Fri day, December 13, 1963—THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-32

giirtit

Ann 0 tl ("cements

Last Week's Winners of the

"RASKIN
BIG BABY BONUS"

MRS. GARY R. MARCUS

(Twin Boys)
and

MRS. STUART PERNICK
(9 lbs., 3V2 oz.)

Congratulations on the birth of
your children and we hope the
RASKIN PRODUCTS you re-
calved helped make your first
week at home easier.

RASKIN FOOD CO.

Dec. 9 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Sheldon Lederman (Reva Mil-
ler), 24045 Scotia, Oak Park, a
daughter, Ruth Laura.
* * *
Dec.7 —To Capt. and Mrs.
Alan N. Mendelssohn (Margo
Horowitz of Bay City), 19235
Canterbury, now with the U.S.
Army in Landshut, Germany, a
son, Jeffrey Scott.
* * *
Dec. 5 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Harold W. Goodman (Evelyn
Siporin), 31069 McKinney.
Franklin, a son, Joel Steven.
*
Dec. 4 — To Dr. and Mrs.
Gilbert J. Striks, 16009 Hilton,
Southfield, a son, Frederick Jay.
• * *
Dec. 3 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin S. Newman (Arlene
Lewis), of Buffalo, formerly of
Detroit, a son, David Lewis.
* * *
Nov. 29 — To Dr. and Mrs.
Myron H. Joyrich (Ida Zyskind),
10661 Saratoga, Oak Park, a
daughter, Nancy Lauren.

* *

Nov. 29—To Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Medwed (R o b e r t a
Simon), 10241 Corning, a daugh-
ter, Susan Aleece.
* * *
Nov. 29 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Hartz (Marilyn Gelb),
a son, Alan David.
* * *
Nov. 28 — To Mr. and Mrs.
David Hessenthaler (Harriet
Sorokin), 21431 Westhampton,
Oak Park, a son, Bruce.

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To Mr. and Mrs.
Nov. 27
Melvin Glaser (Sybil Abram-
son), 20724 Pembroke, a daugh-
ter, Alicia Susan.
* * *
Nov. 27 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Weisberg (Rosalind Kool-
ish), 14161 Greenbriar, Oak
Park, a daughter, Jodie Ellen.
* * *
Nov. 25 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Joel Shapiro (Loraine Hirsch-
man), a daughter, Phyllis Ava.
* * *
Nov. 21 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Stein (Irene Marko-
witz), 8286 Huntington, Hunting-
ton Woods, a son, David An-
drew.
*
*
Nov. 20 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Alan R. Cornfield (Sharyn Stein-
man), Of Ledgestone Dr., South-
field, a son, Robert Howard.
•
*
Nov. 18—To Rabbi and Mrs.
Gast halt e r, twins, daughter
Shayna Muska and son Schney-
er Zalman Eliezer.

—

Nov. 12 — To Mr. and Mrs.
Richard G. Chosid (Cherie-
Lynne Siegan), 19519 Cran-
brook, a daughter, Robin Su-
zanne.

Launch Study
on Attitude of
Israeli Youth

The American Jewish Commit-
tee and the Hebrew University
have launched a joint research
project on the attitudes of Is-
rael's youth toward their Jewish-
ness and toward Jews outside
Israel.
The announcement was made
by the American Jewish Com-
mittee at a reception for Eliahu
Elath, president of the Hebrew
University, at the Committee's
Institute of Human Relations in
New York City.
The three-year research-action
study will examine a broad sam-
ple of youthful Israelis, aged 18-
25, both in and out of school. It
will seek to learn in a system-
atic manner how they see their
relationship with Jews in other
countries, what "being Jewish"
means to mean, what the bases
are of their Jewish identification
and of such attachment as they
feel for Jews elsewhere, and
how they view the role of Israel
in Jewish life.

Bonn Gets Bill
Forcing Retirement
of Ex-Nazi Judges

BONN (JTA) — A bill to
force the retirement of West
German judges with Nazi rec-
ords was introduced in the
Bundesrat, the Upper House of

Parliament.
The measure was sponsored

by George Zinn, Minister Presi-
dent of the State of Hesse, who
is the chief representativ of
Hesse in the Bundesrat. Under
the bill, judges and prosecutors
who handed down "inhuman
death sentences" or were other-
wise implicated in Nazi crimes
during t he Hitler era, could be
forcibly retired.
Under the present law, retire-
ment is possible only if the
judge or prosecutor consents to
retire. The measure was co-
sponsored by the delegate from
the city-state of Hamburg.

Grant Scholarships
for Education in
Jewish Social Work

NEW YORK (JTA) — Eighty-
four scholarship grants were
awarded for the 1963-64 school
year to 69 students for graduate
education in social work by
Jewish Community Centers and
YM-YWHAs, the National As-
sociation of Jewish Center
Workers and the National Jew-
ish Welfare Board.

`The Atomic Age' Thoroughly Analyzed by 45
Authorities in Rabinowitch-Grodzins Volume

One of the most dramatic re-
capitulations of the roles played
by scientists who developed the
atomic bomb will be found in
the 616-page a c c o u n t. "The
Atomic Age," edited by Profs.
Morton Grodzins and Eugene
Rabinowitch, just published by
Basic Books (404 Park Ave., S.,
NY16).
The perils and the fears, as
well as the hopes for a more
optimistic future are outlined in
the essays of 45 scholars and
scientists who discuss, in the
republished articles in this book,
American affairs and this coun-
try's position in the atomic
struggles and debates, as well
as the state of world affairs.
Dr. Rabinowitch, who is
represented in this volume by
a number of his essays, was
active as a chemist in the Man-
hattan Project and is now pro-
fessor of botany and biophy-
sics at the University of Illi-
nois. Prof. Grodzins is on the
faculty of the University of
Chicago. Others with essays in
this book are Prof. Albert
Einstein, Prof. Max Born, Dr.
J. Robert Oppenheimer, Dr.
Edward Teller, Prof. James
Franck, Prof. Bernard T. Feld,
Alvin M. Weinberg, Prof. Har-
old C. Urey and many of their
ssociates in the Atomic studies
and tests.
The essays in "The Atomic
Age" are drawn from the "Bul-
letin of the Atomic Scientists"
since World War II.
It is heartening to note that
the concluding section of the
book is devoted to "Bases for
Hope," and that Dr. Rabino-
witch, in the final essay, "Push-
ing Back the Clock of Doom,"
sounds an optimistic note by
saying:
"When, in the past, the Bul-
letin clock was moved forward
closer to midnight, it was on
the occasion of events — the
first Soviet atom bomb, the
first hydrogen bomb—symbolic
of mankind's drift toward the
abyss of a nuclear war. The
recent advent of intercontin-
ental missiles is another stage
of the same drift; the forth-
coming test of a French nuc-
lear bomb in the Sahara, sym-
bolic as it is of the beginning
of the worldwide spread of
nuclear weapons, will be
another. No similar landmark
can be pointed out indicating
progress on the road to world
community, but there has
been, in recent years, an ac-
cumulation of facts and words
which suggest that this hope-
ful trend is gathering force.
The feeling seems justified
that a turn of the road may
have been reached, that man-
kind may have begun moving,
however hesitantly, away from
the dead end of its history;

Israel Contributes
to United Nations
Fund for Refugees

UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.,
(JTA) — Israel will contribute

$5,000 for the 1964 program of
the United Nations High Com-
missioner for refugees, it was
announced by Dr. Eliezer Yapou,
member of the Israeli delega-
tion. The announcement was
made at the Ad Hoc Committee
of the General Assembly for the
announcement of voluntary con-
tributions to the programs.
Felix Schnyder, the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees, said
that the goal for 1964 was pro-
grams of $2,600,000. Yapou
thanked the High Commissioner
for his statement that his office
was concentrating on aid to new
refugees. He said the Israel
contribution was subject to par-
liamentary procedures.

Three habits promote death:
To eat and rise suddenly, to
drink and rise suddenly, to sleep
and rise suddenly. — Sabbath
129.

and so, with a hesitant hand,
we are setting back the Bulle-
tin's clock."
The entire review of the
atomic age development begins
with the Einstein letter to Pre-
sident Roosevelt opening up the
entire discussion relative to
atomic research. It all began
out of the fear that Germany
might be first to develop the
bomb and thereby doom the en-
tire world under her domina-
tion.
The numerous developments,
the official reports, the differ-
ences of opinion on issues that
arose in the course of the re-
search, the charges of espion-
age, the Oppenheimer case—all
these issues are under review
here.
Considerable interest at-
taches to the attack on Albert
Einstein for his support of a
world government movement,
made jointly by Sergei Vavi-
lov, A. N. Frumkin, A. F. Joffe
and Nikolai N. Semenov. In
the course of their excoria-
tion, they warned against the
elements that "chained Tsar-
ist Russia to the capitalist
West with chains of enslav-
ing loans," and declared:
"Money received from foreign
banks of the Tsarist govern-
ment suppressed the revolu-
tionary movement in the coun-
try, handicapped the develop-
ment of Russian science and
culture and organized Jewish
pogroms." They warned that

the road urged upon the UN
by Einstein "is only profitable
for those circles of monopolis-
tic capital to which these
complications offer a promise
of new war orders and new
profits."
Einstein defended his position
in a reply and states: "I advo-
cte world government because I
am convinced that there is no
other possible way of eliminat-
ing the most terrible danger in
which man has ever found him-
self. The objective of avoiding
total destruction must have pri-
ority over any other objective."
In a discussion of the J. Rob-
ert Oppenheimer case before the
Atomic Energy Commission,
Harry Kalven, Jr., states that
"it is the security system and
not Dr. Oppenheimer that, in
the end, has lost its case."
The totality of issues incor-
porated in the collection of es-
says in "The Atomic Age"
makes the Grodzins-Rabinowitch
edited book of immense value.
It becomes one of the most
authoritative books on the sub-
ject of atomic power in rela-
tion to American and world
issues.

to ■ clawmoam.,••■■■■nasown•wwo•non,■o■ oi

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