(Copyright, 1973, JTN, Inc.) What is the secret of learned that Einstein worked only with the aid of a pen- genius? cil. Yet Einstein topped Albert Einstein's son, Prof. Hans Einstein, whose death Newton. corrected the gravi- tation theory and explored was reported recently, had the mysteries of the stars a theory about his father's and the atom. greatness that might be Many people, of course, worth considering. The son was quite a distinguished sci- have sat under apple trees entist, though not the match and used pencils without any world-shaking discoveries. of the father. So genius is not attribut- Usually we think of genius as having something to do able either to apples or pen- with the genes, something in cils and perhaps not as much our cells which comes with as we think, to genes. 'heredity. Albert Einstein's So what is left? parents were average peo- Let us listen to Prof. Hans ple. His father was something Einstein who said. of a bon vivant. As a child, "What made any father ex- little Albert was rather slow. traordinary I think was the t the age of three, when tenacity with which he would .post children speak, Albert pursue problems even after found speaking difficult. they worked out wrong. He When he entered school, his would always try and try mother worried about him. again." "I don't know what to do "Probably the only project about Albert," she wrote. "He doesn't seem able to he gave up on was me. He tried to give me advice but learn." Yet he was to be acclaimed he soon discovered that I the world's top scientist. was too stubborn and he was Newton previously held the wasting time." Albert Einstein usually pinnacle. Newton sat under an apple tree and on apple poch-poohed the idea that he falling on his head revealed had an extraordinary intel- to him the motion of the lect. He did say, however, stars, the gravitation theory that if he had some special and a whole new picture of quality in that respect, it was the cosmos. "Let there be probably due to the fact that light," wrote the poet Alex- he was slow as a child in ander Pope, and there was learning to speak. For him to speak, it was necessary to Newton. When some years back. concentrate as he formulated David Ben-Gurion visited the words. This, he said, in- Einstein at Princeton, he re- clined him to think more be- turned marveling. He had fore speaking or doing any- expected Einstein to be work- thing else. It will be seen that both ing in a laboratory, but he F :0.0;4 11,..•;1 . • 4 ∎ • .•4 ∎ •••.; $500,000 in Federal Grants THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 10, 1973-21 By DAVID SCHWARTZ Secret of Einstein's Genius Einstein's and his son's ex- planation have points of co- incidence. Both emphasize the influence of time. Hans Einstein says his father was extraordinary because if he couldn't find a solution one time, he would try a second, a third, d- fourth and a fif- tieth time. Albert Einstein said he learned to think be- cause he had to spend more time thinking in order to speak. Brilliance or genius in- creases with the increase of time applied to work. So time is really a kind of salve pro- moting genius. All of which falls in line with Einstein's theory of rel- ativity which made the world regard the element of time in a new light. Before Einstein, the world of physics did not have much regard for time, but Einstein held that time was something hard and sub- stantive like space. Time was a fourth dimension. Perhaps it is a main, if not the sole dimension of genius. Lubavitchers Plan Summer Visits NEW YORK (JTA) — For the 25th consecutive year some 200 senior Lubavitcher students are spending their summer vacation time visit- ing Jew i s h communities throughout North, Central and South America, and Eu- rope. This program, referred to by many as the Jewish "peace corps," is one of many instruments created by the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneer- son, to reach out to as many Jews as possible, wherever they are. The students, aged 18-24, have volunteered three to four weeks of their summer vacation period to visit the various Jewish communities. Traveling in pairs they will visit large cities, small towns and hamlets, where they will contact local Jews, rabbis and communal leaders, and visit synagogues and educa- tional institutions. They will meet and talk with Jews on the streets, in shopping cen- ters and at work. "Three passions, simple but overwhelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for love, the search for knowledge, and unbear- able pity for the suffering of mankind. These passions, like great winds, have blown me hither and thither, in a wayward course, over a deep ocean of anguish, reaching to the very verge of despair." Bertrand Russell to Aid New York Jewish Poor NEW YORK (JTA) — Two federal grants totaling al- most $500,000 to help the Jewish poor in New York City were announced by Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R., N.Y.). One grant of $300,000 will provide legal services for the poor in the Brooklyn Jewish community and the other grant of $198,542 will coor- dinate and set up programs for the poor. Javits, speaking at a press conference in his office here, said the funds will come from the Office of Economic Op- portunity. If the programs are successful, they will be funded by other federal agencies if the 0E0 goes out of existence, he said. The money was made pos- sible by a new law, spon- sored by Javits and Rep. James H. Scheuer (D., N.Y.), which provides funds for areas not reached by the reg- ular poverty programs or. for poor people living in areas not designated by the fed- eral government as povetry neighborhoods. CRAZEE DAYS Creativity Based in Israel: Katzir TEL AVIV (JTA) — If the Jewish nation seeks any cul- tural, moral or national mis- sion, this can be done only through the return to Eretz Israel, President Ephraim Classifieds Get Quick Results Katzir said at the closing session of the jubilee conven- ••• ■ 111,. ■ ;11,1 11;1•;&4 ∎ ;,•;a li; ■ ;111,;. •;41;4 ■••■ ;11 11• 4:4 1,11;d 11;±;411;t; ■ 1,1•;•;!;111b;e;411.- .±:4•••'41 11,e'd 1,4 .4 11••• ■■ tion of the L a b or Zionist 1;71,747, Pr;71 Movement at Beth Berl. The president said that Is- rael is becoming more and more the national cultural center of the Jewish nation, "and I am convinced that ultimately the Jewish true national creativity w o u l d emerge from Israel. Jewish creativity would be possible only when the Jewish nation will be in its homeland." Focusing on changes in hu- man life due to the develop- ment of technology and sci- ence in the era of automation, Katzir said that the socio- economic changes "in the pluralistic society we live in require a reevaluation of the values of the Labor Zionist movement, and maybe of the values in general, with which the world used to live until now." Katzir repeated his theory that in order to prevent a scientific a n d technological golem from dominating its creator "we must return to raising the socialistic, human and practical values of the human race." 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