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R OGER RINKE CDILLAC I - 696 AT VAN -DYKE 7 5 8 - 1 8 0 0 f DESIGNS IN DECORATOR LAMINATES For High Quality Formica Always At A Great Discount -=7 k k ‘ • g enend otors 19 1 7. _Tinnily 21 MASTER DEALER 'EtkiTEE,4_1 4) ar erar6 , cc acciam=.marInciza aST011 DESIGNED WOODWORK me SPECIALIZING IN: • Wall Units • Bedrooms • Dining Rooms • Credenzas • Tables • Offices ALSO SPECIALIZING: • Woods • Glass • Stones • Lucite r i p204;m10.10 ,..,9„ A classic chair rail... A unique chair to bump the rail... A special room for the chair that bumps the rail... IT DOESN'T HAVE TO COST A FORTUNE . . . ONLY LOOK LIKE IT! CALL LOIS HARON 851-6989 Allied Member ASID LYNNE MASTER, M.Ed Owner Director 22 If FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1992 Uncommon woodwork and trim for the exceptional home around the room that holds the chair that bumps the rail. Timeless design... Installation that endures. • Clinical Teaching • Testing/Evaluation • Therapeutic Tutoring 545-6677 • 433-3323 Call Bruno Trentacost to view our portfolio. 10 years of designs and installations. From one-of-a-kind pieces to complete trim and woodwork for many exclusive, fine homes. 4036 Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills (313) 628-1406 25201 Coolidge, Oak Park Mitzvah Corps Matches Volunteers And Agencies ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Assistant Editor S herrie Stern is a mat- chmaker of sorts, though her clients are not lovelorn young men and women. Mrs. Stern is a member of a new Temple Israel group that brings together men and women looking to do a mitzvah and organizations that need their help. The project is the brain- child of temple member Dr. Jerrold Weinberg. Together with Mrs. Stern, Regine Schmier, June Kamil, Sheila Schiffer and Sandi Stocker, he helped start the Mitzvah Corps. The corps will hold its first recruitment meeting 9:30 a.m. April 5 at the temple. Through the corps, vol- unteers will be able to offer their services in the follow- ing areas: • Clerical, working at the temple office. • Donating professional skills. • Pararabbinic, such as -visiting with the sick or homebound. • Volunteering in the gen- eral and Jewish community at organizations including Yad Ezra or the Home for Aged. Temple Israel Program Di- rector Nancy Gad-Harf de- scribed the corps as "a cen- tralized catalog of volunteer opportunities." The program will allow in- dividuals to volunteer for as many projects, and for as long a time, as they choose. "Some people want to vol- unteer an hour a week; others want to work on a one-time-only project," Mrs. Stern said. "We'll have something for everybody, from the lawyer who wants to donate his expertise to the layman who wants to stuff envelopes." Based on past temple vol- unteer projects, which have attracted hundreds, Dr. Gad- Harf said she anticipates a great deal of interest in the Mitzvah Corps. "Every day I have people call and say, 'I'd like to do something for the hungry or the homeless. What can I do?' " she said. "The Mitz- vah Corps will give people an opportunity to become involved in exercising their Judaism." ❑ Dutch Recall Deportation Of Jews Amsterdam (JTA) — Fifty- one years after Dutch workers launched a general strike to protest the deporta- tion of Jews, several thou- sand people gathered in the former Jewish Quarter in commemoration. The event, celebrated an- nually since the liberation of Holland in 1945, centers on the statue of the Stevedore in Jonas Daniel Meyer Square, which was the heart of Amsterdam's Jewish quarter before World War II. The Stevedore was selected by Dutch sculptor Mario Andriesse to symbolize the dockworkers of Amsterdam, who were particularly notable participants in workers' strikes in Amster- dam between Feb. 25 and 26, 1941, called to protest the deportations of Jews. The theme of this year's commemoration was the battle against racism, fas- cism, xenophobia and all forms of discrimination which continues a half- century after the end of the Nazi era. The original strike was a spontaneous outburst to pro- test the arrest and deporta- tion of 425 young Jews. This year, a plaque was unveiled at the place where the events leading up to the strike originated. It is the entrance of a snack bar at 149 Van Woustreet. In 1941 it was an ice cream parlour called Koco run by two German- Jewish refugees, Ernst Cahn and Albert Kohn. On the evening of Feb. 19, 1941, intruders broke in. One of the owners, Mr. Cahn, sprayed them with ammonia from a fire extin- guisher. They turned out to be German police. In reprisal, the Nazis selected 425 young people from the Jewish quarter and deported them. They ex- ecuted Cahn and deported his partner, Kohn, who died in a concentration camp.