POLITICS
START THE NEW
YEAR WITH US!
Ori
NEW YEARS IN TORONTO
DEC. 30-JAN. 1 OR DEC. 31-JAN. 2
GALA BALL OR
MURDER MYSTERY PARTY
In fashion... it's
all a matter of taste.
Don't conform - inform.
• R . T.MOTORCOACH
• 2 NITES HOTEL
$ 185
• NEW YEARS EVE PARTY
OR YOUR CHOICE INC
DINNER. DANCING & MORE!
Inside
• 31409 Southfield Rd.
Emile Salon
642 3315
DEC. 28-JAN. 1
ONLY
• R.T. AIR & TRANS
• 3 NITES IMPERIAL PALACE
FROM
• R.T. AIR & TRANSFERS
• 7 NITES HOTELS
CALL FOR DETAILS
SNOW TRAIN AGAWA CANYON
iSault Ste. Marie, Ont.
P.P.
ws
ORLANDO, FLORIDA
DISCOUNT AIRPORT LIMOUSINE SERVICE
FEB. 14-28 OR FEB. 21-MAR, 6
ONLY $775 P.P. DBL.
$ 4 9
885-1.1M0
• R.T. MOTORCOACH
• 14 NITES HOTELS (10 IN FLORIDA)
• 3 DAY ADMISSION EPCOT
AND/OR DISNEY WORLD
••LUAU & SHOW AT SEAWORLD
• TOURS TO CYPRESS GARDENS &
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER
• 2 DINNER SHOWS & MORE!
"BILOXI BLUES"
IN TORONTO
(5466)
rvice, c1nc.
$189 DBL.
• R.T.MOTORCOACH
• 2 NITES WATERTOWER HOTEL
• 2 BREAKFASTS, LUNCHES & DINNERS
• FULL DAY ON TRAIN
DATES: JAL 2941, FEB. 5-7, 12.14, 19.21, 26-28, MAR. 11.13
Serving The Stars And
Fortune 500
For Over 3 Generations
imousine
p.p. dbl.
PHOENIX, ARIZONA
& GRAND CANYON
MARCH 1-8, FR. $599 P.P. DBL.
• NEIL DIAMOND
FRANK SINATRA
• BILLY JOEL
BOB HOPE
• WHITNEY HOUSTON
LIZA MINELLI
• PRINCE
BILL COSBY
MICHAEL JACKSON
• JOAN RIVERS
• ETC. • ETC. • ETC.
L
ge
$749
• R.T.AIR & HOTEL TRANSFERS
• 7 NITES. CHOICE OF HOTELS
YOUR FAVORITE STARS DO!
Gliatewide
P.P. DBL.
DEC. 26-JAN. 2
STATEWIDE LIMOUSINE
• Seats 6 Comfortably
• All-New Stretch Limousines
• Uniformed Chauffeurs
• Professional & Punctual
$449
NEW YEARS SPECIAL
NASSAU, BAHAMAS
-
RIDE WITH
•
•
•
•
•
P.P. DbI.
NEW YEARS IN LAS VEGAS I
Designer fashions as individual as you are.
50
Michigan's Largest
and Finest
FEB. 12.14, 1988$169
•
•
•
•
•
P.P. DbI.
2 NITES HOTEL
SAT. P.M. PERFORMANCE
DINNER ED'S WAREHOUSE SAT.
CITY TOUR
R.T. MOTORCOACH
BIG RIVER IN
GRAND RAPIDS
I
!
1
I
•
•
•
•
TEEN TRAVEL
1, CAME
;77/= 1/L --4.1 1=1:tri./..\\
•=-77/1
2375 Steeles Avenue West Suite 201
Downsview, Ontario M3J 3A8
•
••
40TH ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION!
CALL FOR LOW WINTER RATES!
ONE DAY THEATER TRIPS
BY MOTORCOACH
"CAN CAN" - TOLEDO
JAN. 30 - $46.00
(CHITA RIVERA & RADIO CITY ROCKETTES)
"MITZI GAYNOR"
PREMIER CENTER
FEB. 17 -$32.00
MAT. PERFORMANCE
(416) 731-1862
BE LEY 10 15 8 TRAVEL
Or call Iris Fuller (313) 626-1424
23100 Providence Dr., Suite 105
Southfield, MI 48075
%/!-= • I
an
R.T. MOTORCOACH
1 NITE AMWAY GRAND HOTEL
SAT. P.M. PERFORMANCE DES VOS HALL
1 DINNER — 1 BREAKFAST IN HOTEL
LUNCH AND SHOW
GEORGE AUERBACH'S
TEEN CARAVAN
Plus young adult and
family tours to Israel
JANUARY 23-24
ONLY $13900 P.P. DBL.
ISRAEL
The summer camp
that travels...and camps
, ,*\\
simmommaniumum.11111MNS
FRIMY nEr, FKARER_4 _1987
•
559-8620
Zionists
Continued from Page 64
an extended trip to the
United States where he
sought to endear himself to
key fund raisers and Ameri-
can Zionist leaders.
As the week of decision
approached, there was
speculation in Jerusalem that
the Likud might instead put
forward such bright young
men as Knesset Members
Dan Meridor or Ehud Olmert.
There is even talk of the
Likud wheeling out a real
heavyweight like Moshe
Arens, former defense minis-
ter, Ambassador to Washing-
ton and a man often spoken of
as a possible successor to
Shamir as party leader.
With his American back-
ground and generally high
standing among Diaspora
communities, Arens could
prove to be a hard candidate
to beat. But even if he does
agree to run, he could face
legal difficulties if he insists
on retaining his Knesset seat
while serving as chairman of
the Jewish Agency and WZO.
According to WZO sources,
the Zionist Congress intends
to settle the leadership issue
as quickly as possible in order
to concentrate on the "Zionist
issues" that fill its agenda.
That, however, is considered
to be little more than a pious
hope. Instead, it seems likely
that the business of electing
a new bunch of top officials —
and the role played by the
fund raisers in torpedoing
Akiva Lewinsky — could
devour much of the four days.
It could even, say WZO
sources, boil over into open
rebellion by Israeli "old-
timers" who find the new,
assertive mood of Diaspora
leaders too much to stomach.
An indication of the depth
of this feeling was contained
in an indignant letter to the
Jerusalem Post by veteran
Israeli politician Moshe Kol,
one of just three surviving
signatories of Israel's
Declaration of Independence.
The fund raisers, wrote Kol,
"don't understand anything
about the important work of
the departments of the
Jewish Agency and the World
Zionist Organization. They
want to destroy the demo-
cracy of the world Zionist
movement." "Who authorized
them to make such demands?
Did they ask American Jewry
or world Jewry?" he asked.
"Thank God that such so-
called leaders had nothing to
say 40 years ago when the
State of Israel was born and
American Jewry struggled
with us for our independence.
If such so-called leaders
would have represented
American Jewry then, who
would have struggled for our
independence?"
Moshe Arens: A Likud longshot.
S
uch bitterness, given
voice at the congress,
could drag the whole
issue of the Diaspora-Israel
partnership out into the open,
whether most delegates want
it or not. And the results of
such a debate would be
unpredictable.
For while outgoing WZO-
Jewish Agency chairman
Arye Dulzin has repeatedly
called for "fusion" of the
Diasapora fund raisers and
the Zionists, there are others
who believe that the time has
come to break up the 16-year
partnership.
Five months ago, delegates
to the Jewish Agency
Assembly carefully avoided
this issue. The Thirty-First
Zionist Congress might not,
however, be so circumspect.
"There could be fireworks,"
noted a Jewish Agency
source, "unless the various
parties are satisfied with the
deals that are being cut this
week."
The leadership issue is not
the only subject that is likely
to drown out discussion of
such mainline Zionist issues
as immigration, settlement,
Jewish education and demo-
graphy.
Two non-agenda items —
religious pluralism and the
question of an international
Middle East peace conference
are expected to be raised and
hotly debated.
A powerful Reform-Conser-
vative coalition is likely to
push hard for some kind of
declarative action on Or-
thodox stranglehold in Israel
— a move that will predic-
tably be fiercely resisted by
the Orthodox Mizrachi bloc.
The peace conference
debate is expected to be pro-
moted by the Labor Party
whose leader, Shimon Peres,
is its most ardent advocate
and who has declared that the