* * * * * * * * * * * * Artr TIME IS RUNNING OUT ti 'IL 7,1 'cram Mixed Media For All Of Your Seder and Pesach Week Dinner Feasts Prepared By Our Fabulous Chefs! Complete Passover Dinners From Appetizers To Our Fabulous Desserts! Pick up our convenient Menu Order Form or We'll Even FAX It To You! . STOP IN Now FOR MATZAH MANIA Old Fashioned Fried Matzah Like Mama Used to Make! Served Any Time, All Day Long * * * * * * * * .4tINEntertainment zbir =TROTT MIME NEWS 4/21 2000 98 * * * * * * * * * Get Results... Advertise in our Entertainment Section! Call The Sales Department (248) 354-7123 Ext. 209 wanting to connect more. "I definitely embrace the Jewish reli- gion; I just don't consider myself responsible enough to call myself a devout Jew because I haven't earned that. But I definitely connect with the traditions of the Jewish religion, and culturally I consider myself a Jew. "But I'm also half Irish. My moth- er was brought up Irish Catholic, so I consider myself a student of all these religions right now, and in preparing to have children, that's a big responsibility to understand and to come to terms with." Have his feelings about faith changed since playing a rabbi? "I've learned to embrace it a little bit more and accept my feelings about religion in general. I now have more respect for people who commit themselves to a religious life. I grew up feeling cynical about faith, but now I'm inclined to believe that you have to have faith in something, some form of God. "I believe there's some structure in this universe, and everything is meant to happen for a reason." — Philip Berk "World' Win The documentary film Arguing the World, directed by Joseph Dorman, has just been awarded a prestigious Peabody Award. The film documents the lives of New York intellectuals Irving Howe, Irving Kristol, Daniel Bell and Nathan Glazer, their common origins at the City College of New York and their divergent political and intellectual encounters. It was screened at the Detroit Film Theatre in 1998 and aired on PBS stations last year. The film was supported by a 1997 grant from the Fund for Jewish Documentary Filmmaking adminis- tered by the National Foundation for Jewish Culture. The George Foster Peabody Awards, established in 1939 and first awarded in 1940, recognize distinguished achieve- ment and meritorious public service by radio and television networks, stations, producing organizations, cable television organizations and individuals. They per- petuate the memory of the banker-phil- anthropist whose name they bear. The awards program is administered by the Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia. To learn more about the Peabody Awards, click on vvww.peabody.uga.edu/index2.html.