NEWS Mr. Alan's 18th Anniversary Shoe Sale Shimon Peres Urges Golan Compromise . • •n nvites you to this special 3-Day shoe sale celebrating his 18th Anniversary. All shoes will be marked down 20% from Mr. Alan's already low sale prices at all free locations. Hurry In this weekend and enjoy our 20% discount off our entire stock. And don't forget — open Friday, November 29th until Midnight. • HERE'S A FEW SAMPLES OF OUR INCREDIBLE VALUES: 20% OFF OUR VALUE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE $50 $2988 Botany 500 Cap-Toe or Kilte $100 $125 $69" $69" Rockport Bostonian Tassel Loafers Cole • Haan Driving Shoes Reebok Pump Gym Shoes Bostonian Tassel Wing Tip Johnston & Murphy Tassel Bastian Fur-Lined Leather Boots $80 $120 $ 11 0 $130 '150 $150 $185 $74" $79" $9988 $99 88 '9988 $9988 $99" Steeplegate Slip-on 5 175 929" Bally Claremont Johnston & Murphy Optima $230 $175 $12988 $13988 Lorenzo Banfi 5 275 '169" Rossini Winter Boots - $2 39° 1039° ENTIRE STOCK OF CHAMPION CLOTHING - 20% OFF! Nct AI Items Available At AI Stores MIDNIGHT MADNESS - FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY! Sale Runs Friday, Saturday, and Sunday Only! Nov. 29th, 30th & Dec. lst.! A NAME YOU VALUE, THE BRANDS YOU TRUST! Southfield The Original New Orleans Mall 10 MIe & Greenfield 559-7818 Downtown West Bloomfield Birmingham On The Boardwalk Orchard Lake Road 136 N. Woodward North of Maple South of Maple 647-0550 626-3362 Dearborn 15219 Mch. Ave. One Block East of Greenfield 584-3820 Eastland Mall Entarra 7A Next to Hudson's Mall Hours 371-2233 HOLIDAY HOURS Mon., Thurs. & Fri 10-9. Tues. wed. & Sat. 10-7 Sunday 12-5 EASTLAND MALL STORE OPENS AT 9:30 A.M. - FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29TH The metro area's largest selection of watches, bands and batteries! For the area's largest selection of watches. Keeping Detroiters right on time since 1927 SOUTHFIELD: (Southfield § 12 Mile) 552-0080 PO NTIAC: (Voorheis & Telegraph) 333-2263 FARMINGTON HILLS: (Orchard Lk. & 13 Mile) 851-0440 64 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1991 Full service watch and jewelry repair. WATCH BANDS MT. CLEMENS: (Canal & Garfield) 263-7700 MADISON HEIGHTS: (12 Mile & Dequindre) 541-0808 Jerusalem (JTA) — Labor Party leader Shimon Peres has come out publicly in favor of "territorial com- promise" on the Golan Heights and is urging his party to endorse that posi- tion at its national conven- tion, which opens here this week. His unequivocal stand on the issue comes at a time when the party is faring worse than ever in the public opinion polls and is sharply split on territorial corn- promise, the Palestinians and peace. Mr. Peres gave his backing to a policy statement ham- mered out by the party's Platform Committee after lengthy, acrimonious debate. It advocates both "territorial compromise" on the Golan Heights and "strengthening existing set- tlements" there. In practical terms, that means Labor would be will- ing to freeze settlement- building on the Golan dur- ing negotiations with Syria, a concession that the Likud- led government has so far refused to make. In media interviews, Mr. Peres said Israel "must not go down from the Golan," but that does not mean it has to retain the entire territory, which it captured in 1967 and annexed in December 1980. The Likud position, backed by the Knesset last week, is that the Golan is not negotiable and that Syria will get only peace in exchange for peace, not ter- ritory. Mr. Peres claimed that "as every child knows," it is "nonsense" to oppose any withdrawal whatsoever. But according to the latest polls, that is what a majority of Israelis do. In another compromise plank, the Platform Com- mittee called for recognition of the "national rights" of the Palestinians, but stopped short of endorsing a Palestinian state. The recommendation also omitted a specific ban on talks with the Palestine Lib- eration Organization, demanded by hawks within the party. It endorsed con- tinued negotiations with the delegation of Palestinians the Israelis met with in Madrid. Political observers predicted bitter fights over the platform during the three-day convention. The 1,200 convention delegates must adopt the platform and approve or reject a new system of party primaries to select its leadership and its Knesset slate for elections that are still a year away. While Mr. Peres said he was pleased with the plat- form as is, Labor's No. 2 leader, Yitzhak Rabin, said the party must adopt clear positions on the peace issue which differentiate it not only from Likud but also from the "leftist ex- tremists." Mr. Rabin, who speaks for the hawkish or "centrists" wing, says the party has veered too far to the left and blurred its differences with the "peace alliance" com- prising Mapam, Center- p Shinui and the Citizens Rights Movement. "What matters is how to bring the party back into power," he said. But Chaim Ramon, the more dovish chairman of Labor's Knesset faction, has accused Mr. Rabin and party hard-liners of being less in- terested in winning the 1992 elections than in joining a victorious Likud in another unity government after- ward. At the moment, Labor is weathering its lowest public approval rating ever against the Likud, according to the latest public opinion surveys. Mr. Peres dismissed the polls. He claimed they "reflect the government's transient popularity" after the Madrid peace talks and will change "down the road, when the real issues will have to be faced." Labor conducted a mem- bership drive earlier this year, which added about 150,000 new names to its roster. The convention delegates reflect a substantially younger generation. For many, it will be their first convention. Their numbers include more than 50 new immigrants. Although Mr. Peres and Mr. Rabin have been locked in a leadership struggle for years, new faces are emer- ging to challenge them if the new system of primaries is adopted, allowing every par- ty member to vote for party leader. Prominent among the aspirants are Knesset mem- bers Ora Namir and Gad Ya'acobi, and Yisrael Kessar.