I SPOTLIGHT FALL SPECIAL NORWEGIAN SALMON DINNER $8.95 Served With: Baked Potato, Choice of Vegetable, Cup of Soup OF The Day, Bread Basket, Apple Pie West Bloomfield Oak Park Orchard Lake Rd., south of 15 Greenfield north of 10 737-3890 967-3999 Philip Handleman with his Boeing Stearman airplane. Handleman Soars With Air Photos CARLA JEAN SCHWARTZ Local Columnist hilip Handleman, of Handleman Filmworks, combines his professional career of film producing and photog- raphy with his love of avia- tion. His 75 color photographs from national air shows is a major part of the illustrated book Air Show: The Drama and Speed of Precision Flying published by Military Press and distributed by Crown Publishers. The front and . back cover shots are also by Mr. Handleman.. The photos are dramatic and powerful. From war- p Bingham Farms Telegraph Between 12 & 13 645-5288 Special Valid Through 12/30/90 Beau jacks ITH E A T R Food & Spirits 3K EARLY DINNERS NOW 7 DAYS Monday Thru Sunday 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. 626.2630 FAMILY DINING 2 FOR 1 SPECIALS 10 0/ /0 DISCOUNT TO SENIOR CITIZENS FROM 3 p.m. to CLOSING (Not Good On 2 For 1 or Early Bird) CARRY-OUT & CATERING AVAILABLE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1990 . •', ''' •-•;. T.: .,.. i ' ' 4 frrli 559.8222 AIR SHOW THE DRAMA & SPEED OF PRECISION FLYING ( A Love Story of the '90s Boy Meets Girl, Boy Beds Girl, then IV ' hat! ". . . the Attic has not only Regal but also Mary Bremer in Terrence McNally's comedy about love in the moonlight on a fold-out studio couch. They have the right mix." — Detroit Free Press Homemade From Natural Ingredients Dania and Ed Farah Invite You To Enjoy American and Lebanese Cuisine 82 . . . . \ n ln Hu nn — • :Ill , „ — ....- -, Alias 27167 Greenfield, Just N. of 11 Mile i'1*-'" ■ • • el>. IIIII N nnan =. - - - - f /1 II il ri.—.., pilau = ......7. . -* $5.75-$9.95 of Teleoraph • - ed .-,. .h. Entrees priced from 4108 W. Maple • Birminaham. MI • 1 block w El Presents "Better actors under more astute direction aren't to be found elsewhere in metro Detroit, or most other places, for that mat- ter. This is our best. Come and admire, and laugh a lot, too." — The Detroit News THRU DEC. 9 FOR TICKETS, CALL 875-8284 Third at W. Grand Blvd. Air Show cover. birds and antique aircraft to sport airplanes, Mr. Handleman provides thrill- ing photos. At an air show in Reno, some airplanes are so close that they almost col- lide. Mr. Handleman also captured a wingwalker and other air stunts. "When I was growing up, I was inspired from an early age by aviation," said Mr. Handleman. He remembers listening to his mother's stories about the national air races in her native town of Cleveland. His parents, Paul and Sonia, former Detroiters, now reside in Palm Beach, Fla. He has flown to Florida, Iowa and New York photographing the aviation shows in his Cessna 180, which is restored to resem- ble a U.S. light observation aircraft or in his Boeing 75 Stearman in navy colors. Mr. Handleman describes aviation as "part of his life." TECHNION TREASURES The American Technion Society Detroit Chapter held its 42nd annual dinner at Congregation Shaarey Zedek, with guest speaker Dr. Alan Keyes. Dr. Keyes, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research in Washington, D.C., is former vice-consul in India and was assistant sec- retary for international af- fairs during the Reagan ad- ministration. Dr. Keyes delivered a pas- sionate pro-Israel speech to a rapt audience, who gave the speaker a lengthy standing ovation. Isaac Lakritz, ex- ecutive director of the Tech- nion East Central Region, pronounced the speech the best he's ever heard at any Technion dinner. Alex Potashinsky and Zhanna Ketslakh, former- ly of the Soviet Red Army Chorus, provided enter- tainment for the evening. The two strolled from table to table, singing traditional Russian and Jewish songs. Technion updates were delivered by Max Gill, in from Israel with his wife, Aviva Gill, and Melvyn