metro YE S TODAY! Remembering from page 8 YOU CAN HAVE IT ALL YOU WANT A NEW FLOOR THAT'S BEAUTIFUL LONG LASTING AND AFFORDABLE. LET THE EXPERTS AT ABBEY CARPET & FLOOR SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS TO GET THE PERFECT FLOOR FOR YOUR LIFESTYLE AND YOUR BUDGET. ALL AT PRICES THAT WILL FLOOR YOU! Charlie and Mildred Kaye at home in Southfield SPECIAL OFFER SPECIAL OFFER SPECIAL OFFER YOUR PURCHASE OF $1,000 OR MORE. YOUR PURCHASE OF $2,000 OR MORE. YOUR PURCHASE OF $5,000 OR MORE. TELESCO TELESCO TELESCO it Abbey Carpet & Floor $500 . $100 200 OFF OFF OFF 11 Abbey Carpet & Floor Abbey Carpet & Floor 248-682-5600 248-682-5600 248-682-5600 'CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER OH-ER OR PROMOTION. EXPIRES 11/30/11. 'CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR PROMOTION. EXPIRES 11/30/11. `CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER OFFER OR PROMOTION. EXPIRES 11/30/11. TELESCO lb Abbey Carpet & Floor 248-682-5600 2705 Orchard Lake Road • Sylvan Lake TelescoFloors.com 10 November 10 • 2011 over there faster and help fight the Germans:' Kaye reflected. "I had read about how Hitler wanted to dominate the world and about all the atrocities being inflicted on the Jewish people. Unfortunately, some of our leaders ignored these atrocities. I don't think many Americans caught the signifi- cance of what might have happened to all of us if the Axis had won the war. "The younger generations are more acquainted with the current Afghanistan and Iraq wars, but I don't want them to forget World War IL" A graduate of Detroit's Commerce High School, Kaye returned to his studies at Wayne (State) University, got a bachelor's of science degree, then became a certified public accountant. He owned Charles Kaye & Co. for 42 years, including an office in Farmington Hills. Now retired, he is still a director of the Bank of Birmingham. Frat Brother In Pacific Kaye's Gamma Kappa Chi fraternity brother at Wayne, Dr. Louis Hoffman, 88, of Huntington Woods, a retired psychiatrist, fought a different kind of war — against the Japanese on the contested islands of the Pacific. He has a Bronze Medal and three Purple Hearts to show for it. Infantryman Hoffman caught some shrapnel in the invasion of Leyte Island in the Philippines, earning his first Purple Heart, then moved on to land on the beach at Okinawa. The Japanese were entrenched on the island and put up one of the fiercest battles of the Pacific war because it was so close to Japan. Hoffman's company had only five survivors when it ended. "I got hit by more shrapnel there, so they gave me another Purple Heart:' said Hoffman. "But," he went on in modesty char- acteristic of combat vets, "I'd rather not talk about why I won a Bronze Stan" The hospital ship U.S.S. Comfort carrying him and other wounded sol- diers was hit by a Japanese kamikaze (suicide) bomber, injuring many of them again, killing the entire medical staff and destroying equipment. "But we made it to a hospital in Guam, then I was sent to Hawaii. I got my third Purple Heart in the air attack," he said. Psychiatrist For 55 Years After VJ (Victory in Japan) Day in August, Hoffman, a graduate of Detroit's Central High, returned to Wayne to com- plete his medical Louis Hoffman education and practiced psy- chiatry for 55 years. Kaye and his wife, Mildred, and Hoffman and his wife, Florence, have been married 65 and 64 years, respec- tively. They remain good friends today. "I believe my combat experience actually helped me in my psychoanal- ysis of people in later years:' offered Hoffman. "Being under pressure and stressful situations myself gave me a better understanding of how my patients reacted to the same condi- tions." Kaye and Hoffman were two of 670,000 Americans wounded in the war; 405,000 were killed. Said Kaye: "We may have been awarded medals, but the real heroes of the war were those who never came back." LI