MORTGAGE at a BANK you can TRUST ur ART SLEUTHS from page 29 vault, based on telephone calls and clan- destine meetings." OfEthks AndArt WE OE' Conventional and Jumbo STABLE and FIXED RATE MORTGAGES We are available the branch or we will come to y home! Great Rates Fast Approval Sterling® MORTGAGE DIRECT 866-500-0018 bank & trust "We Create Solutions."® sterlingbank.com Sterling Bank & Trust Southfield, Michigan 723440 The Zone Diet... Delivered! VerVA.We 'bvAt,. 1„. . ^r. /4 234PECIEETLatIz' ,.A7MTVE:sv. 0 subscribe today and save almost 7., ""Nc rair IN 6/13 2003 30 vfmger 0.e` 4 For more info call 248/646-9700 or visit us online at www.healthygourmetdelivery.com 4IPCIFF the cover price! 248.351.5174 Masurovsky, who was born in 1947 in Paris, is one of the top private sleuths in the art world. He came to the field after working with the U.S. State Department and the Senate Banking Committee, investigat- ing Nazi war crimes and the relationship between Nazi officials and Swiss banks and financial institutions. Through his involvement with HARP, a project of the B'nai Kith Klutznick National Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C., he helped initiate the seizure of two valuable looted paintings by German-Jewish artist Egon Schiele from New York's Museum of Modern Art. Other stolen works were discovered at Christie's and Sotheby's, two of the world's most prestigious auction houses. Despite the "big bucks" involved in these cases, Masurovsky said much loot- ed art was taken from "the average folks out there — not collectors who bought them for an investment, but people who saw art or, more often, decorative objects, and bought them because they liked them." Hillel Headmaster Dr. Mark Smiley said, "This was a great example of inte- grating Holocaust education into the arts. At the same time as you're learning about the Holocaust and about art histo- ry, you are considering what it really means to be an ethical collector. It's val- ues education at its best." Among the adults at Masurovsky's talk was Stuart Cykiert of West Bloomfield. With his brothers Jay and Andrew, he began Hillel's Walter Cykiert Holocaust Education Fund in memory of their father, a survivor of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. All three Cykiert brothers are Hillel graduates. So far, three of their children have graduated from the Farmington Hills school, and another two are gradu- ating this year. "We didn't begin this fund for recogni- tion; my father would have hated that," said Stuart Cykiert. "We just want to be the appendages for Hillel doing these projects." So far, the fund has underwritten tours by Hillel upper-schoolers to the Holocaust Memorial Center in West Bloomfield and to the Jewish Ensemble Theatre's productions of the play The Diary ofAnn Fnznk. It also sponsored the only Detroit-area showing of the New York-based exhibit "I Never Saw Another Butterfly," a collection of drawings and poetry by children imprisoned in the Terezin concentration camp.