7618 Woodward Ave. 871-1590 OPEN SUNDAYS AGAIN... 12 noon to 9 plat Our Daily Hours ... Mon. 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Tues. Thru Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m., Sun. 12 noon-9 p.m. • r s kW • \ • ,k YOU'RE LOOKING AT A LETHAL WEAPON. PHOTO LEGEND page 75 Meg . A SPECIAL QUALITY PARTIES UP TO 200 Specializing In: Bar Mitzvahs, Sweet 16s, Showers, Anniversaries, Retirement Parties, Birthdays, Weddings, Etc. Special Appetizer Parties Available DYSAUTONOMIA Fact is, more Americans may die by the fork than by any other weapon. That's because so many of them use it irresponsibly. Like to fill up on high-fat, high- cholesterol foods. Foods that can load the blood with cholesterol, which can build up plaque in their arteries, increasing their risk of heart attacks and threaten- ing their lives. So next time you pick up a fork, remem- ber to handle it as you would any other weapon. For self-defense, not self-destruction. ft) American Heart , Association WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE This space provided as a public service. Richard Dreyfuss "Through my friendship with a courageous young man I am delighted to accept the position of Honorary Chairman and to lend my support to this devastating, rare disease." Dysautonomia Foundation Inc. U.S. Savings Bonds make good business sense! Call today to find out just how much Bonds can do for you 3000 Town Center, Suite 1500, Southfield, MI 48075 (313) 444-4848 farcoS Where Old Friends Med - Lunch • Dinner • Cocktails Banquet Facilities Available - 680-0066 645 Big Beaver Road, Troy • Open 7 Days A Week 1-800-US-BONDS American Ballet Theatre, 1937. Actually, Mr. Eisen- staedt was just beyond his 30th birthday when his career started to click. Although an uncle had given him a camera when he was 13, his interest did not focus until he turned 20. He was recuperating from injuries sustained in the German army during World War I. He went to museums to study the composition styles of the great master painters and think about how he could apply the techniques. His interest in photog- raphy continued while he worked as a button and belt salesman from 1918 - 25. His picture of a Czechoslovakian tennis player was the first he sold, and it launched his- freelance career. In 1935, he came to America and soon was one of Life's four original staff . photographers. Although he has pho- tographed great thinkers such as Albert Einstein, world leaders such as Winston Churchill and glamorous movie stars . such as Marilyn Monroe, his greatest acclaim is from a 1945 picture of a sailor kissing a nurse in Times Square on the day World War II ended. It is part of the Circle Gallery display. Reminiscing about his trips around the globe to give a visual perspective to the news, he recalls a very exciting 1955 assign- ment in Israel. "I was traveling with Vice President Nixon to Central America when I got a cable from Life to come back and work on a story on Judaism," he said. "At that time, Life was doing stories on the great religions. "There is a very famous picture from that assign- ment I have in the South African exhibition. It is of a rabbi, a talmudic schol- ar, teaching the Bible to young students in Jerusalem. "When we asked the rabbi to be photographed, he didn't want to be on account of his religion. But he said to us, 'Come to my home at night and we'll ask the Bible whether I can be pho- tographed.' "When we came to him in the evening, he went to his library, picked a book with closed eyes, came back, opened the book, put his finger there and, after a few minutes of reading, said he would do it. He read in Genesis: 'And they shall dance before my eyes.' "That's the reason I could photograph him with his people." Among the many Jewish luminaries he has pho- tographed, two instantly flash into his mind: Irving Berlin, who was very pleasant, and Henry Kissinger, who was his subject several times. Henry and Cristina Ford are two Michigan- based celebrities whose likenesses he captured. "Henry Ford told me I must call him 'Henry,' and it was very difficult for me to call him Henry," he said. "I did the cover story