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One coupon per check • Expires 11/30/04 Open 7 days a week Mon-Sat 11 am-10 pm • Sunday 4 pm-9:30 pm • Authentic TtaCiano Menu &-' Atmosyliere Eine n 8 Book your next special event with us! Reservations Accepted Appetizers • Insalata • Zuppa Specialty & Traditional Pastas Chicken • Veal • Beef • Fish Our Personalized- Sionature Series Large Selection of Fine Wines Live Entertainment Friday & Saturday Nights 248-360-9671 • Playing A Psychiatrist On TV 7110 Cooley Lake Road ri GRAND OPENING Open to the Public ROSENBERG'S OSHER AFE Inside Adat Shalom Synagogue $14" Adults (prepaid) '18" at the door $4" Children under 12 (prepaid) site° at the door CALL 248-626-5702 for Information and Reservations No Refunds • No Substitutes Under Supervision of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis 911780 4' EIRIK KNUTZEN Copley News Service Eic ank Azaria was starring in a stage production of Sexual Perversity in Chicago in London's West End last year when his Hollywood-based manager forwarded the pilot and the second-episode scripts of Huff He wasn't anxious to get involved with the horrendous weekly grind of a one-hour dramedy, but made the mistake of reading the manuscripts. And fell in love with them. Azaria plays Dr. Craig "Huff" Huffstodt, a successful New York shrink dealing with functionally insane people professionally and facing an equally sur- real family life with an overbearing mother (Blythe Danner), a wife near meltdown (Paget Brewster), a sensitive teenage son (Anton Yelchin) and an institutionalized schizophrenic brother (Andy Comeau). In essence, Huff never has a day off and seems destined for a massive flameout. To make sure he was on the right path, Azaria passed one of the scripts by creator and executive producer Bob Lowry to his own Beverly Hills shrink for comment before going into produc- tion. "He gave it two thumbs up," laughed Azaria, 40, "because he found the story pretty interesting and pretty realistic. He gave me his honest appraisal, only point- ing out a couple of technical flaws — [such] as the procedures followed when a psychiatrist prescribes a medication." Fifteen years (off and on) of psy- chotherapy with the same psychiatrist has been an infinite blessing, according to Azaria. "It has gotten me through things like a divorce (from actress Helen Hunt) and the strength to deal with friends battling alcoholism. Besides the tragedies in my life, I have found it tremendously help- ful just to have somebody objective download my anxieties, stresses and dilemmas. "[Therapy] has really helped me stay creative and sane, given the fact that show business is very difficult and stress- ful in many ways," he continued. Its a profession where you feel like you're con- stantly being judged and literally called on to perform on cue. We all have huge pressures in life, and this is certainly one of them. Having a place to go and some- one professional to talk to about what's really bothering me has been a tremen- dous boon in my life." Not particularly impressed with men- tal health drama series since The Psychiatrist with Roy Thinnes, Azaria Shedding New Light "NOVA" explores the "Cave of Letters," the last refuge of followers of Jewish patriot Shimon Bar Kokhba. rom Shimon Bar Kokhba to Yehonatan ... get ahold of the young men and come with them. And I shall deal with the Romans." So wrote legendary Jewish patriot Shimon Bar Kokhba to his supporters during a desperate uprising for religious freedom in the year 132. NOVA explores the last refuge of one group of Bar Kokhba's followers with a historian whose bold theories have rocked the world of biblical archaeology in an episode titled 'Ancient Refuge in the Holy Land." It airs 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 23, on many PBS stations (check your local listings). The expedition takes NOVA to a p 265 Old Woodward • Birmingham 11/19 248-642-2555 2004 Hours: Monday-Saturday 9:30-6:00 60 Closed Sunday 205 Pierce Street • Birmingham 248.647.8670 remote cave in the Judean desert, first excavated by the famed Israeli archaeolo- gist Yigael Yadin in 1960. Yadin uncov- ered a cache of ancient documents, human skulls and artifacts that shed new light on the Bar Kokhba revolt, which resulted in the Roman slaughter of 580,000 Jews. Now, Jewish historian Richard Freund of the University of Hartford returns to the cave, certain that the site still holds startling secrets. The place is called the Cave of Letters, after one of Yadin's most notable finds: letters from Bar Kokhba himself and the haunting personal archive of Babata, one of several women who lived in the cave along with dozens of children.