Israel Want one? • • • • • Out In The Cold As riots mount and bombs explode, Israel's peace camp seems to have gone into hibernation. LARRY DERFNER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS C ynical laughter went up from various points in the crowd at Rabin Square in Israel recently. The emcee had just announced that there were 30,000 strong at this "Save the Peace" rally. The real figure, it was clear to veteran protesters, was more like a third of that. Excuses were offered at the demonstration organized by "An Entire Generation Demands Peace," a popular movement somewhat milder than Peace Now, and unofficially connected to the Labor Party. The event had been hastily planned, they said. There hadn't been enough advertising, they added. Have one? • • • • never been in such danger of im- minent destruction. Mr. Peres, the opposition Labor party leader, has warned that Israel stands "On the eve of war ... on the verge of catastrophe." Yet, to the extent that the op- position is heard from, its mes- sage has no resonance. In the Knesset and in the street, the Is- raeli "Peace Camp" seems to have about folded its tent. For example, Peace Now mounted two demonstrations at Har Homa. Each drew about 150 people. The Israeli left used to be a vig- orous, mobilized force. Massive demonstrations were held dur- ing the Lebanon War and at the Get this! We will help you get what you want with our Prime or Better home equity loans. Guaranteed. And for a limited time, you can get a 3-year fixed term loan at a low 8.50% APR*. So get what you want for what you need with the best home equity loan program around. Come in today or just call 1-800-OLD KENT. THE DETRO IT J EWIS H NEW S Shimon Peres: Met with tepid response. 84 OLD KENT Prime Rate" is the highest rate shown as the Prime Rate in the Money Rate Table of The Wall Street Journal. For home equity installment loans, Prime Rate will be determined at the time of the loan. The Prime-or-Better Loan is a 36-month, fixed-rate home equity loan. The current Annual Percentage Rate (APR) is 8.50%. To obtain this rate, you must have payments automatically deducted from a checking or savings account and must have an Old Kent Preference or OnLine Checking Account. The loan is payable in 36 equal monthly payments. For example, a $10,000 loan would require 36 payments of $315.67. Applies to 80% loan-to-value loans only. — Cr MEMBER FDIC @OLD KENT BANK 1997 But that still couldn't explain the flatness of spirit at the protest. The evenings headliner, Shi- mon Peres, hammered away at the Netanyahu government. "We can still make peace. We can't stop, we can't grow tired, we can't despair," he exhorted the crowd. The applause was tepid. The crowd seemed tired, all right. They weren't in despair, though; that was for the masses who had stayed away. With the exception of the pe- riod immediately after the Has- monean Tunnel riots last September, the peace process has start of the intifada. More than 100,000 people turned out at Ra- bin Square — then named Kings of Israel Square — to cheer Yitzhak Rabin and his policies the night he was killed. As re- cently as the aftermath of the tunnel riots, a series of demon- strations sprang up almost spon- taneously in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, drawing tens of thou- sands of people. But now? "People are in de- spair," said attorney Ayelet Nach- mias, sitting at Sheinkin Street's Cafe Tamar, a meeting place for the dovish-minded. "They feel