I ANALYSIS I KEDEIMI New Style Kosher Wines for Your Holiday Israeli Politics Continued from preceding page Boot= de tiemi 1011 . Ant NYSia -.1,21,..11ASSUP D' RED WINE -- IOU run .... •-•••••ICRoLgAt-.-.-- ;SEMI CRY WHITE WINE 1965 .) 1;1_1 BORENSTEIN'S Headquarters For All Your Passover Needs 25242 Greenfield Road N. of 10 Mile • Oak Park In The Royal Plaza Exit Greenfield, Off I.696 967-3920 There's Hidden Money In Your Garage! THE FINEST IN HOME SECURITY WIN ON FUR! SAVE ON STORAGE! [- STORAGE AND CLEANING ; 1 I SAVE $800 1 I Dricker-Tunls Furs !EXPIRES 6-30-90 Discount for pre-poyment Check or cosh only JN...I Bridterzlimis Fins 6335 ORCHARD LAKE RD • ORCHARD MALL West Bloomfield $554200 40 FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1990 NECESITAMOS MAS DE SU TIPO. DONE SANGRE + American Red Cross Today, in a direct confron- tation in Labor's central committee, Peres would probably win. But, given an- other year or two of the Likud-Labor partnership, many party insiders believe that the Defense Minister could unseat Peres. Thus, it is not surprising that Rabin has been the Labor's primary advocate of keeping the unity govern- ment together. He has offered various compromise formulas and encouraged his followers within the party to oppose Peres' efforts to bring down the government. In so doing, Rabin has positioned himself to the right of the the Finance Minister — and, not coincidentally, squarely in the center of the Israeli political spectrum. That is the present line-up. But Israeli statesmen are capable of surprising flexi- bility. In the not too distant past, the 'hawkish' Ariel Sharon, courting the then-prime minister Menachem Begin, supported the Camp David accords, while the 'dovish' Shamir and Arens opposed it. Similarly, in the 1970's, as prime minister, the `hawkish' Rabin was a dove who opposed Jewish set- tlement in the West Bank, while the 'dovish' Peres, tried to out-flank him from the right by becoming a patron of Gush Emunim, the right wing movement pro- moting settlements in the West Bank. In Israeli politics, positions change. Only personal ambi- tions and interests remain constant. ❑ New Alliance Party ADL Charges New York (JTA) — Below the bold black lettering of the New Alliance Party sta- tionery, highlighted by quotation marks, is the par- ty's brief but descriptive motto: "people instead of profits." But a recent study by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith contends that the NAP's philosophy might just as well be "profits in- stead of people." In The New Alliance Party: A Study in Deception, the ADL claims that the left-of- center party that ran black candidate Lenora Fulani in the 1988 presidential elec- tion is nothing less than "part Marxist sect, part therapy cult, part enter- tainment enterprise." "Like the extremist politics of Lyndon LaRouche," the study says, "the New Alliance Party has the trappings of a cult." Its politics "is an amalgam of eccentric 'therapy' theories, revolutionary rhetoric, black nationalism, sexual refer- ences, anti-Semitism and in- tense anti-Israel bias." The report refers to nu- merous statements by Fred Newman, whom ADL says is the leader of the party, in which Newman expressed support for PLO terrorist Abu Jihad, Libyan Colonel Moammar Gadhafi and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. He also referred to Jews as "the storm troopers of decadent capi- talism" who "sold their souls to the devil." ADL also alleges that Newman — a one-time col- lege teacher and the director of eight "therapeutic centers" where his unique method of "social therapy" is practiced — used the centers for the indoctrina- tion of NAP members and for political fund-raising. "It's the potential to lure the unsuspecting or the in- nocent into support for various activities of the par- ty that is the source of con- cern," explained Alan Schwartz, director of ADL's research and evaluation department and editor of the study. "The NAP has all the features commonly assoc- iated with cults: a father figure in Newman, the strict inculcation of a specific point of view into members that seem to do his bidding, the extreme secrecy of much of their activity, the decep- tiveness in the running of these so-called therapy centers as a vehicle for pro- moting Newman's ideology, as well as the anti-Semitic scapegoating," Schwartz said. The controversial party was formed in 1979 in New York by community and labor activists, many of them Jewish, as a pro- gressive party for American underdog minorities. It de- scribes itself as a black-led, multi-racial left-wing party, and has taken outspoken views on gays.