Balfour Concert to Feature Fulbright Charges Both Nasser, B-G Are Prejudice-Afflicted
WASHINGTON, (JTA) —
(Secretary General Dag Ham-
made such a study," Ham-
Israel Philharmonic Nov. 1 Chairman Fulbright of the Sen- marskjold said at the UN, he have
marskjold replied, "but if there

Under the chairmanship of
Sherman Shapiro, plans are be-
ing formulated for the appear-
ance in Detroit of the Israel
Philharmonic Orchestra, on
Nov. 1, at the Masonic Audi-
torium.
Coming here under auspices
of the Zionist Organization of

Boost Sen. Javits
forVice-President

WASHINGTON, (JTA)—Sen.
Jacob K. Javits, New York Re-
publican, was proposed by an-
other prom-
inent Republi-
c a n Senator
f o r "serious
consideration"
as the Repub-
lican candi-
date for the
United States
Vice Presiden-
cy on a ticket
to be headed
Sen. Javits by Vice Presi-
dent Richard M. Nixon. The pro-
posal was made by Sen. • John
Sherman Cooper, of Kentucky.
Javits should be nominated,
said the Kentucky Republican,
if Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller
refuses the Vice Presidential
nomination and if Sen. John F.
Kennedy is nominated for Pres-
ident by the Democrats. If that
were to be the .line-up of Presi-
dential candidate s, Cooper
maintained, Sen. Javits could
"bring New York into the Re-
publican column."
Republican observers here
pointed out that "a chief func-
tion any Vice Presidential can-
didate has is to capture the
electoral votes of his own state."
Sen. Cooper noted that Javits
showed from the time he first
ran for Congress from New
York in 1946, he proved he was
capable of defeating prominent
Democratic opponents.
In 1956, Javits was nominated
for the Senate after a bitter .
battle with Republican con-
servatives, and beat New York's
Mayor Robert F. Wagner by
458,000 votes.

Landsm,anshafteh
Convene June 5
for JNE Planning

Detroit Landsmanshaften lead-
ers will meet at breakfast Sun-
day, June 5, 10 a.m., at Jericho
Temple, 18495 Wyoming, to dis-
cuss aspects of their program-
ming.
The meeting, convened by the
Committee of Landsmanshaften
for Jewish National Fund, also
will hear and welcome home
Morris Brandwine, first vice-
president of JNF and chairman
of the Foundation, who has just
returned from his first trip to
Israel.
The Committee extends an
invitation to the breakfast to
all members of Landsmanshaften
who have visited Israel during
the last 12 years. According to
Harry Kaminer, chairman of the
committee, "it will interest
those members who were in Is-
rael to hear Mr. Brandwine's
fresh views, and to compare
them with their own impres-
sions." Kaminer stated that
there will be no admission
charges to this meeting, and no
solicitations.

Algerian Jewish Section
Bombed; Girl Killed

ALGIERS, (JTA) — A young
Jewish girl, A. Nahman, was
mortally wounded in Setif when
a bomb exploded in the city's
Jewish section. The girl was
tossed 20 feet in the blast. •
A number of Jewish passers-
by were wounded but their
names and the degree of their
injuries were not disclosed. The
attack has shocked the local
Jewish community.

Detroit, the world famous or-
chestra will be featured at the
annual Balfour Concert.
Arrangements are being made
for special parties to precede
the concert — in order to fa-
cilitate group attendances by
family clubs, organizations and
others.
Patrons already are being
enrolled for the event, and
tickets will go on sale shortly.
Judge Ira Kaufman, president
of the Zionist Organization,
pointed out that this will be
the second visit of the Israel
Philharmonic to Detroit, the
first having been in 1951 when
all seats at the Masonic Temple
were sold out far in advance
of the concert.
"The first concert was an
outstanding social event, and
we are confident it will be ex-
ceeded by even greater interest
this year," Judge Kaufman said.
Shapiro said that cooperating
committees, including patrons
and social committee, will be
announced soon. He said there
are plans for parlor meetings
to provide opportunities for as-
sistance in this event to the
many Detroiters who already
have made inquiries about the
forthcoming event.

ate Foreign Relations Commit-
tee told a press conference
Monday that he has not yet
sorted out or evaluated his im-
pressions on his visit to Israel,
Egypt and Jordan and that he
would make a formal report
later. He said that both Nasser
and Ben-Gurion appear to be
"afflicted with ancient preju-
dices that caused so much
trouble in that area."
The Arab refugee situation
was "a very serious problem,"
he stated. He said Nasser feels
Americans do not know the
Arab side of the issue, adding
that Nasser was willing to im-
plement UN resolutions on the
Suez Canal if Israel abided by
UN resolutions on repatriation
of Arab refugees.
In Tel Aviv before his de-
parture, Fulbright said in an
interview that his tour had con-
vinced him that the refugee
problem was at the root of
Arab-Israel hostility. He said
that with an advance commit-
ment from Israel of cooperation
in a major resettlement pro-
gram, he felt the Arab coun-
tries could not object to an
investigation into the desires of
the refugees themselves.

had no objection to a proposal
by Senator Fulbright for crea-
tion of a new body of experts to
study the Arab refugee prob-
lem. At a press conference,
Hammarskjold was asked for
comment on the report that
Sen. Fulbright indicated during
his visit to Israel that upon his
return to Washington, he would
suggest that a fresh study be
made of the problem. "I myself

is a feeling that there is a need
for a new body—by all means."
The study to which he referred
was a plan he proposed to the
United Nations for the develop-
ment of the productive economy
of the Middle East as a means
toward a definite solution of
the Arab refugee problem
through absorption of refugees
in the Arab countries where
they now live.)

We Take Pleasure in Announcing the

Formation of

MORRISON & FRUMIN, INC.
And Our Admission to Membership on
the Detroit Stock Exchange

1465 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit 26, Michigan

Telephone: WO 1-1345

May 16, 1960

Murray Frumin, President
A. I. Morrison, Secretary

HISTORIC TRIBUTE DINNER

to Her Excellency

GOLIDA MEIR

Minister for Foreign Affairs of the State of Israel

for Thirty Years of Monumental Leadership to Her People

Celebrating Twelve Years of Israel's Heroic Achievement

and Honoring

RABBI JACOB E. SEGAL

with a

"Man of the Year Award"

at 7 o'clock, Tuesday Evening, June 7, 1960

In the Grand Ballroom of the Statler-Hilton Hotel

JOHN E. LURIE, Dinner Chairman

Open to 1960 Israel Bond Purchasers and Those Subscribing

By the Night of the Dinner

TOM BORMAN, General Chairman
Detroit Israel Bond Committee

Couvert: Five-Fifty
Dietary Laws will be observed

For reservations
call
DI. 1-5707

