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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 9

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRERTuesday, September 16, 1980 A-9 Three States Holding Primaries Today iff ''ps Washington Governor Faces Tough Battle BY ASSOCIATED PRESS A tough battle for the governor in Washington state, a double runoff for a senatorial nomination In Oklahoma and the abortion issue In Massachusetts highlight three primary election contests today. Political maverick Dixy Lee Ray, the nuclear power advocate who swept into the governor's chair four years ago, faces a stiff challenge in Washington state. Miss Ray, a conservative Democrat and former chairwoman of the Atomic Energy Commission, Is trying to survive a last-minute rush by liberal state Sen. Jim McDermott. At the same time, three of the state's top Republicans are seeking the GOP nomination.

REPUBLICANS ALSO are choosing a nominee to challenge the state's and the nation's senior senator, Warren G. Magnuson, chairman Coats has counter-charged that Kerr's late father did. not endorse John Kennedy for President until 10 days before the 1960 election. The Republican senatorial race is between Tulsa businessman John Zink and state Sen. Don Nickles.

The main congressional contest in Oklahoma was in the 4th District, where state Rep. Jim Townsend and Dave McCurdy, a lawyer, vied for the Democratic nomination to succeed retiring Rep. Tom Steed, also a Democrat. IN MASSACHUSETTS, where two Congressional seats are at stake, Roman Catholic Cardinal Humberto Medeiros has sent a letter to all parishes in the Boston archdiocese urging Catholics to "vote to save our children, born and unborn." In the 5th District, antl-abortlon forces campaigned against incumbent James Shannon, who was challenged by businessman Robert Hatem. In the 4th District, Barney Frank, a liberal Boston legislator, squares off against Arthur Clark, conservative mayor of Waltham, for the right to succeed U.S.

Rep. Robert Drinan, a Jesuit priest who is retiring at the direction of the Vatican. Drinan has endorsed Frank. minute surge could allow him to pull off an upset. His campaign moved into high gear shortly after Labor Day.

McDermott came out swinging, rapping Ray's stands on everything from welfare cuts and prison policies to her personal finances and appointments. On the Republican side of the gubernatorial contest, the heavy favorite is John Spellman, who heads the government in King County, the state's most populous. Also running are Secretary of State Bruce Chapman and House Republican Speaker Duane Berentson. BOTH DEMOCRATS and Republicans will vote in Oklahoma to nominate candidates for the Senate seat being vacated by retiring Republican Henry Bellmon. The runoffs became necessary when no candidate In the Aug.

26 primary won a majority of the votes. The two top Democratic vote-getters were Robert Kerr Jr. son of a former U.S. senator and Oklahoma governor and Andy Coats, a former Oklahoma County district attorney. Kerr has charged Coats with being "ashamed to admit he's a Democrat" because of his reluctance to endorse President Carter for re-election.

CARPET CLEANING SALE of the Senate Appropriations Committee and Senate president pro tern. Magnuson, 75, is seeking his seventh term. He faces only token opposition from fellow Democrats In his bid for re-nomination, but a close contest was shaping up between the Republican candidates Attorney General Slade Gorton and conservative broadcaster Lloyd Cooney. Miss Ray Is the favorite going into the primary, based on her incumbency, poll showings and a fat campaign treasury of well over $700,000. But McDermott, a psychiatrist, has been moving up In the polls and observers say a last- ELIZA TOBIAS, left, and Jessica Schmidlapp explore the Discovery Room.

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Bond Hill' home Hamilton 894-3221 in the slides are available to the stu simstiiiasifiM Hfl.jflSliSi i i mat ffflfitift 5 iiJujtijffi noTts ass i 1 LANDSCAPE ORGANIZATION 242 1375 flow 4022 READING ROAD mm Ask about our dyeing service for your wall to wall carpet secuRityamiRkhAnian BY OWEN FINDSEN Enquirer Art Critic School children who visit the Cincinnati Art Museum will supplement their tours with a special presentation In the museum's newly installed Discovery Room, designed especially lor children. A small second-floor gallery has been converted Into a special facility for school groups of children In the third to sixth grades. Architect David Nlland has created a multiple-use space In which children will be Introduced to the tools and fundamentals of art. The Discovery Room Is a Joint project of the Art Museum docents fcnd the staff. Chairman Carolyn Fovel explained that the facility Is Designed to present a three-part, 20-mlnute program to 20 children at a time.

This way as many as 60 students can be accommodated during an hour-long museum tour, with two groups touring the galleries while a third is In the Discovery Room. THE ROOM is divided into two areas; one a small auditorium where the children will sit to see slides and materials of the artist. The students then move to the other portion of the room, where they can experiment with the basic forms of art. The first presentation of the Discovery Room features painting. Each year the room will change its program to feature other aspects of art.

Artist Keith Kleespies has created a slide program showing the process of making a painting, using a Frank Duveneck still life as an example. The slides show the proc-ss from the sketch through Stretching and priming the canvas, roughing In the painting and finishing. The series of canvases used PUBLIC INVITED FREE LECTURE! mm mmE TOMS' dents to examine along with the brushes, paints, palettes and other tools of the painter. "This Is a hands-on experience," Fovel explained. After seeing the slides and examining the materials, the students move to tables where they can make designs of their own.

The tables contain a variety of cutout shapes In colored plastic, which the students are encouraged to manipulate to form designs. The room Is not intended as a creative arts class but as reinforcement of in-gallery experiences. "MOST LIKELY these students have never seen a painting before," Fovel explained. "Here they will be Introduced not only to the tools and processes of the artist, but to the ideas and creative processes. We've alrady tested the room on some school groups and It works.

The children really enjoy It," she said. Docent tours are available for various aspects of the museum collection. The Discovery Room will be used In the first year for those tours which concentrate on the painting collection. The museum docents are trying to reach all of the school districts in the Cincinnati area to tell them about the new Discovery Room; al ready more than 400 students have been scheduled for tours. School tours can be arranged by phoning the Art Museum Education Department at 721-5204.

The Discovery Room is a community gift In honor of the 20th anniversary of the museum docent program. Funding was provided by the Junior League of Cincinnati, the Frank E. Gannett Newspaper Foun dation and The Cincinnati Enquirer, the Frolic Committee, the do cents and individual donors. told his story than with the story Itself. THAT'S A loser.

Newspaper columnist (Miss Hill) starts receiving letters that threaten her life. At the same time several acquaintances from therapy group get killed In a shocking manner. The first and third, which I won't detail, are especially so. Three, perhaps four, men, including Kinski's psychotherapist, and a like number of women gather ominously about Hill. She's forced to play the whole role In terror.

Her former husband also works at the newspaper and Is always around for no sensible purpose. The Kinskl character keeps stumbling into sexual relations-two of them quite graphic with his female patients. A hulking, hovering man from the therapy group is always too near for comfort. It all turns out quite expectedly. But, not before Paulsen has indulged himself In some of the most outrageous red herrings ever filmed.

The murderer's favorite weapon is a pair of scissors. At some point every character in the film gets a chance to toy with a pair significantly while the camera does everything but point and scream "See that! See that!" and the soundtrack makes appropriately ominous noise. KINSKI'S PERFORMANCE is the most notable not surprisingly. Paulsen didn't give him very good words to speak, but he invests them with an urgency and complexity that make a character and make his chunks of the story at least possible. Miss Hill is too much in a swivet too much of the time to tell much.

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LOWRY LehmannHaupt the necessary knowledge. Young people and retired people have learned the famous techniques that you will be introduced to in the ninety-minute, fact-filled, illustrated free lecture. It's a tremendous introduction to some startling, proven facts that could change your life. Bring a pen or pencil! There's note taking space on the free sixteen page guide you will be given at the lecture. The personal representative of the authors will lecture and illustrate, and there is absolutely no cost or obligation! Free lectures ONLY at the following locations.

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Lowry moved from supermarket butcher to America's foremost authority on financial security and famous lecturer-author You Can Become Financially Independent by Investing In Real Estate" Simon Schuster) in just a few short years. Al's appearances on radio and television shows nationally have drawn rave reviews for his simple, practical methods. William Nickerson skyrocketed to fame with his million-seller "How I Turned $1,000 Into 3 Million In Real Estate In My Spare Time." Bill's book was the grandfather of "How-To-Do-lt" books, and he has appeared before millions to tell of his success. These two famous, self-made multi-millionaires joined forces nine years ago to sponsor what has become America's most respected, most famous, most complete investor's seminar. It's a literal bonanza of tested and proven procedures, and teaches you an exciting step by step "Creation of Wealth" formula for success you can begin to use right now.

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These two famous men are educators, and no investments will be offered for sale: there is absolutely no cost or obligation! SOME OF WHAT YOU WILL HEAR AT THE FREE LECTURE: How to start your investment program from scratch! Getting the knowledge you need to take the insecurity out of investing. Equity in your home, and how to put it to work. The high risk of going into business. Interest-Free borrowing from Uncle Sam. Your hidden assets, and where to look.

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One hundred and ten percent financing. Tax shelters available to "The Little The quickest way to get Professional Real Estate Knowledge! How bad credit plus knowledge buys property. How simple, creative management can make you big profits. How many people start with nothing and reach financial security in two years! DON'T MISS THIS EXCITING FREE LECTURE! There are hundreds of money making opportunities you can take advantage of, if you have BY TOM McELFRESH Enquirer Film Critic It's fitting, I suppose, that I should be of two minds about "Schizoid" (at eight indoor and outdoor cinemas). I On the one hand despite the presence of a distinguished actor such as Klaus Kinskl and the ability of leading lady Mar-ianna Hill, It's at best a cheap, bloody, little horror number with a driveling plot, dismal dialogue and a far too serious attitude about Itself.

It fairly drowns in self-importance. ON THE other hand, writer-director David Paulsen has a certain taste for the neo-baroque In certain surreal sequences, even though his storytelling, both his words and his Images, lacks cohesion and control. Item: The film was shot entirely on locations in Los Angeles. Paulsen's sense of the city's plastic, pretentious heart Is exact and his expression of that is fine. Kinskl as a sort of psychotherapist lives in an ornate house full of all the formal garden sterility and artificiality money can buy.

All that is wonderfully apparent in Paulsen's image making. Item: The murderer's fury Is directed toward a number of women-all of whom are first seen gabbing and giggling In a hot tub. Whether Paulsen sensed that the location he ehose was just right or the production budget did not allow for a set decorator whichever the details of the house, lawn and garage that make up the setting are splendid. The problem, I guess, really is that Paulsen was vastly more successful with the milieu in which he WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17th HOLIDAY INN 2235 Sharon Rd Cinn (1-75 Exit Sharon Rd.) THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18th HOLIDAY INN CINCINNATI 2100 Diile Mitchell 1 I88B E.A.I., 1980.

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About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,582,401
Years Available:
1841-2024