DETROIT American-Israel Group Honors Masco Executive KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer F or the past decade, Masco Corp., the Taylor-based company that sells furniture, doors, auto parts and plumbing supplies, has been doing business with Israel. In the Golan Heights, Masco sells doors through Pazgal Imports. Outside Tel Aviv, Amcor Corp. exports shower heads for distribu- tion in the United States through Brass Craft, the Southfield-based subsidiary of Masco. Now the company, under the direction of interna- tional sales director George Herrera, is considering expanding its business deal- ings in Israel. "We hope to increase our connection with Israel," said Mr. Herrera, who will be honored at a dinner on Wednesday by the Ameri- can-Israel Chamber of Commerce of Michigan with the 1991 American Israel Trade Award. "We also are now working on a free trade agreement with Mexico, which will give Israeli goods a broader market as well." Ever since Mr. Herrera traveled to Israel with the American-Israel Chamber three years ago, he has been looking for new business op- portunities in Israel. Since the visit to Israel, Masco began selling after- market auto parts there. Now under negotiation are sales of kitchen sinks and certain dies. "We hope to make the parts there and bring them back to the United States," Mr. Herrera said. Mr. Herrera, born in Havana, moved to the United States at age 16 to complete his education. He joined Masco. in 1982 after a long association with A-Z International in Houston, a division of Masco. Mr. Herrera has lived in Venezuela, where he managed operations for A-Z, and he lived in London, where he supervised opera- tions for Europe, the Middle East and the Far East. "George has been involved in importing and exporting with Israel for a long time and it is not a long-distance relationship with Israel," said Shelly Jackier, ex- ecutive director for the American-Israel Chamber of Commerce. "He has been successful in identifying more business opportunities for Masco, which translates into more business for the company arid also benefits Israel." In the last eight years, Mr. Herrera has set up a foreign distribution network fOr the Masco Group, developing and managing the firm's global network of agents and distributors. For his success, Mr. Her- rera was awarded the Mich- igan Exporter of the Year Award in 1990. He serves on the board of the American- Israel Chamber, and he is a committee member for the Japan Working Group of the National Association of Manufacturers.0 O 0 _c 0 Linda Foster of the Jewish Community Council packages Torah covers for the Jewish community in Minsk, Soviet Union. The covers were a gift from Jewish contributors in Detroit. Construction To Start On New B'nai Moshe ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor C onstruction may begin as soon as next week on a new B'nai Moshe synagogue in West Bloomfield if final negotia- tions are completed with the • contractor. The synagogue board voted 20-6 last week to go ahead with construction of a new facility on Drake Road, several hundred yards south of Maple Road. The new facility will include a 550- seat sanctuary, social hall and offices, totaling 28,000 square feet. Robert Roth, former B'nai Moshe president who is chairing its building com- mittee, said negotiations with Turner Construction of New York should be com- pleted by Monday, and the company was anxious to begin work immediately. The project is expected to take 9-12 months. The new synagogue is ex- pected to cost $3.1-$3.5 mill- ion. ❑ ROUND UP Seaman's Bias Claim Investigated New York — The U.S. Navy has launched an in- vestigation to determine if a woman was denied a securi- ty clearance because of her Jewish heritage and perceived ties to Israel, the Anti-Defamation League re- ported this week. Seaman Deborah Berns- tein, who alerted the ADL to her situation, is an Arabic language student at the Naval Postgraduate School at the Monterey Language Institute in California. She alleges that improper and prejudicial inquiries played a significant role in a deci- sion by the National Securi- ty Group Command (NCGC) to deny her a sensitive com- partmentalized information security clearance. In a letter to Capt. Steven Myers, special assistant of the Navy's security group command headquarters, ADL National Director Ab- raham Foxman commended the NSGC-HQ's decision to order an investigation and said he was pleased the NSGC has temporarily canceled Ms. Bernstein's . ; tea "Would you have difficulty carrying out an order to bomb Israel?" transfer orders pending the outcome. However, Mr. Foxman ex- pressed concern that Ms. Bernstein "may have been subjected to questions and comments that potentially impinge upon the civil and constitutional rights of all cadets and staff at the facili- ty." Ms. Bernstein, who has lived in Israel, told the ADL that a chief warrant officer asked her if she would have difficulty carrying out an order to bomb Israel. When she hesitated, Ms. Bernstein said, the officer allegedly accused her of not being loyal to the United States. Ms. Bernstein said the offi- cer then launched into a harangue about the 1967 ac- cidental sinking of the USS Liberty by Israel Defense Forces. The situation was further exacerbated, Mr. Foxman pointed out in his letter, when Ms. Bernstein's com- manding officer told her "we may eventually be against Israel if they don't settle the Palestinian issue" and "I wouldn't want to fly side by side with you in an aircraft if we had to bomb Palestine, or Israel, or whatever you call it." In addition to alerting the ADL, Ms. Bernstein has con- tacted California and New York representatives, along with Michigan Senator Carl Levin. Hitler Youth Focus Of Program New York — "I belonged to Hitler body and soul," says Alfons Heck, recalling how he became a high- ranking member of the Hitler Youth during World War II. Along with 8 million other German children, this 10-year-old belonged to the loyal army of Hitler Jugend, who pledged their lives to Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich. In June, Home Box Office will show "Heil Hitler! Con- fessions of a Hitler Youth," combining recent interviews with Mr. Heck and rarely seen newsreel footage. The program will air 10 a.m. June 3, and on June 6, 12, 16, 24 and 28. Based on Mr. Heck's book A Child of Hitler, the docu- mentary reveals the intense feelings of pride and patriotism that led Alfons Heck to join the Nazi Party. He remembers being taught "racial science" in elemen- tary school, through which Germans could differentiate themselves from "inferior races." From an early age, he was told the Jews were "different" and the Germans were "the master race." Mr. Heck recalls, "I had accepted what was being taught in school, and I fully believed that we, as the master race, were entitled eventually to rule the world." Filmmaker Seeks Greenberg Items Washington, D.C. — Di- rector Aviva Kempner is seeking Hank Greenberg anecdotes, film footage, photographs and memorabilia for a new biographical documentary she is making about the former Tiger great. Material should cover his early playing in the Bronx to his professional career with the Detroit Tigers and the Pittsburgh Pirates as well as later involvement with management of the Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox. Ms. Kempner also is inter- ested in anecdotes, photographs of film footage from the late 1920s to the 1940s of children, especially Jewish and immigrant youth, playing stickball or baseball in urban settings, such as the Bronx. Contact Ms. Kempner at The Ciesla Foundation, 1707 Lanier Place NW, Washing- ton, D.C., 20009. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 11 0 F--