ENTERTAINMENT 4 JET JEWISH ENSEMBLE THEATRE presents FIRST IS SUPPER TRAYS FOR ALL OCCASIONS OUR SPECIALTY Remember .. . All Our Trays Include A Beautiful Fruit Basket Cakes Custom Styled To Your Specifications. • Bingham Farms Oak Park West Bloomfield Be tickled and touched by this poignant drama of an immigrant family in Chicago, 1919 by noted comedian, 737-3890 967-3999 645-5288 oufies B OHI SHELLEY BERMAN Directed by Evelyn Orbach SIM December 4 - December 29 Tickets 788-2900 or — 645-6666 Proudly Presents LIVE ENTERTAINMENT & DANCING NORMA _JEAN BELL JET Aaron DeRoy Theatre • Jewish Community Center 6600 W. Maple Rd. • West Bloomfield AND THE ALIATARS Thurs., Fri. & Sat. . . . All Shows 10 p.m: Now Appearing . . . Wed. Evenings Only We are pleased to announce that our hotel is now known as Southfield Hilton Garden Inn. This change will bring about updated services with even more emphasis on gracious hospitality and meticulous attention to your travel needs. We appreciate your business, and be assured that we will give you the same high quality of service that you have come to expect from HILTON. Please direct any question or concerns that you may have to the Hotel Sales Deportment or Reservations at (313) 357-1100. BRAVE NEW WORLD Featuring MICHAEL KING & DANNY COX I AVAILABLE FOR PRIVATE PARTIES ON SUN. THRU WED.I 22061 Woodward, Between 8 & 9 398.1940 Southfield Hilton Garden Inn 26000 American Dr.,Southfield, MI 48034 1-800-HILTONS (313)357-1100 BUY ONE POUND -I GET ONE POUND FREE GOURMET PASTA SALAD THE CITY'S BEST KOSHER DAIRY TRAY • Lox • Sable • Chubs • Tuna Salad • American & Cream Cheeses • Tomatoes • Onions • Cucumbers • Olives • Bagels • Kaiser & Onion Rolls • Hard-Boiled Eggs or Egg Salad • Cottage Cheese with Pineapple Cherry Torte Cake I FREE DELIVERY 10 Person Minimum per person Offer Expires 10-31-91 Catering Hot Line: 737-5190 Traditional Jewish Foods By Shirlee Bloom 32415 Northwestern, Betw. Middlebelt & 14 Mile • 855-9463 74 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1991 GOLDEN BAGEL 547-3 58 1 23055 Coolidge Under Supervision Of The CAFE KATON Oak Park ,ouncil of Orthodox Rabbis Ofrenda Continued from preceding page tends to like the work from Ochimicho, an area where the art is weird. It's art that is unlike anything made any- where else. The stuff is all sur- realistic and sometimes hor- rific . . . they are not my favorites at all?' Some of the pieces Mrs. Margolin refers to include a devil dancing with a woman in a tavern, an im- prisoned Franciscan or a San- ta Claus riding a bull which turns into a motorcycle with a skeleton. "I like stuff from this region because it is pungent, vivid," Mr. Margolin said. "You'll know Ochimicho because their stuff is slightly off-kilter and that's terrific." Mrs. Margolin favors the work of the Oaxaca region which features black clay pot- tery, painted wooden animals and figurines. The artifacts in this region, she said, are in- fluenced by ancient pre- Columbian artistic styles and native indigenous art. The couple have heard a wide variety of opinions about their collection. While they realize that it does not appeal to everyone, they are only of- fended by those who trivialize the work or view it as "whim- sical." "I really hate that," Mr. Margolin said. "Most of it has a deeply-felt meaning on a cultural and community level that reaches back sometimes. hundreds and thousands of years. It's very deep-rooted. It's not whimsical." "But that doesn't mean that some of the pieces can't be just plain funny," Mrs. Margolin adds. "Some are meant to be. But many have very tradi- tional Spanish or Indian in- fluences." Ms. Jones said the label "folk art" tends to unfairly categorize the genre as some- how less aesthetically valuable than other forms of art. "Many people like to dif- ferentiate between folk and fine art. What we consider fine art needs to be expanded to include the traditional art. If you go into a museum and look at Etruscan or many Egyptian artifacts, they were not created as fine art. They were created out of an in- digenous tradition. And yet to- day we consider them worthy of being placed in a fine arts context. But we don't think that way of contemporary folk art." "Folk art or indigenous art," Mrs. Margolin added, "has for many years been maligned by the fine art divisions because it is not in a sense sophisti- cated based on criteria in which most westerners look at art. To them, it's not perfect or very realistic. It doesn't, in a sense, look like art. It looks