On The Cutting Edge The Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Israel, has a staff of 1,800 researchers who are conducting 640 projects on the frontiers of science and technology. SIMON GRIVER Special to The Jewish News T he Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot epitomizes the Zionist pioneering values that brought the Jewish people back to its ancestral homeland. Some 250 acres of shrubland and sand dunes have been transformed into the lush lawns of today's cam- pus. More importantly, many of the world's finest scientists are exploring the frontiers of science and making exciting steps forward in cancer research, immunology, solar energy and dozens of other areas. The Weizmann Institute comprises 21 units which are currently conducting 640 research projects. The number of scientific staff now totals 1,800, including 500 graduate students pursuing their master's and doctorate degrees within the Feinberg Graduate School. The Institute's president, Professor Arye Dvoretzky, formerly a professor of mathematics at the Hebrew University, has a simple but demanding philosophy. "We must be at the cutting edge of science," he asserts. "The only justification for our ex- istence is the quality of our research." This phrase "justification of our existence," played an important role in the In- stitute's history. Chaim Weiz- mann, like all Israel's foun- ding fathers, knew that a Jewish State could only justify its existence through its achievements. Exploiting Jewish scientific brainpower, he foresaw, offered Israel the chance to make its mark on the international scene and develop profitable enterprises. Thus it was that in 1934, Weizmann, with a staff of 10 accomplished scientists, founded the Daniel Sieff Research Institute (named for Daniel Sieff, the late brother of the current chancellor Lord Sieff of Brimpton, who was set on a scientific career but died tragically in 1933). Weiz- mann by then had already made significant contribu- tions to organic chemistry and industrial fermentation. His colleagues started work on projects related to the citrus industry, dairy farm- ing, silk and tobacco, and the manufacture of chemical pro- ducts for medicine. The Institute was able to accept a small number of the German professorial refugees then fleeing Nazi Germany. Under the dynamic guidance of Meyer Weisgal, the In- stitute rapidly expanded and in 1944 it was named after Weizmann himself. When the A solar furnace at the Weizmann Institute of Science is shown, consisting of 63 mirrors, designed by scientists at the Institute, which concentrates the light of the sun, making it 10,000 times as bright. The aim of this research is to find ways in which solar energy can be substituted for imported fuels like oil. Weizmann Institute of Science was formally dedicated in 1949, it contain- ed eight buildings and 60 laboratories. Weizmann lent additional prestige to the Institute by refusing to move to the capital Jerusalem after 1948, though he was nominated as the Jewish State's first presi- dent and ceremonial head of state. He continued living, together with his wife Vera, in Rehovot. lbday that house, on the grounds of the In- stitute, has been bequeathed to the nation and is open to visitors. Chaim and Vera Weizmann are buried in the house's garden. But Weizmann would never have wanted the Institute to be known for its shrines. He would have been the first to recount the achievements of the Institute. Even as early as 1954 it had become the world's only commercial source of heavy oxygen. And in the following year WEIZAC, the Institute- designed computer, became the world's third largest. Moreover, the talent that the Institute has produced has been prolific. Professor Ephraim Katzir, a former president of Israel, was one of the first two recipients of the Japan Prize in Biotechnology for his work in biophysics. Benjamin Geiger, professor of chemical immunology, won the triennial prize of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies. In the field of cancer THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 117