` A .1t • " STAR DELI 13 G COMPARE OUR LOW PRICES WITH ANY DELICATESSEN IN TOWN! $6 . 99 IS ONE OF THE BEST CARRY OUT ONLY RESTAURANTS IN AMERICA! s E • - rt-1-;111 -1Pn't A. CREE \i/SMALL SCR F EN MEAT TRAY Hours: Open 7 days from 7-10 Numb3rs Game per person SALAD TRAY $7.50 * Handcut Lox * Our Regular Iiina & Fat-Free Tuna Can't Be Beat! * Vegetarian Chopped Liver * Homemade Potato Salad & Coleslaw per person DAIRY TRAY $14.50 per person STAR'S TRAYS CAN'T BE BEAT FOR QUALITY & PRICE! OFF ** ON STAR'S BEAUTIFUL ALREADY LOW-PRICED MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS WITH THIS COUPON • Expires 10131/06 • One Per Person • Not Good Holidays • 10 Person Minimum DELIVERY AVAILABLE 24555 W. 12 MILE ROAD Just w west of Telegraph Road • Southfield :•*:;:.;;NitZW t . 24 S 352 • 7 A 77 T' Gena Rowlands . and Rob Morrow in a scene from Numb3rs CBS hit confronts its Jewish characters. "Gravity Bar & Griit' is a perfect 10 *fa restaurant imaginative, grounded new American food that eschews all false steps; a serene At the end of the day S nice to feel grounded by the finer things in life. cherry, apricot and robin's egg dining room that fasters conversation but has just enough buzz to feel lively." —Susan Isaacs Nisbett Ann Arbor News Special Writer i :30 am-3:00 pm, Mon-Fri Dinner: 4:00' pm, Moh-Sat 340 N. Main Street • • Downtown Milford 248.684.4223 • www.oravityrestaurantcom 1167550 Our homemade is really made from scratch! j en th RESTAURANT Quality casual dining for the entire family 1186 Maple Rd. • Walled Lake 248-669-8240 Ma le Rd. 0 • Mon-Sat 7-9 • Sun 8-3 • Children's menu • Carryout 46 October 5 • 2006 Monday-Saturday Lunch Specials 1 whole sandwich & soup or french fries $3.95 11:00 - 3:00 pm 2 choices daily! After 2:00 pm daily! 15% OFF Total Bill Not good with any other offer or special ex p 10/31/06 Curt Schleier Special to the Jewish News T he most Jewish drama on television comes out of the closet tomorrow night. The hit CBS series Numb3rs is about the lives of the Epps family: FBI agent Don (Rob Morrow), his math whiz brother Charlie (David Krumholtz) and their widowed father, Alan (Judd Hirsch). In past interviews, both Morrow and Krumholtz acknowledged that their characters are Jewish. Both also assumed that their family's religion eventually would play a role in the plot line, though they couldn't predict when. That time is now Tomorrow's episode, airing 10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 6, on CBS, centers on the theft from a small Los Angeles museum of a Pissarro painting of uncertain provenance. Erica Hellman (Gena Rowlands), a Holocaust survi- vor, claims it belonged to her family and was stolen by the Nazis. But as the sole survivor of her family, she has no supporting witnesses to her claim. As Don and Charlie investigate, they become increasingly involved in their own Jewish past. "Why do you think we were never religious?" Don asks his brother. "Mom always wanted a Christmas tree Charlie responds. And then the subject is dropped. Alan tells Don about his own mother's cousin, who "got out before the war, and then spent her whole life searching for her people!' "Did she find any?" Don asks. "Not a single one." Show runner Barry Schindel says the show is "about family and what the loss of one's family means!' It has a special significance for him. Both his in-laws are survivors; his mother-in-law was sent to Siberia when captured by the Russians, while his late father-in-law was in several camps. "I pushed for this episode and wanted to do it as close to the High Holidays as I could," he says. Schindel understands that "as survivors die, their story gets increas- ingly less relevant to younger people. It gets tougher as the years go by. It was important to me that our younger demo watches this show and has an idea for what happened!' During the filming, an atypical mood pervaded the set. "Everybody was committed to make this as real as possible in terms of feelings and was approaching [the story] seriously and with gravitas," says Schindel. "I don't think anyone thought of it as just another story." The Holocaust-themed episode of Numb3rs airs 10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 6.