- Short and Long Term Parking! ANNUAL PERCENTAGE YIELD 6.29% ANNUAL PERCENTAGE YIELD 12-month CD 24-month CD 6.40% 1 ' ,memp11110- •$500 minimum opening deposit • Interest compounded quarterly Oakland Commerce Bank Member FDIC 31731 Northwestern Hwy. • Farmington Hills, MI 48334 • 248-855-0550 * Rates subject to change without notice. Substantial penalty for early withdrawl. Annual Percentage Yield is effective as of 8/8/97 LINCOLN Mercury "Superstar" Used Cars • HYUNDAI TOYOTA il ir Ma10.11Da SUZUKI. Ask anyone who owns one.- "EQUITY TRADE" WE PAY OFF YOUR TRADE REGARDLESS OF HOW MUCH YOU OWE! AUTOMOTIVE GROUP WE GUARANTEE... A F-A-R-R BETTER DEAL! "The Bigger We Get... The Better Deals You Get!" THE SUPERSTAR DEALER CALL 1-800-MEL-FARR 24 Hour Information Center Est. in 1975 • 84 BOOM page 63 in the world, meaning that it would inevitably slow down. For the first half of the 1990s, Israel's annual economic growth rate was comparable to that of the Far Eastern "tigers," and be- yond the dreams of the West. Un- employment had been cut almost in half. While the Rabin-Peres government spent beyond its means, driving up inflation in the process, its liberal policy also paid off in vastly improved schools, new highways all over the coun- try, and a lot more jobs. Prosper- ity was in the air. Today, Netanyahu blames the economic doldrums on the previ- ous government, saying the Ra- bin-Peres regime spent the country into deep overdraft while holding the economy in a social- ist hammerlock with state own- ership over large companies. Early on, Netanyahu promised to cut spending sharply and speed privatization, and he has made good on his word. Yet, the economy grows weaker. The opposition blames the re- cession on Netanyahu's mishan- dling of the peace process. Unemployment is rising and foreign investment is dropping. `The government's own figures show that foreign investment is down by 40 percent. Nobody wants to invest in a country that's on the brink of war," said Avra- ham Shochat, finance minister under Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres. Because of that perception, tourism also has stumbled. But the truth is that no coun- try could maintain Israel's tremendous growth record for long. It expanded at an annual average of 6 percent in 1990-95. Naturally, today's recession hurts Israel's poor worst of all. And Netanyahu's brand of eco- nomics doesn't offer relief. The Social Democratic Party in his coalition, led by Foreign Minister David Levy, recently extracted from him a long, expensive list of promised spending programs for the poor. But with more budget cuts immediately ahead, nobody expects them to be fulfilled. Israel's economy leaves Ne- tanyahu in a difficult political po- sition. As Maxim Levy, David Levy's brother and the Gesher faction's No. 2 man, said: "Ne- tanyahu was elected by the peo- ple in the development towns, and they are waiting to see what it got them." A development town is often a backwater, usually in the Galilee or the Negev, settled in the 1950s by uneducated Sephardi immi- grants. They often have low-paid, unskilled jobs at best, and un- employment at worst. In Kiryat Malachi, at the northern edge of the Negev, more than 70 percent of its 22,000 res- idents voted for Netanyahu in the last election. At a local falafel joint fre- quented by the chronically un- employed, Lalou Ategi, 37, a handyman who's been out of work for two years, said he used to be "hardcore Likud." He ex- pected that his fortunes would rise with the new government. "Now, for all I care, [Palestinian leader Yassir] Arafat can come and take over," he said. Yet, a Kiryat Malachi woman in her early 20s who hopes to get a minimum-wage job at a local print shop, and whose sign- painter father has been jobless for five years, said she doesn't think the economy will hurt Ne- tanyahu in the city. 'Things have always been bad in Kiryat Malachi," she reasoned. Likud's Meir Shitreet, former mayor of the development town of Yavne, is thought to have been one of the most successful local leaders of Israel's poor. Just appointed by Netanyahu to be the coalition whip, Shitreet believes the government's bud- get-cutting strategy will eventu- - / ally turn things around for all Israelis. "Inflation will go down, the economy will stabilize, there will be much more investment in industry and this will create jobs," Shitreet predicted. Netanyahu is Israel's most economically learned and conservative prime minister ever. He promised a Reagan- ite/Thatcherite economic "revo- lution." It may succeed later, but -- \ for the last year, Israel's econo- my, like the peace process, has faltered. Publicity Deadlines The normal deadline for local news and publicity items is noon Thursday, eight days prior to issue date. The dead- line for out-of-town obituar- ies is 10 a.m. Tuesday, three days prior to issue date. All material must be type- written, double-spaced, on 8/2 11 paper and include the name and daytime telephone number of sender. __/