Save Hone
Prescription
Every Lover Writes
His, Her Own Story
ALISON ASHTON
SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS
ARE You TAKING MEDICATIONS FOR:
• Diabetes • Asthma • Emphysema • Lupus • High Cholesterol • Hypertension
• Ulcers • Arthritis • Organ Transplant • Any ongoing Medical Condition?
ARE You TAKING MEDICATIONS OR USING SUPPLIES SUCH AS:
• Mevacor • Prilosec • Diabeta • Insulin • Zantac • Neoral • Cardizem • Ultram
• A Glucose Meter • An Insulin Pump • Any Medication on a regular basis?
CALL Now To JOIN THE RX FREEDOM PROGRAM
Alt you need to qualify is Major Medical Insurance.
• WE fill your prescriptions and send them overnight to you FREE nationwide delivery!
WE file the difficult, lengthy insurance forms!
WE wait for the insurance reimbursement check!
WE charge NO MEMBERSHIP FEE!
NO CASH OUTLAY, in most cases, once your insurance deductible is met!
—
JOIN THE THOUSANDS WHO HAVE CALLED
ADVANTAGE
HEALTH SERVICES, INC.
A Full Service Express Mail Pharmacy
440 Horsham Rd, Suite 2, Horsham, PA 19044
1-800-682-8283
®iscover (Pare Beauty at
LEVIN'S BEAUTY SUPPLY
DONALD E. GALE, D.D.S.
DENTURE
CENTER
Specializing in
Hard to find fragrances
Professional Nail Supplies
Top-of-the-line Hair Products
West Bloomfield
• 851-7323
Orchard Lake Road
In The West
Bloomfield Plaza
LU
Oak Park
• 547-9669
24695 Coolidge At
10 Mile Road
OPEN 7 DAYS
bsTE
LLJ
C.)
CC
LU
0
LU
74
'9
m
COMING AUGUST 12, 1996
C L j Giaz, c. q:p 1
1.4 <2 rin I Itc, in el cs c e•
HARVARD ROW MALL
21774 WEST 11 MILE RD.
SOUTHFIELD, MI 48076
29911 Northwestern Highway • APPLEGATE SQUARE
EXTRACTIONS
DENTURES & PARTIALS
RELINES & REPAIRS
QUALITY DENTURES AT AFFORDABLE PRICES
30 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
SPERBER'S
KOSHER CATERING
AT SPERBER'S YOU DON'T HAVE TO SPEND AN
EXTRAORDINARY AMOUNT OF MONEY TO HAVE AN
EXTRAORDINARY EXPERIENCE. WE MAKE EVERY EVENT
ABSOLUTELY UNFORGETTABLE, REGARDLESS OF SIZE OR
BUDGET. WE WORK WITH YOU, IT'S THAT EASY.
BEYOND EXPECTATIONS,
AND WELL WITHIN REASON.
Featuring Fine Art and Select.. Artwork
810-352-3340
Gallery Hours: Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri. 10:00-6:30, Thurs. 10:00-8:30, Sat. 10:00-6:00
353-2200
357-2910
OFFICE
*It
I I
661-5151
JEWISH CENTER
Do you think of love as war, a
joint journey or a guessing game?
It all depends on your personal
love story, says a Yale Universi-
ty researcher, and that story can
have a big impact on the success
of romantic relationships.
Yale cognitive psychologist
Robert Sternberg says that each
of ushas woven our own story of
ideal love based on memories and
personal experiences. Studying
60 undergraduates, he uncovered
at least 24 different story lines.
"Keep in mind that there prob-
ably are as many love stories as
there are lovers," he says.
Common themes include love
as a garden that needs constant
tending or the fantasy of a
damsel being rescued by a knight
in shining armor.
"The important thing is that
both lovers need to have essen-
tially the same script. The stories
are of our own invention with el-
ements drawn from the fairy
tales we hear as young children,
the models of love relationships
we observe around us in parents
and relatives, and the television
shows and movies we've seen,"
Dr. Sternberg says.
Compatible personal love sce-
narios are why couples who bick-
er a lot may stay together (both
view love as war) while other,
seemingly ideal couples split up.
Internal love stories can be so
persistent that some people are
more willing to change partners
than adjust the story.
Such is the case with a man
who views love as art, who choos-
es a partner for her beauty. When
that beauty fades, he seeks a new
partner.
BREAST CANCER ON RISE
The incidence of noninvasive
breast cancer has risen sharply
in the past 10 years, according to
an article in the recent issue of
The Journal of the American
Medical Association.
Researchers at the University
of California at San Francisco
studied data collected by the Na-
tional Cancer Institute's Sur-
veillance, Epidemiology and End
Results program and found that
the estimated number of cases in
1992 was 200 percent higher
than expected based on 1983
rates.
Most cases are "only detectable
by mammography, and the
marked increase since 1983 co-
incides with the period during
which mammographic screening
for breast cancer became wide-
spread," the researchers said.
Alison Ashton is a writer for
Copley News Service.