Station IUNIChiefs To SpeakObituariesWornINEW YORK—Dag Hammarskjold, secretary general of the United Nations, and Lewis L. Strauss, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, will be among the principal speakers at the American Jewish Committee’s five-day 50th anniversary gbservance which endshere Sunday.Jacob Blaustein of Baltimore, planning committee chairman, announced that the theme of the Observance is “The Pursuit of Equality at Home and Abroad.” He saidthe meeting, which will bring together more than a thousand communal leaders from 600 communities throughout the country, willfocus chiefly on:_ Mrs. Regina Weiser,-90, mother«i social sci- of Mrs. Henry Steinberg of 1301 E.ization combating bigotry, protect- the Badersand spe- Edgemont, died March 30. She wasing the civil and religious rights enlists religious leadersi resjdent of Mlami Beach, pia.of Jews, and advancing the cause ciaUsts in edu^UOT ^ ^ con. | Besides Mrs. Steinberg she U wavof freedom everywhere inmum mu **■*a m ^ A » _ _ a11 CCUvlll CV # IBlaustein said that in addition to ference.PROSPECTS for American equality in economic, social, and educational spheres. .Role of American religious institutions in promoting inter groupamity. .United States and the MiddleEast. .Status of Jewish communities inthe United States and throughoutthe world. .Challenge of the half centuryahead in realizing the promise inherent for all Americans of the American documents of freedom.dag hammarskjoldLEWIS L STRAUSSTHE AMERICAN Jewish Committee, which was founded in the wake of the Kishinev pogroms in 1906, is the oldest American organ-vived by three other daughters, Mrs. Charles Adler of Miami Beach,Mrs. Max Levy and Mrs. William Levy, both of Wilmington, Del.; six grandchildren, and six greatgrandchildren.• • •BERT GETZ, 60, winter resident,died in Tempe March 18. Funeral services were held at Grimshaw Mortuary on April 20 with Rabbi Carol Klein and Cantor Norman Migdal officiating. Burial was inBeth El Cemetery. He is survivedby two brothers, Charles of 103 W.Palmcroft Dr., Tempe, and Harveyof Mason City, Iowa, and a sister,Mrs. M. L. Grover of Fort Sill, Okla.* * 0MRS. JAC. LEVY, 83, of New Orleans, La., died March 22. She was the mother of Mrs. Phil Taxman of 6529 N. Central who, with her husband, attended the funeral in New Orleans. Also surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Richard King of New Orleans; two grandchildren, and two great grandchildren.HIRSC1 left) MrsMaricopaCollice Pi wright, jccuss ion o:at Nation Thursday gram chaNEWMAN, 69, died, died ... Funer- I MCSal services were held at Grimshaw Mortuary by Rabbi Carol KleinTUCSOISRabbi SlapsDebunking Of. ^ D was otiened “d Cantor Migdal. Burial was in onist CourBeth El Congregation will elect r as a further in- Beth El Cemetery Survivors are b the locofficers at a general membership ^n^ f0r “bargain-hunters” to two sisters. Mrs Louise Lipow of can Councmeeting Wednesday night at the Israel French perfumes, 3311 E. Vermont Ave. and Sarah Zionists eisynagogue. Reports will be even visit whiskies .Newman of 1708 K Indian Schoolby congregation committees and af- ™awatdid ^ ^ ^ b^mer^mard. *so^ffiliate organizations. | are now avallable there tp tourists | “N J• ♦ *Piety SurgeNEW YORK (JTA)—A warningto Jewish leaders against “debunking” the present religious revival was issued by Dr. Abraham J. Feldman of Hartford, Conn., resident of the Synagogue Council!ol America, at the close of the SCAannual general assembly.Dr. Feldman spoke with dismay about the tendency to regard spiritual renaissance with “incredulityand warned his colleagues against “going too far*’ in their search for causes of the revived interest in Jewish religious identification inthe U.S. ,He questioned the propriety ofprobing the sincerity of persons who in increasing numbers are joining synagogues and asked the assembly “how can we sit in judgment when they come to worshipand seek education?”Violinist LamentsMIAMI BEACH* * * I at duty-free prices.MURRAY LEWIS, 3302 W. Mis- --souri, and Joseph Ott Lampe 4f26 #Calle Redonda, have passed the Tr i qr/cket,Arizona bar examination for ad-1 I UIH I VWIWlv^f, mittance to the practice of law.Lewis, from Charleston, W. va., served at Luke Field for two yearsZftrSSSr formerly I Isaac Stern refused to play secondworked for attorney Sam Langer- fiddle to a cricket at a concert here, man. Stem said it was not cricket to* * * J have two soloists on one programGerrold Cowitz sonofMrand because of theESjSMSTlS? competlUon. Pointing with his howIndians and the Baltimore Orioles al ^ee potted palms at the right during their March exhibition base- q{ me gtage as ^ SOUrce of the ball games in Phoenix. He is a un3clleduled solo performances, he Little League all-star. Qff ^ £tageBOB MABKOW, 1833 N. Seventh attendants marched overNational Association of American three palms away. The yiohmsPhotographers^convention at Wash- then returned and completed the ington, D.C. 1 concerto.EMANUEL ROSE, 1531 W. Campbell, died April 4 in a local hospital.He is survived by his wife, Sara; a son, Melvin, of Phoenix, and two daughters out-of-town. Burial was scheduled for Chicago, according toA. L. Moore and Sons Mortuary.* * . *can Counc Zionists e\ Zionism c Angeles Z\Accordir the Tucscpublic statists adviseto particip anti-ZionisMISS HELEN Lefkowitz who came to Phoenix in mid-March, died at St. Joseph’s Hospital April 1. She hack resided here with her sister, Mrs. Nathan York, of 512 E. Mulberry. Burial was held in Pittsburgh, Pa.Arabs Saved From SeaTEL AVIV (JTA)—-A party of 11 Arabs, including a woman and three babies, were picked up in a small boat in Israel waters off the southern coast. They were enroute from Gaza, where economic conditions have worsened since the Israeli withdrawal, to Lebanon.AMERICAN ZIONIST COUNCIL. PHOENIX