12 Friday, June 6, 1980 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS w. c. Trojan Hertz to Retire in 1982 After 30 Years at Beth El "Son of C. Trojan" CUSTOM FURNITURE & CARPET CLEANING ON LOCATION I-HEE ESTIMATES Phone 576-1140 (Continued from Page 1) League, Israel Bonds, Joint Distribution Committee, Religious Education Asso- ciation, Detroit Police Commission, Wranglers, Governor Romney's Com- mittee on Moral and Ethics in Government, and with Max Fisher he became the first Jewish member of the Board of Directors of the Economic Club of Detroit. Rabbi Hertz is a frequent speaker at churches and synagogues, colleges and universities (often under the auspices of the Jewish Chautauqua Society), and on radio and television. WJR broadcast his High Holy Days sermons for 18 years. In 1967, Hebrew Union College conferred upon him an honorary degree of Doc- for of Divinity. He earned his PhD from Northwestern University in 1948. In 1965, he served as "Preacher in the Univer- sity" at Harvard. Since 1970, he has been adjunct professor of Jewish thought at the University of Detroit. He is the author of five books, "The Education of The Jewish Child," "Prescription for Hear- tache," "The American Jew In Search Of Him- Anti-Semitic Front Unit Duped Historical Society "Investment dressing... because your best investment is you: At Executive Custom Shirtmakers, Inc. we use the finest fabrics and expert craftsmanship to design each shirt especially for you. Because after all, you're worth the investment. Executive Custom Shirtmakers, Inc. 207 S. Woodward Ave., Birmingham, MI 48011 642.0460 (Continued from Page 1) groups to whitewash the crimes of the Nazi regime." It is now making plans for its second convention, with dates variously announced as Aug. 1-3 and the Labor Day weekend. At last year's inaugural meeting, one of the main speakers was Ar- thur R. Butz, author of "The Hoax of the Twentieth Cen- tury," published in 1976. Butz is professor of electri- cal engineering at North- western University. In his remarks, as re- printed in the institute's "Journal of Historical Review," Butz claimed that the Nazi extermina- tion camp gas chambers were "fictitious" and that hundreds ' of thousands died in Ger- man prison camps be-_ I SELL THE FINEST QUALITY LINENS FOR YOUR HOME! NOBODY —BUT NOBODY — UNDERSELLS MARIAN RAIMI EXTRA SPECIALS FOR LINEN WHITE SALE BLUE AND WHITE POLKA DOT QUILT COVERS (72x84 ONLY) $ 7 EACH SUMMER QUILTS ALL SIZES ALL COLORS X-LONG DISH TOWELS $ 1 1 9each 22x44 BATH TOWELS $1110 each CAMP SUPPLIES • COT SHEETS 30x75 FITTED. ALSO FLAT SIZE • PILLOW CASES • DENIM DUFFLE BAGS • LAUNDRY BAGS • BLANKETS • BATH TOWELS • BEACH TOWELS DETROIT LAUNDRY SUPPLY CO. 22121 COOLIDGE, JUST SOUTH OF 9 MILE OAK PARK _ 548-1833 OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 9:30 a.m. 2 p.m. - cause of disease. Other speakers included Dr. Austin J. App, a former associate professor of English at LaSalle College in Philadelphia, who has been a Nazi apologist since the 1940s. One of the ear- liest purveyors of Holocaust-denial prop- aganda, he was the author of a 1966 American Mer- cury article titled "That Elusive Six Million." At the convention, App claimed that anti-German "vengeance" since World War II stemmed from "Zionist and Communist agitation about the Third Reich's alleged extermina- tion of the Jews." Another convention speaker was Udo Walendy, head of a "German re- visionist publishing house," according to Finger. A self- proclaimed expert in analyzing "faked" photo- graphs, Walendy claimed that virtually all photo- graphs of death camp at- rocities are hoaxes. Finger said that in an attempt to give the insti- tute and its journal an aura of scholarship, an offer is made to enter up to four gift subscriptions to the journal to the lib- raries of the donor's choice. Other institute incentives to encourage membership, he said, in- clude free copies of Holocaust revisionist works. The institute's mailings and announcements are signed by "Lewis Brandon," identified as "director" of the institute. He is also listed as office manager of Noontide Press, a Carto op- eration in Torrance, Calif., which turns out racist and anti-Semitic books, accord- ing to ADL. ADL hoped that exposing and documenting the anti- Semitic nature of the Insti- tute for Historical Review would prevent reputable groups and institutions from being misled as was the Organization of Ameri- can Historians and North- rop University. HIAS Official NEW YORK — The He- brew Immigrant Aid Socity (HIAS) has established a Department of Public Af- fairs and named Richard Kellerman, former associ- ate director of HIAS' public relations, as director. self," "What Counts Most In Life?" and "What Can A Man Believe?" A number of small books of his sermons have been published. Rabbi Hertz is a former chairman of the board of overseers of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish In- stitute of Religion and has been a delegate to three in- ternational conferences of the World Union for Pro- gressive Judaism. He is a former chairman of the committee of Soviet Jewry of the Central Conference of American Rabbis. He served on the National Rabbinic Advisory Commit- tee of the United Jewish Appeal and has been a member of the national boards of the American Jewish Committee, Joint Distribution Committee, Religious Education Com- mittee and Israel Bonds. In 1959, Dr. Hertz went to the USSR on a special mis- sion for the White House to investigate the status of Jews and Judaism behind the Iron Curtain. In 1963, Dr. Hertz was the first American rabbi received in private audi- ence at the Papal Palace by Pope Paul VI. During World War II, he served as an army chaplain. He is a former department chaplain for the American Legion and the Jewish War Veterans, and is currently a member of the National Jewish Welfare Board's Chaplaincy Commission. This spring he served as scholar-in-residence at Fort Ord, Calif, training lay leaders to serve as actinp - chaplains for the Arm Forces. In 1979, he was appointed to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission for Michigan, and in 1980 he was elected to the board of directors of the Michigan Cancer Society. CASH _ FOR YOUR mammas& PRECIOUS JEWELS * * S iteii/tceall 50414, 755 W.Big Beaver Rd. (16 mile at 1-75) Tray, Michigan Phone:313-362-4500 HONEYWELL BARBER SALON MICHAEL KELLY Proprietor Michigan State Hair- Styling Champion Ranked 6th Nationally Manicures Call 424-8466 for appointment exclusive MICHIGAN DISTRIBUTOR OF SALES • SERVICE • CUSTOM LEASE PLANS ramaRoFF Buick-Hondal 28585 Telegraph Rd. across from Tel-Twelve Mall Southfield, Mich. Phone 353-1300