between the Israelis and the Palestinians — except for those who have to make the case for its $1.9 billion package of promised Congressional aid to make it all happen. According to several Capitol Hill sources, administration officials have not forwarded a plan for appropriating the money or briefed key congressional officials on why the additional aid I is necessary to help Israel pay the high costs of additional West Bank pullouts. u But administration officials say they're merely trying to avoid traps set by Republican leaders - who are perfectly willing to pass the aid package, but only if they cut other programs favored by the administration by a corresponding amount. The problem of "offsets" has plagued the Wye aid debate from the beginning; the admin- istration, sources here say, wants to avoid being forced to swallow big, politically unpalatable cuts as the price of the extra jolt of aid. But White House officials say the Wye spending package is just one of a handful of budget priorities they hope to work out with Republican leaders, and that they're not willing to win the Mideast money at the expense of other priorities. Pro-Israel lobbyists generally agree that quiet negotiations when last- minute budget deals are concocted is the best strategy, but worry that the administration is missing an impor- tant opportunity by not pressing its case for the money now, while the memory of the Sharm el-Sheikh agreement is fresh and while Israel and the Palestinians seem to be back on the road to peace. o Yasser Arafat: Low profile visit. apparent lack of action on the supple- mental aid promised in the Wye River agreement; the White House promised the Palestinians $400 million, although Congress is likely to pare that down or add new conditions. Administration officials expect to spend some time this week educating Arafat about the realities of the current budget battle between Congress and the White House. Arafat will also reportedly press for repeal of the law keeping a tight lid on the PLO office in Washington — some- thing the administration is not likely to support at this time. "What's good about the visit is that it's a normal working visit, with- out a lot of drama," said Judith Kipper, director of the Mideast pro- gram at the Center for Strategic and Call today for your free in-home consultation ea/test 6a44, Formerly of The Closet Company, Inc. Cookie, Doris and The Staff Of Bloomfield-Keego Resale Shop Hope Everyone Had A Great Holiday, And Wish You A Happy And Prosperous New Year! 34 25 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor . (at Commerce Rd.) Mon.-Sat. 10 5, Thurs. til 7 By Appointment Only - 681 - 5424} Maxie Collision, Inc. Jim Fleischer — "Since 1987" 32581 Northwestern Highway, Farmington Hills, MI 48334 248 - 737 - 7122 DAVID ROSENMAN S Auto Alma PURCHASERS NEW & USED CAR BROKER Sales • Leasing • Buying (248) 851-CARS (248) 851-2277 Detroit Jewish News 9/24 1999 29