(LIMIT D N t• #2 FRIDAY, JULY 30 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Benetton Ceci's Creative Custom Shirtmakers Hersh's LaBret Jewelers Mr. Alan's R. Grumet Chico's Expecting The Best The Male Room Patricia Miles Sundance Zeza Up to 75% OFF RETAIL PRICES theboardwdlk Orchard Lake Rd. • S. of Maple • W. Blmfd. ast Call! ( 1) Summer Clearance Final Markdowns Save up to 70% Women & Children for Dress, Casual or Athletics $4 9° $ 4 90 $ 29 9° $990 pmd $ 90 pow $ 90 Keds • Bass • Stride Rite • Nike • LA Gear • Reebok • Capezio • & many more 536 prs. Orchard Mall 851-5566 Greg Evergreen Plaza 559-3580 West Bloomfield SHOES Southfield "Serving the community for 36 years." This Leningrad synagogue is similar to the one defaced in Moscow. Moscow Synagogue -4 Attacked Again New York (JTA) — The mood among groups that monitor Jews in Russia has grown more fearful since the main Moscow synagogue was attacked this week for the second time in a month. Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, chief rabbi of Moscow, told the World Jew- ish Congress that shortly before dawn early last week, youths reportedly wearing black uniforms threw bricks through two of the syn- agogue windows and tried to break down the main doors. Rabbi Goldschmidt, who is now in Israel, received the report from the synagogue's caretaker, who witnessed the attack and called the police. The police showed up after the perpetrators had already fled, as happened after the earlier attack in June. Mark Levin, executive di- rector of the National Con- ference on Soviet Jewry, said, "I think this (second at- tack) highlights what we've been saying for a long time now, that popular anti-Semi- tism remains a real threat, and it is articulated in many differ- ent forms." Asked if Jews in Moscow are apprehensive, he said, "I think they are obviously concerned about the repeat of an incident." Mr. Levin spoke to Michael Chlenov, co- president of the Vaad, which represents Jewish groups in the former Soviet Union. Mr. Chlenov told him that the Vaad has been working with the synagogue leader- ship to work out an agree- ment to provide better pro- tection for the synagogue. "We have informed our State Department about this as well as the Russian Em- bassy in Washington," Mr. Levin said. Jewish groups have been in contact with the Russian ambassador to Washington, Vladimir Lukin, requesting a 24-hour police guard. Rabbi Goldschmidt re- quested police protection for the synagogue at the time of the earlier attack, which oc- curred June 13, but nothing resulted. But Rabbi Adolf Shayevit- ch, chief rabbi of Russia, reached at home in Moscow, said that some municipal representatives had shown up at the synagogue saying a police guard would be placed there within a week. In the June attack on the synagogue, the police, who were called while that at- tack was in progress, failed to arrive on the scene until well after the attackers had departed and then labeled the incident not anti- Semitic. ❑