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October 10. 1989 II . 4 ; 4 " creativ Your financial \\learning cente Picked 'Best of Detroit" Toy Store by Detroit Monthly - Visit Us At - - OPENING SOON 14 MILE & HAGGERTY MIDDLEBELT at 11 MILE - MID-ELEVEN CENTER - — NEWBERRY PLAZA - 624-4930 26 0 future can begin today. call 1-800-US-BONDS VISIT OUR TWO CENTERS - New Location 1.1 Mit FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1989 477-1775 Continued from preceding page what they want to show, and I would do the handwork, ac- tually painting it." Like Factor and Lubin, Cutler has his work printed in several medical journals and books. All three medical il- lustrators said they are con- tent in their careers and en- joy the challenge that comes with the job. "I think it's challenging because every time a physi- cian comes to you, as well as you know the anatomy or as much as you've learned about surgery through the years, you always learn something new because they're coming to you as an expert in a very specific field," Factor said. "And my knowledge of anatomy is very general, so I get to see a quick study in a lot of different areas, drawing for eye surgery, heart surgery, abdominal surgery, obstetrics and gynecological surgery. "Although the job is challenging, it does have its downside," he continued. "Juggling 10 clients can be tiring because you have to bend over the drawing board INC. JEWELERS 32940 Middlebelt Road • Farmin • ton Hills, MI • 855-1730 cal What's Art, Doc? I MtE "MIS, U.S. SAVINGS BONDS THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT eight hours a day. You have to make every minute count. My neck and back are frequently sore." Cutler said, "The nice thing about this job is that I get to work in a lot of different media; I get to paint; I get to draw; I get to sculpt; and I get to study the human anatomy in the operating room and the morgue?' To Lubin, the job is always challenging because she has to take somebody's thoughts and ideas and draw them. "A photograph of a surgical site is a messy situation with blood, fat and tissue," she said. "You can't clearly see what's going on, so the medical illustrator cleans it up. I love the challenge." Lubin admitted there aren't any things she dislikes about the job. With four small children, she finds it conve- nient to work out of her home and does the jobs she likes, trying to avoid illustrating charts and graphs, the mechanical form of drawing. "I enjoy art and feel privileged to get paid for do- ing this." ❑ I NEWS I Georgia Shul Gets OK To Build Despite Foes RICHARD BONO Special to The Jewish News A Reform congregation was granted govern- ment approval last week to build the first synagogue in suburban Gwinnett County, ending temporarily a six-year dispute in which some local residents were accused of anti-Semitism in their pro- tests over the construction of the shul. The Gwinnett County Com- mission voted unanimously Aug. 22 to approve a zoning variance that clears the way for the temple's construction near Snellville, Ga., 25 miles from Atlanta and three miles from the national head- quarters of the Ku Klux Klan in Stone Mountain. The county commission vote was based on the recom- mendation of Gwinnett's Planning Commission, which gave its approval seven days before. At that time, a handful of residents from the neighborhood where the synagogue's construction was Richard Bono is a reporter for our sister publication, the Atlanta Jewish Times. proposed vocally objected. The language and manner with which they made their com- ments caught the attention of the country, as news organiza- tions from coast to coast reported the event. One of the six people who claim to live near the McGee Road site where the proposed temple would be built said she objected to the "strange people" Beth David would bring to the neighborhood. Another questioned why Jews would even want to build "a church" in an area where there are no Jews. Vocal opposition at the planning commission hearing came two years after a sign announcing the "future site of Temple Beth David" was defaced with swastikas and Nazi "SS" symbols. At that time, public officials in Gwin- nett, Christian clergy and others condemned the act. Pat Garmon, a Snellville resident who opposes con- struction of the shul, read a list of six objections that she said pertained only to the legality of the zoning issue before the commission. "We have no objection to anyone's religion, nationality or color or anything to do with that," she said. ❑