4 Restaurant \ Fresh Mid-Eastern Cuisine/ OWL F04416114 aithea funk Speciatv 1361tetad .of adiug at $4.95 complete with your choice of fries, hommous or rice & pop, coffee or tea Calet4tg & Ftee Detitletg r " I Buy One 1 Lunch or Dinner 1 1 1 Get the Second 1 for 30%I OFF 1 I I coupon per person exp. 10/31/02 L IN. ma NEI mg Ell °pea 7 'No a Week! 6096 W. Maple Road ticipants themselves and then putting them together in a split second." The photographer, who has done gym pictures in Detroit for a special publication, is working in Italy on a book to be titled Inside the Light: Four Seasons in Tuscany, an appreciation of Italian life completed with his wife, writer Maggie Barrett. "The camera, to me, is a license to see," Meyerowitz says. "I don't work with it in a way that makes it seem hard or technical. I'm a wanderer, and I like to stop and look at things and melt into the space." Joel Meyerowitz: Photos from 'After 9/11: Messages from the World and Images of Ground Zero," at the Gerald R. Ford Museum. W. Bloomfield 248 539 0505 - - or your What's Your Wish? In Commemoration Of 9-11 rime Filet Mignon The 28 Meyerowitz pictures at the Ford museum are joined with condolence messages and artifacts sent to U.S. embassies and consulates by people in 110 countries. The exhibit was assem- bled by the United States Diplomacy Center of the U.S. Department of State in collaboration with the Museum of the City of New York and encompasses photographs of the rescue workers and the desolation they faced. Meyerowitz, the only photographer allowed free artistic access to the dis- aster site, also is compiling his images into a book. He has previous- ly published 11 books of color pho- tographs and one on the history of street photography. "There are now 32 of these exhibi- tions traveling the world, and that's something I never expected," says the photographer, who felt a moral commit- ment to the project and gained access with the help of the New York museum. "More than anything, I wanted to make a historical record that would serve future generations who were curi- Chicken or „Salmon wit}, choice. of ttn9aki, spicy garlic chili ma.r or mustard dipptng sauce U mo-51ze 5hrimp Tempura Alaskan King Crab Salad ous about the aftermath of the attack. When the .city administration said that nobody could go in and take photo- graphs, I thought that was a crime against history. I wanted to make that right so I found a way to go in. "Over the nine months I spent there, I observed healing, recovery, sal- vation and reclamation. There was a human effort that was very positive despite all the destruction and death." Meyerowitz, who carried his equip- ment a minimum of six miles a day every day to .shoot the difficult and dangerous area, believes the experience made him more of a realist. The expe- rience motivated him to focus on social issues in future projects. ❑ 'Eye of the Beholder: A History of Photography?' runs Oct. 18-Jan. 5 at the Grand Rapids Art Museum, 155 Division North. Hours are 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Sundays with Friday hours extending to 9 p.m. $7 adults/$4 seniors and col- lege students/$3 children 6-17. (616) 831 1000 'After 9/11: Messages from the World and Images of Ground Zero" runs through Oct. 15 at the Gerald R. Ford Museum, 303 Pearl , s treet NW, Grand Rapids. Gallery hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. every day. $41$3 seniors. (616) 451-9263. - • Zo Kinds of Noodle „Soups Eking fourElf . .s.our friends and one dinner is complimentary* Private Room/Catering/Delivery 2000 Town Center, Suite 98 10'/2 Mile on Evergreen Road (248) 358-1911 http://wvvw.musashi-intl.com 1,11 www.detroitjewishnews.com Find out before your mother! 10/11 2002 83