LIGHT UP YOUR LIFE... at our 1/3 off Lamp Sale! Two Named As Heads Of Memorial Council Every lamp in our studio is on sale for 10 days Sale ends June 10 plus... these specials from Italiana Luce The "Dove" reg. $290 Now $149 Available in black, red or white The "Tabla" Reg. $345 Now $245 Available in black only While supplies last studios FINE FURNITURE, ACCESSORIES & GIFTS 6644 Orchard Lake Road at Maple West Bloomfield Mon-Thur-Fri 10-9 Tue-Wed-Sat 10-6 Sun 12-5 • 855-1600 ■ COLORWORKS STUDIO OF INTERIOR DESIGN CJD w C/D w 1-- CC LU CD UJ 4441 1 As you've heard by now, we're making news in design! Whether it's planning your new home, remodeling your existing one, or furnishing a room - we invite you to explore the difference in interior design and encourage you to interview one of our designers for your next project. Barbi Krass • Linda Bruder • Linda Hudson allied member AStD The Courtyard 32500 Northwestern Highway • Farmington Hills • 851-7540 ■ Washington (JTA) — Ending over a month of speculation, the White House has an- nounced that New Jersey business executive Miles Lerman would become chair of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, and Rutgers University Pro- - fessor Ruth Mandel would become vice chair. President Clinton said that Mr. Lerman and Ms. Mandel were "charged with keeping the flame of memory alive. "I have faith in their abil- ity to do so," the president said. Mr. Lerman and Ms. Mandel replace Baltimore builder Harvey Meyerhoff and San Francisco executive William Lowenberg, respec- tively. In a controversial move just weeks before the muse- um's April 26 opening, the White House asked Mr. Meyerhoff and Mr. Lowenberg to resign from their posts. They were asked to stay on for the museum's opening, however. Both Mr. Meyerhoff and Mr. Lowenberg were presi- dential appointees named by previous Republican ad- ministrations. In other personnel matters at the museum, the director, Jeshajahu Weinberg, who had previously said he wish- ed to leave his position, decided recently to stay on for an indefinite period of time. A search for a new director was suspended when Mr. Meyerhoff and Mr. Lowenberg were asked to step down. The council's new chair and vice chair are already members of the council, a body appointed by the presi- dent which served as a de- velopment arm of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Muse- um before it opened, and now functions as its board of trustees. Mr. Lerman is a Holocaust survivor who was appointed to the council by former President Jimmy Carter. He runs an import-export business in Vineland, N.J., and has served as national vice chairman of the State of Israel Bonds. During his service on the council, Mr. Lerman has been a key player in the pro- cess of obtaining Holocaust- related artifacts and docu- ments from a variety of Eu- ropean countries. Ms. Mandel is director of the Center for the American Woman and Politics at the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers. She is an expert on women and leadership, focusing on women politicians, and was appointed to the council by former President George Bush. "Building the museum has been the central focus of my life for thirteen years," Ms. Lerman said. "I am grateful to the president for having the confidence in my ability to lead the effort at this stage." Ms. Lerman acknowledged that he is assuming the chairmanship at a "very challenging stage,'.' just as the museum has opened to "world acclaim." The museum's mandate, Mr. Lerman said, was to make the horrors of the Holocaust relevant to people today. "Our hope is to touch the soul of the visitor," he said, so that each one asks him or herself, "What is my respon- sibility to society today?" The museum, he said, will serve as a repository of ar- tifacts, and a meeting place for Holocaust scholars. "We felt it was extremely important that we tell" the story of the Holocaust "in an undeniable manner," and the artifacts he helped bring to the museum, he said, will contribute to that goal. "All the exhibits are authentic and documented," he said. "We are denying the deniers the ability to fiddle around with history." Mr. Lerman said that under his chairmanship, the council would formulate pol- icies but would let the pro- fessional museum staff implement them. He said he hoped to "return stability to the organization," which has been the subject of reports and rumors concerning in- fighting among various fac- tions about what the muse- um's mandate was to be. But he pledged that any major disputes would not be "hidden" from public scrutiny. He also said he hoped to bring in more women and young people to serve on the council.