Parents clamor for a group shot. BOUND 1STO A group of 60 teen-agers, four rabbis and one educator are heading east for a journey D back in time. JULIE EDGAR SENIOR WRITER PHOTOS BY DANIEL LIPPITT Left: Zelig Barr, 17, and Ari Lerman, 16, tag their luggage. Above: Arnie Gross adds a finishing touch to daughter Lindsey's backpack. ara Cimmino and Andi Lipton felt secure about their background in Jewish histo- ry Wednesday as they prepared to take off on a two-week journey through the death camps of Poland and the memori- als and military bases of Israel. And yet, both agreed, they were not prepared in another way for the horrors they will see and hear about in Poland. "Emotionally, I don't know if we're ready," said Cara, a senior at Andover High School. "It's hard to believe so many people were killed," said Andi, a senior at West Bloomfield High School. "[Poland] is basically a burial ground ... It's some- thing I think I need to see as a Jew." The two teens were among 60 Who 'chatted and milled around a Northwest Airlines gate Wednesday waiting to board a flight headed for Warsaw. The group is part of the Teen Unity Mission, Detroit's ver- sion of the March of the Living Program. After the actual March of the Living from Auschwitz to Birkenau, the teens will head for Israel for the second week of the trip. Aaron Klemanski, also a West Bloomfield High se- nior, said he can't wait to get back to Israel, where he spent five months last year. Poland will be "hard," he acknowledged, noting that even with the required dozen hours of study with a University of Michigan history professor prior to the trip, "you can't teach emotions; no textbook can tell you how to feel." ❑