Jewry's Role in Human Advancement BETH ISRAEL CONGREGATION 2000 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor, (313) 665-9897. Rabbi: Robert Dobrusin. Ser- vices: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9:30 a.m.; weekdays 7:30 p.m.; Sunday 5 p.m. Please join the congregation for kiddush following services. BETH SHALOM 14601 W. Lincoln Road, Oak Park, (810) 547-7970. Rabbi: David A. Nelson. Can- tor: Samuel L. Greenbaum. Ritual di- rector: Rev. Samuel Semp. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m.; Sunday 9 a.m., 5 p.m.; weekdays 7 a.m., 6:30 p.m. Kiddush follows Shabbat services. Shabbat morning Torah study group, 8:45-9:30 am. Haftorah, Elliot Sorkin. BETH TEPHILATH MOSES 146 South Ave., Mt. Clemens, (810) 465-0641. Services: weekdays 7:15 a.m.; Saturday 10 a.m. with kiddush fol- lowing; Sunday 8 a.m. with breakfast fol- lowing. Hebrew Sunday school 9 a.m.-noon. B'NAI MOSHE 6800 Drake Road, West Bloomfield, (810) 788-0600. Rabbi: Elliot Pachter. Cantor: Earl Berris. Cantor emeritus: Louis Klein. Sexton emeritus: Shalom Ralph. Torah readers: Abram Rabi- novitz. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Satur- day 9 a.m., 8 p.m.; Sunday 8:30 a.m.; weekdays 7 a.m. Kiddush follows Shab- bat services. Shabbat Minchah followed by se'udah shlishit, rabbi's class, Ma'ariv and Havdalah. D'var Torah, Kerry Greenhut; Haftorah, Cal Weiss. Adult study group, 12:30-1:30 p.m. ISAAC AGREE DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE 1457 Griswold, Detroit, (313) 961-9328. Rabbi: Noah Gamze. Cantor Israel Idel- sohn. Services: Monday-Friday 5:15 p.m.; Saturday 8:30 a.m. SHAAREY ZEDEK 27375 Bell Road, Southfield, (810) 357- 5544. Rabbis: Irwin Groner, Stephen Weiss. Cantors: Chaim Najman, Sidney Rube. Services: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday 7:45 a.m.; Monday and Thursday 7:30 a.m.; daily and Friday 6 p.m.; Sat- urday 8:45 a.m., 8:30 p.m.; Se'udah shilishit between Minchah and Ma'ariv. Sunday 8:30 a.m. SHAAREY ZEDEK B'NAI ISRAEL CENTER 4200 Walnut Lake Road, West Bloom- field, (810) 681-5353. Rabbi: Leonardo A. Bitran. Services: Saturday 9 a.m., 8:30 p.m.; Sunday 9 a.m.; Monday and Thursday 7 a.m.; Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday 7:15 a.m.; daily and Friday 6 p.m. Join the congregational family for kid- dush/lunch following services. REFORM CONGREGATION BET CHAVERIM P.O. Box 871262 Canton, MI 48187- 6262; (313) 480-8880. Rabbi: Peter Gluck. Services: 7:15 p.m. the third Fri- day of each month. Services are at Cherry Hill United Methodist Church at Ridge Road and Cherry Hill Road in Canton. Visitors are welcome. Religious school available. TEMPLE BETH EL 7400 Telegraph Road, Bloomfield Hills, (810) 851-1100. Rabbis: Daniel B. Syme, David Scott Castiglione. Rabbi emeritus: Richard C. Hertz. Cantor: Stephen Dubov. Services: Friday 6 p.m. Saturday 10:30 a.m. TEMPLE BETH EL 501 S. Ballenger Hwy., Flint, (810) 232- 3138; Rabbi: Mark B. Goldfarb. Canton- al soloist: Aleksander Chemyak. Services: 8 p.m. second Friday of the month; 10:30 a.m. first and third Saturdays. BETH ISAAC 2730 Edsel Dr., Trenton, (313) 675- 0355. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m. Con- gregational leaders conduct services throughout the year. Visitors are wel- come. TEMPLE BETH EMETH 2309 Packard Road, Ann Arbor, (313) 665-4744. Rabbi: Robert D. Levy. Chaz- zan: Ann Zibelman Rose. Services: Fri- day 8 p.m. TEMPLE EMANU EL - 14450 W. 10 Mile Road, Oak Park, (810) 967-4020. Rabbi: Joesph P. Klein. Rabbi emeritus: Dr. Milton Rosen- baum. Cantor: Norman Rose. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m.; Monday-Thursday 5:30 p.m. TEMPLE ISRAEL 5725 Walnut Lake Road, West Bloom- field, (810) 661-5700. Rabbis: M. Robert Syme, Harold S. Loss, Paul M. Yedwab, Joshua Bennett. Cantor: Harold Orbach. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m.; Saturday Rabbi's Tish 9:30 a.m., services 10:30 a.m.; weekdays 7:30 a.m.; Sunday 9 a.m. Friday, wedding blessings of Liz Kramer and Eric Lefkofsky; Lauren Slut- sky and Jeremy Belchinsky. TEMPLE KOL AMI 5085 Walnut Lake Road, West Bloom- field, (810) 661-0040. Rabbi Norman T. Roman. Rabbi emeritus: Ernst J. Con- rad. Services: Friday 8 p.m.; Chevrat Torah 9:30 a.m., services 11 a.m. TEMPLE SHIR SHALOM 3999 Walnut Lake Road, West Bloom- field, (810) 737-8700. Rabbis: Dannel Schwartz, Michael L. Moskowitz. Can- torial soloist: Penny Steyer. Services: Friday 8 p.m.; Saturday, 9:45 a.m. Rab- bi's Tish, 11 a.m. service. No service this Friday. CONGREGATION SHIR TIKVAH 3633 W. Big Beaver, Troy, (810) 619- 9669. Rabbi: Arnie Sleutelberg. Ser- vices: Friday 7:45 p.m. RECONSTRUCTIONIST CONGREGATION T'CHIYAH 404 S. Pleasant St., Royal Oak, (810) 542-0900; 4605 Cass, Detroit, (313) 832-0009. President: Alan Schenk. Ser- vices: Saturday 10 a.m. at the Royal Oak Women's Club led by Benjy ben Baruch: brief service and study session on Tisha B'Av. HUMANISTIC THE BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE 28611 W. 12 Mile Road, Farmington Hills, (810) 477-1410. Rabbi: Sherwin T. Wine. Services: Friday 8 p.m. Rab- binic intern Adam Chalom will lead a ser- vice on Jewish traditions. Oneg Shabbat will follow. Shir Shalom Plans Picnic Temple Shir Shalom will hold a family picnic 6:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 22, on the temple grounds. The cost is $17.51 per adult and $8.24 per child under 12 years of age. Service Under the Stars will follow dinner at 8 p.m. Reservations for the picnic must be made by Aug. 18, through the temple, (248) 737- 8700. Beanie Babies And Bagels Congregation Beit Kodesh will hold a fund-raiser, Ty Beanie Baby and Bagel sale 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 10, at the synagogue, 31840 W. Seven Mile Road, Livonia. For information, call Lyn Wag- ner-Ditzhazy, (313) 425-5116. Tisha B'Av Services Set Adat Shalom Synagogue will hold services for Tisha B'Av 8:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 11, and Tuesday, Aug. 12. The Book ofEikha (Lamenta- tions) will be chanted by Adat Shalom clergy, along with adult and teen-age members of the congregation. Participating with Cantor Larry Vieder will be: Rabbi Efry Spectre, Rabbi Daniel Nevins, Jonathan Blatt, Neal Blatt, Sidney Feldman, Paul Magy, Saul Rose and Asher Tilchin. Services for Tisha B'Av also will take place at 7 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 12, when special prayers and read- ings will be included in the tra- ditional morning service. Minchah services will be held 1 p.m. Tuesday and regular evening services will take place at 6 p.m. Beth Achim Plans Open Houses The community is invited to at- tend two open houses sponsored by Congregation Beth Achim for new and prospective members on Sunday, Aug. 10. The first will take place in West Bloom- field from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., and the second will be in Hunting- ton Woods from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Prospective new members also are invited to join Rabbi Yoskowitz at a special rabbi's kiddush held after Shabbat ser- vices on Saturday, Aug. 16. Guests are requested to intro- duce themselves to our greeter as they enter the sanctuary. For information, call the syn- agogue office, (248) 352-8670. `Lamentations' At B'nai Moshe Members of Congregation B'nai Moshe will chant the Book of Lamentations at a Tisha B'Av service 8:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 11. Rabbi Elliot Pachter will lead the service. There will be a morning ser- vice 7 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 12, at which additional liturgical ma- terials will be included. The dream of atoms for peace inspired many scientists who ushered in the atomic age while working with wartime's Manhattan Project--a future of limitless, safe power for mankind's benefit. Among its chief architects were theorists of Jewish origins, many of whom were European refugees. Within a few years they performed the miracle of capturing the energy of the sun on the planet earth. ENRICO FERMI (1901 54) b. Rome, Italy - Physicist The University of Rome's - first professor of theoretical physics used slow-neutron bombardment to release radioactive particles from elements--for which he won the 1938 ' Nobel Prize for Physics. Fermi then joined Columbia University to escape Fascism. Recognizing the potential of nuclear fission, he explored means to trigger self- sustaining chain reactions and developed what he named an "atomic pile." The nuclear device inaugurated the atomic age on Dec. 1, 1942. tpwr", u; HANS BETHE (1906-) Strasbourg, Alsace-Lorraine Physicist Fleeing Nazism 60 years ago, the most senior living founder of the atomic age is still an active theoretician at Cornell University. His discovery of how stars generate energy earned him the 1967 Nobel Prize for Physics. He also contributed to solid state physics, radar, reactor design and astrophysics. While heading the theoretical nuclear physics division of the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, Bethe helped guide some of the world's brightest scientists to success. He remains among the most outspoken advocates for universal reductions in nuclear stockpiles. J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER (1904-67) New York City Physicist The professor of physics became the director and moving spirit of the Los Alamos atomic research laboratory which he helped ,- create in 1943. The intense, dedica- ted administrator almost single-handedly coordinated hundreds of scientists and technicians into an effective team. Oppenheimer resigned in 1945 and took the helm of Princeton's Institute of Advanced Study. His career was marred by allegations of left-wing leanings, a charge which President Kennedy refuted with a 1963 Fermi Award for his contributions to the Atomic Energy Commission. -- Saul Stadtmauer The late Leo Yaffe (1916-97) won an international reputation for promoting the peaceful applications of nuclear energy, and helped pioneer nuclear chemistry and radioactive tracer techniques in his Canadian homeland. Playing a key role in implementing safety standards for handling radioactive material, Yaffe received the Order of Canada in 1988 and the Prix du Quebec two years later. N - rn co Cr) COMMISSION FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF JEWISH HISTORY Harold Berry & Irwin S. Field, Co-chairmen Harriet F. Siden, Secretary Founders/Sponsors: Walter & Lea Field CD 37