Temple Beth Emeth provides a spiritual home of acceptance and warmth in Ann Arbor. KAREN SCHWARTZ Special to the Jewish News N ow celebrating its 36th, or double-chai, anniversary, Ann Arbor's Temple Beth Emeth today boasts a congregation of more than 650 families, a thriving reli- gious school serving more than 400 children and a music program with four choirs. Member Allyn D. Kantor of Ann Arbor remem- bers how it all began in 1 966 — the days when 25 people would gather for services in someone's base- ment, sitting on chairs borrowed from a funeral home. "We were simply improvising as we went along. . 4111, 10/11 2002 72 That's what we had to do," he said. "Yes, it was inconvenient; yes, it wasn't plush, but we wanted this to work. And we did what it took to make it work." Kantor, second president of the. congregation (succeeding Ronald Tikofsky), recalled when major issues of concern included searching for a rabbi and finding space for services and religious school. "We were concentrating on the basic elements of survival for a congregation, and developing a phi- losophy of how we were going to practice Reform Judaism ... we were concerned about the fundamen- tal elements of what our congregation stood for," Kantor said. "When you think about things now — a beauti- ful, well-lit sanctuary and inspiring music, an inspiring rabbi — and you think back to how we began in this small, dark, albeit finished basement at someone's home, it's amazing how far we've come," he said. From the time Kantor served on the board in 1967 through his presidency, which ended in 1970, the temple membership went from 25 to 60 fami- lies. Services were held at what was then a Unitarian church. Beth Emeth's needs just kept growing, said tem- ple administrator Rhonda Simon. In 1970, the con- gregation found larger quarters renting space at Saint Claire of Assisi Episcopal Church on Packard Road. And there they've stayed.