FRONTLINES DETROIT'S HIGHEST RATES 7.625% 7.846% 12 MONTH CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT Effective Annual Yield' Minimum Deposit of $500 7.750% 7.978% Effective Annual Yield' Minimum Deposit of $75,000 `Compounded Quarterly Rates subject to change without notice This is a fixed rate account that is in- sured to $100,000 by the Federal Sav- ings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC). Substantial Interest Penalty for early withdrawal from certificate accounts. FIRST SECURITY1 SAVINGS BANK FSB MAIN OFFICE 1760 Telegraph Rd. PHONE 338•7700 (Just South of Orchard Lake) f OUAt HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 14 FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1988 HOURS: MON.-THURS. 9:30-4:30 FRI. 9:30-6:00 West Bloomfield's Heated Race Highlights Primary On Tuesday KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer W est Bloomfield Township has once again entered the limelight in the 1988 municipal election. At issue is the burgeoning growth of this 42,000-person municipality with a large , Jewish population and a citizen revolt by a small, yet forceful lobbying group that claims its purpose is to save the community . from overdevelopment. The Organizations United to Save the Township (OUST) says the government is too pro-development and takes credit for the recent resigna- tions of three elected officials — former Township Super- visor John Doherty, who suf- fers serious health problems; former trustee Betty Sue Dupree, who since has moved out of state; and former trustee Jeff Leib, who has launched a campaign for the Oakland County prosecutor spot. The three resigned this past year during a recall drive spearheaded by OUST. Now voters will choose from one of the largest slates of candidates in Oakland Coun- ty's primary as 33 residents fight it out to secure four-year terms of office within the township government. Voters will select candidates for supervisor, clerk, treasurer and four trustees. Voters throughout Oakland County will go to the polls to nominate Democratic and Republican candidates for partisan offices such as Oakland County offices, U.S. senator, U.S. representative and state representatives and the nonpartisan state Court of Appeals (which has two new judgeships), Oakland County probate judge and some local District Court judgeships. Polls will be open Tuesday from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. In West Bloomfield, where candidates for most township offices are all Republican, winners of the primary will be uncontested in the Nov. 8 general election. OUST is backing new- comers Sandra Draur for supervisor and Judith Holtz and Kathleen Haack for trustees. Other candidates are: Supervisor — Ronald Ber- man, Lawrence Friedman, Vincent Cytacki and incum- bent Dorothy McIntosh. Trustees — incumbents Gordon Allardyce, Raymond Holland and Dennis Vatsis and newcomers Dr. Herbert Bloom, William Dotterrer, Douglas Hoxie, Henry Leeds, Patrick McGinty, Olga Meyer and G. Kenneth Poye. Twelve Democratic and Republican candidates also are running for six, four year terms for the parks and recreation commission. Bloom, married to Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Alice Gilbert, says his humanitarian activities throughout the world would help insure an adequate pat- tern of growth in a township plagued by divergent views. Voters living in Bloomfield township — the other municipality which com- prises a large Jewish popula- tion — also will be asked to nominate respective party candidates for the general election. Voters can choose Republican or Democratic candidates, but can not nominate contenders for both parties. No one is challenging in- cumbents in Bloomfield Township, who will be un- contested in the primary and in the Nov. 8 general election. In the race for U.S. Senator, former U.S. Rep. Jim Dunn of East Lansing will battle it out with Robert Huber of Troy for the Republican nomina- tion. The winner will face longtime Democratic Sen. Donald Riegle Jr., who is unopposed in the primary. For U.S. representative district 17, both Republican Dennis Flessland of Hun- tington Woods and Rep. Sander Levin, D-Southfield, are unopposed in the primary. In the 18th Congressional District, Democrat Gary Kohut of Troy and incumbent Rep. William Broomfield, R- Birmingham, also are unop- posed in the primary. State Sen. Lana Pollack, D- Ann Arbor, faces University of Michigan economics pro- fessor Dean Baker in the Democratic primary for the state's second Congressional District. The winner will try to unseat six-term Republican Rep. Carl Pursell. All Jewish members of the Michigan House of Represen- tatives — Maxine Berman, D- Southfield, David Honigman, R-West Bloomfield, Burton Leland, D-Detroit, and David Gubow, D-Huntington Woods — are unopposed in the primary. Clerk — incumbent Sharon Law. - Treasurer — Thrry Gibbons, Denise Hammond and Paul Kilar. . Hopefuls Seek Patterson's Job ROBIN FREEDMAN Jewish News Intern eff Leib wants to lessen the trauma faced by crime victims when telling their story. "I believe there is tremen- dous insensitivity towards victims of child molestation and women abuse," Leib said. He has proposed a prosecu- tion team in which the victim will be assigned to one assis- tant prosecutor, establish a relationship with the assis- tant, and thus take the agony out of retelling the crime to j several "strangers!' A former West Bloomfield trustee, Leib faces three other Republican contenders — chief prosecutor Dick Thomp- son, state Sen. Richard Fessler and Commissioner Jack McDonald — in the race for Oakland County pro- secutor this year. The winner of Tuesday's primary will meet Democrat Barry Kraemer in November. It's the first time in 16 years that a new prosecutor will serve Oakland County. Outspoken Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson, incumbent . since 1972, has decided not to seek re-election. McDonald, Oakland Coun- ty commissioner, worked in the prosecutor's office from 1970 to 1973. He says his campaign is strong because he adds valuable experience in the courtroom, not just in administration. "Anyone who runs for pro- secuting attorney has to be consistent, tough and fair. I'd like to do the job quietly and to the best of my ability." McDonald said. Thompson has worked with Patterson since the beginning