Friday, April 21, 1944 THE JEWISH NEWS Helped Frame Palestine Mandate Isadore Levin's 50th Birthday Recalls Interesting Career Jewish Agency, JNF Spend 3 Million to Aid Refugees in 2 Months NEW YORK (JTA) — Almost $3,000,000, a record sum, was Nationally Famous Attorney, a Captain in Last War at 25, spent by the Jewish Agency,- for Palestine and the Jewish Na- Assisted Frankfurter and Mack in Establishing tional Fund in the first two Terms for Jewish National Home months of 1944, with the largest single expenditure being made for immigration assistance and relief to refugees, as thousands of Jews found homes in Pales- tine, it was announced here by Dr. James G. Heller, national chairman of the United Pale- tine Appeal. In the months of January and February, 1944, t h e Jewish Agency, with the funds of the Palestine Foundation Fund, its fiscal instrument, spent $1,914,- 932; The Jewish National Fund spent at the rate of a million dollars for the same period. The inadequacy of income from the U. S. and the rising rate of expenditures made it necessary for the Palestine Foundation Fund to borrow $1,215,000 from Lloyds Bank in London, Dr. Heller stated. Page Eleve n Cantor Meisels Publishers Meet Guest Soloist In Indianapolis At Zionist Event Forms of Community Coop« ■•■•■•■1,41. Mrs. Cooper to Participate In Night of Jewish Music At Center Thursday Saul Meisels, cantor of Cleve- land Temple on the Heights, will be guest soloist at the annual Evening of Jewish Music spon- eration to be Discussed On April 29 and 30 INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., (JTA)' Indianapolis will be host to pub.' lishers of weekly English-Jewish newspapers from coast to coast Saturday and Sunday, April 29 and 30 when almost all of the fifty odd U. S. Jewish papers published in English will con- verge on the city for their first annual convention. An invitation to the publishers was sent out this week by Ernest Cohn, president of the Indian- apolis Jewish Federation, express- ing the hope that the publishers would find their stay in the city pleasant. The Federation will be host to the publishers at luncheon Sunday at Beth El. Activities will open with an Oneg Shabbat at 2 p. m. Satur- day, with Philip Slomovitz, of The Jewish News of Detrbit, and Joseph Brin, of the Jewish Advo- cate of Boston, delivering papers. Mr. Slomovitz will discuss forms of community support and Mr. Brin will discuss the failure of SAUL MEISELS Jewish leadership to cooperate sored by the Zionist Organiza- with the Anglo-Jewish press. tion of Detroit, next Thursday Saturday night and Sunday evening, at tee Shaarey Zedek. morning's sessions will be devot- Mrs. Abraham Cooper will ed to advertising and circulation participate in tIte program and respectively. After the luncheon, assisting will be the instrumental the final session of the convention trio composed of Bernard Argie- will be held, with the editorial wicz, 'cellist; Morris Hochberg, work of the papers the topic oil violinist, both members of the the discussion. Election of officers 'Detroit Symphony Orchestra, will close the convention. and Sylvia Hochberg, pianist. There also will be community singing. creases in 1923. He has won national recognition for the handling of cases before the U.S. Supreme Court in matters in- volving interstate commerce and the anti-trust laws, before courts over which Chief Justices Charles Evans Hughes and William How- ard Taft presided. These cases are frequently referred to in the courts and in law colleges. Mr. Levin on several occasions refused to accept public offices that were offered to him in the City and State, preferring to carry on his law practice. He has served on committees of the City and State Bar As- sociations and was a member of the State Bar Association com- mittee which framed the exist- Admission is free and all are ing corporation law. invited. . Served on Clinic Board —Photo by Herman Krieger, Jewish News Staff Photographer ISADORE LEVIN Twenty-five years ago, then a Captain in the U. S. Army who had been retained to assist in the dismantling of U. S. artillery that remained overseas after World War I, Isadore Levin was called upon to help in drafting terms with respect to Palestine that were to be incorporated in the Mandate which later was given by the Peace Conference at Versailles to Great Britain. He was then 25, but his liant scholarship at the Har- that he received the call to par- yard Law School placed him in ticipate in framing the terms of the foreground among the ablest the Palestine provisions to be in- available lawyers for the his- corporated in the Mandate. Up- toric task of preparing the on completion of that task, he ground for the establishment of went to Palestine, from there the Jewish National Home. going to Paris and London, re- Assisted Frankfurter turning to Detroit in October of Thus, in 1919, Capt. Levin had 1919. the great privilege of working Upon his return here, he was with Prof. Felix Frankfurter— honored by a large assembly now one of the Justices of the that gathered in the Shaarey U. S. Supreme Court—and Judge Zedek synagogue on Willis and Julian W. Mack, who passed Brush Sts. to hear a report of away a year ago, in preparing his experiences in Palestine. the legal documents for the Pal- He returned to the Butzel and estine Mandate. Butzel office and has been for Last Tuesday, on his 50th many years a member of the birthday, which was just an- *firm now functioning under the other day in his busy career as name of Butzel, Levin and one of the state's leading law- Winston. yers, Mr. Levin recalled his On Alien Enemy Board early experiences. He was full Among the great honors that of faith that the ground that have come to him in this war had been prepared 25 years ago was the call he received from for the solution of the problem U. S. Attorney General Francis of homelessness of great num- Biddle to serve as a member of bers of Jews will yet bear the Alien Enemy Board for fruit, and that the work of the Eastern Michigan. He accepted pioneers is not a lost cause. the appointment several days Born in New Haven after Pearl Harbor. He is also He was born in New Haven, Government Appeal Agent for Conn., April 18, 1894. His par- Draft Board No. 10. ents, Rabbi and Mrs. Judah L. In his legal work, Mr. Levin Levin, came to Detroit with has handled many intricate their family three years later. matters involving many organ- Mr. Levin, after graduating izations and re-organizations. from Cass High School, received He appears frequently before his B. A. degree from Harvard the Michigan State Supreme College and his LL.B. from Har- Court and he has argued before yard Law School. the U. S. Supreme Court in im- In August of 1916 he entered portant cases. the law office of Butzel and He enjoys this type of work Butzel, the partners of which because it enables him to deal were Henry M. Butzel—now with legal doctrines and to in- State Supreme Court Justice— terpret legal decisions so as to and Fred M. Butzel. Shortly bring about the development of thereafter, in May of 1917, he important principles and prece- enlisted in the Army. He was dents. He finds interest in the sent overseas in September of great variety of problems that that year with the Field Ar- come to him in a broad general tillery. • practice. On completion of the officers' Given Natonal Recognition training school course he was An important- case which commissioned Lieutenant and brought him fame was the suit later was promoted to Captain. which prevented th e Detroit Went to Palestine City Gas Co. from putting into It was in September of 1919 effect its announced rate in- He served for six years as a member of the board of North End Clinic, is a member of the boards of several corporations, is a director of the Detroit Times and serves on the com- munity advisory board of The Jewish News. His father, the venerable Rabbi Judah L. Levin, died in 1926. His mother passed away in 1933. Besides his brother and law partner, Abraham J. Levin, he has two other brothers, Dr. Na- than P. Levin, who resides with his family in Los Angeles, and Prof. Samuel M. Levin of Wayne University. Mr. Levin is proud of the fact that four members of the family are serving in the armed forces. Capt. Gerald Levin, son of Dr. and Mrs. Nathan P. Le- vin, is serving with the Air Force overseas. Prof. and Mrs. Samuel M. Levin's two sons and their son-in-law are in active service. They are First Lt. Jos- eph H. Levin, who is stationed at the A b e r d e en Proving Grounds, Maryland; First Lt. Herbert G. Levin, who is com- pleting his medical internship in Chicagq before entering active service, and Stanley B. Fried- man, who is with the U. S. Engineers at Camp Belvoir. . Mr. Meisels will sing Shir Hashirim by Lazare Saminsky, Adamah by Max Helfman, Der Batlan, Hotzmach and Der Rebele by Henoch Kon, Bialik's Bein N'Har P'Rat by Nachum Nardi, Kaddish by Joel. Engel and the Folk melody Die Chassene. The instrumentalists will ren- der Jacob Weinberg's Trio in Hebrew Themes and Jacques Halevey's Escerpts from LaJuive. Jewish War Vets To Meet Monday The Jewish War Veterans will hold a joint meeting of all posts and auxiliaries on Monday at 8:30 p. m., in the -Mezzanine Auditorium of the Maccabees Building, Woodward and Put- nam. World War Veterans II Post. No. 268 %ill be instituted and its officers installed. Official movies of the Office of War Information will be shown and the Jewish War Vet- erans Memorial Home Drive will be discussed at a short business meeting. There will be refresh- ments with the compliments of the State Department. A New War-lime Convenience! Ready Cooked Foo- ds in the Casserole Carton Sanders offer two or more Ready Cooked Foods daily — Chopped Beef Pie and Biscuits, Steak and Kidney -Pie, and many others. These foods are packaged in the new Casserole Carton which can be placed right in the oven for heating — and then on the table for serving. Each carton contains four generous servings. Ready Cooked Foods are carried in stock at seven Sanders stores. Orders may be placed at any store for next day's specials. CONFECTIONERS CANDIES • BAKED GOODS • ICE CREAMS She Always Wants The Best for Her Family . . So she comes to a druggist she knows is fully prepared to help her at times of illness. He has always given her the most carfeul service in filling her preicriptions perfectly. She knows she can depend on Cunningham's