Saute, f tevin, Student of Youth Problems, Authority on Penology, Ex-Honduran Consul, Dies at 62 Saul R. Levin, of 2055 W. Bos- ton Blvd., one of Detroit's most interesting personalities, a lead- ing attorney and a leader in the Consular corps here, died of a heart attack Monday, at the age of 62. Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon at Kaufman Chapel,. Rabbi Morris Adler officiating. . Hundreds of his friends and admirers came to pay final tribute to a man who for more than 40 years . had been a part of many important causes. At the Clover Hill Park Cemetery, the service was con- ducted by Rabbi Irwin Groner. Surviving him are his wife, Bess; sons, Carl and Sander, both attorneys; a daughter, Mrs. William (Hannah) Gladstone; three grandchildren; two broth- ers, Judge Theodore Levin and Dr. Samuel J. Levin; and three sisters, Mrs. David Croll, of Tor- onto, Mrs. Alan Grossman and Mrs. Henry Yanow. A younger brother of Saul Levin, Hoke Levin, died only a month ago, on March 29. An- other brother, I. Bayre Levin, died in 1951. In February, Levin was re- appointed by Governor Wil- liams as a member of the Michigan Corrections Com- mission. He had become an authority on penology and in recent yes • proposed drastic changes in the state's correc- tions system. He had been at work on plans to be acted up- on by the Corrections Com- mission on drastic changes in our penal system. He was earnestly opposed to capital punishment, he believed in the necessity for studying criminology from humanistic views, in order to arrive at a solution of many ills in society, and his views were treated with great respect and were given serious attention by his associ- ates on the Corrections Commis- sion, to which he had given se- rious concern and much time and study. Levin was opposed to re- . strictive covenants and by personal example, as a mem- - ber of the Boston Boulevard Residents Association, he co- operated in efforts - against racial discrimination in housing. Levin was prominent in the Consular corps, of which he was a member for many years, com- mencing in the late 1930's when he became the Honorary Consul for Honduras. He served as Vice Dean of the Consular Corps here and was held in high esteem by foreign diplomats. In addition to holding the Consular posts for the Honduras, he also repre- sented Mexico here on numer- ous occasions. He was an expert on inter- American law, had traveled widely throughout Latin Amer- ica, and was well known in many of the Latin American capitals where he had visited and studied conditions on trips with Mrs. Levin. His primary interest for many years was the problem of youth. Forty years ago, he already- was active in the Young Judaea movement, and he took a deep interest in young people, often having made sacrifices in efforts to direct misguided youth IF YOU TURN THE tr . S . 11 th, UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T FIND A Fie/ER WINE THAN " Milan Wineries, Detroit, Mich. SAUL R. LEVIN towards proper and produc- tive channels. With his brother, Theodore, now Chief Judge of the U. S. District Court, he formed the firm of Levin and Levin, in 1920, upon their graduation from the Detroit College of Law. That firm has since de- veloped into the present firm of Levin, Levin, Garvett and Dill. Levin was a member of the board of Parkside Hospital. He was a member of the Michigan, American, Inter-American and Detroit Bar Associations and was a member of the latter's grievance committee. He was associated with the Zionist Or- ganization, always having been an ardent supporter of Zionist and pro-Israel causes, of Bnai Brith, Congregation S h a a r e y Zedek and Perfection Lodge F&AM. Saul Levin was deeply inter- ested in Jewish educational ef- forts and served for many years as a member of the board of the United Hebrew Schools. Norman H. Birnkrant, Aus- trian Consul in Detroit, headed a group of Consuls who were honorary pallbearers at the funeral. They and the countries they represented were: Remi Lawagie, Belgium; Dr. Alberto Becerra Sierra, Mexico; Wil- liam K. Weiler, Netherlands; Edward Johanson, Sweden; Mark Stevens, Thailand; Ralph Osborne, Haiti; Vittoria Re, Italy; Remi de Ramieri, San Marino; Dr. William Caswell, Norway; Alexander Gordo n, Guatemala. (See Editorial and Commen- tary, Pages 2 and 4.) Rothschilds Seek to Gain Ransom Paid to Hitler (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) LONDON — The Rothschild family acted Tuesday in a bid to recover part of what may be the largest ransom ever paid— the estimated $20,000,000 hand- ed over to Hitler in 1939 for the release of Baron Louis de Rothschild. The ransom was paid after the failure of a direct appeal to Hitler by the Duke of Wind- sor. R. D. Wilberforce, London attorney, appealed to the foreign compensation commis- sion to uphold the claim of Baroness Carlice de Rothschild, widow of Baron Alphonse de• Rothschild, to 600 acres of land included in the ransom. The Nazis sold the land, then in German-occupied Poland, to a German Baroness. Lady Rothschild is claiming about $250,000 in compensation for the land from a fund set up by the Polish government to compensate British owners for property taken over by the Polish People's Republic. Anti-Semitism in State Department, Truman Declares Student: Mr. President, in your memoirs you mentioned there was some anti-Semitism in the State Department. President Truman: It is still there. Student: Mr. President, is that in regard to policy in the Near East, or personnel in the administration? President Truman: It has to do with the international policy, and in the Near East, and Syria and Iran. This conversation is taken from the "Seminar on State- craft," from the new volume, "Truman Speaks," by Harry S. Truman, pub- lished by Co- lumbia Uni- versity Press. In this vol- ume are in- corporated the lectures by President Tru- man, and the discus s ions Truman that followed them, when the former President spoke at Columbia University. In addi- tion to the foreword by Dr. Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University, and an introduction by Truman, the latter's lectures were On the Presidency, On the Constitu- tion, On Statecraft and On Hysteria and Witch-Hunting. President Truman condemned the Ku Klux Klan and all mani- festations of bigotry, as well as "plots dreamed up by anti- Masons, anti-Catholics, anti- Negroes and anti-Jews. He told the participants in the seminars: "If a man lives by what he teria at the very beginning un- til public feeling rises against it." "Truman Speaks" will prove very valuable to students of government. Add "Charm" To Your Gift for Mother professes to believe, whether he's a Catholic, a Presby- terian, a Baptist, or a Jew, he'll make a good citizen, because there's a moral code which was given to us by the Almighty God himself." He expressed the view that Julius and Ethel Rosenberg "had a fair trial. Discussing the hysteria that was in evidence during the McCarthy period, he said: "It seems to me that one of the lessons of the periods of hysteria that have recurred is how very often very responsible people in high positions are willing to go along with the hys- A WIDE SELECTION OF 14K GOLD CHARMS AT VERY LOW PRICES. From $5.00 Visit With the Latin's AT 1111 ■ 111111 ■ For That 1960 FORD 129.131 W. NINE MILE ROAD or Used Car — Call SAUL H. SINKOFF Salesman for LI FERNDALE 20. MICHIGAN LI 2-2110 Thurs., Fri., Sat. 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