Girl Scout Wins Jewish Honor in Korea Two Young Detroiters at Brandeis Play
Role in Important Atom Experiments

Two Detroit physicists—one from
this area—have been associated in
experiments at Brandeis University
which have resulted in the most
precise test ever performed on the
basic symmetry principle of "Time
Reversal Invariance" and the most
sensitive measurement ever made
on an atomic beam apparatus.
The experiments, which were ini-
tiated by Dr. Edgar Lipworth of
Brandeis and Dr. P. G. H. Sandars
of Oxford University, have been
continued with the assistance of
Dr. John P. Carrico and Talbert
S. Stein, both from Detroit and
Dr. Asher Adler, instructor in
physics.
Girl Scout Marcia Susan Blum receives the Menorah Award, a
The results of experiments have
religious award for girl scouts of the Jewish faith, from Chaplain left open the possibility of an atom
(Capt.) Albert M. Dimont as her mother, Mrs. Annette Blum and sister, possessing an 'electric dipole mo-
Sarah Myrna look on. Marcia became the first girl scout in Korea ment." According to the principle
to receive the award. Her sister was the first girl scout to win the
of "Time Reversal Invariance,"
award at Ft. Bliss, Tex. Some of the many achievements Marcia fulfilled
to earn the award were the daily reciting of prayer and reading of
the Bible and attending Sabbath services and observing holidays. She
also made a study of Judaism, its holidays, customs and history. Her
father is a lieutenant colonel stationed in Seoul.

Youth Page

Bill Adler Compiles U.S. Youths'
Letters to JFK and Jacqueline

Bill Adler did a magnificent job
in compiling the wit of John F.
Kennedy and in his other works
which included the humor of
Churchill and others.
Now he emerges as the compiler
of noteworthy letters written by
young Americans to both President
Kennedy and to Jacqueline Ken-

meaning him, and a postscript ask-
ed whether J.F.K. guessed he was
the man meant.
The selections by Bill Adler ap-
pear in five sections entitled From
Young Hearts With Love to John
F. Kennedy, Teen-Age America,
The President and His Family,
Strictly Personal to JFK from
Children Everywhere and Dear
Mrs. Kennedy. The entire family is
covered and the letters to Jac-
queline are as interesting as those
to J.F.K.
Bill Adler enhances his stand-
ing as a good editor and compiler
and his newest work, the youths
letters to the Kennedys is a truly
entertaining work, revealing the
minds of young Americans.

Seventeen Magazine
Prints Book of Prayer
for Teens of All Faiths

JFK and Jacqueline

nedy. His "John F. Kennedy and
the Young People of America,"
published by David McKay Co. (750
3rd, NY17), contains many quota-
tions from letters that will enter-
tain and delight readers of all
ages.
Editing these letters, Adler in
the main used only first names
and initials as signatories, and in
only a few cases were the last
names mentioned.
One youngster object e d to
sending a dog to the moon be-
cause "a good dog is hard to
find." Another asked the Presi-
dent for old clothes to serve to
start a museum of Presidents'
discarded clothing.
From many cities came letters
with unique messages: There were
unusual requests, advice, encomia.
One letter was accompanied by an
essay, "A Special Man," which did
not mention the President while

`Kochav' Teens to Collect
for UN Children's Fund

Joining some 3,000,000 young
Americans who will collect coins
Saturday night for the United
Nations Children's Fund, a group
from Bnai David Synagogue will
devote this weekend to an all-out
campaign.
Members of Kochav, National
Conference of Synagogue Youth,
will canvass their neighborhoods
asking not candy for themselves,
but coins which will send milk and
medicine where they are most
needed.

NEW YORK—A noted Jewish
scholar writes about the meaning
of prayer in a new anthology of
devotional poetry and prose pre-
pared for American teen-agers of
all faiths.
In the introduction to the newly
pulished "Seventeen Book of
Prayer" (Macmillan), Rabbi Abra-
ham Joshua Heschel, professor of
Jewish ethics and mysticism at the
Jewish Theological Seminary, tells
teen-age readers that:
"To pray is to take notice of the
wonder . . . that animates all
beings . . . Prayer is our humble
answer to the inconceivable sur-
prise of living . . . all we can offer
in return for the mystery by which
we live . . . Prayer comes to pass
in a complete turing of the heart
toward. God, toward His goodness
and power. It is the momentary
disregard of our personal concerns,
the absence of the self-centered
thoughts which constitute the art
of prayer. Feeling becomes prayer
in the moment in which we forget
ourselves and become aware of
God."
Dr. Heschel's statement, titled
"The Divine Margin," is one of
three introductions to the new
volume. The others are "Commun-
ion with God" by Dr. Francis X.
Connolly of Fordham University
and "Praying with One's Own
Voice" by Dr. Tom F. Driver of the
Union Theological Seminary.
"The Seventeen Book of Prayer"
was prepared for the teenagers of
America by the editors of Seven-
teen Magazine. The book contains
religious expressions of all faiths
by poets and philosophers, schol-
ars and statesmen throughout
history.

Winter Conclave
at Beth El -to Draw
150 State Youth

Temple Beth El will host 150
young people for Michigan State
Temple Youth's first winter con-
clave Nov. 5-7.
The weekend will begin with reg-
istration Friday afternoon for out-
of-town guests, and services will
be held that evening. The service
will be written by the youth group
members. John Nannes, MSTY
president, will deliver the sermon.
Saturday's activities will in-
clude morning services, classes
and workshops. That evening
there will be a dinner-dance in
the social hall. Entertainment
will include music by the Ross-
Byrns Quartet and a skit, which
is a modern Cinderella story,
performed by Beth-El youth
group members. The play was
written by conclave co-chairmen
Andy Broder, Ruth Drachler and
Betsy Hecht and by MSTY Con-
clave vice president Bob Ross.
Sunday morning's agenda will
consist of a brunch and an evalua-
tion of the weekend program.
Housing will be provided by tem-
ple members in Huntington Woods
and northwest Detroit.

atoms should not possess this
phenomenon, opposite charges at
two points.
The possession of such a dipole
moment could mean that the elec-
tron itself behaves as if it were
made up of positive and negative
charges separated by a small dis-
tance.
Stein, as part of his PhD thesis,
is continuing experiments to test
effects which suggest the possi-
bility of dipole moments.
If additional evidence offers
conclusive proof that dipole mo-
ments exist in atoms, the discov-
ery would indicate that the laws
of nature do not work in the
same manner forward and back-
ward in time.
Stein attended Cass Technical
High School and graduated with
honors from Wayne State Univer-
sity, where he was elected a mem-
ber of Phi Beta Kappa. He is an
honorary Woodrow Wilson Fellow
and received a National Defense
Education Act Fellowship for
studies in physics at Brandeis.
Married to the former Elaine
Ruth Askinas, a 1964 graduate of
Brandeis who teaches high school
chemistry, Stein is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Herman J. Stein of Mey-
ers Rd.
Dr. Carrico attended the Univer-
sity of Detroit and graduated from
the University of Windsor with the
gold medal in physics.

All age groups of Mizrachi Hat-
zair may participate Sabbath after-
noons in educational and cultural
activities at Cnog. Beth Yehudah.
Group leaders are Judy Weinman,
Eva Cik, Miriam Rothenberg, Rin
Left, Moshe Fine and Asher Abra-
movitz. A leader's seminar on Is-
raeli dance is conducted by Sony
Segal. These groups are directed
by Rev. Marshall Goldman.

Father-Son Affair Set
by Beth Aaron Club

Beth Aaron Talis and Tefillin
Club will celebrate its 15th year
with a father and son breakfast
8:30 a.m. Sunday in the synagogue
social hall.
Boys ages 12-17 may attend the
kservice, breakfast and program
with their fathers. Also, teams will
be formed for this season's bowl-
ing league. Seymour Rosen is
chairman.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, October 29, 1965-27

Tamarack, occupying S h e r u t h
and Fishman villages.
Teachers from Einstein and Oak
Park High organized the week's

events.
Oak Park is the only school in
the Detroit Metropolitan area that

offers this camping program.

Adas Shalom United Synagogue
Youth will hold a "sok hop" at the
synagogue 8 p.m. Saturday. High
school students are invited.
* * *
On Sunday at 8:15 a.m. the first
meeting of the Bar and Bat Mitz-
vah Club will be held. There will
be a service, a bagel breakfast and
a program.

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Boy Scout Troop Starts

Boy Scout Troop 210, sponsored
by the Young Israel Center of
Oak-Woods, invites all interested
boys from age 11 up to participate
in the youth program. Scoutmaster
Fred Lax is assisted by Larry
Platt.

By NANCY FISHMAN
The summer has ended, but the
camping program for students and
teachers of Oak Park has just be-
gun.
Camp Tamarack in Ortonville re-
serves the fall and spring seasons
for 5th and 6th graders of Oak
Park elementary schools.
The purpose of this five-day
school outing is to give students a
broad knowledge of outdoor living.
During the course of the week,
children undergo nature studies
and have lessons in fishing, archery
and camperaft.
The first week for this year's
program began Oct. 11. The Al-
bert Einstein Elementary School
sent four 5th grade classes to

Adas Shalom 'Sok Hop

Mizrachi Youth Start
New Season Saturday

I Teen-age groups of Mizrachi
Hatzair will gather 3 p.m. Saturday
at the Mizrachi building to open
the new season. George Gelber-
man, who spent the summer in
Israel, will show slides of his trip.
Singing and refreshments will fol-
. low.

—Dateline —
Oak Park High

a lp

Call 961-7460 for an Appointrnehe

f

Please Send information on Your School fa
Name

°PERT

FINISHING
SCHOOL

47 EAST ADAMS
Detroit, Mich. 48226

Address

City

State

7one

Phone

IN DETROIT SIN CE 1944

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