enquirer.com

News
Front Page
Local
Sports
-Bengals
-Reds
-Bearcats
-Xavier
Business
Health
Technology
Weather
Traffic
Back Issues
Photographs
AP Wire
-World
-Nation
-Sports
-Business
-Arts
-Health

Classifieds
Jobs
Autos
General
Obits
Homes

Freetime
Movies
Dining
Calendars
Weekend

Opinion
Columns
Borgman

GoCinci
HelpDesk
Feedback
Circulation
Subscribe
Phone #'s
Search

E N Q U I R E R   L O C A L   N E W S   C O V E R A G E
Wednesday, October 27, 1999

GET TO IT


A guide to help make your day

GOING OUT
        • Today at Taft Theatre: It's Widespread Panic, 8 p.m. $21. 562-4949.

        • Music at the Mount: With Jan Diehl, Paul Ellis and Phil Blank, 8 p.m. today, College of Mount St. Joseph Recital Hall, Delhi Township. 244-4863.

        • Blue Wisp Big Band: Today at the Blue Wisp Jazz Club, downtown. Music starts at 9:30 p.m. 721-9801.

        • Rally in the Alley: There's food and music by Centaur and the Dave Wolfenberger Band, 5:30 p.m. today in the Backstage District on Walnut Street, across from Aronoff Center. 763-5686.

STAYING IN
        • TV picks: Harrison Ford narrates Jane Goodall: Reason for Hope, a biography of the scientist and environmentalist (8 p.m., Channels 48, 54, 16).

        • TV Critic John Kiesewetter also says Janine Turner has a new sexy look as a store owner who falls in love with a TV reporter (Paudge Behan) in Venice on Barbara Taylor Bradford's A Secret Affair (9 p.m., Channels 12, 7).

        • Bonus pick: American Movie Classics promises live coverage of Christie's sale of Marilyn Monroe memorabilia today (7-9 p.m.)

WHAT'S IN STORES TODAY
        • Disc picks: The week's big boomer CD, says music critic Larry Nager, is the long-anticipated reunion of David Crosby, Steve Stills, Graham Nash and Neil Young on Looking Forward (Reprise; $17.98 CD, $11.98 cassette.

        • Bush front man Gavin Rossdale has two reasons to celebrate this week — he turns 32 Saturday and his band is releasing The Science of Things (Interscope; $17.98 CD; $11.98 cassette).

        • Stone Temple Pilots and its chronically substance-abused lead singer Scott Weiland make some news outside the police reports this week, releasing their fourth album, No. 4 (Atlantic; $17.98 CD, $10.98 cassette.

        Only God Could Judge Me (Priority/No Limit; $17.98 CD, $11.98 cassette) is the latest from New Orleans rap kingpin Master P.

        • LeAnn Rimes goes the full Patsy on LeAnn Rimes (Curb; $17.98 CD, $10.98 cassette), covering such Cline classics as “Crazy” and “I Fall to Pieces,” along with country standards “Lovesick Blues” and “Me and Bobby McGee” and her new hit, “Big Deal.”

        • Alan Jackson's tribute to George Jones on the recent CMA awards show was heartfelt, as shown by his new CD of country classics, Under the Influence (Arista Nashville; $17.98 CD, $11.98 cassette).

PLANNING AHEAD
        • A day away: Baseball Hall-of-Famer Lou Brock signs autographs at the West Chester Shell Service Station (9370 Union Centre Blvd.), 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Thursday.

        • 48 hours out: Enquirer sports columnist Paul Daugherty talks about his latest book Fair Game: An Insider's Look at the World of Sports in Cincinnati, noon Friday, Main Library, downtown. 369-6900.

        • 72 hours 'til Saturday: Roots rockers Bela Fleck and the Flecktones hit Taft Theatre, downtown. Music at 8 p.m. $17.50. 562-4949.

        • Also Saturday: Robert Pinsky, poet laureate of the United States, delivers the 13th annual Niehoff Lecture at the Mercantile Library, downtown. Lecture follows 7 p.m. dinner. Reservations deadline: noon today. $125 for library members; $150 for others. 621-0717.

        Get To It appears daily. Send items to nberlier@enquirer.com

       



Legislator seeks to end '2 Percent Club'
Teens will live every musician's dream
Obesity epidemic is killing thousands
Tip for trimming down
Just how much are you eating?
Health info on the Web needs examination
Some recommended health-related Web sites
Avondale wants law to keep out undesirables
Miss America visiting Over-the-Rhine
Police targeting Fort Washington Way
Reading schools try to dispel furor
Routine traffic stop results in stolen patrol car, chase
School levy backers target undecided voters
Children Services asks for support
Levy assists 10,000 disabled
Opponents take shots at Patton
Taft stumps for local school levies
Getting the right sound
Famous engraving of city in new printing
- GET TO IT
Starting the millennium with a wedding? Tell us about it
Workshops spell out Social Security issues
14-year-old faces adult murder charge
Boone sophomores get to test knowledge
Card-game slaying goes to grand jury
Decision on uniforms given to schools, parents
Ex-Boone official gets year in jail, lecture on theft
Lakota freshmen schools up to voters
Liberty asks for post office
Ludlow official in court over back taxes
Miami breaks ground on memorial to activists
Neighbors, city may have cleared hurdle for housing complex
Ohio low on school breakfasts
Relative keeps fight alive for renamed bridge
School kids operate bank branch
Sheriffs irate over drug allegation
Study: Payroll tax cut may help Covington
Suspect in crash can play football
TRISTATE DIGEST
Union Twp. residents asking for new name
Warren-Cincinnati vans to stop
Wyoming seeks funds money for fields
Yucky water gives insight


 
Search | Questions/help | News tips | Letters to the editors
Web advertising | Place a classified | Subscribe | Circulation

Copyright 1995-2000. The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper.
Use of this site signifies agreement to terms of service updated 4/5/2000.