-PSYCHOANALYZE Till's from page 89 5 L of: Freud's Vienna consulting room, with the famous • analytic couch, where famous patients like the Wolf Man, Dora and Rat Man laid there heads and bared their souls. "! Right: Manuscript of Freud's BBC interview statement, Dec. 7, 1938, on his founding of the science of psychoanalysis. It reads.in part: "I had to pay heavily for this bit of good luck. People did not believe in my facts and thought my theories unsavory Resistance was strong and unrelenting." is pleased to announce the $395 LUNCH SPECIALS Served Mon.-Sat. from 11:00 am to 3:00 pm your choice of: • Soup or Salad • Sandwich and Cup of Soup • Sandwich and Salad for$ 395 Banquet Facilities Available Saturday Afternoons, Nights and Sundays. Whether a wedding, shower, Bar/Bat Mitzvah, Anniversary or any special occasion, The Sheik, would love to serve you. Open for Lunch ono Dinner 7 -Days 4189 Orcbaro Gale Roao Orcboro Lake 8/6 1999 90 Detroit Jewish News r 248-865-0000 gay: 248 - 865 - 0020 g trying to show us that making sense of the past is a fundamental aspect of being reasonable and perhaps not-too-unhap- py persons," Roth says. "Whether we make sense of Freud by criticizing or praising him is not that important. What's important is that we come to terms with this figure who's shaped the 20th century in many ways and consider him as part of our history. "There's. probably not any important idea of Freud that is not controversial today. Freud emphasized that people are not what they seem to be and that their deepest pas- sions and desireS come out from-time to time in odd, bizarre and sometimes very funny ways. I think that most people have come to believe and live • their lives as if they believe that popu- lar, common sense psychology. "We may not use Freud's concepts in detail, but I think most people look for hidden meaning in ways that are indebted to psychoanalysis. They try to make sense of things that don't seem to make sense by looking for some desire or fear that's being expressed." LT "Freud: Conflict and Culture" runs through Sept. 9 at The Jewish Museum, Fifth Avenue at 91st Street in New York. Museum hours are 11 a.m.-5:45 p.m. Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays and 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Tuesdays. $8 adults/$5.50 students and seniors. (212) 423-3200. To see items from the exhibit on the Web, go to lc-web.loc.gov/exhibits/freud.