THE JEWISH NEWS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY THIS ISSUE 60¢ CLOSE-UP SEPTEMBER 15, 1989 / 15 ELUL 5749 Fresh Air Asks Marriott For Help KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer The Fresh Air Society has asked Marriott Corp. to develop a marketing plan to boost occupancy for the Butzel Conference Center at Camp Maas in Ortonville. The parternership, pending approval of the camp's ex- ecutive committee, aims to in- crease revenues by attracting more small business and pro- fessional groups during the week to the conference center, which is booked most weekends throughout the year and empty most of the weekdays. Ninety percent of its users are Jewish groups. The executive committee, authorized last week by the camp's board of directors to finalize an agreement with Marriott, is expected to meet with Marriott officials this week. Butzel would be marketed to the Detroit area Jewish community and to the Detroit/Flint business com- munity for weekday retreats and educational conferences. Sam Fisher, executive direc- tor of the Fresh Air Society, said the camp's main concern is serving members of the Jewish community, who get priority bookings at Butzel. Generally, he said, these groups select weekends. "We found that there are not enough professional groups using the conference center during the week," Fisher said. "We are not mak- ing ends meet. All we want to do is break even. If we occupy Butzel during the week, we can do that." To date, conference center bookings for the 1989-90 fiscal year generate $275,000 in revenue. Fisher said Fresh Air Society needs $325,000 to break even. Continued on Page 22 ADL Defends Screening GOP WALTER RUBY Special to The Jewish News Why More Soviet Jews Will Be Going To Israel Washington — The Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith may begin screening Republican Party candidates and appointees for possible neo-Nazi or racist associa- tions. Some national Jewish leaders have questioned the appropriateness of such an ar- rangement, which has been strongly defended by ADL National Director Abraham Foxman. At the same time, Foxman has denied that there was any connection between the ten- tative arrangement and a re- cent ADL press release asser- ting that this and other Jewish publications have misrepresented Republican Party Chair Lee • Atwater's position on David Duke, a Louisiana state legislator and a former Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan. In a recent conversation, Foxman confirmed that he met with Atwater last week and that the RNC chair agreed to assign a staff member to develop a framework for cooperation between the GOP and the ADL. "As you recall, there was a problem last year with the Heritage Council," said Fox- man, referring to a Republican presidential elec- tion support group that was found to include a number of former Nazi sympathizers among its members. "After it was all over, we wrote letters [to Republican officials] say- ing it was in the interests of the Jewish community and American citizenry that they develop some sort of process by which they can screen this — that they can check out who has a [anti-Semitic] background . . . " According to Foxman, Frank Farenkopf, Atwater's predecessor as RNC chair- man, thought the idea was a good one. "We are an organization concerned with [finding out] who are anti-Semites," Fox- man said. "They are not .. . That's what we are in business for: to tell the people who want to know who are the anti-Semites and the Nazis." Continued on Page 22