DETROIT

Mr. Alan's

1/2 Off %More"
Shoe Sale

SALE ENDS
_TUESDAY!

Waldorf

$60 Value . . . Now $29 88
Pontiac
$140 Value .. Now $6988

Tempi()

Manchester
$215 Value .. Now $ 99 88

All-Leather Cap-Toe
$95 Value .. . Now $ 29 88

COLE • HAAN

GIORGIO BRUTINI

$80 Value . . .

Now $ 3 988

Genuine Snake

950 Value .. Now $4988

Penny Loafer

Rossini Warm, Winter Boots

$50 Value . . . .

Now $ 1 9 88

930 Value .. Now $4988

Country Road

940 Value

Wing-Tip

Arapahoe

$105 Value .. Now $3988

$145 Value . . Now
Savona
$200 Value . . Now

ROCKPORT

$100 Value .. Now

4. 988

w $4

9 88

TIMBERLAND

$6988

$9988

LORENZO BANFI

4

Asst. Lorenzo Banff
$245 Value .. Now $ 99 88

ENNESI

Suedes
$100 Value . .

Now $6988

JOHNSTON &
MURPHY

NUNN BUSH

Asst. Rockports

Continued from preceding page

$170 Value .. Now $ 79 88

STACY ADAMS

Casual

Rally

Bostonian Wing-Tips le
$125 Value . . . Now

59 88

Rossini Lizard

FRENCH SHRINER

$300 Value .. Now $ 9988

Tassel

MARTEGANI

920 Value .. Now $4988

Crocodile & Suede

BRUNO MAGLI

s450 Value .. Now $ 19988

Packard

s140 Value .. Now $4988

Small additional cost for size 13 and up.
Not all styles & brands available at an stores.

AU. MANN

A Name you Value, the Brands you Trust.

Southfield
The Original"
New Orleans Mall
10 Mile & Greenfield
559-7818

Eastland Mall
NOW OPEN!
Next to Hudson's
Mall Hours
371-2233

West Bloomfield
On The Boardwalk
Orchard Lake Road
South Maple
626-3362

Downtown
Birmingham
136 N. Woodward
North of Maple
647-0550

Dearborn
15219 Mich. Ave.
One Block Ea-st
of Greenfield
584-3820

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Wed. & Sat. 10-7
Thurs. & Fri. 10-9
Sun. 12-5

Right in Your
Own Driveway!

THE
TUNE
-UP
I MAN

Certified by the National
Automotive Institute of Excellence

Comes to your home or office
with the garage-on-wheels

Valet service that doesn't
cost one penny extra

• Expert diagnostic tune-up
• Elecronic analyzer
all engine systems
• Professionally trained
mechanics
• Perfect results assured

Expanded Services
Call Sanford Rosenberg
for,your car problems

398-3605I-4

16

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1991

Rally notes: Federation
executives are already talk-
ing about a major mission to
Israel once threat of war
subsides. Federation exec-
utive vice president Robert
Aronson said the Detroit
Jewish community needs to
make a major statement. A
mission, he said, could be the
best followup to the rally
that the community could
make.
A community-wide Red

Several Jewish Soldiers
Fighting in Persian Gulf

•

4

KIMBERLY LIFTON

Wing Tip

GENUINE LIZARD

$100 Value .. Now $ 4988

* * *

Cross blood drive will be
held from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. on Feb. 10 at the Hillel
Day School. The blood is to
be collected for the Opera-
tion Desert Storm forces.
The Israel Program Center
is urging the community to
donate clothing, toys and
lanterns that can be sent to
Israel to help the 1,350
Israelis left homeless by the
Scud missile attacks.
The Program Center is
also accepting the names of
those who would be
available to go to Israel if
needed in some sort of vol-
unteer capacity. The number
to call for volunteer-informa-
tion or to get other informa-
tion regarding the situation
in Israel is 661-5440. 0

FRATELLI

$275 Value .. Now $ 9988

Hikers

remember the number of peo-
ple sharing the emotions
we're all feeling now."
Hillel Day School children
led a sea of people waving
American and Israeli flags in
song from the bimah.

Staff Writer

W

earing a set of gold
wings, Joan Hallem
Schafer will offer a
message of gratitude this
Shabbat from the pulpit of
Beth Israel Synagogue in
Flint.
She never takes off the
wings, a gift from her son,
Capt. Wayne Hallem, 29, a
U.S. Marine helicopter pilot
who has been stationed in
the Persian Gulf since July.
He called his mother Sunday
night and asked her to thank
the Flint Jewish community,
whose members have sent
countless letters, prayers
and care packages.
Mrs. Schafer, a social
worker for Flint's Jewish
Resettlement Services, will
honor her son's request at a
community-wide service to
support the U.S. troops and
Israel.
"I have been so busy, I
haven't stopped working,"
Capt. Hallem told his
mother. "Please tell all of
the wonderful people that I
get mail every day. They
have played an important
role."
Other Jewish parents, in-
cluding Marilyn and Philip
Dano of West Bloomfield and
Donna Hawley and Sheldon
Wolin of Flint, have talked
this week with their chil-
dren stationed in the Per-
sian Gulf. Although they
said they are proud and sup-
portive of the U.S. initiative,
they are nervous and anx-
ious for their children's
homecoming.
"I have mixed emotions,"
said Mrs. Dano, whose son,
Eric, is a first lieutenant

Capt. Hallem
with the U.S. Marines. "As a
mother, my heart says I
don't want him to be there; I
want him safe as can be. But
my head tells me logically I
understand why he is there.
We must defend our country
and Israel."
Mrs. Dano spoke to her son
on Tuesday — 4 a.m. in the
Middle East —after he fin-
ished an all-night stint of
bombing runs.
"He said he was okay and
exhausted," she said. "He
can't tell us where he is or
give details about how he
feels, but the sound of his
voice made us excited. He
said he can't call out
anymore because there are
restrictions on calling."
Lt. Dano, 26, is an elec-
tronic warfare engineer. He
flies on an EA6B plane,
which breaks radio frequen-
cies that clear paths for
bomber planes.
A graduate of the U.S.
Naval Academy in An-
napolis, he finished training
in August and immediately
went to the Middle East.
"He was trained to do as
he is told and to fight for his

•

