a Many 0f ie Wolin family photos were to ,Ken at Lie last. minute. Nobody knew w ien L icy woulct all b© together again. Morton Wolin: "This very day I remember; this very day I will not forget." of them, both for what they endured and how they came out of it." T he issue tonight is the business of book making. Members of the ... And So We Must Remember committee — all volunteers, many ready to donate their own money if funds run out for the project — sit in a liv- ing room in Huntington Woods. The room is large and airy; the coffee is hot and plentiful. Among the items still to be addressed: how many copies to print, which paper stock to use for the pages and the cover, which quotes to put on the book jacket. Every subject receives careful attention. No one runs out of patience when 26 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1992 several committee members discuss, at length, whether the cover should have a mat- te or a glossy finish. Every- one seems to understand that this is no ordinary book, but a project of sacred memory. "Do you think these mar- gins are large enough?" one member asks. Laura Sacks Kohn is co- ordinator of the book. She met up with Howard Kloc soon after he returned from speaking with his mother in Florida. That's when the idea for ... And So We Must Remember came about. "We had all these Holo- caust stories, and survivors who are old," she said. "I be- lieve those of us hearing and inheriting the stories have an awesome responsibility to continue and safeguard them." So a group, drawing mem- bers from the temple's social action committee, was formed to work on the pro- ject. Letters soliciting man- uscripts were mailed out. Anyone who had been touched by the Holocaust was invited to send a sub- mission. "At first, it was hard to get responses," Mrs. Kohn said. But then one came in, and then another and an- other. Often, the manu- scripts offered remarkable detail. "And it seems like a lot of people were saying things for the first time." Mrs. Kohn's husband, Martin, edited the manu- scripts. Other volunteers in- cluded Howard Kloc's wife, Elli, who did all the word processing, and George Erd- stein, who designed the cov- er. The rabbi's discretionary fund will pay for the first 500 copies of ... And So We Must Remember. The final version of the book is hundreds of pages long, with at least a page or two from everyone who sent a submission — and even an account from one who did not. Mrs. Kohn was deter- mined to include writings from a survivor who was particularly dear to her: the late Rabbi Frank Rosenthal of Temple Emanu-El. "When I was 5, I fell in love with him," she said. "Though he had come through such painful expe- riences, he had a real zeal for his faith." It took a little searching, CID (-7