Noted Musicians i it Jewish Music Month Festival at Center Tuesday Paul Olefsky, solo cellist, Harvey Seigel, violinist, and Lare Wardrop, English horn. all members of the Detroit Symphony, will appear as solo- ists with the Jewish Center Symphony Or- chestra, Julius Chajes, con- ductor, in the third Tuesday evening con- cert, at 8:30 p.m., March 1, in the Aaron DeRoy Thea- t r e 1 8 1 0 0 Meyers. The program is dedicated to the nation-wide celebration of Jewish Music Month. Olefsky, graduate of the Cur- tis. Institute of Music, studied with Piatigorsky, and later with Seigel Wardrop Pablo Casals. He will be heard in Max Bruch's "Kol Nidre" on Hebrew melodies and Dvorak's Celli) Concerto. Seigel, who will play Wie- niawski's Violin Concerto, stud- German Car Firm Offers Assembly Help for Israel Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News JERUSALEM — The West German Gogomobil Company is one of four _foreign firms which have extended offers to estab- lish assembly of compact cars in Israel, Michael Tsur, director general of the Israel Ministry of Trade and Commerce, dis- closed Tuesday. Tsur recently returned from a visit to the United States, where he said he had conclud- ed an agreement with an Amer- ican compact car producer to manufacture such cars in Israel. Production of such a car has been the goal of Ephraim Illin, manager of the Kaiser Frazer plant at Haifa, since Regie Ren- ault, the French auto maker, unilaterally cancelled its con- tract for assembly of Renault cars at the Haifa pant. Tsur did not identify the other two companies or give the name of the American firm. Feinberg in California for Whitman Lectures • , Charles E. Feinberg, well known Detroit lecturer and .collector of American Litera- titre, opened a series of lectures i0 California Feb. 25, speaking On "Abraham Lincoln and Walt ;Whitman" at the 'University of Southern California, at Los Angeles. ; On Feb. 26, he will be in an Francisco to address the Friends of San Francisco Public :Library on "Book Collectors and Book Collecting." On Feb. 28, Feinberg will be back in Los Angeles to address the Fellowship for Jewish Cul- ture on the subject of "Jewish • :Ceremonial Art." The final talk Of the series will be in Los Angeles March 2 before the Zamarano Club. He will discuss "Whitman's Difficulties with ;Publishers and Book Sellers." ; . ied at the Julliard School of Music under Mischa Mischakoff. Wardrop, who has played under conductors Ossip Gabril- owitsch, Franko Ghioni and Karl Krueger, has organized the Little Symphony. He will perform Julius Chajes' "Melody and Dance." dedicated to the memory of Henry Wineman. The Center Symphony Or- chestra will open the program with "Little Suite" No. 1, by Hugo Kauder. The concert is co-sponsored by the Women's Chapter of Beth Yehudah Schools. Vienna Raid Turns Up Nest of KKK Nazis; Seize Hate Material VIENNA, (JTA)—A "raid on a printing plant here and the arrest of three Viennese neo- Nazis produced evidence of an Austrian undercover Nazi group linked to the Ku Klux Klan and to an international fascist group with headquarters in Sweden, the Austrian police reported. Alfred Honkiss, owner of the printing plant, Herbert Drex- ler, a university student, and Heidi Suessmayer, also a stu- dent, were charged with neo- Nazi activities. All have records of such activities, the police reported. Large quantities of anti- Semitic itiaterial were seized in the raid. Some of it had been shipped here from the United States and Sweden. The police spokesman said some of the material was inscribed "Ku Klux Klan of America" and some were printed at Malmo, Sweden by the fascist "Social European Movement." Other material bore the stamp of "The White Brotherhood," which police said was a European branch of the KKK. The Austrian underground group was a front for six out- lawed Austrian Nazi groups whose members communicated by code. The neo-Nazis, alleged to head the Austrian front group, Leopold Windisch and Fred Borth, were arrested last Month on charges of inciting public unrest. The front or- ganization was termed by the police part of an international network of anti-Semitic groups. Hal Lehrman to Speak at Temple Israel "Crisis in the Middle East— Peace, War or Permanent Arm- istice" will be the subject of free-lance writer Hal Lehrman when he addresses a public meeting at Temple Israel at 8:30 p.m., Monday. Lehrman, who is speaking under the auspices of the temple Men's Club, is currently on a lecture tour following his return from a 10-month trip to North Africa and the Middle East. During his visit from Mo- rocco to Iran, Lehrman inter- viewed such headline makers as the Shah of Persia, Habib Bour- guiba of Tunisia, the rebel Al- gerian Premier Ferhat Abbas, Israeli Premier David Ben- Gurion and Gen. Moshe Dayan. His tenth visit to the Middle East since 1942, Lehrman served as a special correspon- dent for numerous publications. Twice winner of the Guggen- heim Fellowship for his Middle Eastern reporting, Lehrman is the only free-lance reporter to have won the Council on Foreign Relations Fellowship, a $10,000 prize awarded annual- ly to one foreign correspondent. He is the author of three books, "Portrait of Israel," "Israel: The Beginning and To- morrow" and "Russia's Europe." Prior to World War II, he served with the Associated Press in Paris. Morton J. Bechek, Men's Club president, appointed Reuben Levine as chairman of the speakers committee which planned the event. Assisting him are James Salle, Sam Rab- inowitz, Jerome Ross, Sam Suss- man, Martin Citrin, Bernard Osnos, Sid Newman, Jr., and Frank Simons. A question and answer pe- riod will follow Lehrman's ad- dress, after which there will be a reception in honor of the speaker. Tickets are available at the temple office, UN 3-7769. Plymouth NEW CAR! USED CAR! or SERVICE! YOU EXPECT MORE FROM HAMILTON AND GET IT! BEN GREEN You Can't Drive Overhead — Why Pay For It! HAMILTON MOTOR SALES; 13519 HAMILTON at DAVISON TO 6 2800 - Population, Emigrants Report Made in Israel JTA Teletype Wire from Israel to The Jewish News Israel's population at end of 1959 totalled 2,089,000, of whom some 200,000 were non-Jews, according to official figures published Monday. During the year 33,045 per- sons came to Israel as immi- grants, 84,000 came as tourists and some 45,000 Israelis left for travel abroad for varying per- iods. About 10,000 left Israel for permanent residence abroad, 7,062 having declared such in- tentions when applying for visas. The estimates showed that some 114,000 persons emigrated from Israel since the establish- ment of statehood, including some 5,000 non-Jews. Hungarian Synagogues Daubed with Swastikas Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News VIENNA — Synagogues in Budapest and other Hungarian towns have been smeared with swastikas and fascist slogans, the Viennese newspaper, the Express, reported Monday. Citing statements from per- sons arriving here from Hun- gary, the newspaper also quoted them as reporting that Hungar- ian newspapers have been for- bidden to print any mention of the daubings. 34A*14,3fACT 5.3,5,A. EST J. HEIN.Z ITSBUR6HYA, -*.missgemannaw: Open to a good suggestion? Open a can of Heinz strictly Kosher Beans tonight. Heat! Serve! And watch 'em disappear. Sit back (for a minute) and enjoy the satisfaction of knowing that every spoon- ful is a delicious, nutritious delight. It's a pleasure —isn't it get up again when they sing out, "More beans, please!" EVERY LABEL CARRIES THE 0 SEAL OF APPROVAL OF THE UNION OF ORTHODOX JEWISH CONGREGATIONS OF AM ERICk