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The Journal Herald from Dayton, Ohio • 26

Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
26
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

26' JOURNAL HERALD Moy 15, 1980 The Spring Planting Festival can you dig it? Art and exhibits ART EXHIBITS: The exhibition Brooke Alexander A Decade of Print Publishing 1968-1977 'will be on display in the Dayton Art Institute's Special Exhibitions Gallery through May Americans In Class, an exhibition of 50 glass objects by a variety of American contemporary artists, will be on display in the Special Exhibitions Gallery through May 25. SPRING ART EXHIBIT: Miamisburg Art Gallery presents Its spring exhibit an art Instructor for the Kettering Schools, ahowlng her paintings and drawings through May 25. She will demonstrate during the exhibit. Open every day except Monday, 1 to 5 p.m. Nightclubs ANNARINO'S SUPPER CLUB: Three's Company, Monday through Saturday, 8 p.m.

to closing, 2826 N. Dixie Drive. AMY'S NOWHERE LOUNGE: Nick Powers, 7 p.m. Friday and 8 p.m. Saturday, 2866 S.

Dixie Drive. Weekend Calendar 1 The FILM of the month series, sponsored by the Dayton and Montgomery County Public Library system, will continue during the month of May. The May feature-length film will be Gulliver's Travels. The film will be shown at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Wilmlngton-Stroop Branch Library, 3980 Wilmington Pike.

The movie Is free. Children of all ages will be able to meet a variety of interesting animals from the Jo-Don Farms animal exhibit and petting zoo from Franksville, at Towne Mall through Sunday. Over 20 species of birds and beasts will be a part of this PETTING ZOO AND ANIMAL ENTOURAGE. The mall hours are daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.

and Sunday noon to 5 p.m. A SO-cent fee will be charged to enter the petting zoo. A 1921 steam locomotive and tender brings to 43 the number of historical exhibits available to visitors taking the free tours of CARILLON PARK. The park is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.

and 1 to 8:30 p.m. Sundays. It is closed on Monday except when Monday Is a holiday. Carillon and celestron musical programs are presented each Sunday from 7 to 8 p.m. Carillon Park is located at Patterson and.

Carillon boulevards. Theater Troy Civic Theatre: THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER, tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday, 8 p.m. The Barn In the Park across from Hobart Arena In For Information and reservations call 1-335-1933. Yellow Springs Center Stage: HOME, tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday, 8:30 p.m., Yellow Springs Center Stage, 136 Dayton St Reservations by calling 1-767-2481. Fantasy Express Children's Theatre: AKUGORO AND THE TINY CREATURES, Saturday and Sunday, and May 24 and 25, 1 and 3 p.m.

Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays, lower level of Memorial Hall, 125 E. First St. For reservations and Information call 226-0535. jh v-" it It This Sunday the Caesar'! Creek Pioneer Village will celebrate Its annual Spring Planting Festival from 10 a.m.

to 6 p.m. The festival will be held on the village green, close to the log cabins and other buildings that have been restored by members of the village. Many of the structures were rescued from the area that was flooded by the U.S. Corps of Engineers In creating Caesar's Creek Lake. The festival will host more than 80 craftsmen demonstrating traditional skills, Including spinning, wood carving, churning, blacksmlthlng and the making of dulcimers and "apple-head" dolls.

Many of the craftsmen will offer items for sale. The festival also features continuous entertainment, Including square dancers, fiddlers and banjo players. Snacks and refreshments will be available, ranging from homemade bread with fresh-churned butter to full dinners of ham and beans and cornbread. To get to Pioneer Village, take 1-71 to exit 45 (Ohio 73), turn toward Waynes-ville and follow the signs. Admission is $3 per carload.

All proceeds will be used to preserve and restore the log cabin heritage of Caesar's Creek valley. Special events The nation's largest gathering of Appalachian craftspersons and musicians will be held at the Cincinnati Convention Center through Sunday. Folk and bluegrass music continues through the afternoon and evening until 10:30 p.m. More than 90 exhibitors will display and sell Appalachian crafts, including toys, chairs, rugs and pottery. A dozen musical groups from Georgia to Ohio also will take part.

Proceeds from the $2 door donation for adults and $1 for children are distributed by the Appalachian Community Development Association through grants to foster retention of the nation's Appalachian heritage. You can stock up on garden seedlings and flowers at a BENEFIT PLANT SALE at Carriage Hill Farm tomorrow and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The farm also will present a QUILT SHOW Saturday. Carriage Hill Farm is on Shull Road between Ohio 201 and Belief on-taine Road.

Before you lose yourself In the great outdoors, it's good to know you won't get lost there. You can learn what you Qeed to know when the Dayton-Montgomery County Park District presents PREPARE TO BACKPACK at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Cox Arboretum, 6733 Springboro Pike. You can put that knowledge to use when the park dls- i VV 4 4 i KNOLLWOOD TAVERN: Live music, Saturday night, 9 p.m. till 2 a.m., featuring Kenny Justice and his Country Travelers; Sunday night, Jam session, 3833 Dayton-Xenla Road.

MURPHY'S LAW: Live entertainment by Mie Murphy, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, 5539 Far Hills Ave. SHE: Rosie, Thursday, Rosle and Thunderaxe, Friday and Saturday, Forest Park Plaza. STOUFFER'S: Fantasia appearing in the Grogshop through May 25, Stopfer's Fifth and Jefferson streets. SUTTMILLERS: Jocelyn at One More Time through Saturday, Thursday 8:30 and 10:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday 8:30, 10:30 p.m. and 12:30 a.m.

THE MUSIC MAN: Just 'N Tyme, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday 9 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Monday, Hills and Dales Shopping Center. VENUS LOUNGE: Iron Mountain' Country, Thursday through Saturday and Tommy Wills Saturday only. 7031 N.Dixie Drive.

WHITE SANDS NITE CLUB: Fuzz, Monday, Friday and Saturday, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m., 5955 N. Dixie Drive. this month. Oil paintings and watercol-ors by area artists, and some pen and Ink drawings will be featured.The Gallery Is located at 54 S.

Main Miamisburg; hours 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. WATERCOLOR EXHIBIT: Sandy Wall will exhibit watercolors at The Designerie, 2400 Far Hills through May 31. ART EXHIBIT: Fiber by Jeanne Braen and blown glass by Nick Delmatto and Tim Jerman are on exhibit at Fifth Street Gajlery, 416 E. Fifth Sunday through May 30.

Gallery hours are noon to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. PHOTOGRAPHS: Dayton and Vicinities by George Merva, Roesch Library Gallery, University of Dayton, through June 4. ART EXHIBIT: The Ohio Watercolor Society exhibition, a traveling exhibit, will be on display at the Middletown Fine Arts Center, 130 N.

Verity Parkway, through May 24. ART EXHIBIT: The Dayton Society of Painters and Sculptors, 48 High Street Gallery will have Virginia Monschke, Cast of Akugoro and the Tiny Creatures' 's play being presented by Fantasy Express STOATS trict holds an overnight BACKPACKING HIKE at 1 p.m. Saturday, May 24, until noon of the following day. Reservations are required for these Green Mansion programs. To make them, call 278-8231.

The Mental Health Association's' MILE OF QUARTERS drive takes place Saturday at the Dayton, Salem and Upper Valley malls. Anyone contributing $18.73, or six feet In quarters, will receive a special T-shirt. Would you like to improve your photographic ability? A NATURE' PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at Sinclair Park, corner of Shoup Mill Road and Riverside Drive. This workshop, sponsored by the Montgomery County Parks, Recreation and Maintenance Services Department, is free.

Some Like It Hot will be the premiere movie of a new film series scheduled at the library beginning today. The new FILM SERIES, entitled "An Evening Out," will offer feature-length films every Thursday at 7 p.m. for five weeks in the auditorium of the Main Library, 215 E. Third St. All films scheduled for this series will end by 9:05 p.m.

Admission to all films in this series is free. The City of Kettering Parks and Recreation Division will host its first annual FRISBEE INVITATIONAL DAY at noon Saturday at the Kettering Recreation Center, 2900 Glengarry Drive. The competition will take place on the ball diamond behind the Kettering Ice Arena. Participants can register at noon. There is an entry fee of $1.

The YWCA annual SIDEWALK SALE will be held at the Central YWCA, corner of Third and Wilkinson streets, from 8:30 a.m. to 1 today. Proceeds benefit the local and world-wide program of the YWCA. Wright State University Artist Series: BREAD AND CHOCOLATE, tomorrow, 7 and 9 p.m., Sunday, 8 p.m., Room 112, Oelman Hall, on the WSU main campus. Tickets $1 at the door.

For more Information call 873-2329. Dayton Repertory Theatre: THE CLASS MENAGERIE, Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m., The Dayton Playhouse, 1728 E. Third St For reservations and information call 222-7000. Dayton Theatre Guild: THE OLDEST LIVING GRADUATE, tomorrow 8:30, Saturday 5 and 9 p.m. and Sunday 7:30 p.m., 2330 Salem Ave.

For Information and reservations call 278-5993. terry Jogging cut-offs woven knits boys-girls to $2 it This ad good thru May 18, '60 MISTAKES UNLIMITED quality children's factory outlet TOWN COUNTRY (rear) Kettering, Ohio M-F10-8 Sat 10-6; Sun. FRANKLIN SQUARE 1-75 eiK 38 Rle. 73 M-Sat 10-5 Sun. 12-S C2 I- i 7 ,3 prions I) sporting goods In1 Friday', familiarity Still breeds lontempt Once I was interviewing the star of a short-lived little travesty called Midnight Madness, which was an exjremely poor copy of Animal House.

The star was being accompanied on the hustings by a particularly obnoxious studio hack, and when I questioned the star about the two films' similarities, his polyestered handler stepped in and sneered "Well, everyone knows there's only three stories anyway." What a twit, I thought then, but after sitting through Friday the 13th, I rethought my position. Hell, maybe the manicured moron was being generous. For 1980 graduating class of the Norman Bates School of Hotel Management and Spooky Film Making, there seem to be only ONE lousy story. i Stop me if you've heard this before, but The Story Is i'Moween, obviously, which has been done so many times In the last two years It's become public domain, SIDEWALK SALE FAR HILLS STORE ONLY May 8, 9, 10 SPORTS MERCHANDISf AT PRICES YOU WON'T SEtlCVC. Wt WANT THESE ITEMS OUT Of OUR STOCK AND TO DO THAT WE'VE MADE THESE DRASTIC REDUCTIONS.

In the film, Adrienne King is ail-American Alice, who should have taken the day off le Birth or a Nation or Row Row Row Your Boat At least In the majority of the treachery tripe that's followed in wake the producers have changed the elements around a bit and rearranged the faces. But the makers of Friday the 13th can't even be bothered with minor redecorating. They swipe the title Implication, characters, scenes, even camera placements, Indiscriminately and unashamededly. In Hollywood, unorlginallty In the '4 Terry Lawson cofilrm SHOES REO. IALI VINYl All RUBIER CIEATED SHOES WHITE OR HACK SIZES YOUTH IO-1 I I2 IJ-I 3-5-6-7-8 8.M AM SAUCONY LEATHER NYION SASEIAU SHOES WHITE OR HACK STYIES 7 9-11 H-12-13 11.98 24.98 .88 pr.

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The rest Is up to you, because I don't want to spoil anything. The Halloween formula is followed to a tee, with each cutle getting bloodied one by one In the most awful ways. And true to form, the victims almost always have stripped down to jockey shorts or bra and panties first Exploitation? Hardly. I think that's some real Freudian comment on the link between sex and violence, even if the scriptwriter had to Insert a game of Strip Monopoly at one point to set up a kill. It's all too heavy for me, but I know no one would do a thing like that for the sheer tiUllation of It.

The ending adds old-fashioned Insult to Injury by ripping off Brian DiPalma't Carrte as well as Halloween, but by the time we've arrived there we're so bloody bored we're counting the film sprockets. The only thing that's missing is for Steve to return to camp and say "Geez, how are we going to get ready for the camp opening next week with all this blood all over?" But he doesn't; we Just get one of those promises for a sequel that we've come to expect from these putrid potboilers. Saturday the UlHI Nah. How about Bastille Day! No, wait, I've got It February 29th. Now, THAT'S a scary day.

Friday Tbt 13th is playing the Beaver Valley, Cinema South and Kon-Tlkl theaters. It Is rated R. with nudity, profanity and violence. pursuit of profit Is not only no vice, It's grounds for canonization if the bucks follow. TO BE FAIR, there Is one stab at seml-originallty hen.

The setting for all the ensuing mayhem Is a sum-mar ramp. I can only name maybe three films In the lasj year set at a summer camp. The oo-we-oo starts early on when the pretty little catpp Cock-to-be arrives smlley-faced at local diner asking for directions to Camp Crystal Lake. All the paeons turn as one and give her one of those portentous pures Just rife with meaning, but the dumb buany doesn't get the hint She's offed before she ever arrjves to meet all the other cute teen-sgers who will tooti be la barrels and barrels of trouble. AL'the camp, the usual array of stereotypes abound.

There's Ned the Joker, Jack the macho man, Brrtida the sexpot. Bill the good guy and Marcle the nobody. But the minute Alice Is seen on screen, with hrr. all-American scrubbed and rubbed good looks, we knflw she's destined to be the last one alive, so we mentally murder all the others even before the maniac grti to them. -Presiding over all these cutles la Steve, the head hone Bo, one of those guys who barks orders and still has the love and respect of his charges and carries a backpack like It's grown permanently to his back.

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Pages Available:
695,853
Years Available:
1940-1986