ISRAEL FEDERAL FIREPLACE & BBQ sAvE, 2,0 Or Mir On Si FIREPLACE 0 i II a • 1 1 FROM II I --- O m on git -,, ' :-. --i.- . w .. $9997 2 ea tve- e , , , , NI .„--- _W-1,‘ -- III E t:-.--ii4WA , — me —,------ _ , ell i • ,,,,n: ......„ --_,--- -- _-.:,- e' .: • - Ill Ii i 1 SAFE•CLEAN•REALISTIC•ECONOMICAL 2 II I EXPERT INSTALLATION AVAILABLE r IN NOVI I I • r a . In Pine Ridge Center Novi Rd. at 10 Mile Rd. 1-3/4 miles south of 12 Oaks Mall u' 0 348-9300 I 11 111 • • • • ;. . ._. ., , "'", ii , ,i.o, II . 1 - • ' fr, MADE TO ORDER ORDER ` ,."' f - , III s l FREE Measurement and ' '....: •.. $90.00 Value! PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED • I : . , Standard Installation ‘1610• r ■ q , I I CUSTOM GLASS DOORS BARBEQUE 1, PATIO FURNITURE r I 1 / , . __._--- $29997 ® al. 71 (Federal Fireplace ■ . . , ....... . • - 4 • Ill 4.0 111 HOURS: MON-FRI 10AM-9PM • SAT 10AM-8PM •SUN 10AM-5PM i II iii I PORTLAND SOLID BRASS NI FROM IAN • OUR LIVE BURNING DISPLAYS " No en a L. SEE OR Aft .... • s II I #16530 i 1 $ 209 97 FROM al i DELUXE GLOWING EMBER ii : 100% CERAMIC LOG $eie97 a NM I w / a uto pilot control Ref. 430.00 0 I 7 III #EP24/ ow II NEARTNCRAFT SENTRY IN SOUTHFIELD ` 12" - \--e In F&M Plaza Southfield Rd. at 12 Mile Rd. I mile north of 1-696 557-3344 EXTRA CHARGE FOR SHIPPING • SOME ITEMS NOT EXACTLY AS PICTURED • PRIOR SALES EXCLUDED III16. r I II r • a II ill DECORATIVE FABRIC AND WALLPAPER We're NEW... We're DIFFERENT... and We Sell ONLY 1ST QUALITY decorative fabrics at everyday LOW PRICES! "FACTORY TO •Down Quilts Cleaned •Vown & Feather Quilts &laws Remade •Quilt Covets (Your Fabric or our Fabric) TRAURIG'S s iMe QL:ILT&PILLOW SHOP 547-2660 Come in and view our dramatic displays. We have a fabric just for you, for all your decorating needs. And if you like, we'll follow through and recover your furniture, create your special window and bed treatments . . . and much more. PARTIES EXCLUSIVELY You'll be pleased with our service, selection and quality. • Tents • Tables • Chairs • China • Paper Goods FABRIQUE 750 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham, MI 644-6505 BOSTON° Personal Shredder ; Rests neatly above most wastebaskets I k *After $20.00 mfg. rebate. List 234.95 ea. 1690 (not included). Activates when paper is inserted 12 Mile & Southfield Rd. Green-Eight Center 14 locations throughout Michigan. (313) 569-1376 (313) 967-2550 1-800-462-1853 Sale ends October 23, 1991. *Pick-up price/delivery extra. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1991 Sat 104t00 Barry's Let's Rent It 855-0480 11100010001cf roopvcis 5..e1kesSoVvolAs. ce Sell i . 4393 ORCHARD LAKE RD., N. OF LONE PINE IN CROSSWINDS Also: 5834 Monroe St., Sylvania, OH 419-882-1882 68 AUTUMN SALE White Goose Down Quilts and Bed Pillows 22050Zgo d Id eward BEDROOMS, ETC. . . . Custom Bedrooms at Factory Direct Prices Call Nancy Blau at 399-2311 Continued from preceding page 1 100 GLASS DOORS ON DISPLAY! 11 : NUMEROUS STYLES & FINISHES um No UN $259 97 ‘ O GLASS DOORS se i DELUXE BIRCH i LOG 24 " SET a ■ #BEP-24. w/manual valve Ref. 360.00 Anne Frank FIREPLACE - iGAS • 1 20 MODELS 4'4 ) ' 1 . 4.. '` , -:; LOGS , TO CHOOSE a op 4 0 0/0 night and called for her. I saw Mrs. Van Peltz (the Van Peltz family had gone into hiding with the Franks; Mr. Frank changed the name in the diary to Van Daan), and told me that Margot was too sick to come to the wall, but she'd call Anne. "Anne came and began cry- ing. 'I don't have parents, I don't have hair and I don't have clothes . . " For the first time Chana learned that the Franks had been in hiding, not in Switz- erland, and that their secret hideout was discovered on August 4, 1944. The Franks were sent to the Westerbork concentration camp, where they were put on the last transport to Auschwitz. There, Anne's head was shaven. Anne thought her father was dead. "She saw Mengele picking people to die and she was sure that her father must have been among them; but she didn't realize that her father was in good physical condition and that Mengele chose on the basis of appear- ance, not age," surmises Cha- na. "If she had known that her father was alive, I think she would have lived . . . she would have had the strength to keep on fighting." Chana spoke to Anne three times at the wall in Bergen Belsen. After the first visit, she prepared a small package of food from Red Cross ra- tions that had arrived. She tossed it to Anne at the sec- ond meeting, but it was inter- cepted by an older woman. Their third meeting took place in February, two months before the camp was liberated. This time, Anne caught the food package Chana had prepared for her. Anne Frank died in March 1945 from typhus. A month later, as the camp was about to be liberated, 16-year-old Chana was put on a train and transported around Germany for a few weeks until the Rus- sians arrived. She was hospit- alized with typhus in Hol- land, where she was visited by Otto Frank, who helped support her and sent her to her relatives in Switzerland. Chana doesn't understand why she was spared and her Anne was not. Though she ac- cepts it as the Will of God, she is haunted by the 'what if's' that could have spelled the difference between life and death for Anna "If the Germans would have discov- ered the Franks' hideout just two months later the family would have missed the last train to Auschwitz. She might be less famous than to- day, but she would be alive. Maybe she would have been famous; after all, she wanted to be a journalist and writer." Just as Anne's writing abil- ity developed quickly in the unnatural solitude of the fam- ily's hideout, her character matured in the concentration camps, where she was trans- formed from a spoiled child to a noble adult. "In Auschwitz, when she was only 15, she was assigned to distribute the paltry rations of bread among the starving inmates," says Chana. "No one ever com- plained about an unjust allo- cation . . .Until the end, Anne knew how to feel the pain of others. Once, from her barracks she saw a group of children from Hungary waiting in lines for hours in the pouring rain in front of the gas chambers. Anne broke down in tears, but those who stood next to her II didn't have the strength to cry. "We must always give something, even if it is only tears," she told them. Now that Chana has re- tired, she spends much of her time telling Israeli children and adults about her friend Anne Frank. The cramped study in her home in Jeru- salem is a small Anne Frank museum: the complete vol- ume of her diaries, her chil- dren's stories, books and videos about Anne and the Holocaust. "Anne's dream was to live after death . . . I have to do what she wants, to keep her memory alive." ❑ 'I NEWS 11""Ium Israelis Meet Counterparts Jerusalem (JTA) — "Regular meetings" are taking place abroad between top executives of Israel's Dead Sea Works and their counterparts from the Jor- danian industrial complex on the eastern shore of the Dead Sea. The disclosure was made by Uri Bin-Nun, director general of the Dead Sea Works. He spoke last week at Sdom, site of the Israeli plant, where Tel Aviv Uni- versity has opened a resear- ch center to study the world's saltiest body of water at the farthest point below sea level on earth. The meetings have taken place in Europe and the United States, Mr. Bin-Nun said. At one recent session, a ranking Jordanian company official expressed hope that eventually joint projects would be undertaken by Dead Sea-linked industries of both countries.