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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 24

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

49 TODAY THE SUN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5. 191 EATER'S DIGEST Teachers get no respect, but Teachers' ought to Evening's fare ranged from mediocre downward 'j 'UY TEACHERS, from IB unenthusiastic, are pushing up from below; meanwhile, the unsatisfied, unsympathetic and unimaginative administrators are pressing down from above. At the same time, outside reformers pinch in from the flanks. And in the middle of this exceedingly uncomfortable position is the poor teacher. Ouch! Arthur Hiller's film, from a screenplay by W.

McKinney, is almost an expose, but it's too full of love to sustain a tone of stridency. It is at its best as a random tour of teacher culture in High School U.S.A., and it watches with grim amusement the toll the job takes. The teachers' lounge, for example, looks like a locker room during half-time of an NFL game, with sluggish, perspiring, heavy-breathing bodies strewn about The system is so bizarre that control of the ditto machine is a major political issue, and the psychologist is carrying a gun. These guys aren't burned out, they're numb. The hero in this madness is one of the last of his breed To Care.

In less capable hands than Nick Nolte's, Alex Jurel might be a tinhorn liberal saint, given to making The Speech about The Kids and The Future until the sanctimony of it all brought the cookies up your throat. But Nolte's Jurel is a profoundly flawed man, too lazy for his own good, too jaded for anybody's good, and into the recondite pleasures of cheap beer and picked-up sex. He looks like an explosion in a cut-rate clothing store, and you could probably find your way to Cleveland by following the By Carleton Jones THE ORIGINAL CRACK POT RESTAURANT. 8102 Loch Raven boulevard. The Crack Pot has a lunch discount for senior citizens, chandeliers made out of crab traps, a couple of acres of nice cedar shake walls and of fans excluding me.

I must plead guilty to occupational prejudice here, for the crab house, pure and simple, has never offered a culinary critic much scope. A hard crab, after all, is either -big or little or juicy or stringy or somewhere in between. In gourmet terms, most crab house kitchens usually have pretty limited resources and the clatter and crowding is often in a class with the galley of a small destroyer. Innately, too, I have always resented what I regard as Maryland's neglect of its own greatest specialty. The accent on easy, volume prepara- tion of the Chesapeake treasure makes us ignore what exalted things can happen to shellfish.

Where is cold and gorgeous crab Louis, or steaming crab au gratin in patty shells or quivering crab mousse with maille mustard sauce or sauteed crabs in parmesan butter a la Delmonico's or crabs sauteed artichokes and mushrooms? They went thataway to New York and New Orleans. About the only venturesome non-fried, stuffed or steamed type crab dish found in a majority of Maryland crab places is buttery crab Norfolk, in a variety of versions. The Crack Pot makes a gesture in the direction of varied seafood with an unusual shrimp imperial. And to its credit it makes a strenuous effort 'to serve- hard crabs year-round (leaning on Louisiana imports off season) and I feel guilty knocking a place that attempts to offer crabs for all seasons. From the evening crowds that boil in andout of the Crack Pot, the hard crabs here may be the greatest, but, since I did not try them on my call, I cannot say either way.

What I can say is that the fare, otherwise, ranged from mediocre downward (but not terribly far downward), and that I suspect that liance. This is one of those places where you are well advised to order the "special" (they had lobster at a sizzling $9.95 the night of my call) or stick with the hard ones, for anything else may not quite jelL That's the way it was the night of our call a rather hectic one as it happens, since the place was never less than at capacity (there are no reservations taken on weekends) and neither the waitress nor a busboy who put in a single appearance functioned adequately in clearing. Our six dishes and four drinks ran $45 for three, without wine, not an indication of the usual check, probably, since the prices here are very reasonable. I must give the briefest notice to a large and generous-sized shrimp cocktail a faintly peppery, but basically bland and dull cream of crab soup and a stuffed mushroom foursome in which the topping and crab filling had been blended together in a visually sloppy, single mass, as a result, apparently, of a cursory trip through the broiler, though it had some flavor distinction that made it stand out above the others. Also quickly covered can be the deep-fried stuffed crab an enormous whale-like thing that was improperly prepared, since the claws were not cracked before frying; a mediocre, rather small crab imperial in an ugly metal ramekin and a trout amandine ($7) of repellent quality, grayish and oily.

We skipped dessert at the close of the main course, not a regular routine for this department, but I understand that they are limited pretty much to cheesecake. Accessories to this depressing dinner were coarse, clumpy french fries, doughy rolls and rubbery carrots, all plainly and simply not of acceptable restaurant quality. I am sure that happier experiences are possible, especially if you stick to the special or a jug-of-beer-and-hard-crabs routine, and there are real values on the carryout menu (but not the cream of crab soup at $8 a They will stuff your flounder order with lobster for $9, for instance. The Crack Pot is a family place that meets a market for relaxed dining, and it is not without its touching notes. Where else would chili be listed as an appetizer? tion is designed to reveal the inadequacies of the system and its servants, which has the administration worried and the kid's ex-teachers terrified.

And one of them happens to be Nolte. Who also happens to be Williams's ex-teacher. He remembers her rear end and she remembers his shoulders and with memories like that, can love be far away? The relationship between Nolte and Williams is one of the least successful aspects of the film; Included primarily to accommodate that bang-up climax mentioned earlier, It feels rushed and stilted. What feels authentic is love for his kids and his profession and his contempt for the people who don't understand either or have forgotten both. In fact, one of the most impressive things about "Teacher?" is the way in which it uses its central antagonism between Nolte and his former pal, the efficient vice principal Roger Reubel (Judd Hirsch) to debate theories of education.

Reubel, the compleat bureaucrat, is committed to the idea of the mass: Most kids, he feel, will learn, and he's become cold-blooded about the certain percentage wholl slip through the cracks. He doesn't care because he doesn't have the time. Nolte, on the other hand, stands for the kind of emotionally committed teacher who can't hold back. He becomes involved in an elaborate reclamation project that has an eerie parallel to the case of the kid who is suing the school. Nolte, who knows he pushed that boy through because he didn't care, wants another chance with Eddie (Ralph Macchio, of "Karate Kid," who at 23 still makes terrific high school sophomore).

"Teachers" really disintegrates in its last 30 minutes, in which the screenplay contrives a kangaroo court gambit by which the conservative bureaucrats set out to destroy Nolte to prevent him from testifying for Williams, who has, in any event, already settled the case. All this is calculated merely to allow Nolte to growl some General Principles of Education while working out his tear ducts and to flirt with the idea of leaving the profession. Nevertheless, "Teachers" is a good deal more fun to go to than high school ever was. Rating: PG red veins in his eyes. But smoldering deep inside Alex there's still a teacher.

The film weaves a variety of colorful tales about life in the slow-learner's lane, but the central narrative is organized around a lawsuit brought by a kid who's graduated with flying colors from JFK, only to learn by bitter experience in the real world that he cannot read or write. The lawsuit shakes up JFK more profoundly than an earth tremor, particularly because it is to be argued by an ambitious, idealistic young lawyer named Lisa Hammond (JoBeth Williams) who happens to be a grad of JFK herself. Her investiga mm THE SUNROBERT HAMILTON Waitress Carol Venere takes the order of David and Connie Bush. its long, sprawly menu may be less than wholly accomplished with bril- WEEKEND LIVE SPECIAL EVENTS Today: TBA Tomorrow: Monuments. Sunday: David Zee.

October 20.) Baltimore Actors' Theatre, Flag House garden, 844 East Pratt street. "The Miracle Worker." Drama about Helen Keller and her teacher Annie Sullivan. Thursdays to Sundays through October 21. Vagabond Players, 806 South Broadway. Call 563-9135.

"Opal's Million Dollar Duck." Comedy by John Patrick. Wednesdays to Sundays through October 28. Bolton Hill Dinner Theatre, 1111 Park avenue. Call 523-1 000. "The Post Show." Variety entertainment.

Fridays following the regularly scheduled show. Towsontowne Musical Dinner Theatre, 7800 York road. Call 321-6595. FILMS 1110 Rosemont avenue, Frederick. Hours: 10 a.m.

to 5 p.m. tomorrow; noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Details: 1-663-1611. Silver Run-Union Mills Fall Festival.

Entertainment, music, antique cars, pony rides, kiddie rides, moon walk, breakfast until 1 1 a.m., lunch, fresh produce, flea market and tours of nearby Union Mills Homestead Museum and Grist Mill. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday at Union Mills Homestead Park, 7 miles north of Westminster on Route 97. Details: 1-346-7285.

Southern Maryland Antique Show, sponsored by Women's Club of Southern Maryland. Displays by dealers, food. Today through Sunday at La Plata National Guard Armory, U.S. 301 and Route 225, La Plata. Hours: 10 a.m.

to 8 p.m. today and tomorrow; noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission: $2.50. Details: 1-934-8827 or 1-645-7187.

Sykesville's Fall Festival Day. Pancake breakfast, fun run, train rides from Sykesville to Mount Airy, crafts, and food in celebration of the 1 00th birthday of the BSO Railroad Station and the listing of Mount Airy on the National Register of Historic Places. Hours: 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow in Sykesville and Mount Airy.

Details: 781-6222 or 1-848-4500, extension 270. Volunteer Appreciation Day in recognition of the recreation and park volunteers throughout the state. Special ceremony at noon and free admission at the Baltimore Zoo. Sunday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Details: 468-4560. Westminster Cemetery and Burying Ground Tours. Fayette and Greene streets. Hours: 6:30 p.m. today, 10 a.m.

tomorrow. Admission: $2 for adults, $1 for children under 12 and senior citizens. Details: 528-2070. Girard's, 1 001 Cathedral street, 837-3733. Today and tomorrow: Bootcamp.

Sunday: Maximum Strength. The Horse You Came In On, 1626 Thames street, 327-8111. Sunday: Gordon Michaels. Hyatt Regency, 300 Light street. 528-1 234.

Today, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.: Ed Williams's Big Band; 7 p.m. to 1 1 p.m. Ronnie Dawson Trio. Tomorrow, 8 p.m.

to midnight: Ronnie Dawson Trio with Ruby Dawson. King of France Tavern, Maryland Inn, Annapolis, 269-0990. Today through Sunday: Stef Scaggiarl Trio. Leadbetters, 1639 Thames street, 342-5770. Shows at 9:30 p.m.

Today: Second Story. Tomorrow: Gentle Times. Sunday: Michael James. Longfellow's, 800 North Charles street, 752-2392. Today: Chain Gang.

Sunday: Joe Williams. Manor Tavern, 15819 Old York road, Monkton, 771- -4840. Today and tomorrow: Dakota. Marble Bar, 306 West Franklin street, 727-5336. Today: Judy's Fixation and the Monuments.

Tomorrow: Cabal. Sunday: David Wylde and the Wyldecats. Maxwell's, Petting Plaza Shopping Center, 668-2233. Shows at 9:30 p.m. Today: Sharks.

Tomorrow: No Heroes. Sunday: Arrows. Sneakers Sports Saloon and Restaurant, Long Reach Village Center, Columbia, 730-2208. Today and tomorrow: Doubts. Trenton Street Stop, 1817 Maryland avenue, 659-9481 Today: Used Parts, tomorrow: Zee Band.

Sunday: Dime Store Split. Valhalla, 1101 Cathedral street, 752-4719. Today and tomorrow: Ralph Tucker Project. Baltimore Film Forum. "Adventure!" Fridays, today through October 26, 8 p.m., in the auditorium of the Baltimore Museum of Art.

Admission $3.50 general, $2.50 for Film Forum members. Today: "King Solomon's Mines." Maryland Institute, College of Art MICA Friday night film program. Selected Fridays in the Mount Royal Station building auditorium. Cathedral street and Mount Royal avenue. Admission $3.50 general, $2.50 for students with identification.

Today: "Yellow Submarine," 7 p.m., and "The Point," 9 p.m. Walters Art Gallery. Family Film Classics. 1:30 p.m. Saturdays through October 13, in Graham auditorium.

Series fee $1.50, $4 members, $9 nonmembers; admission 50 cents children, $1 members, $3 nonmembers at the door. Price includes gallery admission. Tomorrow: "The Black Stallion." tured banners by Marjorie Coffey. Through Oecemrjar 15. American Indian artifacts.

Through November 10. Community College of Baltimore, 396-7980. Faculty art show. Through today. A Creative Place, Bel Air, 838-9450.

"Glass and Water, -color," hand-blown-sculptural vessels by Lauren Cum-mings and paintings by Mituse Elston. Through October li Daedal Fine Arts, Fallston Mall, 879-4421. Paintings by New York "RhinoHorn" artists Peter Dean, Jay Milter end Nicholas Sperakis. Through today. Paintings by Maryland artist Ernest Walters.

October 5 through November 2. G. H. Dalsheimer Gallery, 519 North Charle street, 727-0866. Photographs by Duane Michais and Bruce Handelsman.

Through Sunday. Erikson Gallery, Reisterstown, 833-2252. Exhibition Of antique illuminated manuscripts. Through Novembej 17. Gallery 409, 409 North Charles street, 396-130( "Opening the Egg" by Sheila Hack, new paintings and works on paper.

Through October 12. 2 Goucher College, 337-6116. "Past and Present Goucher Faculty Selection." Through October 21 C. Grimaldis Gallery, 928 North Charles street, 1080. New works of Maryland landscapes by Eugene Leake.

Through November 4. Life of Maryland Gallery, 901 North Howard street; 539-7900. "Remarkable Morgan State Collection, more than 60 works, including African artifacts. Through November 2. Marson, 6 Shawan road, 666-7161.

American, European and Oriental works from the Nineteenth anJ Twentieth centuries. Through November 30. Maryland Art Place, 105 Market place, 962-8656, "Evocations: Essential and Irrational." Through Octoi ber19. Maryland Institute, College of Art, 669-9200, extension; 264. "Drawings by Comtemporary American Figurative Artists." Through November 4.

"Points of View: Contemporary Photographers," works; by Ruth Bernhard, Roy DeCarava, Lee FriedlanderJ Robert Heinecken and Sonia Sheridan. Through Octo-. per 25. McOonogh School, 363-0600. Paintings and construe- tions by Lee Boot and photographs by Bert Szymanski Through October 19.

-i Meredith Gallery, 805 North Charles street, 837-3575 "Facades," oil paintings and lithographs by Mictiaet' Clark. Through October 9. Notre Dame College, 4701 North Charles street, 435- 0100. Contemporary quilts and wall hangings by Paul Jaworski. Through October 14.

A Studio Gallery, 3500 Clipper road, 366-2368. Works, by Les Harris. Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.j indefinitely. Three Arts Club of Homeland, 4 Wyndhurst avenue 433-1765.

Works by members of the Baltimore Watery ART Museums CLASSICAL MUSIC Baltimore Museum of Art Sunday, 3 p.m.: Pro Musica Rara presents "Three Centuries of Music: Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Eighteenth." Call 358-5430. Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. All events in the Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, 1212 Cathedral street, unless otherwise stated. Call 837-5691. Baltimore Symphony Chorus auditions are under way.

Call 727-7300 for appointment. Today, 10:30 a.m. and noon: Music for Youth concert titled "America Dances" with dancers from the Baltimore School for the Arts. Pineda Becker narrates and Catherine Comet conducts. Louie's Bookstore Cafe, 518 North Charles street.

Call 962-1224. informal chamber music during the dinner hour and Sunday brunch. Old St Paul's Church, Charles and Saratoga streets. 685-3404. Today, 4:45 p.m.: Organ recital by Rodney Hansen.

(Follows 4 p.m. Evensong service). THEATER Athenian Agora. Three-day Greek bazaar sponsored by the Greek Orthodox Cathedral of the Annunciation. Entertainment by costumed folk dancers, mime, poetry readings, films, art exhibits, cultural displays, lectures, cooking lessons, craft items and an auction.

Today through Sunday at the Greek Cathedral, Maryland avenue and Preston street. Hours: 1 1 a.m. to midnight today and tomorrow; noon to 7 p.m. Sunday. Free.

Derails: 727-1831. Baltimore Fanners' Market Fresh vegetables, fruits, greens, honey, jams and cider from local farms. 8 a.m. )until sellout, Sundays through December 16, on the parking lot between East Pratt, President and East Lombard streets. Details: 837-4636.

Calvert Fair, sponsored by the Calvert Heritage Association, celebrates Maryland's 350th anniversary. Music, 'arts and crafts displays, demonstrations, tours of the East Nottingham Friends Meeting House, children's activities, food and refreshments. Tomorrow, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at Calvert Elementary School in Calvert, Route 273, approximately 12 miles west of Newark, Del. De-tails: 1-398-9638.

Carroll County Farm Museum offers tours with costumed guides through museum and outbuildings, traditional crafts demonstrations, farm animals, hiking trails, country store. Noon to 5 p.m. weekends through October 31 500 South Center street, Westminster. Admission: $2 for adults, $1.50 for ages 6 to 18 and 60 and over, free for under 6. Details: 1 -848-7775.

Civil War Display. "The Civil War in Maryland" features artifacts and photographs pertaining to the role of Maryland soldiers in the Civil War. Through October at EJIicott City Railroad Museum, Main street and Maryland avenue, Ellicott City. Hours: 1 1 a.m. to 4 p.m., Wednesday through Saturday; noon to 5 p.m.

Sunday. Talk on occupation of Maryland by Dan Toomey, 2 Sunday. Admission: $1.25 for adults; 75 cents for children, 5 to free for under 5. Admission includes tour of station and sight-and-sound show. Details: Colonial Reenactment in Salisbury for visit by Maryland's 350th anniversary flotilla.

Simulated bombardment of the town by colonial militiamen, classic Eighteenth Century dances and music, historical vignettes and food. Tomorrow and Sunday. Hours: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. tomorrow; 10 a.m.

to 5 p.m. Sunday. Details: 1-749-0144. t- Easton Flyaway '84. Hot air balloons, wingwalking, military flyovers, antique aircraft and warbirds, and precision aerobatic flying and skydivers.

Noon tomorrow and 1 p.m. Sunday at Easton Airport on U.S. 50. Admission: $5 for adults; $3 for children. Details: 1 -822-3301 Fall Festival at Rose Hill Manor.

Crafts, flea market, apple butter making, entertainment, children's activities, free museum tours. Tomorrow and Sunday at Hose Hill Manor, 1611 North Market street, Frederick. Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow, noon to 5 p.m.

Sun-day. Free. Details: 1-694-1648. Fells Point Fun Festival, sponsored by the Society for the Preservation of Federal Hill and Fells Point. Live entertainment on three stages featuring sounds of rock end rod, jazz, big band and dixieland; ethnic food; arts ard crafts; photography exhibits, and a flea market Hours: 11 a.m.

to 7:30 p.m. Tomorrow and Sunday at the foot of Broadway. Free. Details: 675-6756. Hancock C0 Canal Lock 52 Day.

Interpretive programs focusing on canal, bluegrass concert, refreshments, walking tours. Canal Museum open. Tomorrow, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Take Interstate 70 to Hancock exit.

Lock 52 is on left of exit ramp. Details: 1-678-5463. Hootenanny at Harborplace. A three-day country fair with exhibits, demonstrations, and crafts related to country life, including sheep-shearing, cow-milking, dog obedience and bee beard demonstrations, fiddlers' contest and square dancing. Today through Sunday in the Amphitheatre.

Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. today; 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday.

Details; 332-4191 Did State House Quilt Show. Display of old and new quilts and demonstrations in the Reconstructed State House of 1676. Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday.

Old State House, St Marys City. Admission: $1 for adults; 50 cents for children 6 to 12. Details: 1-862-1634. Rosa on sella Memorial Mass featuring a performance of Rossini's "Stabat Mater" by cast that includes Metropolitan Opera stars, the Ponselle Competition semifinalists and a chorus made up of members of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and Baltimore Opera Company. Sunday, 4 p.m., at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen.

Free. Details: 486-4616. Schifferstadt OktoberfesL Celebration of German heritage featuring colonial crafts, art, food and German Tomorrow and Sunday at Schifferstadtx Baltimore Museum of Art, Art Museum drive, 396-6310. "The Photographs of Gordon Parks." Sunday through November 11. "Old Gods and Young Heroes: The Pearlman Collection of Maya Ceramics." Sunday through January 20.

"American Masters: The Thyssen-Bornemisza Collec-. tion." Through October 28. "Leon Bakst: Theatre Designs." Through Sunday. Maryland Historical Society, 201 West Monument street, 685-3750. "Maryland: Its Beginnings," an exhibit honoring the state's 350th anniversary.

Through Sunday. Walters Art Gallery, 600 North Charles street, 547- 2787. Admission fee except Wednesdays. "The Grand Prix de Rome: Paintings from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, 1797-1863." Through October 28. "Objects of Virtu: Precious Works of the Eighteenth Century." Through November 25.

"Turkish Delights, Fifteenth-Eighteenth Centuries." Through December 9. "Printed Books from Holland and Belgium." Through December 16. POPULAR MUSIC color Society. Through November 17. Galleries Towson State University, 321-2808.

"Fibers," works by seven female artists. Through Sunday. 1 University of Maryland Baltimore County, 455-2901 "Images of the Chesapeake, 1612-1984," prints, draw-4 ings, maps, photographs, artifacts and writings Through January 6. "The Best Little Whorehouse hi Texas." Country-western musical. Wednesdays to Sundays through December 31.

Limestone Musical Dinner Playhouse, Beaver Dam road, Cockeysville. Call 666-8080. "Brighton Beach Memoirs." Autobiographical comedy by Neil Simon. Through October 13. Morris A.

Mechanic Theatre, Hopkins Plaza. Call 625-1 400. "The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial." Drama by Herman Wouk. Opens tomorrow. Runs Fridays to Sundays through November 4.

Fells Point Theatre, 814 South Broadway. Call 732-2087. "Chapter Two." Neil Simon's autobiographical comedy. Today to Sunday. Petrucci's Main Street Dinner Theatre, 312 Main street, Laurel.

Call (direct from Balti-more) 792-7499. "Danton's Death." Political drama set during the French Revolution. Through October 28. Center Stage, 700 North Calvert street. Call 332-0033.

"Funny Girl." Musical bio of Fanny Brice. Fridays to Sundays through November 25. Colony 7 Dinner Theatre, Colony 7 Quality Inn, Baltimore-Washington parkway and Route 32. Call (direct from Baltimore) 792-7922. "Gypsy." Backstage musical based on Gypsy Rose Lee's memoirs.

Opens today. Runs Wednesdays to Sundays through December 14. Act Two Dinner Thea-tre, 8014 Route 40 East, Rosedale. Call 686-1 126. "Hello Dolly!" Musical about an irrepressible matchmaker.

Fridays to Sundays through December 31. Baltimore Actors' Theatre, Oregon Ridge Dinner Theatre. Call 667-8427. "Little Miss Dreamer." Musical drama about Bessie Smith. Fridays to Sundays through October 21.

Arena Players, 801 McCulloh street. Call 728-6500. "Mame." Musical based on "Auntie Mame." Opens today. Runs Fridays to Sundays through October 14. Theatre Theresa, Shrine of the Little Flower School Auditorium, 2800 Brendan avenue.

Call 256-3468 or 391-2251. "Man of La Mancha." Musical based on "Don Quixote." Wednesdays to Sundays through October 28. Towsontowne Musical Dinner Theatre, 7800 York road. Call 321-6595. "Mary Pickersgill's Starry Banner." Historical musical for ages 4-1 Tomorrow, 11 a.m.

and 1 p.m. (Rain date OUTDOORS Angelina's Restaurant, 7135 Harford road, 444-5545. Shows 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Today: Tim Fields and Melanie McElvany.

Tomorrow: Kathleen Shipley. Arthur's, 6518 Baltimore National pike. 744-3434. Today and tomorrow: Mad Hatters. Belvedere 13th Floor, Charles and Chase streets, 547-8220.

Today and tomorrow: Bob Fields Trio with Brenda Al-ford. Sunday: Pianists. Bertha's, 734 South Broadway, 327-0426. Today: Irish Tradition. Tomorrow: Allen Houser Quartet.

Cafe Park Plaza, 81 0 North Charles street, 727-7772. Today and tomorrow: Tim Eyermann and East Coast Offering. Sunday: Aieta Green and Mark Roumelis. Chesapeake Restaurant 1701 North Charles street, 837-771 1 Today and tomorrow: Paul Case. City Lights Restaurant and Cabaret Light Street Pavilion, Harborplace, 244-8811.

Today: John Myers and Marlee Lindon. Country Fare Inn, 100 Painters MiH road, 363-3131. Shows at 9 p.m. Today: Bob Hale. Tomorrow: Greg Martin.

Cross Keys Inn, Perry's Ordinary, 51 00 Falls road, 532-6900. Shows at 9:30 p.m. Today: Keith. 8 10, 1 0 East Cross street, 837-8559. Today and tomorrow: Junior Cline and the Recliners.

Sunday: Another Language with Exhibit A. E. J. Bugs Saloon, 702 South Broadway, 563-0961 Today and tomorrow: Fast Break. Sunday: Crash Davenport.

Full Moon Saloon, 170 Aliceanna street, 276-9636. Ascension Lutheran Church, 7601 York road, 825-1725. "Art in the Parlor," flokati weaving by Kate Martinson. Through October 30. Baltimore County Public Library, 320 York road, Tow-son, 296-8500.

"Points of View by Baltimore Photo Journalists," sports, news and features photographs by 1 1 area newspaper photographers. Reception from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Through November 4.

Baltimore Hebrew Congregation, 7401 Park Heights avenue, 764-1587. Oil paintings by F. Moss. Through October 29. Baltimore Museum of Industry, 1415 Key highway, 727-4808.

"Roll Out the Barrel: Brewing in Maryland 1634-1984." Through October 28. Breezewood Gardens and Museum, 3722 Hess road. Southeast Asian art. Open 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Sunday. Admission $2. Catoisville Community College, 800 South Rolling road, 455-4279. Works by award winners from the Maryland Crafts Council. Through today.

Chizuk Amuno Congregation, 6100 Stevenson road, 486-6400. Retrospective exhibit of 25 years of art in various media by Sayde Sklar. Through October 22. City Hall Courtyard Galleries, City Hall, 396-4721 "Revivals and Revisions," drawings, architectural renderings and models from Baltimore renovation projects. Through October 23.

Cloisters Children's Museum, Brooklandville, 823-2550. Fabric-covered free-form enclosures and tex- "Brisk Walking Is No Sweat" campaign, 30-minut walks in two downtown locations designed to help oU fice workers find time to exercise. 12:05 p.m. and 1:05 p.m. every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, througrf December 3, rain or shine, from Equitable Bank Centej Plaza, Charles and Lombard streets, and Gordon Plaztr at the University of Baltimore and State Office Coith plex.

Mount Royal avenue, Vt block west of Charles street. Details: 685-1 460. Irvine Natural Science Center, Stevenson. Sunday? 2:30 p.m.: Tea walk with naturalist to find wild plant' that can be used to brew herb tea. Fee: $1 for nonmerrhi bars.

Preregistration required. Details: 484-2413. 4 Mountain Club of Maryland. Tomorrow: Easy circuit hike in Pine Grove Furnace State Park, Pa. Details: 377 5625.

2 Sierra Club of Greater Baltimore. Sunday. Moderate difficult 5- to 6-mile hike in the Monocacy Natural Re sources Area west of Frederick. Meets 10 a.m. at Hut zler's Westview.

Details: 583-7285..

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