ORT Conference Outlines Accelerated
Detroit Committee Formed to Assist in
Building Tel Aviv Cultural Center, New
Israel Vocational Training Program
Home for Israel Philharmonic Orchestra PARIS, (JTA)—An acceler- occupations were taught. Three

A Detroit committee has been
formed, under the chairmanship
of Max Osnos, to assist in the
completion of the Tel Aviv, Is-
rael, Cultural Center, which is
to include a Symphony Hall as
the new home of the Israel
Philharmonic Orchestra.
To advance this cause,
through private subscriptions, a
private concert will be given
for a limited group of people
next Tuesday evening, at Frank-
lin Hills Country Club, with a

DR. ARTHUR J. LELLYVELD

Vatican Publishes Text
of Pope's Speech to AJC

ROME (JTA)—The full text
of a speech delivered by Pope
Pius XII last week to a dele-
gation of the American Jewish
Committee was published in
the Vatican daily newspaper
L'Osservatore Romano. It em-
phasized the Pope's views on
racial discrimination and per-
secution.

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world famous violinist as solo-
ist.
Dr. Arthur J. Lelilyveld, ex-
ecutive vice-president of the
American-Israel Cultural Foun-
dation, which is sponsoring the
movement, will be present at
the concert to outline the ob-
jectives of the new building
program.
The dedication of the new
Tel Aviv Center will take place
on Oct. 2, with Prime Minister
and Mrs. David Ben-Gurion
heading the list of notables in
attendance.
It will be the richest single
concert on record, with the
following artists participating:
Leonard Bernstein will be the
conductor and the distin-
guished artists will be Artur
Rubenstein, p i a n i s t; Isaac
Stern, violinist, and Gregor
Piatigorsky, cellist.
The need for a new home for
the Israel Philharmonic Orches-
tra was indicated in the num-
ber of annual subscribing inem-
bers. More than 17,000 people
hold annual memberships. Com-
pared with the Detroit Sym-
phony membership of 2,500 for
a population exceeding 2,000,-
000, as contrasted with the total
Israel population of 1,900,000,
the Israeli music lovers are be-
lieved to set a world record.
The Detroit committee under

the chairmanship of Max Osnos
includes Lester Burton, Avern
Cohn, Mrs. Abraham Cooper,
Lewis Daniels, Charles Fein-
berg, Walter Field, Nathan Fish-
man, Charles Gershenson, Karl
Haas, Joseph Handleman, Leon
Kay, Jacob Kellman, Joseph
Kukes, Hoke Levin, Philip
Marcuse, M i l f or d Pregerson,
Leslie Schmier, Abe Shiffman,
Leonard Simons, Richard Sloan,
C. William Sucher, Jack Wain-
ger and Mrs. Henry Wineman.

7KW,

MAX OSNOS

Lessening of Arab-Israel 'High
Tensions' Seen by Nehru; Invites
Dr. Nahum Goldmann to Visit India

LONDON, (JTA) — Pr i m e
Minister Nehru of India told a
news conference he believed
there had been a recent lessen-
ing of the "high passions" in-
volved in the Israeli-Arab dis-
pute. He made the comment in
reply to a question from a
Jewish Telegraphic Agency cor-
respondent. He added that it
would be better to wait for
those passions to "cool down a
little" before any steps were
taken towards a settlement of
conflict.
The Prime Minister said such
steps would have to be taken
in the interests of both the
Arab countries and Israel. He
warned that there could not be
a perpetual state of precipitate
warfare in the Middle East. He
asserted that India had put up
with much more from Pakistan
than Israel had to face from
Egypt. At - the same time he
ignored a question concerning
Israel's moral right to defend
herself against a country, Egypt,

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which openly proclaimed a state
of war. Asked if he felt Egypt's
attitude toward Israel was help-
ful to world peace, Mr. Nehru
replied that Egypt's attitude
was "probably more helpful"
than that of other Arab coun-
tries.

Nehru Extends Invitation
to Dr. Goldmann for Visit

TEL AVIV, (JTA) — D r.
Nahum Goldmann, president of
the Jewish Agency, has been
invited to visit India by Indian
Prime Minister Nehru, the Zion-
ist leader disclosed on his ar-
rival here to attend the World
Zionist Actions Committee
meeting.
Dr. Goldrnann said he and
Mr. Nehru had discussed Mid-
dle East problems and pos-:
sibilities of pacification of the
area. The meeting took place
at the home of the Premier's
sister in London.

Tito Hints at Israel Visit;
Was Invited 3 Years Ago

TEL AVIV, (JTA)—President
Tito of Yugoslavia considers
himself "obliged to visit Israel,"
he told a Histadrut official at-
tending a Congress of Yugoslav
Workers Councils, A. Gliat, who
reported the Yugoslav leader's
statement on his return to Is-
rael.
The government of Israel in-
vited Tito to visit Israel three
years ago, prior to his Egyp-
tian and Far East tour. The
invitation has never been an-
swered.

Mrs. Fried Chosen
`Volunteer of Week'

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Mrs. Avery Fried, of 5434 W.
Outer Dr., has been chosen
"Volunteer of the Week" by the
United Community Services,
and will receive the organiza-
tion's Community Service Pin.
Mrs. Fried, a member of the
Women's Guild of Sinai Hos-
pital, is co-chairman of the
Motor Corps Service.
She became a Motor Corps
driver in 1953, and has given
300 hours of her time each
year since then to the hospital.
In addition to this demanding
schedule, Mrs. Fried also man-
ages a household of four chil-
dren, makes puppets for child
patients at Sinai and complet-
ed a six-week occupational
therapy course at Wayne State
University.

ated program of vocational
training in Israel to meet that
country's urgent needs for
skilled manpower and renewed
efforts toward the rehabilita-
tion of Jews in North Africa
are the major items of discus-
sion at the bi-annual meeting
of the 88-member Central Board
of ORT. The principal Ameri-
can speakers at the opening
session were former U.S. Sena-
tor Herbert H. Lehman and Dr.
William Haber, president of the
Central Board and of the
American ORT Federation.
Sen. Lehman called the ORT
program of Jewish economic
reconstruction a history-making
idea and said it was clear that
"ORT training has become a
proven path to an independent
life" for Jewish refugees. "Many
persons with assistance of pro-
grams like ORT are today alive,
self-sufficienrt and useful cit-
izens," he stated, adding a
warning that present world
realities "compel an awareness
that there remain Jews who are
as urgently in need as at any
time in the recent past."
A report on ORT activities
throughout the world submitted
to the parley shows that 23,000
adults and children in 19 coun-
tries were aided by ORT in
1956 at a cost of $4,125,000. The
largest ORT program is located
in Israel, the report stated. The
areas of gravest economic dis-
tress are among the Jewish com-
munities of North Africa and in
Iran.
The report noted that last
year, 23,000 Jews attended 391
trade schools and workshops
maintained by ORT. The organ-
ization employed 757 teachers
and shop instructors, nearly 250
of them in Israel. Sixty different

out of four of the student body
were boys and girls between the
ages of 14 and 18 who attended
two, three and four-year courses
at ORT vocational schools. Most
of these youngsters were in
Israel, North Africa and Iran.

Israel Seeks to Attract
German Tourist Trade

COLOGNE, (JTA)—In an ef-
fort to attract more German
visitors, the Consular Depart-
ment of the Israel Purchasing
Mission here has notified travel
agencies throughout the country
that the granting of three-month
tourist visas to Israel has been
facilitated. Applicants must in-
dicate how they fared at the
hands of the postwar denazifica-
tion courts and into which de-
nazification category they were
placed by such courts.

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