The record, 30 juin 1983, Supplément 1
June 30 I - s:.;; > ¦ -• v.v .?>. 2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, JUNE 30.1983 Ice Water and limousines for Festival’s jazz greats MONTREAL (CP) — There’ll be soft lighting for Ella Fitzgerald's sensitive eyes, ice water for Sarah Vaughan’s throat, limousine service for Oscar Peterson.That’s what they asked for and that’s what they’ll get when they arrive here and flash their wares at the fourth annual Montreal In ternational Jazz Festival which begins Friday.During the following 10 days, this city will be blessed with the sounds of 400 of the best jazz musicians in the world.It’s fine-tuning time for the festival, the most sumptuous jazz fest ever catered in Canada.There’ll be big bands and small groups, Dixieland and hurtin’ down-home blues, bongos and Latin jazz, jazz-rock and experimental jazz that doesn’t sound like jazz at all.The big names are Vaughan, Fitzgerald, Peterson, Vic Vogel, Ray Charles, Stan Getz, Miles Davis and the Modern Jazz Quartet.But there are many more who will perform on 10 different stages where a total of 200 shows will be put on, 60 of them free of charge.The star-studded lineup attests to the first-rate reputation the Montreal festival has already earned in its short history.But for Alain Simard and Andre Menard, the two promo- ters who head the non-profit organization that puts it all together, it hasn’t always been easy.For one thing, they say it couldn’t have happened just a few years ago, when Quebec nationalism was such that only music by and about the Québécois could draw Quebecers.And then there’s that star-studded lineup.“I tried to book Ella or Sarah for the first three festivals but always failed,” admits Simard.“Either they weren’t available or wanted too much money.” FIERCE COMPETITION Moreover, competition for the big names is fierce, especially from European festivals.“It seems every town in the south of France has a jazz festival these days,” Menard complains.Then there’s the sheer logistics of the festival, most of which is handled by production coordinator Charles Joron.He makes sure everything — including the artists — is in place for the concerts.And he makes sure the stars are served the specific food and drink they ask for in their contracts.Fortunately, Joron says, very few jazzmen “are like the rock group that once insisted that they be provided with two pounds of Smarties — with all the reds removed.” All the same, jazzmen can be tricky.Festival organizers still shudder at the memory of Ray Charles refusing to let them amplify his piano or the horn section of his band last year.“He said he hated microphones,” recalls Menard.“He believed his sound was better without them in the good old days.“We miked him anyway.We had no choice.But he was furious.” But not too furious, happily, to accept the Montreal invitation to come back this year.‘You can never grow up and be in the Kingston Trio’ NEW YORK(AP) —The Kingston Trio, which recently played Carnegie Hall, was formed in the spring of 1957 and has been celebrating its 25th anniversary for the last year.But there hasn’t exactly been a Kingston Trio for most of those years.Only one of the original members, Bob Shane, silver-haired at 49, is left.The others are Roger Gambill, 41, w ho has been singing with Shane for 11 years, and George Grove, 35, who as a boy listened to Kingston Trio records so much that his father admonished him: “After all.you can never grow up and be in the Kingston Trio.” In 1957, the Kingston Trio was Shane, Nick Reynolds and Dave Guard — college students who sang in coffee houses around San Francisco.They were discovered by a publicist in Palo Alto, Calif., and signed to a contract written on a napkin.Their biggest hit came the following year with Tom Dooley, only their second release.Other songs they made famous were The Tijuana Jail, M.T.A., A Worried Man and Scotch and Soda.The trio tours 35 weeks a year and “the economy dictates where we play,” Grove said.When they first regrouped, they spent three months in the Ohio Valley and the rest in the West.Now, they’re expanding the territory.Their Carnegie Hall appearance was the trio’s first in 21 years.What about the inevitable comparisons?’ “A lot of people play our old records before coming to hear us,” Shane said.“Basically, all we’ve done with the old material is uptempo it.Everybody has learned to live faster lives.We moved up the pace.“George has a whisky baritone that people remember,” he said.“Roger has a high tenor voice.I fill in on lead: harmony’s too hard.Whatever it is.it works.“We’re nostalgic in the fact about 70 per cent of the tunes in the show are old.In those days we probably did more ballads.Not that I don’t like them.This show is a little faster-paced than the old show was, and a little looser.“The main difference to me is personalities.In those days we weren’t as friendly toward each other all the time as we are in this group.” SOLD BY MAIL In 1981, a friend of Shane’s, Nick Heyl, formed a record company, Xerex, in Norwich, Vt.to record the trio.He put out 25 Years Nonstop, old hits newly sung, and Looking for the Sunshine.They’re sold by mail and at concerts.Dave Guard left in 1961 and was replaced for six years by John Stewart.In 1967, Shane and Stewart started solo careers and Nick Reynolds started farming.“I was doing a solo about nine months in 1968,” Shane recalled.“I didn’t like it.I realized I enjoyed singing with a group.Then I started the New Kingston Trio with a couple of other fellows.We made one single record for Capitol.It was horrible.I don't remember what it is.” Olüinü mo NO.TITLE 1.Flashdance 2.Electric Avenue 3.Time 4.Reach Out 5.Don’t Let It End 6.Overkill 7.Let’s Dance 8.Our House 9.Affair Of The Heart 10.Every Breath You Take 11.Little Red Corvette 12.Beat It 13.I’m Still Standing 14.Straight From The Heart 15.The Woman In You 16.Safety Dance 17.We Two 18.Always Something There 19.Too Shy 20.Lean On Me 21.Ship To Shore 22.Puttin’ On The Ritz 23.Family Man 24.Total Eclipse Of The Heart 25.Baby Jane 26.Making It Work 27.My Love 28.Wanna Be Starting Something 29.White Wedding 30.Wishing 31.She Works Hard 32.China Girl 33.Never Gonna Let You Go 34.Hot Girls In Love 35.Fascination 36.Is There Something I Should Know 37.Change 38.Come Dancing 40.Guilty LAST WEEKS ARTIST WEEK ON Irene Cara 1 9 Eddy Grant 2 11 Culture Club 4 9 Narada Michael Walden 7 6 Styx 5 8 Men at Work 3 13 David Bowie 6 15 Madness 11 7 Rick Springfield 9 9 Police 15 5 Prince 8 14 Michael Jackson 10 15 Elton John 16 7 Bryan Adams 14 10 Bee Gees 23 6 Men at Work 12 14 Little River Band 25 5 Naked Eyes 13 12 Kajagoogoo 28 5 Chilliwack 21 7 Chris de Burgh 18 8 Taco 20 11 Hall & Oates 24 6 Bonnie Tyler 26 6 Rod Stewart 29 4 Doug & the Slugs 27 6 - Lionel Ritchie 17 15 Michael Jackson 30 4 Billy Idol 32 4 Flock of Seagulls 33 3 Donna Summer 34 3 David Bowie 36 3 Sergio Mendes 37 3 Loverboy 38 2 Human League 40 2 Duran-Duran 39 2 Tears for Fears PL I The Kinks PL 1 Lime PL I Midler’s divine madness keeps packing them in TORONTO (CP) — Midway through her Monday night concert at Kingswood Music Theatre, Bette Midler.the Divine Miss M.told an appreciative audience she was going to do her impersonation of Shelley Winters in the film The Poseidon Adventure.She lay stomach down across a high pink stool, made some swimming motions, and then went limp, signifying the fatal heart attack suffered by the Winters character during a desperate underwater swim.That bit, while neither especially clever nor knee-slappingly funny, got its laugh from an audience already well primed by Midler’s Divine Madness.And it provided for a big followup, namely Midler’s apparent astonishment on regaining her upright stance to find that her billowy, peach-colored skirt had come loose, leaving the singer-comedienne standing in a skimpy, matching slip.“Oh, it’s off now, so what the —,” she tossed off to delighted response.Such accidents suitably summed up the whole tone of Midler’s 2V2-hour performance: funny, bawdy, unpredictable — and above all, impeccably orchestrated.SCREAMED FOR MORE It had the audience screaming for more, so much so that by 11 p m., Midler had exhausted her planned encore material.She returned once again to say that, while she didn’t have anything more to sing, she wanted the crowd to know just how much she enjoyed them, inasmuch as she’d heard that Toronto audiences were so-o-o-o- sophisticated.Her ability to mesmerize the crowd is a credit to the 36-year-old entertainer’s professionalism.She’s neither a regular on the pop charts nor a massive album-seller.By usual recording standards, she’s not exactly prolific — aside from the soundtrack to the film The Rose, for which her rcting brought her an Academy Award nomination, she has not had a studio album in 3V2 years.And yet Midler and her legendary outrageousness packed so much magnetism that the evening’s rain and drizzle couldn’t dissuade even the several hundred fans in the lawn area behind the packed canvas-covered pavilion of the new Kingswood theatre, at Canada’s Wonderland about 30 kilometres northeast of Toronto.“I wish I could go out there and dry every one of you off,” Midler told the lawn patrons.“I wouldn’t sit through that to see anybody — well, maybe Jesus.” EARNS ADULATION The adulation from the audience was well-earned.Midler, backed by three female singers billed as The Harlettes and an exceptional six-piece band, alternated with schizophrenic ease from funk and rock to gospel and swing.When she delivered the occasional ballad, it was with the proverbial voice of an angel.Paradoxically, her stage patter, the standup comedy bits, were as salty as anything ever heard along a waterfront.A healthy portion of the show had Miss M delivering one off-color joke after another with machine-gun rapidity — material designed to assault the finest-tuned sensibilities but apparently offending none. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY.JUNE 30, 1983-3 A war that never was — frightening as any truth Kaleidoscope By RICHARD LONEY The Burning Mountain by Alfred Coppel (ACADEMIC PRESS): $21.95, 438 pp.Each year, as the gruesome anniversary of Hiroshima comes around (August 6,1945), the military argument about the atomic bomb being used is replayed.Had the two Japanese cities not been almost annihilated, so the debate goes, the Pacific war would have honed in on the Japanese islands, resulting in the most bloody and suicidal fighting of the South Pacific conflict.The horrible lessons of Tarawa, Iwo Jima and Okinawa would have been but prelude to the savage defence of Kyushu and Honshu, the southern and central areas respectively of the Japanese archipelago.American writer Alfred Coppel has fictionalized just such a scenario with The Burning Moun- tain.a fully documented, and painstakingly researched account of Operation Olympic to take the southernmost island Kyushu, and Operation Coronet, to take the Kanto Plain, at the edge of which lies Tokyo itself.Basing his might-have-been novel on the historical documents of the U S.armed forces, which had been in the advanced planning stages until August 6th made them obsolete, Coppel tells a very convincing and chillingly authenticated tale of the Invasion of Japan.Even the documentation regarding Japan’s plan to repel the invading American forces, called Ketsu-go 3 and 6.is utilized in The Burning Mountain.With a technique that recalls Cornelius Ryan's brilliant pair of military recreations, The Longest Day and A Bridge Too Far.Coppel unfolds the war account from two perspectives—both the Japenese defenders and the American invaders are represented by a wide selection of individuals, each with his own viewpoint on the war.The naval task force, air support fliers, marines on the beach-heads, paratroopers, signal men, intelligence and data gatherers, are all represented by characters that Coppel brings to life in his book that is as interesting on the narrative level as it is on an historical-novel basis with the masses of facts and figures that would have been reality had the American invasion been put into motion.From the J apanese side of the battle Coppel presents equiva lents of doughboys digging in un der a merciless naval barrage on the half dozen or more beach Ian ding areas; kamikaze pilots are profiled, and their strange cultu ral heritage explained, as well as their naval counterparts in cigarshaped mini-submarines that rammed into destroyers in the same fashion as they had during the strategic battle of Midway; an attempt is also made to probe the minds of the samurai and to account for the Japanese race's attitudes toward the cowardly act of surrender and the fanatical loyalty to the Emperor which would have obtained during any assault on the homeland.Coppel’s alternate history is brutally honest and accurate, as this former fighter pilot in the U S Air Force has created a novel that ranks with The Caine Mutiny and The Naked and The Dead.In spite of being based on a battle plan that came very close to becoming the nightmare of combat and suicidal charges that Coppel depicts here so vividly, it is hard to keep in mind that The Burning Mountain is fiction about a war that never was.‘Not a coconut, nor a monkey’ — Shaw Festival NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, Ont.(CP) — One of George Bernard Shaw’s strangest plays has its Canadian professional premiere next week at the Shaw Festival, adding interest to an already promising season."The play is not a coconut, nor I a monkey,” Shaw said in defence of The Simpleton of the Unexpected Isles, a play about mixed-blood and open marriages written in an age long before those ideas were accepted.It tells the story of six people, representing the cultures of the West and the Far East, who experiment with eugenics, the science of breeding.But instead of producing offspring combining the finest traits of both worlds, they produce the worst.Shaw was 79 when he wrote it in 1935, and many thought The Simpleton showed signs of his senility as a playwright.And though he wrote the play, he confessed he did not know how it should be staged.The opening scene has a man blow his head off, not an easy stage direction to follow.Denise Coffey, who last season brought to the festival a new production of Pygmalion, in which an actor playing G.B.S.himself wandered in and out of the scenes, has undertaken to stage The Simpleton in the festival’s Court House Theatre, opening June 30.The cast includes Douglas Rain, Frances Hyland, Richard Farrell, Tom Wood, Nora McLellan and Herb Foster.WORLD TOTTERING Shaw saw the world tottering towards world War and perhaps its own extinction on Judgment Day.With so much talk now of world nuclear holocaust, the festival believes the time is ripe to bring The Simpleton out of the archives.A Polish critic called it The Unexpected Failure of The Aged Simpleton.and the New York Herald-Tribune said of Shaw: "Like a dignified monkey, he climbs a tree and pelts us with edifying coconuts.” The Simpleton is one of three Shaw plays opening next week.O’Flaherty, V.C., a one-act play about a British Army private who returns to his home in Ireland as a war hero in 1915 to face so much verbal gunfire he wishes he was back at the front, becomes the festival’s lunchtime theatre offering.It stars Dan Lett as O’Flaherty, with Ma rion Gilsenan, Richard Farrell and Mary Ellen Macquire, directed by Paul Reynolds.‘Stagnation’ the problem says Charles EDMONTON (CP) — Ray Charles, at 52 one of the few musicians who qualify for living-legend status, has a lament for the current generation of pop musicians."The problem with so many young players today is a kind of stagnation,” said Charles, who will be on stage at Edmonton’s Jubilee Auditorium on Saturday night."When I was a kid we could go down to the union hall and, you know, get your behind kicked by some quality musicians, and learn, really sit down next to them and learn.“Nowadays they have to pay $35 to see the Rolling Stones or something.They're just not allowed to let their creativity come forth.It’s a shame, because there is talent out there.” In a telephone interview from Los Angeles, Charles, who has spent 35 years in the music business, said the outlook for popular music will improve only when lawyers and accountants are weeded out of the record industry.“You've got all these businessmen running the labels that don’t have a feel for music at all." he said.“It’s one thing not to be able to play, but these guys can’t even keep time.“A lot of them got burned in the disco thing and now they're running scared.They’re just interested in selling copy music, no original nothing.They want to make their money right now.“They might blame everything on video games, but that’s just BS.I have to say, with all due respect, that in today’s market I doubt if 1 would have ever made it.” Charles said he surprised a lot of people with his latest release: I Wish You Were Here, a country album complete with Nashville sidemen and no-nonsense, acoustic-based guitar picking.Theatre Royal BARKERVILLE, B.C.(CP) — This historic gold town, surrounded by the mountains of the Cariboo range in south-central B.C., is alive with the sound of music from Theatre Royal’s command performance.The colorful spectacle of songs, satire and solos by a cast of about 16 played to a packed house of 300 on the weekend following official opening remarks by local and provincial dignitaries.The two summer productions take audiences back in time to Barkerville in the mid-lSOOs, when many accomplished performers who originally came for gold became part of the amateur drama club in the city of 5.000 miners and merchants.The hip-roofed old theatre with its solid, padded benches stretching the width of the building has remained a community source of pride.The Legend of Fanny Bendixon is a fast-moving musical telling the life story of a Barkerville character who belongs in the galaxy of B.C.'s history.But Fanny is largely forgotten by historians and virtually unknown to the 200,000 tourists who annually visit her town, located 90 kilometres east of Quesnel.Bendixon, played by Linda Flitton-Kappus, is a fierce, independent spirit in a man’s world who arrives in San Francisco from Paris with a boatload of undesirables.goes back to the 1850s She becomes mistress of a leading underworld character prior to marrying gentle Louis Bendixon in a moving wedding scene set to softly-strumming guitars.The marriage fails and Fanny heads north to the Cariboo, trekking in midwinter to Barkerville from Antler Creek She becomes a successful proprietress of a string of saloons and one of the main forces in rebuilding the town after a fire in September.1868, wiped it out.From 1880 to 1898 she operated Mme.Bendixon's saloon and boarding house which still stands.A second production.Dr.Craig’s Music Hall, is family entertainment bringing music, comedy and dance from Theatre Royal’s early years—1865 to 1875 —to the stage today.The music of Stephen Foster, John Soussa and Gilbert and Sullivan was commonly heard throughout the Cariboo.As well as modified dancing by hurdy-gurdy saloon girls, the banjo playing of Craig Wood and sing-a-long, handclapping selections, a short comic opera provides lots of laughs.About 40,000 visitors are expected to see the shows through the summer.J ^ smokd Its the telephone.Use it to report anybody or anything that might start a fire.?» 5Ü! A f'ublu 5, m/r of Thu Nruipmprr (y Thf AJurttiiMg Cewtnl Admission $4.50 Students 14-20 $300 MAKS Students 14-20 $3.00 Admission $4.50 Ukt It’i really, totally, the most fun a couple of todies emit have.J You know?Cinéma CAPITOL 59 King est SBS-CTITI (with card) Mef*l Wash 7 M.tun 13# Hi*ht 7 36 Spring Wtak « IP Ian 3:1#.Night t lO v.É * • 4 UlU ;’ .lam sencftnq toeing wifa me.Sho is suffering from this disease.-from AW p$.It means a Jot Help Mary help her dad HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE has no known cure .yet! HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE is a hereditary brain disease .HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE affects both men and women .HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE causes slow mental and physical deterioration and eventual death .HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE usually strikes in mid-life often after children, like MARY have been born.This is Mary's story.She faces a 50% chance of inheriting HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE from her Dad Please help Ralph Walker and The Huntington Society help Mary and her Dad.HUNTINGTON’S DISEASE - MAKE IT YOUR CAUSE Original letter on file in Huntington Society national office.Send Donations to Ralph Walker, Executive Director Huntington Society of Canada 13 Water Street North, Suite 5 box 353, Cambridge, ont.N1R5T8 Please accept my donation D Cheque o visa ?Mastercard card/______________________________________ Exp.date________________________Amount _ Signature__________________________________ Name_______________________________________ $9 C'TK'UJVf- PfM.f 14—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1983 Monday DAYTIME MOVIES B:00 O * * to ‘'Interlude" (1957, Romance) June Allyson, Roeeeno Brezzi.A mentally distraught woman ratuaas to surrender her composer husband over to the librarian lady who really loves him.«2:30 0 (D **to "Cinq femmes en danger" (1975, Drame) Robert Conrad, Anianette Comer.Cinq anciennes compagnes se retrouvent un jour et décident de pasaer un week-end sur une ile ou elles ont loue une maiaon pour l’occasion.2:00 Q Œ) A A A "La Barbe a Papa" (1973, Comedie) Ryan O'Neal, Tatum O’Neal.Un escroc de petit envergure est charge de conduire le fillette d’une de aes amies decedee a une tante a Missouri.2:30O O AAto "Tonnere rouge" (1973, Western) Donald Sutherland, Jean Duceppe.La vache d'un administrateur est engorges par dee Indiens allâmes 6:00 O AA A "Ben Hur" (te) 0959, Aventure) Charlton Heston, Jack Hawkins Ben-Hur, prince juif pacifique est injustement envoya aux galeres par un Romain, en meme temps que sa mere et sa soeur sont emprisonnées.EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR / SPORTS O Q O O Œ) æ NEWS O LE MONDE Œ) LE 18 HEURES SD STUDIO SEE "Dirt Bikes" Motorbikes are ridden through an obstacle course and on the Saddleback Track in Southern California (R) 6:30 0 NBC NEWS O C0 FORUM 0Œ abcnewsq 09 BUSINESS REPORT 6:400 INFORMATIONS LOCALES / METEO 7:00 0 O LE VAGABOND 0 CBS NEWS 0 BARNEY MILLER O UNIVER8IADE '83 Scheduled eventa are basketbell, cycling, gym-nasties, fencing, swimming, diving, and tennis (from Edmonton, Alb ).O ONE DAY AT A TIME (BM'A'S'H ® CHARLIE’S ANGELS Œ) MACNEIL 7 LEHRER REPORT 7:30 O Q DU TAC AU TAC O FAMILY FEUD O ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT A look at theme parks around the country.Q (D UN MONDE EN FOLIE O HEROES Orson Welles narrates the official story of the Congressional Medal of Honor, awarded to those men who risk their lives "above and beyond the call o! duty" on the battlefield.CD THRILL OF A LIFETIME Featured: a homemaker rides a Great Lakes freighter: a young Albertan magician performs at Hollywood's Magic Castle; two high-school girls arrive at school in a helicopter; an Ontario mother makes a special tribute to her children.(R) VERMONT REPORT Guest: Adjutant General Donald Edwards 8:00 O O TELE-SELECTION *?'4 "Un prive dans la nuit" (3e) (1978, Drame) James Coburn, Jean Simmons Une fois retrouvée, Gabrielle est prise en charge par le detective qui entreprend de lui faire perdre son habitude de la morphine Ask Kate Forsythe’s saga By Kate Woods Since my last name is Forsythe, I'm wondering whether John Forsythe may be related to me.Also, when did "Bachelor Father’’ run?— M.F.He’s not a relative The "Dynasty" star's real name is John Freund."Bachelor Father" ran from 1957-’62.SHIP TO SHORE — Where can I write the producer of "The Love Boat"?— J.B.T.The executive producers are Aaron Spelling and Doug Cramer.You can write both at Aaron Spelling Productions Inc., Warner Hollywood Studios.P 0.Box 60257.Los Angeles.CA 90060.REMARKABLE — Can you please tell me where to write actor James Remar, who played one of the killers in "48 Hrs.” and had a small part in ¦‘Partners"?— M.H.You can write Remar, who has one ot the best sneers in the business, in care ot Hildy Gottlieb at ICM, 8899 Bevetly Blvd.Los Angeles.CA 90048 He's just started work on another picture tor Paramount."Uncommon Valor " Gene Hackman headlines the adventure flick, which is along the lines of "The Dirty Dozen " At one lime it was called "Youth in Asia." MIGHTY MATT — How old is Matthew Broderick John Forsythe from "WarGames"?My mother says he really isn't a kid.— L.A.Broderick is 20.so it depends on your vantage point as to whether or not he's still a kid.His father was the late actor James Broderick, who viewers may recall as the father on "Family " WHITHER PARKER — Whatever happened to Parker Stevenson of "The Hardy Boys"?— J.J.Stevenson made a pilot earlier this year with Billy Dee Williams about a couple of actors turned private eyes.It's called "Shooting Stars " ABC hasn't picked the show up for the fall, but the pilot is expected to air July 28 If the response is good, it might get a midseason slot.Send your letters to Kate Woods.United Feature Syndicate.200 Park Ave.Room 602.New York N Y t0166 St- DELI OPENING Johnny Slash (Merritt Butrick) and his band perform at the opening of the new deli counter in the supermarket where he works on ‘‘Square Pegs, MONDAY, JULY 4 on CBS.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME O SQUARE PEGS Lauren falls head-over-heala in love, but has little chance of winning her heartthrob.(R) Q LOVE, SIDNEY Sidney learns that Laurie haa forgotten his plana to celebrate thair ninth anniversary together.(R) Q RANGIN' IN Christinas activitisa at the centre are disrupted when Kate helps a boy find out what's the matter with his mother (R) & CD LES ROBINSON SUISSES O CD BASEBALL (B SNOW JOB Hilda meets an old heartthrob and Bobby meets a girl with whom he has a philosophical disagreement about love.(R) Œ NATIONAL SYMPHONY JULY 4 CONCERT 8:30 O SHE'S WITH ME The Madison sisters (Gloria Gifford, Deborah Pratt) leave Illinois to establish themselves in careers in San Francisco.Q FAMILY TIES A storm torces the Keatons to cancel their holiday plans and stay at home.(R) © BIZARRE Featured: Reagan: reach out and touch: the fight; bigots; sharks in the studio.(R) 9:00 Q TUCKER'S WITCH Private detectives Amanda and Rick Tucker wind up as the targets of the killer they're trailing when Amanda's witchcrsft turns out to be highly unreliable.(R) 0 MOVIE "The Golden Moment: An Olympic Love Story" (Part 2) (1980, Drama) Stephanie Zimbal-ist, David Keith Poltical and competitive pressures come to bear on the love affair between the Ameri- can athlete and the Russian gymnast.(R) O M-A'S'H Hawkeye mischievously starts a rumor that Marilyn Monroe is going to pay a visit to the 4077th.(R) O © MARISOL © MOVIE ?* to "Promia-ea In The Dark” (1979, Drama) Marsha Mason, Kathleen Belter.A teenage girl comes to grips with her terminal illness with the help of a supportive physician.9:30 Q TEACHERS ONLY Diana throws a party to celebrate the school's faculty being named the "moaf cohesive" in the state (R) O © LES MOINEAU ET LES PINSON ffi FREEDOM TO SPEAK "The American Dream" William F.Buckley Jr.hosts an overview of what some of America's greatest thinkers have believed about the promise of this nation.(R) n 10:00 O Q RENCONTRES O CBS REPORTS "Alter All Those Years" Producer-reporter Jay McMullen examines the plight of white-collar workers who, alter spending many years at their firms, have suddenly found themselves on the unemployment tines or forced into early retirement.Q THE NATIONAL / JOURNAL O © BIG BAND © FREDERICK DOUGLASS.SLAVE AND STATESMAN Actor William Marshall portrays Frederick Douglass •• writer, abolitionist leader and trusted advisor to President Lincoln - in a dramatic evocation of the spirit and philosophy of the great black leader.10:30*3 LE TELEJOURNAL / NOUVELLES DU SPORT Q LES NOUVELLES TVA 0 LE TELEJOURNAL / METEO © LES NOUVELLES TVA 1 LE DIX VOUS INFORME 10:60 O LE MONDE REGIONAL 11:00 O 0 O © NEWS O INFORMATIONS LOCALES / SPORTS © LES SPORTS © CTV NATIONAL NEWS © MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT 11:06 0 NEWS 11:16 0 0 UNIVERSIADE '83 O © LA COULEUR DU TEMPS 11:20© NEWS 11:30 0 HAWAII FIVE-0 0 TONIGHT Guest host: Joan Rivers Guests: Richard Simmons, actor Christopher Atkins.O UNIVERSIADE '83 Updated coverage of basketball, cycling, gymnastics.lencing, swimming, diving, and tennis (from Edmonton, Alb ).O CINEMA **to "La Ballade des diamants" O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © BENNY HILL © MOVIE "Battle Cry” (1955, Drama) Van Hettin, Aldo Ray.J.S.Marines mix love with combat during World War It.12:00© MOVIE **to "Blood On The Sun" (1945, Drama) James Cagney, Sylvia Sidney.Japanese warlords try to silence an American newspaperman who foresees Japan's threat to democracy prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor.12:16 0 Q QUATRE FEMMES, QUATRE VIES (2E) 12:30 O THE MUPPETS 0 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN Guests: rock musician Sly Stone; actress-comedienne Sandra Bernhard.(R) O ONE ON ONE 1:66 ©SOLID GOLD Tuesday DAYTIME CHILDREN'S SHOWS 10:00© STUDIO SEE "Dirt Bikes" Motorbikes are ridden through an obstacle course and on the Saddleback Track in Southern California.(R) 4:30 0 CBS FIELD TRIP "The Police Officer And The TV Reporter" Linda Kelsey and Erik Estrada play host to a young boy and girl aa they learn how a television reporter covers a story and what it's like to be a policeman (R) DAYTIME SPORTS 6:00 0 UNIVERSIADE ‘83 DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00o AAA "Female On The Beach" (1955, Suspense) Joan Crawford.Jett Chandler A woman begins to believe that her husband ia planning to kill her lor her money.2:30 0 © A*to "Douce Rachel" (1972, Drame) Stefanie Powers, Pat Mingle Un spécialiste de la perception extra-sensorielle tente de découvrir l identite d'une personne qui par telepathie.a cause la mort d’un homme 1:00© A*** "A Letter To Three Wives" (1949, Drama) Jeanne Crain, Linda Darnell A woman sends a letter to three country club wives informing them that she plana to alope with one ot their husbands.2:00 O© totkto "La Chasseur des daims" (1978.Aventura) Steva Forrest Ned Romero.Deux hommes doivent affronter des bandes d amerindiena et de français hostiles alors qu'ils se portent a la raacousse d'uns jeûna prinessaa datanua par les Hurona.2:30 0 o AAto "Soldat Duroc.ca va etra ta fate" (1976, Comedia) Pierre Tornade, Robert Webber Un soldat qui a l'habitude de ae payer la tete de eea supérieurs, s'en donne a coeur joie lorsqu'il est désigné comme guide pour s'emparer du quartier general allemand.6:00Q "Ben Hur" (2e) (1959, Aventure) Charlton Heston, Jack Hawkins.Ben-Hur, prince juif pacifique est injustement envoyé aux galeres par un Romain, en meme temps que sa mere et sa soeur sont emprisonnées.EVENING 6:00 0 CE SOIR / SPORTS O O O O © © NEWS O LE MONDE ©LE 18 HEURES © STUDIO SEE "Bubble Gum" An old-fashioned bubble gum contest: a 13-year-old pool shark (R) 6:30 Q NBC NEWS O © FORUM Q© ABC NEWS n © BUSINESS REPORT 6:40 0 INFORMATIONS LOCALES I METEO 7:00 © O QUINCY 0 CBS NEWS 0 BARNEY MILLER O UNIVERSIADE 'S3 Scheduled eventa are basketball, volleyball, gymnastica finals, fencing, swimming, diving, tennis and track and held preliminaries (from Edmonton, Alb).O ONE DAY AT A TIME fC) bj • a • e *lj © CHARLIE'S ANGELS © MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT 7:30 O FAMILY FEUD Q ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT An interview with Lillian Gish.O © UN MONDE EN FOLIE O BARNEY MILLER © LORNE GREENE'S NEW WILDERNESS A small squirrel monkey dodges numerous predators while searching tor his troop in the Brazilian rain foraat.(R) n © CROSSROADS: VERMONT’S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE 8:00 © O NOUS LES COMIQUES AAto "Barnabe" (1967, Comedie) Sid Caesar, Juliet Mills.Un escroc ruse mais sympathique, pousuivi par un membre de la pegre, entraîne avec lui une veuve, sa fille et leur koala dans une aventure palpitante.O ON THE ROAD WITH CHARLES KURALT Correspondent Kuralt presents vignettes about the people, places and events he encounters as he travels through America.0 THE A-TEAM While attending a friend’s funeral In a small town, the A-Team get in trouble with live hoodlum brothers.(R) O THE CHINESE China's outward reach lor technology ia paralleled with the industrialized nations' race to penetrate the biggest market on earth in the conclusion of this series (Part 6) (R) n O © SLOANE O © HALF-HOUR COMEDY HOUR (Premiere) This tast-paced comedy series features hosts Thom Sharp and Arsenic Hall and a cast of regulars including John Moschitta.Barry Diamond, Vic Dunlop.Jan Hooks.Rod Hall and Emu, Peter Isackson, Victoria Jackson and John Paragon.© MOVIE A A "Hog Wild" (1980.Comedy) Patti D'Arbanville.Michael Biehn A high school campus becomes the starting point for wild pranks and hilarity when several clean-cut youngsters decide to take on a rowdy motorcycle gang.© NOVA "Black Tide" The moat devastating oil spill in history and ita affects are examined.(R) 8:30 fe) OUR TIMES WITH BILL MOYERS Contemporary issues that affect the daily lives of Americans to dit tarant degrees are examined by correspondant Moyers O © LAVERNE 6 SHIRLEY Shirlay'a dream of marriage finally comes true in an olfbeat wedding ceremony.(R) Q 9:00 o MOVIE AAt?"Promises In The Dark" (1979, Drama) Marsha Mason, Kathleen Belter.A teenage girl comes to grips with her terminal illness with the help ot a supportive physician.Q REMINGTON STEELE Remington and Laura pose as a couple whose marriage ia on the rocks to find out who might be planning to murder their client (R) O O ® THREE'S COMPANY Jack wakes up in bed beside Janet and panics when he can’t remember the events of the previous evening.(R) ?Q © UNE VIE © WORLD SPECIAL "Against The Wind: A Cuban Odyssey" The journey ol lour Cuban refugees to ths United States is traced from their departure to their present situation.(R) 9:30 0 O PREMIERE PAGE O TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT Henry and Muriel's anniversary dinner is interrupted by a call from the police station.
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