Voir les informations

Détails du document

Informations détaillées

Conditions générales d'utilisation :
Protégé par droit d'auteur

Consulter cette déclaration

Titre :
The record
Éditeurs :
  • Sherbrooke, Quebec :Townships Communications Inc,[1979]-,
  • Sherbrooke, Quebec :The Record Division, Quebecor Inc.
Contenu spécifique :
Supplément 1
Genre spécifique :
  • Journaux
Fréquence :
quotidien
Notice détaillée :
Titre porté avant ou après :
    Prédécesseur :
  • Sherbrooke record
Lien :

Calendrier

Sélectionnez une date pour naviguer d'un numéro à l'autre.

Fichiers (2)

Références

The record, 1983-11-10, Collections de BAnQ.

RIS ou Zotero

Enregistrer
i r“i Thursday, November 10 Xüjijim * , mm A 2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983 Back seat playing belies sax man’s top record billing Next to Bruce (The Boss) Springsteen, saxman Clarence Clemons is probably the most visible member of the much-touted E Street Band.As such, it’s surprising that Clemons, in his first extracurricular outing as recording artist, should take such a secondary position despite his top billing.The “Big Man’’ does show his mettle on Rescue (Columbia Records) — credited to Clemons and The Red Bank Rockers — but the real star of this show is undeniably singer John (J.T.) Bowen.The album is not completely without its problems, but the final tally does show it to be a respectable debut for this punchy sextet, formed by Clemons a couple of years ago as a creative outlet for him between E Street activities.Clemons’s now-familiar sassy round tones are suitably represented within the Red Bank Rockers’ performance, but they aren’t the prime feature here.While this highly competent musician does rip out with occasional blistering sax attacks, he could have done a lot more without stealing the thunder from the project as a whole.The gruff, rock-soul tones of singer Bowen, a longtime friend of Clemons, are consistently strong, even if his material isn’t.Cutting through with plenty of butt-kicking oomph, Bowen unintentionally makes this album his own, shining in particular on Rock V Roll DJ, the beautifully rendered A Woman’s Got the Power and a faithful adaptation of the Ashton, Gardner and Dyke hit, Resurrection Shuffle.Of the Clemons cocompositions, his Money To the Rescue, written with Desmond Child, is lyrically good but musically weaker.He fares better with his Gavin Christopher collaboration, Heartache No.99.Springsteen contributes one song, Savin’ Up, and a bit of rhythm guitar on that cut, but his efforts are token at best.However, the overall spirit on Rescue is high.You could do worse thanto party with this one.From the gatefold packaging and the guest lineup to the production itself, the new album from Paul McCartney, Pipes of Peace (Columbia) is classy.What it isn’t is classic McCartney.It’s not for lack of trying.Clearly McCartney aimed to make this one every bit as solid a piece of work as his Tug of War album proved to be.He has loaded this one with impeccable credentials — including jazz-bassist Stanley Clarke, former fellow moptop Ringo Starr, reed man Andy (Roxy Music) McKay and longtime Beatle producer George Martin — and in doing so has emerged with a lot of gloss on only occasionally interesting material.Predictably, the most readily accessible cuts are those cowritten and co-performed by Michael Jackson, who is returning twofold the favor paid by McCartney on Jackson’s current hit album, Thriller.Edmonton exhibition to show western art history EDMONTON (CP) — Tucked away in the library of the National Art Gallery in Ottawa, scholars have been writing Canadian art history with an unabashed Central Canadian slant, says Christopher Varley.The dismissal of Western Canadian art by such scholars prompted Varley, head curator of the Edmonton Art G; to organize an exhibitioi Winnipeg West, a sum >uintings and sculpture prodi in the six major western cr between 1945 and 1970.“The whole point w,.to build a foundation for future art historical research,” says Varley, 33, grandson of renowned Vancou- ver artist F.H.Varley.“Until now, our only resources for this period had been dribs and drabs of information from dispa rate sources.Hopefully this presentation will help to establish the groundwork for further study.’’ HAS 83 WORKS The exhibition features 83 pieces Varley chose as representative of the period’s most interesting work by artists from Van-couver, Calgary, Edmonton, Regina, Saskatoon and Winnipeg.Varley says his study revealed that the influences on artists were the same as those which affected the rest of Canadian society during those years.“Canada was first a colony of England and later of the United States,” he explains.“The art reflected those English and midwest American influences.” There was little contact with the Central and Eastern Canadian art communities, but a strong self-sufficiency which gave Western artists a distinctive identity as they learned from each other, Varley says.In Regina, for instance, there was a flowering of abstract painting during the late ’50s and early ’60s, something Varley says art historians choose to ignore.CREDITS BLOORE Varley says the catalyst was Ronald Bloore, whose cellular enamel on masonite paintings marked a radical departure from the nature-derived abstraction of most other Canadian painters.Bloore, who was appointed director of the Regina College Art Gallery in 1958, later taught at the college and had a profound effect on younger artists such as Arthur McKay and Roy Kiyooka.Unlike today, when artists can live on Canada Council grants, artists in the post-war years had no government handouts and virtually no chance to sell their work.“There’s a market for contemporary Canadian art now that didn’t exist then,” says Varley.“Art schools and galleries provi- ded employment and so they became the meeting place for artists.” But such isolation also created problems, says Varley.“If the two or three artists in each city didn’t get along and had personal differences, it had a devastating effect on the city’s art development.” Vancouver, considered to be a focal point of Western art development, was actually far behind Regina until the 1960s, says Varley.“For the most part, Vancouver’s artists settled, a little too comfortably, for a place on the rear deck of the official post-war avante-garde.” ?kyRÜ MO NO.TITLE ARTIST LAST WEEKS WEEK ON 1.King of Pain Police 1 12 2.Superstar Lydia Murdoch 2 6 3.Never Said I Loved You Payolas 3 12 4.True Spandau Ballet 5 9 5.Tele f one Sheena Easton 6 8 6.All Night Long Lionel Ritchie 9 6 7.Promises Promises Naked Eyes 8 15 8.Making Love Air Supply 4 11 9.Sitting at the Wheel Moody Blues 11 7 10.Islands in the Stream Kenny Rogers/Dolly Parton 15 6 11.Modern Love David Bowie 22 5 12.LOU.Freeze 7 13 13.I’ll Tumble 4 Ya Culture Club 10 16 14.Delirious Prince 18 5 15.Uptown Girl Billy Joel 21 4 16.All I Need Toronto 13 7 17.Love in the Shadows Dan Hill 20 6 18.One Thing Leads to Another The Fixx 24 5 19.Don’t Wanna Dance Eddy Grant 28 6 20.Suddenly Last Summer Motels 23 5 21.Sexy + 17 Stray Cats 17 12 22.Rise Up Parachute Club 12 9 23.Big Log Robert Plant 32 4 24.Kiss the Bride Elton John 16 8 25.Dr.Heckyll & Mr.Jive Men at Work 36 3 26.Unconditional Love Donna Summer 26 4 27.Love is a Stranger Eurythmies 29 4 28.Say Say Say Jackson/McCartney 33 4 29.Tell Her About It Billy Joel 14 13 30.Pale Shelter Tears for Fears 38 2 31.Queen of the Broken Heart Lovcrboy 35 4 32.If Anyone Falls Stevie Nicks 37 3 33.C’est un Reveur Véronique Béliveau 27 11 34.Roc kit Herbie Hancock 39 2 35.Angel Eyes Lime 40 2 36.Major Tom Peter Schilling PL 1 37.Church of the Poison Mind Culture Club PL 1 38.Love is a Battlefield Pat Benetar PL 1 39.The Crown Gary Byrd PL 1 40.Twenty Questions Tic Toe PL 1 Day-to-day foibles supply cartoonist’s pen WINNIPEG (CP) — Lynn Johnston, whose cartoons are syndicated in more than 500 newspapers worldwide, excused herself from an interview recently to look for a new sewing machine.The needle on hers was broken.Johnston, whose comic strip For Better or for Worse reaches readers in 10 countries, has managed for several years to juggle a busy home life with a highly successful and growing business.The former native of Vancouver is currently on a tour promoting her new book, It Must Be Nice To Be Little, and a National Film Board documentary, See You in the Funny Papers, in which she is featured.Her comic strip captures the day-to-day foibles of a family of four that resembles her own family, but Johnston emphasizes that the dialogue and situations in For Better or for Worse are contrived.“You don’t have conversations like that” in real life, says the 36-year-old cartoonist.“If you sat and looked in on a normal family, you would soon fall asleep.“You talk to people who don’t exist and you have adventures with people who don’t exist” when devising the dialogue and characters for the cartoon, she says.KIDS CRINGE She admits, however, that her daughter, Katie, 5, and son, Aaron, 10, “sort of cringe when they think of what’s being printed.” Johnston has changed her hairstyle so that she doesn’t look like the cartoon’s Elly Patterson, a character she says people sometimes expect her to resemble.Johnston and her dentist husband, Rod, have lived in the northern Manitoba mining town of Lynn Lake for five years, but plan to move next spring to North Bay, Ont.She says she feels almost apologetic about leaving.She has said in other interviews that the isolation of the town, the variety of friends she has made and the closeness of the people had provided the perfect environment in which to work and raise children.“On the other hand, it’s time for us to go.” With Lynn Lake’s uncertain future because of possible mine closings, Johnston said the town has become unstable and is shrinking rather than growing.As well, her work demands that she travel a certain amount.With the airlines cutting back on some northern flights, getting about can become difficult, she said.Although her agent has hinted that she should move to the United States, Johnston is having none of it.“I’m a real Canuck.” Help your HEART FUhDW TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983—3 Dryden offers a critique of Canada’s national sport Kaleidoscope By RICHARD LONEY The Game by Ken Dryden (MACMILLAN): $19.95, 248 pp.Ken Dryden’s book about hockey is as different from others of its ilk as #29 was from the usually individualist breed of athletes that go between the pipes to stop the deadly black projectile called a puck.As a goaltender, Dryden already had a passport into the comradeship of hockey’s oddballs, but as a student of the law, and a practitioner of an often embarrassing (to the interviewer and the audience) articulateness, Dryden appeared to be at odds with the usual hockey player image.His book, The Game, is a project that only a rather standoffish, aloof type as Dryden always seemed to be, could write.Organized as a one week plus two days diary recording a typical week in the late spring schedule of the Montreal Canadiens, the road games and home games become opportunities for Dryden’s reminiscences about Canada’s game, and his own quite stereotypical addiction to it.A swing into Toronto, and an overnight stay at the home of his parents, triggers Dryden’s memories of he and his brother Dave’s induction into the goalie fraternity.A stop in Boston opens the floodgates of recollection of the days when Dryden’s Big Red Machine from Cornell would vie for the College hockey championships of the U.S.A.in what became the very friendly confines of the Boston Garden.Strangely enough, Dryden’s debut, and instant stardom in the Cup playoffs of 1971, holds very few memories for the athlete.The whirlwind days of his single-handed rout of Esposito, Orr and the Big Bad Bruins are very dimmed in Dryden’s mind, dulled as they are with the passing of time and other hockey career highlights.A home game against the pathetic Detroit Red Wings affords Dryden the opportunity of regaling the reader with a Scotty Bowman pre-game chalk talk, and some comic moments in “the room”, with the Canadiens’ sharper wits struggling against the no-nonsense severity of the before game rituals.Unfortunately the newspaper excerpts of Dryden’s book did not do justice to the book’s variety, zeroing in as they did on his reflections on coach Bowman, and some rather heavy philosophical passages.Who better than Dryden to record the hijinks in the room of the Canadiens?Even the tone of the book suggests that Dryden was usually a stolid, severe observer of the childish kibitzing that is part of the joy of a hockey team’s psychology.Dryden provides just enough of the thumbnail sketches of individual players to delight the Habs’ fans—Reggie Houle’s boyish spirits and keen eye to the economy ; Steve Shutt’s scatter-gun one- liners that appear to have become tedious to the stonefaced Dryden: Lapointe’s ribald clowning with everyone; Guy La-fleur’s rigid rituals and his dedication to his game.As well as characterizations of his mates, Dryden also offers a synopsis of hockey’s changing face, from the 30’s and 40's down to the 70’s and the challenge from the Soviet ice hockey monolith.Dryden’s prescriptions for hockey’s growth and health are wise, and his grasp of the elements of the game which should be developed carefully reveals that he observed carefully from his nonchalant, leaning, trademark position in the crease.It is very rare that someone who played a game as well as Dryden did is able to reflect upon it with anything like the kind of insight that Ken Dryden brings to The Game.War book highlights Canadian Normandy campaign By Charles Bury Maple Leaf Route: Falaise by Terry Copp and Robert Fogel (MAPLE LEAF ROUTE Publishers, Alma, Ontario, NOB 1A0: $24.95, 144 pp.A new book by two Canadian university historians outlines part of the battle to free Europe fought by the Canadian Army — including the Sherbrooke Fusiliers — and other Allied forces in the bloody months after D Day in 1944.Maple Leaf Route: Falaise, by Professor Terry Copp of Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario (formerly of Montreal’s Concordia) and McGill University’s Robert Vogel, is the second in a series outlining the Canadian campaign in Northwest Europe in 1944 and ’45.Basicly a picture book series, Maple Leaf Route takes the reader vividly through the tears and pain, blood, companionship and brutality of mechanized war on the ground — and in the mud.Volume one of the series recounted the first days of the Allied invasion, from the bea-cheads to the embattled city of Caen, taken July 9 1944.Volume two picks up at Caen and follows the Allied invader-liberators to the end of the Normandy Campaign.The Sherbrooke Fusiliers were not without their role in the Campaign, nor are they without their place in Falaise: .July 18: “Inexperience led the two No mothballs for Cree teepeee EDMONTON (CP) — A rare buffalo hide teepee, believed to have been owned by the great Cree Chief Poundmaker a century ago, may soon come out of mothballs.“It’s one of the finest examples around of a teepee and one of the few surviving examples of a hide teepee in Canada and possibly North America,’’ says Eric Waterton, assistant director of human history at the provincial musuem.Trudy Nicks, museum ethnologist, believes the artifact predates the 1885 Northwest Rebellion.It has been in storage since it was last displayed to the public in 1947.The skin tent, trademark of the Plains Indians, is in poor condition, but the curators are thinking of having a replica made, while displaying the original spread flat.lead companies to advance two to three hundred yards beyond their start line and they became trapped in their own artilley barrage.Lt.Colonel H.L.Bisaillon quickly took control of the situation ; he ordered his reserve companies (of Le Régiment de Maisonneuve, sometimes called La Mayonnaise) forward and assigned the follow-up role to the temporarily disorganized assault companies.With ‘C’ squadron of the Sherbrookes providing fire support, the Maison-neuves moved quickly through intense mortar fire and captured Le Haut, on the edge of Fleury- sur-Orne at 1630.The armour then ‘tied-up’ with the Calgary Highlanders who took over the next bound into the village and beyond it to Point 67, a slight hill overlooking St.André-sur-Orne.It was now getting dark and a further advance to St.André was delayed until morning.” The dozens of photographs in Falaise are well chosen and well reproduced.The maps are clear and well thought-out.At $24.95 it borders on the pricey side but as a Christmas gift for a Fusiliers de Sherbrooke veteran or a war buff it looks like a worthwhile buy.FALAISE Join the human race.We’re all out running in the park.\-.pannapscnon *3 non*.ONLY TWO THINGS CAN SCREW IIP THEIR RELATIONSHIP HE’S ONE.SHE’S THE OTHER.DUDLEY MOORE m «Ç MARY STEENBURGEN 'A, r1, I v B/^nn^mpc comedît/ W/E: 1:30-3:30-5:30 7:30-9:30.Cinémas CARREFOUR Sherbrooke 565 0366 W/D: 7:30-9:30.Wat would you do , proved to you ^ that your three RftfdoAthr AM SrUing Novel b* ROBERT LUDl.UM tHierled to SAM PECKINPAH rear mu arm 7 u anr to miss @ enmc raoul Admission s4.50 Students 18-20 l3 00 EatinV rimi wt« 7 as Sun Cinéma CAPITOL 59 King est S6B-OTM 1 30 Ewninf : 7:30 Th« OtUrmifi tWeeksnd Wnk: 9:10 Sun 3:19; Evtnlnf 9:19. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983 Thanks to quality Chateau Mouton second to none Wine Bits By TIMOTHY BELFORD One of the truly great wines of the world, by any standard, is the famed Chateau Mouton Rothschild The property of Baron Phi lippe de Rothschild, Chateau Mouton is located within the commune of Pauillac in the Haut Medoc region of Bordeaux.Although it was classified only as the first’ of the the Second growths in the classification of 1855, there was little doubt, particularly in the minds of the owners of the Chateau, that their wine really belonged with Chateau La-fite, Chateau Haut Brion.Chateau Margaux and Chateau La-tour in the First Growths category.A reflection of this feeling was found on the label of the bottle which read Premier ne puis, Second ne daigne, Mouton suis — which translates to First I cannot be, Second I do not deign to be, Mouton 1 am .Until 1730, the 175 acres that make up Mouton Rothschild were part of the neighbouring Chateau Lafite vineyard and were owned by the Prince Ségur.The vineyard came into the hands of the Rothschilds — one of Europe’s great banking families — over one hundred years ago and has remained so to this day.In 1973, following nearly one hundred years of lobbying, the French government finally acknowledged what everyone knew to be true and re-classified Mouton to the rank of First Growths.The reclassification was primarily the work of the present owner, Baron Philippe, who took over the winery in 1926 and with scrupulous attention to quality and no small amount of advertising expertise ensured that Mouton Rothschild was indeed second to none.The entire production in any given year is small in comparison to many of the larger Chateaux amounting to a mere 22,000 cases but the quality and longevity of these 260,000 or so bottles are exceptional.The high percentage of Cabernet Sauvignon grape used and the fact that Mouton is allowed to remain in the vat for a full month — juice and grape residue together — results in a strong, hard wine when young but one that matures into a splendid long-lived wine that reaches its peak only after a minimum of ten or more years in the bottle.The price that a bottle of aged Mouton fetches however, would appear to justify both the added care and production expense.It is important that the beginner does not confuse Chateau Mouton with its equally well-known but lesser cousin Chateau-Mouton-Baronne-Philippe which is produced from a vineyard nestled between Chateau Mouton and Chateau Pontet-Canet.Although it is also owned by Baron Philippe, Mouton-Baronne-Philippe is a Fifth G rowth and never reaches the peak of perfection shown by Mouton itself.Originally called Chateau Mou-ton-d’Armailhacq, it was renamed Chateau Mouton-Baron-Phillipe in 1951 and finally given the name Mouton-Baronne-Phillipe in honor of the present owner’s wife.Since it is given the same intensive care as Mouton Rothschild itself.Baronne-Phillipe probably merits a better classification, many believing it is the equall of some of the Third and Fourth Growths.Whatever the case, both Mouton Rothschild and Mouton-Baronne-Philippe are superb wines, but be prepared to pay.Cheers! Honest Ed gambles millions on Old Vic comeback LONDON (CP) —Sir Laurence Olivier, grey haired and bespectacled, bowed to the Queen Mother and said: “We are here to celebrate this old jewel in the crown of Ixmdon.” Olivier’s introduction out of the way, the Old Vic re-opened Tuesday with a gala performance.The celebration, marking the rebirth of London’s most famous theatre, was made possible by Toronto millionaire Ed Mirvish who bought it last year.The Old Vic has been handsomely refurbished and highlighted with the richness of gold paint echoing its Victorian past.An appropriate choice of shows for the gala was the Tim Rice-Stephen Oliver musical, Blondel, based on the legendary court musician of Richard I’s reign.The rock-opera.A Slice of English History, with a cockey and jazzy touch, entertained with such songs as I’m a Monarchist and I Can’t Wait to be King.SHARES BOX Mirvish and the Queen Mother shared a box overlooking the stage and heard Olivier repeat a promise he made years ago: “This will one day be the finest theatre in the world.” London's society turned out in droves for the gala — a far cry for the theatre’s first opening in 1818.Then, as the Royal Coburg Theatre, it warranted only this haughty observation from The Times reviewer: “We were sorry to see that the company of spectators was not so select as we could wish.” Mirvish wants to attract a more loyal and well-heeled audience for a subscription season of six plays and musicals.The Toronto businessman, who built his fortune on a discount shopping emporium, bought the theatre after it had fallen on hard times last year for 550,000 pounds (about $1 million), outbidding composer Andrew Lloyd Webber who wanted to keep the Old Vic a British institution.Since buying the theatre — sight unseen — Mirvish has spent several million dollars to rebuild it to its sumptuous Victorian elegance.It is only the latest of the Old Vic’s many transformations.First opened as a house for melo- drama and farce, it deteriorated into a gin palace.COOKS SAUSAGES Reformed and rebuilt, the theatre was home to the Old Vic Shakespeare company in 1914 under the management of Lilian Baylis, who is said to have cooked sausages offstage between performances.Bombed during the Second World War, the theatre re-opened in 1950.It continued to flourish, first with its owrn resident company and later when Britain’s National Theatre company made its home at the Old Vic in 1964.But in 1977 the National moved to a new theatre on the south bank and for five years the Old Vic limped along on a series of short leases.Deeply in debt and facing per- manent closure the theatre was sold to Mirvish.Known as Honest Ed, Mirvish is new to London but not to this sort of venture.In 1962, he saved Toronto’s Royal Alexandra Theatre from the wreckers and made it profitable with expensive renovations and a popular subscription season.Mirvish claims the subscription scheme, which will also be the key to success in London, has worked so well in Toronto that some people leave their tickets in their wills and battle over them in divorce courts.Whether London’s theatregoers, who traditionally have been single-show buyers, will embrace the North American subscription formula remains to be seen.Too early to tell if Grand Theatre box office adequate The Grand Theatre Company, Robin Phillips’s new repertory theatre in London, Ont., has now done about 75 of the almost 400 performances it has scheduled for its inaugural winter season.But company spokesmen say it is too early for any really solid facts on how well it is performing at the box office.The box office last week was selling tickets at the rate of about 800 a day — just what is needed to fill the Grand Theatre’s mainstage auditorium.But a good many of those sales are for future performances.There have been conflicting reports from London.Some say the theatre is badly below what should be its box-office average over the whole season for it to meet its budget.Others say this is just a slow start for a new venture and business is bound to pick up as the theatre adds more plays to its reper- tory in both the mains-tage and studio theatres.All that spokesmen for the theatre were willing to say is about 10 per cent of the way into the new season, the box office had taken in 35 per cent of its budgeted revenues.GROUPS BOOKING A new feature is the number of group bookings being made.This is something the Grand's predecessor.Theatre London, did not experience when it was selling subscription tickets for a season.Now about 12,000 seats have been sold to convention and tourist groups — this in a city which hasn’t so far advertised itself widely as a fall and winter tourist centre.The Grand Theatre opened its season Sept.13 with its first preview performance of God-spell, starring Brent Carver and involving most of the company.In its first week, it ran Godspell, The Doctor’s Dilemma, Waiting for the Parade, and Timon of Athens.Last week, it added Eve Merriam’s The Club, a musical set in an exclusive men’s club in which all the parts are played by women.It also opened its studio theatre season with Paul Gallico’s The Snow Goose, as told by Barbara Budd and Guy Bannerman.The Grand is to present this season four other Gallico stories in the 150-seat studio theatre and four more big mainstage productions — Arsenic and Old Lace starring William Hutt and John Neville, The Prisoner of Zenda, Shakespeare’s Hamlet, and Dear Antoine by Jean Anouilh.Godspell appears to be attracting the biggest audiences among the original four productions, and Shakespeare’s Timon of Athens has been drawing the smallest crowds.That’s not really surprising, since Timon is widely acknowledged to be one of Shakespeare’s least-polished works.Simply doing it gives Robin Phillips and the Grand Theatre high marks for theatrical courage.But courage doesn't pay the bills.SEEK SPONSORS The Grand is moving to improve its corporate fund-raising by appointing a director of financial development, whose first job will beto solicit more corporate sponsors for individual shows this season and in future seasons.London has the head offices of a number of national firms and these seem to be the most likely candidates to be corporate sponsors.For $10,000 to $20,000, depending on the number of performances scheduled, a company can have its name attached to a production as its sponsor, with acknowledge- ment for the financial help in all advertising and house programs.But the Grand must also establish itself as a national institution.So far, officials say, about 75 per cent of its audience has come from London and the immediate surrounding area.Tm; RESERVE NOW! D TRANS OCEAN TRAVEL Business or Pleasure Just Drop In.Or Give Us a Call Services ore free 66 King West — Sherbrooke — Tel.: 563-4515 Zenith 59010 TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 198T-5 • How could Shake It Sexy not captivate Canadians By Timothy Belford The ballyhoo and hoopla that accompanied the arrival of pay TV has for the most part settled down as the various networks go either financially belly-up— as in the case of C Channel—or back to the government for help.Most, including First Choice — found in Quebec — and Superchannel — apparently found everywhere else — have come to the realization that Candians are not exactly rushing to the wonderful world of adapters, converters, consorters and such.But no one has yet come up with an adequate explanation as to why Canadians are refusing to be Americans.Several suggestions have been offered to explain our native northerner’s reluctance to fit the market projections so skilfully prepared by the networks.One such theory revolves around the presence of an apparent genetic defect found in most Canadians that can only be cured through an extensive chromosome transplant.Another suggestion deals with the dulling effect of thirty-five years of Liberal government which, according to several em-minent American scientist, has left Canadians incapable of appreciating anything but the lo- west forms of humor.No where has there been any mention of the likelihood that most Canadians are rejecting pay TV simply because the quality of the programming offered is just not worth it.For example.The movie version of Reds, starring Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton, Jack Nicholson and the entire population of Minsk was thought to be a surefire winner.And I guess for those who would prefer sitting in the comfort of their own home while the entire Russian revolution takes place, scheduling Reds for 2 a m.makes a lot of sense.For your average Canadian who mistakenly feels that nightime is for sleeping however, it meant that Czar died in vain.A much better idea, obviously, was to fill the prime time slot with that well-known classic, Horror Hospital, whose opening scene included a dwarf, an evil doctor, an escaping duo and a decapitation or two just for good measure.Then there’s the infamous Playboy productions.Who could bear to miss Shake It Sexy with host Barbie Benton giving her im-mitation of a windup doll while contesting couples perform seminude dances which are judged on, among other things, costumes — how many points does a G-string deserve?Playboy also includes interviews with a variety of famous Americans who openly discuss their sex lives.Since it would appear that your average rich and famous person has had at least 1,500 sexual partners, Canadians — who are known to consider sex as a method of keeping warm can be forgiven for being unable to relate to the attitudes of our socially advanced neighbours to the south.Left alone.Playboy TV would quite likely have died a natural death the cause being the near terminal boredom it inflicts on viewers.No, Canadians will have to face the terrifying truth that we are obviously not yet ready for the sophistication of pay television.Until we as a nation are prepared to sacrifice sleep, to develop an appreciation of the artistry of such cinematic masterpieces as Swamp Thing and to open ourselves to the sexual revolution, we will be unable to take our rightful place in the modern world.Pay TV may be here to stay but it depends as they say, ‘on what the market will bear’ and this time the ‘market’ may be right.FIRST CHOICE Embittered film maker told nuclear war not esthetic It was a fashionable era for “angry young men” when English film-maker Peter Watkins won an Academy Award in 1966 for a nuclear war documentary banned by the Bri-tish Broadcasting Corp.for being too realistic.The War Game, a powerful drama showing the aftermath of a nuclear missile attack on an English village, has been shown in cinemas for 18 years and is the most requested film in Swedish schools.But it has been virtually banned from television.More significantly, Watkins’ numerous attempts to find a sponsor for another nuclear film have met systematic rejection.“I’ve had so many projects stopped,” says Watkins wearly.“I distinctly remember a West German television producer telling me it wasn’t ‘esthetic’ to show nuclear war on television.’’ Now middle-aged and somewhat embittered, Watkins remains an angry voice in a world which increasingly views dissent as unfashionable.A man without a country — he left England in disgust after the BBC affair — he has lived variously in Sweden, Norway and the United States.Watkins has all but given up film-making to speak about the nuclear threat.Among his most cri- tically acclaimed films are Culloden, a disturbing reconstruction of the 1746 slaughter of outnumbered highland rebels by the English army, and Edvard Munch, a portrait of the Norwegian expressionist artist that used amateur actors and was banned by Norwegian television.For the last few months, Watkins has been travelling the globe trying to solicit public support for a film to be called simply, The Nuclear War Film.The proposed feature would be shot around the world and would combine factual information about nuclear war with footage of real families discus- sing their feelings and fears.The project has gained solid support in Sweden, Australia, Japan and North America, and Watkins is applying to the Soviet and Indian governments for permission to shoot there.Arriving to address a recent meeting of Canadian independent film-makers in Montreal, a weary-looking Watkins looks and dresses more like the English banker’s son he is, than the “anti-Establishment man” one leading American film encyclopedia tags him.DANGEROUS MAN Watkins says that Sydney Newman, former National Film Board head, accused him to his face of being “a very dangerous man” when he proposed a film on Metis leader Louis Riel.“As a matter of fact, I’ve had more projects stopped in Canada than anywhere else,” he notes.For instance, Watkins says that in 1978, at the invitation of CBC-TV, he proposed to show what could happen if a nuclear reactor in the Philippines fuelled by Canadian uranium went into meltdown.‘‘I wanted to deal with the kind of long-range moral responsibility and that offer to work was withdrawn faster than you could say the word censor.“Ironically, the letter of refusal was typed two days before the Harrisburg meltdown.I shall never forget that.” Understandably, Watkins’ experiences since The War Game have turned him into an arch critic of the media, particularly television, which he accuses of two decades of silent suppression of the development of nuclear arms.CALLS TV A SHAM “You begin to realize the whole thing (television) is a fraud and a sham.It has nothing to do with working with the public, it has nothing to do with the democratic flow of information.” The mainstream me- dia, he contends, are a conservative if not downright reactionary lot, self-appointed keepers of truth who refuse to deal with what it means to be a public manipulator — “which is essentially what most of us are.” “Men and a few women who entered television in their 20s are now clinging hard on to jobs into their late 30s, 40s and 50s,” says Watkins.“These people are killers.“The CBC is stacked with them, the BBC is stacked with them, Norwegian television is stacked with them.Even Swedish television, which is one of the most liberal companies, is stacked with them.” Book tells horror of 1918-19 influenza EDMONTON (CP) — The supply of coffins was quickly exhausted when the killer Spanish influenza swept across Canada in 1918-19, says author Eileen Pettigrew, whose book The Silent Enemy describes the horrors of the flu.Residents of Alliance, Alta., southeast of Edmonton, erected barricades to ward off the disease, which eventually infected one in six Canadians and killed more than 20,000.“They pulled a granary across the street and townspeople manned it to keep people out,” Pettigrew said in an interview Monday.Their efforts proved futile.Alliance’s first flu fatality was the town’s only doctor.The book outlines the fear which swept across Canada after First World War soldiers brought the deadly virus home with them.Officials in Calgary ordered all residents to don masks in public while sidewalk spittoons were abolished in Edmonton, Pettigrew said.To write the book she reviewed old newspapers and interviewed people who remember the devastating epidemic.Schools were closed before the influenza hit Edmonton in October, 1918.Churches and theatres followed and stores were permitted to open only between 10 a.m.and 3 p.m.“You could be talking to a man on the street, turn around and walk down the street .you’d look back and he had fallen over,” said one Edmonton eyewitness quoted in Pettigrew’s book.Native communities were hard hit by the flu during the winter.In some northern areas the dead lay on cabin roofs until the ground thawed in the spring, Pettigrew said.Before people developed an immunity to the new flu strain the epidemic had killed as many people as the First World War, she said.The severity and high fevers caused by the strain of flu left people open to fatal complications.“The thing that killed people was the pneumonia which followed,” the author said.Claims from flu victims cost Canadian insurance companies more than war claims.Volunteers were forced to care for the sick because many of the country’s trained medical personnel were in Europe with the armed forces.Throughout Alberta schools were turned into emergency hospitals and volunteers did the best they would with whatever medical supplies were at hand, Pettigrew said.v__ pamiapacTian 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983 Local theatre bases hopes on ‘wealth’ of E.T.talent By Peter Scowen LENNOXVILLE —While most of us are concentrating on the upcoming cold and flu season, one Townships man is looking right past this winter to next spring — and it's not warm sunny days and red-breasted robins on the windowsill that he sees waiting for him there, it’s bagpipes.Bagpipes, kilts, highland flings and thick Scottish brogues will all be on stage at Alexander Galt Regional high school at the end of next April when Jim Strictland's Townships Theatre presents the musical "Brigadoon” by Lerner and Loewe.Townships Theatre came into being 2 years ago when Strictland saw that the heavy dose of popular Gilbert and Sullivan works served up by the Lennoxville Players an amateur theatre group that he was and still is involved with — was becoming re-petitous.“A lot of people asked ‘When are you going to do something dif-ferent?’” Strickland said in a recent interview.He answered that question by forming another amateur theatre group with the goal of producing varied works and successfully put on Agatha Christie’s 'Mousetrap’’.Townships Theatre will concentrate mostly on musicals however, since they usually have a large cast with a place for everyone who wants to play and are popular with Townships’ audiences.A point that Strictland wants to make very clear is that Township Theatre “is not running opposition to the Lennoxville Players".He is making sure that "Briga-doon’” is not playing at the same time as any LP production by putting it on at the end of next April, and he feels that forming a second amateur theatre group will actually help out LP.“I like to get as many people involved as possible, especially people who have a vague thought about doing it’’ Strictland said.He is sure there is a wealth of untapped talent in the Townships and he hopes to find it by having an entirely new cast for “Brigadoon" His ultimate goal is to organize an amateur theatre guild that between shows would invite knowledgeable types to lecture on various aspects of stage production such as voice, make-up or lighting.All this will certainly benefit theatre as a whole in the Eastern Townships which Strictland says is the off-island center of English theatre in Quebec."Brigadoon” is the story of 2 American friends Tommy Albright and Jeff Douglas who get lost in the Scottish highlands and stumble upon the mysterious village of Brigadoon.Tom meets Fiona Maclaren who is helping prepare hersister’s wedding, and they fall in love.Tom discovers through the town’s schoolmaster that Brigadoon is an enchanted town that only comes to life once every 100 years and then only for one day.Any villager who leaves the town will destroy it, but a visitor may stay if he falls in love.After the wedding the sister’s broken-hearted suitor tries to run away and finish Brigadoon, but it’s still only the first act.The townspeople set out to stop him and find him mysteriously brained by the side of the road.In the second act Tom tells Jeff he is in love with Fiona and is staying in Brigadoon, but is then shocked to discover that it was his friend who accidently killed the runaway.Tom begins tothink the whole thing is a dream and returns to New York with Jeff where he is haunted by Fiona’s memory.He decides to go back to Scotland and find his lost love in her magic village, and that is the rest of the story.There are up to 35 parts in “Brigadoon’’.Strictland, who last year played the title role in the Lennoxville Players’ production of Gilbert and Sullivan’s “The Mikado”, is going to be in the chorus this year in order to give others the chance to find fame in a lead role.He is also producing the show.Nelson Gonyer is directing it, and John Pillé is doing the mu- 7 like to get as many people involved as possible Jim Strictland.‘It’s twice the effort to put on a musical' sic.Strictland is still trying to arrange sponsorship, and should know about that soon.“Brigadoon” is a good musical for the Townships, Strictland says, because there are a lot of Scots here.Not only that, it is good family entertainment for the same price as a movie, and you may just see one of your good friends on stage in a kilt singing his heart out — if you are not up there yourself.However, “Brigadoon" is a much tougher play to put on than “Mousetrap"."It’s twice the effort to put on a musical’’ Strictland said.“Musical support is our big problem now.There is no orchestra around here that people can take part in on an amateur basis”.Strictland is encouraging people to “come out of the closet” and show their talents, talents that he needs to bring “Brigadoon” to the stage.Anybody who thinks they can help should call Jim Strictland at either 569-4692 (home) or 567-4622 (office).There will also be auditions for the courageous at Alexander Galt Regional high school on Tuesday November 15 at 7:30.“Nothing’s impossible” is Stric-tland’s motto.He is actually looking past “Brigadoon” to the day he realises his dream of putting on “The Music Man”.He believes in learning “as you go along”, so no-one should worry about a lack of experience when they consider going for a try-out at Alexander Galt.If Jim Strictland has his way, people in the Townships will remember the spring of ’84 not as a season of melting snow and budding flowers but as something squeezed out of a tartan bag under the arm of a red-faced man in a kilt, and as the time they made their debut on the stage.Nothing’s impossible.“Ah dinna ken.Hae ye ever tried to eat haggis?” Saint John campaign brings city theatre SAINT JOHN, N.B.(CP) — A retired university professor solicited prizes from local businesses and sold raffle tickets on 1,018 items ranging from tattoos to airline tickets.A two-year-old girl donated a nickel.Patrons bought theatre seats for $1,000 and New Brunswick’s most famous industrialist family, the Irvings, coughed up $350,000.When the imaginative, year long fund raising drive was over, residents determined to give the province’s largest city its own theatre house had raised more than $1 million — enough to purchase the once grand Imperial Theatre.Thomas Condon, chairman of the project, said Wednesday that, in one way or another, about 70 per cent of the city’s 110.000 citizens took part.“That’s one hell of a number.1 can’t think of any other project that has really been so grass roots, so involved.“It makes it clear the people really wanted this thing." Condon said purchase papers for the 70-year-old downtown theatre, renamed the Capitol after it was turned into a movie house, will be signed this week.NEEDS THEATRE Artists, merchants and others have complained for years that the city is too big to be without a proper cultural facility.Condon said his group, called the Bi-Capitol Committee, hopes touring theatre groups, ballet and opera companies will use the theatre along with local performers.“There is a lot of amateur and semi-professional theatre groups in Saint John and I think we would be wanting to encourage and extend that.” The theatre now is owned by the Full Gospel Assembly, a Pentecostal church.Because the church has 14 months to find a new home, work on the building will probably be confined to the exterior for the next year or so.But, Condon believes the large Victorian structure will be magnificent when completed “It’s really a jewel.It’s quite spectacular inside.” With a seating capacity of 1,400, the theatre would be the biggest in the Maritimes and a major improvement over the city's existing facilties, Condon said.By comparison, the nationally reknowned Confederation Centre in Charlottetown has 1,076 seats.HAD FOUR More than a century ago, Saint John boasted four theatres with thousands of seats.But, today theatre goers must settle for a high school auditorium when productions are staged.During a strike by school employees a couple of years ago, one Shakespeare play was shifted to a chilly hockey rink.The Bi-Capitol Committee has approached the provincial and federal governments for $5 million to renovate and restore the building.Condon said the private fund-raising project should convince government the theatre is not something for a small, elite crowd.“Here there was a mixture of wealthy, non-wealthy, young, old.There was really a cross-section of the community.” Organizers read telegrams of congratulations this week from Premier Richard Hatfield, Prime Minister Trudeau and Tory leader Brian Mulroney at a noisy celebration.Brian is waitinefor you to make the dmerence .Be a Kidney Volunteer At two years old, Brian knows a lot about waiting.Right now.Brun is waiting for a kidney transplant.He needs a new kidney—soon.With the help of a lot of people, Brian is fighting kidney disease.He can’t do it alone.For as little as a few hours of your time, you can be a life-saver.Your help to raise money for kidney research and patient support programs can make the difference for a child like Brian Call now to volunteer your time for the door-to-door Brian Appeal in March.Brian is waiting for you to make the difference.Call 1-800-268-6364 (In B.C.112-800-268-6364) Op.#533 The Kidney Foundation Of Canada *¦¦¦¦¦ M M M HB H M H I want to be a lifesaver.Please call me about volunteer opportunities.Name__________________ Address______ City Postal Code Prov .Telephone ( )_ The Kidney Foundation of Canada Box 2670, Station “D" Mn Laurier Street West, Ottawa, Ontario KIP 5W7 ¦ ( luriuMc Registration #0224980-13-08 TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983—7 6 A spellbinding panorama of action and emotion9 OTTAWA (CP)-The Wars, the long-awaited film version of Timothy Findley’s award-winning novel which will have its Canadian premiere Nov.11, is a spellbinding panorama of action and emotions which could probably only have been played out by Robin Phillips’s stable of actors.The former artistic director of the Stratford Festival, now running The Grand Theatre Company in London, Ont., puts his imprint clearly on every scene of this two-hour epic of battlefields and society salons in the First World War.Beyond the flutter of a seagull and the trilling of a songbird punctuating scenes of harrowing pathos, there is acting ability and company spirit rarely seen in such concentration on film.More can be said with the flutter of an eyebrow or the twitch of a lip than pages of prose.Brent Carver, who played the leads in Crossbar and Bent, is Robert Ross, the moody teenaged society wimp who becomes a junior officer and goes to war to es-cape family ties.Faced with adult responsibility, he steels himself to and beyond the breaking point, and ends his life in military disgrace but, morally, a hero.The late Glenn Gould contributes the music, his piano interpretations heightening the action.The lineup of Canadian actors is more than just impressive.It’s really like a Who’s Who of live Canadian theatre, many of them not often seen on film Martha Henry and William Hutt are Robert’s parents, Jackie Burroughs his Nannie and Barbara Budd his military hospital nurse.Large and small parts, some of them only a line or two, are taken by Domini Blythe, Alan Scarfe, Susan Wright, Roger Barton, Richard Curnock, Jeff Hyslop, Leo Leyden, William Malmo, Marti Maraden, Richard McMillan and Stephen Russell.All of these worked with Phillips at Stratford and most are with him again in the Grand Theatre Company, including Carver, Henry, Hutt and Budd.Margaret Tyzack, one of the great character ladies of the British stage, appears as a society matron who has given her stately English home to officers for rest and recouperation, where Robert finds peace and his manhood.The film was shot in Ontario, Alberta and England.Findley has said he titled his book The Wars — in the plural — even though it deals only with a story of the First World War because it really is about a young man’s wars with society, with growing up, with colleagues and associates, and with his conscience, the kind of wars everyone has to fight.The Wars won the Governor General’s Award for Literature in 1977.The film follows the book faithfully — as it should, since Findley wrote the screen play as well.And Phillips, with his longtime design associate, Daphne Dare, has been faithful to the book and the period.The Ross’s live in a stately Edwardian home.Father is so successful and reserved he hardly notices Mother is drinking too much as she worries about her family, the loss of a crippled daughter, and what must be done for the sake of duty.The book seemed to suggest a homosexual streak in young Robert.This is not highlighted in the film.Running Brave backed by Indian band’s millions EDMONTON (CP) — An Alberta Indian band’s $11 million foray into the movie business came to fruition last week when Robby Benson jogged into focus across screens around North America in Running Brave.Benson plays Billy Mills, an American Sioux runner who won a gold medal at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.The movie was shot primarily in Edmonton and Drumhel-ler, Alta., and opened Friday in 250 Canadian and U.S.theatres.Prominent among the audience at the flashy Edmonton premiere were members of the Ermineskin Indian band of Hobbema, Alta., which put up all of the film’s budget in exchange for 50 per cent of gross earnings worldwide.The near capacity house was a mixture of tuxedos and blue jeans.Curious patrons who came to catch a glimpse of fa miliar Edmonton locations used in the film applauded sporadically as limousines arrived in front of the theatre to deposit local celebrities.Running Brave is the first feature film produced by Ira Englander, a California-based maker of industrial and educational films.Don Shebib, the acclaimed Canadian director whose last film was the Genie Awardwinning Heartaches, directed Running Brave, but was replaced during the editing process and asked to have his name removed from the credits.“Shebib had his viewpoint as to what the film should look like—it didn’t coincide with my viewpoint,” Englander said in an interview.“This is a project that I created and it had to have a cer- tain flavor.He wasn’t delivering what I wanted.” ’TURNED WHITE' The film revolves around the discrimination faced by Mills — now an insurance agent in Sacramento, Calif.— while attending the University of Kansas and the accusations of his friends on a South Dakota reserve that Mills had “turned white.” Englander says there has been no criti-cism from Indian groups in Canada or the U.S.over the casting of a white actor in the part.However, he admits not everyone has been happy.“There are a few unemployed Indian actors in Los Angeles .who are trying to act like Indian activists and say that we should have used an Indian.But if they look, there’s not one other Indian part in this picture that was played by a non-Indian.” Englander also believes the movie’s message is a more important concern.“Billy is a very positive role model.The Indian people have not seen many of them in film.” Danny Littlechild, a spokesman for the Ermineskin band, said the band approved of the casting.“The first priority of the band was to invest in a money-making venture,” he said.“With all things considered, such as the Olympics in 1984, and Billy Mills being an Indian .it was too good a deal to pass up.As far as Robby’s portrayal, I d I hink anyone else ci, .id have done it as well as he did.” The band, one of Alberta’s richest thanks to oil royalties and real estate investments, hopes to make at least $200 million from the film and associated merchandising.Killing cops is jin other job EDMONTON (CP) — Killing seven young police recruits in one day earned Robert Seale the nickname Psycho, and a lot of respect from the RCMP.Being a cop-killer, a hostage-taker, a child abuser or a rapist is all in a day’s work for Seale when he’s at home in Regina.The 31-year-old, Ottawa-born actor has perpetrated some heinous acts while simulating real-life crimes at Regina’s RCMP training centre.Seale is in Edmonton preparing for a role in the Citadel Theatre production of The Fox.RCMP recruits must undergo 7‘/2 hours each of intense and sometimes brutal dramas to learn how they might react to stressful and violent situations.The sessions are called domestic crisis intervention.“If they screw it up .usually three or four people wind up dead,” said Seale, who has worked for the RCMP for the last three years.Next year the redhead will lead a theatre group which will expand the program to 150 hours of training.In the mini-dramas, videotaped for later analysis, two young recruits take a call at a staged RCMP office.“Usually it’s a domestic dispute between a man and a woman,” Seale said.The recruits are given 30 seconds to gather 10 pieces of information from the caller to determine what is happening CONFRONT ACTORS They then go to another stage which might resemble a ground-floor apartment where they confront the warring pair.The actors and actresses have been armed with an outline of the impending confrontation but must improvise.They ply the recruits with all types of subtle psychological suggestions.“We practise every kind of deception and deceit,” Seale said.“There’s a lot of places were you can hide a gun.” Sleeping amid the creepy crawlies LOS ANGELES (AP) — In the aging house where he has lived since boyhood, Donald Reed sleeps amid images of creatures whose creeping, crawling ways would drive the less adventurous screaming into the night.But the founder of the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films and the Count Dracula Society loves his rooms stuffed with bone-chilling books, frightening film memorabilia and eerie images of the blood-sucking vampire.For Reed, Halloween lasts all year.“Like all kids, I loved Halloween,” said Reed, 47, as he recently gave a visitor a tour of his home south of downtown Los Angeles.“I never gave it up.I never wanted it to end.So I went to horror films, and I began collecting things.“This house is simply a reflection of my great interests: history , Dracula and the Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Film Academy.” Pictures of Dracula in nearly all his cinematic incarnations stare down from the walls in Reed’s bedroom and other rooms: Bela Lugosi, Christopher Lee, George Hamilton and Jack Balance are just a few of the actors who have donned cape and fangs over the last 50 years.The World Almanac’s Book of Buffs, Masters, Mavens and Uncommon Experts calls Reed “perhaps the most knowled-gable American expert on Dracula in truth and fiction.” The buoyant, scholarly Reed says that thanks to Hollywood, horror creatures such as Dracula have become part of American mythology.PART OF MYTHOLOGY “The ancient Egyptians said to speak of the dead is to make them live again,” he said.“We have accepted these creatures as the youths of ancient Greece accepted their mythological gods.But Dracula and Frankenstein are part of our American mythology.They are part of our culture, and on Halloween, they are very much alive.” Reed, who prefers to be known as Dr.Donald Reed, in fact earned a doctor of laws degree at nearby University of Southern California.But rather than practice law, he has written books on such diverse subjects as actor Robert Redford and Admiral Leahy at Vichy France, a study of William Daniel Leahy's stint as the U.S.ambassador to France’s Vichy government from 1940 to 1942.Reed founded the academy in 1972 because he felt Hollywood was being unfair to the fanciful.Only once has an Oscar for best actor been awarded for a role in a horror film : to Frederic March in 1932 for the title role in Dr.Jekylland Mr.Hyde.Science fiction and horror films may draw big audiences, but none has ever won the best picture award.Reed’s organization patterns itself after the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.A FRFF SUBSCRIPTION ARTHRITIS NEWS Canadas only official lay publication about arthritis, is available at no charge by writing: , ( ARTHRITIS NEWS ^ The Arthritis Society -Mfc.920 Yonge Street Suite 420 Toronto Ontano M4W 3J7 * 35 Years of Service to Canadians” 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983 WHAT’S ON Music Mikey is going to break from his usual policy of being entirely neutral and keeping politics out of his ramblings by laying waste to the peculiarites of Canada Post the Crowned Corpse that has the mandate from our federal government to make sure we do all our corresponding by phone.Because Friday is Remembrance Day, Michael Warren.Canada's answer to a question nobody else is foolish enough to ask has decided that his overworked posties need not carry around their burdens this Friday, thus depriving the population of a truly essential service, and making it necessary for us minions at The Record to do a week's work in three days so that we can get your weekend section to you before next month.Unlike the posties, Record employees are not hampered by hail or sleet or extra holidays and must get the product out — preferably in time.The problem that arises for Mikey is that very few nightclubs have anybody to answer the phone at 9.30 in the morning to tell him what bands are playing, so I apologize for the fact that some of my usual listings are not available.Sorry, folks.Anyway, here’s what I’ve got: Royal Male, who are every bit as good as I said they were going to be are playing again this weekend at Cal Pincken's FL Hideaway from Thursdays to Sundays for the rest of the month.The boys live up to all the praise I’ve given them, and surprised me only by the astonishing variety of music they play.An excellent band that gets better every day.Highly recommended.At The Manoir Waterville, The Class of '59 is back for the next two weeks, and they too, are excellent.Their renditions of old favorites from the fifties and sixties are bang-on, and they really know how to get the crowd hopping.The only drawback to this show is the cover-charge ($3 Friday, $4 Saturday) but once again, the music is good and the show is worth it.At the Rock Palace in Sherbrooke this weekend, the rock group Shadow Fax plays through until Sunday, but the big news there is that The Powder Blues Band will be coming to town next Wednesday, November 16.Powder Blues is an exceptionally good band, with a blues-jazz combination that will literally set your feet to tapping whether you like it or not.1 haven't been able to get any details as to admission price or anything like that, but this is a special band, and I’m convinced they’ll be worth whatever’s being asked.Following them, on Thursday, Hostage begins a four-day stint.In South Stukely at Station 88, the country tunes of Bigfoot continue to bring them in every Friday and Saturday evening until the end of November.Bigfoot have always been able to satisfy their audiences, who tend to follow them around if they can, At the Bar Lac Denison in the Danville-Richmond area, Country Pride brings its renditions of old standard and modern country music back again Friday and Saturday evenings.This is another versatile band that draws very loyal followers.At Sherbrooke’s Li’l Nashville, the amazing Texas-Québec are firmly established and are prepared to dazzle the ‘grande ville’ with their highly polished and professional country show.This is an excellent outfit, that brings quality and hard work to their performances and a band of this calibre can hardly be disappointing.The Brian Monty Blues Band performs Friday and Saturday out at Salle Burroughs Falls and as you know, Mikey is a fan of that outfit too.Backing the inimitable Mr.Monty, are Denis Lajoie on guitar, Jim Buck on bass and some old coot named Chris Griffith on the drums.This is the blues the way it should be played.At the Motel Bretagne outside Waterville this weekend, Caroussels Country Riders are back for another week at least.Friday and Saturday evening, and on Sunday afternoon Gail and Réal take to the stage.This is a pleasant place to go and catch some real country tunes in a real country atmosphere.Even I'm not crazy enough to try one of their famous Shiverin’ Bastards however.On Sunday, at 7.30 p.m.at St-Bibiane's Church in Richmond, Doctor Willis Noble will be giving an organ recital sponsored by Les Amis de la Musique.Dr Noble has performed all over Canada and the United States, and has been featured performer on CBC Radio’s Organists in Recital program.He is also an established composer.At Salle Pelletier in Melbourne.Saturday evening.Country Plus will be providing the music for a dance which begins at 9 p.m.That’s all she wrote friends.Complaints should be sent to Michael Warren, Canada Post, Ottawa, Disneyland — by courrier.Exhibitions There’s something quite special happening this week out at The Homestead gallery on route 147 south of Lennox ville.Bev Musty has arranged for an exhibition by one of Cana- By MICHAEL McDEVITT da’s best known and most sought-after artists, Peter Etril Snyder.Snyder is internationally renowned for his true to life depiction of the life and country of the Mennonite community in and around his native Waterloo County in Ontario, and his work represents a lifestyle that, faced with the incursion of modern technology, may soon vanish from the face of the earth.The Mennonites, a devoted religious sect with origins in Germany, have traditionally rejected the influence of technology, preferring to work their land with the help of horses and sheer hard work.They have an intensely strong community life, based on simple, luxury-free living, hard work, and a strong faith in and devotion to God.Snyder grew up in this environment and the affection he bears for it is evident in his straightforward and lovely scenes from Mennonite life.The quality of the land takes on a powerful presence in an area untouched by the blight of power cables, telephone wires, and the pollution of tractor engines, and Snyder captures this perfectly.His paintings are a delight to the eye and are executed with love and respect for the subject.To gaze at these scenes brings back memories of tranquil evenings after a hard but satisfying day’s work, (no.but I’ve heard about it, smarty) in a time when a man’s place in the universe lay in his connection with the land that he worked.Snyder’s paintings are beautiful, and we are particularly fortunate in that this is the first time his work has been didplayed in number in the province of Quebec.The show begins Monday and continues until November 24.The public is urged to come out and spend a quiet afternoon or evening perusing the work of a fine painter whose message is one of love for the beauty around him.The Homestead is open daily from 11 a.m.until 9 p.m.and admission, of course, is free.At the Mezzanine Gallery at the Caisse Populaire de Sherbrooke-est, North Hatley’s Claude Lafleur is exhibiting his latest work in a show called, appropriately enough, Lafleur 83.Lafleur’s drawings and silkscreens are soft and moody, and bear a remarkable resemblance to the work of the classical Japanese painters who preferred subtleness to blatancy.His subjects are pensive and pleasing to the eye, presented with a delicacy of stroke that indicates great skill and attention to detail.The show begins Monday the 14th and continues until November 25 and the gallery is open during regular banking hours.The Bishop’s —'Champlain Art Gallery's exhibit of Precolumbian Art enters its final week and concludes on Wednesday, the 16th.This show is a splendid opportunity to see the work of the fine native craftsmen of South America first hand.Before the arrival of Europeans in America, the Indians of South America had a rich and highly developed culture, which is amply captured by this sample of centuries-old pottery, jewelry and weaving.The gallery is situated in the Marjorie Donald house on the campus of Bishop’s ®nibtrsitp and is open from 11 a.m.until 3 p.m.weekdays.Also at the Bishop’s — Champlain Art Gallery, beginning next Thursday evening The Eastern Townships Juried Exhibition.featuring a selection from some 66 works submitted to a three-man jury for selection.Artists represented include such notables as Denis palmer, Joyce Schweitzer Cochrane, Gordon Pearson, Nicole Benoit and many more.The vernissage for this exhibit, which remains until December 7, is Thursday at 8 p.m.At the Sherbrooke Museum of Fine Art at 86 Wellington St.North, a retrospective of Sherbrooke painter Marcel Gin-gras is on display until December 1.This show features work that spans over forty years of painting, and is simple and diverse in its appeal.The gallery isopen from 1 p.m to 5 on weekdays, and from noon to 5 on Sundays.The Musée Beaulne in Coaticook is featuring a show called Witnesses of Our Time, a series of watercolors by Carole Lafontaine.This show features Lafontaine’s impressions of the world around her and the artist seems to seek out new perspectives on familiar objects.Her experiments are not shocking but are revealing and display a curiosity that is vibrant and alive.The Beaulne is open from Wednesdays through Sundays from 1 to 4 p.m.At the Salle Albert Gravel at the Sherbrooke Municipal Library the wild and wonderful oil paintings of Jacques Desruisseaux wil be on display until December 2.Desruis-seaux’s extreme surrealism tends to make one wonder what kind of sugar cubes found their way into his herbal tea during the 60s, but his visions are entertaining and certainly unusual.He seems to let his imagination run off ahead of him while he busily paints maps of where he’s going.Desrusseaux adds new meaning to the old adage that getting there is half the fun.The gallery, situated in the Library basement is open during regular library hours Monday through Saturday, morning afternoon, and, on Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays, in the evening until 9.Everything you ever wanted to know about the northern muskox can be learned at the Centre Exposition Léon Marcotte at the Sherbrooke Seminary on Frontenac St.Omingmak: The Muskox is an exhibit prepared by the National Museum of Science by scientists who spent ten years studying the habits and precarious lifestyle of this large and beautiful beast.The Centre is open every day except Monday from 12.30 p.m.until 5.At the Point de Vue gallery at the Sherbrooke CEGEP the paintings of German-born artist Gustaf Gabbe are on display until November 18.Gabbe is a retired landscape architect whose interest in self-expression has caused him to master both painting and woodcarving, and now that he has retired, he devotes his time almost exclusively to his art.He has exhibited extensively both in Canada and in Germany.The Point de Vue is open from Monday to Thursday from 8.15 a.m until 9 p.m and on Friday from 8.15 until 5.At the Museum of Minerology and Mining History in Asbestos, three separate exhibits are on display until December 15 ; The first, entitled The Search for Early Man in Canada, is a product of the National Museum of Man and displays archeological findings recently uncovered in the Yukon, which set back the date at which man is thought to have made his appearance here significantly.The second is entitled Meteorites and Mikey will let you guess what that’s about.The third, entitled Rocks and Minerals should also be no mystery to the experienced reader.The latter two exhibits come from the Geological Survey of Canada.The museum is open from Monday through Wednesday 1 to 4.30 p.m., Thursdays and Fridays from 1 until 9, and on Saturdays and Sundays from 1 to 4.30.Admission is free.The Museum is located at 104 Letendre St.in Asbestos.Finally, on Wednesday, November 16, CBC foreign correspondant and Newswatch producer David Bazay will be in town to discuss Manipulation of the Media in the Last Three Wars, by which I understand he means the Falkland Islands, the Middle East and Grenada.Bazay will be speaking before the Canadian Institute for International Affairs at the Aubergere des Gouverneurs in Sherbrooke at 8 p.m.For more information on this event, call Graham Moody at (819) 564-3653.For those who can’t make that talk, Bazay will be speaking earlier at 4 p.m.at MacKinnon Hall on Bishop’s (Umtifrsitp Campus.Movies This week’s movie fare in the region offers some reasonably interesting attractions particularly at Sherbrooke’s Cinema Capitol, where Robert Ludlum’s spy thriller The Osterman Weekend is back on the bill with the highly acclaimed Eating Raoul.The Osterman Weekend combines the Kafkaesque confusion of a Ludlum novel — none of which are ever disappointing — with the graphic realism of director Sam Peckinpah with nail-biting results.A man goes off on a weekend with friends only to discover that his three closest companions are in reality deadly Soviet agents.It will keep you on the edge of your chair.At the Cinema Carrefour, things lighten up considerably with Romantic Comedy starring a highly promising combination of Dudley Moore and Mary Steenburgen.This, for a change, is a domestic comedy suitable for the entire family.The upshot is the typical personality conflict between two people completely unsuited for each other who naturally fall completely in love with each other.Not exactly a new premise, but one that has been used with considerable success provided the leading characters can carry the weight.In Moore and Steenburgen this should be easily realized.Romantic Comedy is also playing out at the Cinema Prin-cessin Cowansville where it is to be coupled with Hercules starring Lou I errigno.Despite the fact that he is obviously built for the part of the famous Greek Hero, the Incredible Bulkhas never really impressed me with his thespian qualities.Combine that with the way he speaks, and Hercules TOWNSHIPS WEEK-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10.1983-9 WHAT’S ON may come off looking rather foolish.The movie may be enriched by several scantily covered damsels of the ‘in distress’ type however, so all may not be lost.At the Jiiïliop’S lUntotrsitP Film Society this week, are two films, both of which are well worth catching.On Saturday at 2 p.m Watership Down, the story that Richard Adams made up to occupy his children on a long motor trip is a sure-fire treat for kids and easy-going adults alike.In this tale, the lives loves and surprising qualities of a group of rabbits is chronicled and we get an entirely different outlook on the furry little long-eared rodents.It’s a good story, and one entirely suited to transition to the screen.At $1 each, tickets for this are a real bargain.On Sunday evening at 7, Paul Newman puts in one of his finest performances in recent years in The Verdict, the story of a liquor-ravaged criminal lawyer who facest his gravest — and perhaps last — challenge.Television Tonight on Vermont ETV at 11.30, Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall star in one of their earliest collaborations Dark Passage, in which Bogie plays an escaped convict whose face has been disguised by plastic surgery, and who must remain in hiding until it heals.Typical of early Bogart as the tough, but sensitive bad guy.To lighten things up a little tomorrow at 2 p.m.Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr star in An Affair to Remember.This is a pleasant little romantic comedy which employs both these marvelous actors to their best advantage.Basically it’s the story of a shipboard romance with a lot of light-hearted nonsense thrown in.A good hangover-cure.At 9 on Channel 12, one of the first new-wave comedies — and one of the best — has its television premiere.Airplane, a satirical, slapstick and downright nuts spoof of the Airport type disaster film, stars Robert Hays, Leslie Neiison, Robert Stack and Lloyd Bridges.Channel 12 has another great movie on at midnight with Otis Young, Jack Nicholson and Randy Quaid as sailors out on The Last Detail.Nicholson and Young are assigned to bring Quaid to prison following his conviction of a serious crime, and on the way decide to give the kid a final fling before a lifetime of incarceration.This is an awfully funny movie, but it has more to offer than just laughs.On Sunday evening at 8.30, Radio-Québec ’s En Scène presents Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers in concert.Blakey is one of the innovators of modern jazz drumming, particularly in the manner in which he adapted African rhythms into the be-bop framework.The concert is simulcast in stereo on CIMO-FM at 106.1 on the radio dial.At 9, journalist and historian Gwynne Dyer completes his masterful War series with Goodbye War, in which he examines some recent examples of the small-scale warfare which is always going on.He also looks at efforts to bring about an end to war, including the founding of the United Nations and the activities of modern peace movements.Following this program, host Patrick Watson will interview Dyer and challenge some of his theses.This series of one-hour films has already begun to win international awards, and for very good reason.Dyer is a incredibly astute analyst of international relations, and his series has been provocative, disturbing, and refreshingly straightforward.Congratulations to the CBC and the National Film Board for having the courage and the foresight to present this sample of how really good television can be.At 9.30 Radio-Québec offers a French translation of Taxi Driver, Martin Scorcese’s violent but excellent depiction of the seedier aspects of big-city living.isolation and modern American standards.Robert De Niro stars as a lonely war vet who makes his living driving cab at night in new York city, and whose exposure to the ugly side of life leads him to some strange plans.He becomes involved with a 12 year-old prostitute, (Jodie Foster) and his confused relationship with her leads the film to its climax.The attention given this movie as a result of attempted assassin John Hinckley’s obsession with Foster tended to overlook the unpleasant, but borne-out message that American society is slowly, but surely losing its grip on reality, and that desperation, loneliness and futility can turn men and their value systems completely around.Peter Boyle and Cybill Shepherd also star.On Monday at 8, Vermont ETV presents California, part of the excellent Making of a Continent series, which examines the history of North America from a geological point of view.Using the newly developed theory of plate tectonics, the show looks at how geological activity millions of years ago has had a direct effect on the varied ecological systems of the continent.This show also deals with the question of the major earthquake expected in the California region.At 9, CTV presents Ordinary People, the beautiful rendition of Judith Guest’s touching novel of a family, whose vulnerabilities are exposed when tragedy strikes.Mary Tyler Moore, Donald Sutherland and Timothy Hutton star in this Academy Award-winning picture.On Tuesday at 9, Vermont ETV continues Vietnam: A Television History with Vietnamizing the War(1968-73l which examines the ill-fated attempts by the Nixon administration to extricate American forces from their no-win situation in Southeast Asia.Faced with the disturbingly high rate of domestic unrest with America’s involvement in the war, the Nixon administration chose to install a program of gradual troop withdrawal, mixed with increased bombing of the North and an escalated series of arms shipments to the Saigon regime, in the hope that the decaying South Vietnamese government would be able to carry on the war for themselves.This only increased the soldiers’ sense of futility, and made them wonder who would be the last American to die in the conflict.At midnight, Channel 12 presents the first movie Mikey ever saw in a theatre.The Ten Commandments starring Charlton Heston as Moses, and Yul Brynner as the doomed pharaoh of Egypt.Cecil B.De Mille really outdid himself in this extravaganza, and corny as it may seem to us now, the picture was at the time considered the greatest technological film achievement ever.One thing about this movie; you have no trouble telling which ones are the good guys.Finally, on Wednesday, Vermont ETV presents he Kid Who Couldn't Miss, a National Film Board presentation of the story of Canadian World War I pilot ace Billy Bishop.The film includes some excerpts from Billy Bishop Goes to War the musical revue based on Bishop’s exploits.Radio Tonight at 9.40 on CBC Stereo Aistair Cooke, everybody’s favorite expert on everything, brings us part 2 of his tribute to George Gershwin on Alistair Cooke’s Songwriters.Cooke mixes anecdotes about Gershwin with some of his best known tunes and compositions.^approximately 10.15, Nightfall, also on CBC Stereo, offers The Stone Ship an adaptation of the story by William Hope Hodgson about an old sailing ship and her crew who encounter a deadly terror from the sea.Tomorrow morning on The Entertainers at H .05 on CBC Stereo , an interview with Rory Flynn, daughter of actor Errol Flynn who describes growing up in Hollywood as the child of a movie idol.Also featured is an interview with film director Stanley Kramer who is famous for producing such socially relevant movies as Ship of Fools, On the Beach, Judgment at Nuremberg, and Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner.Kramer discusses his life, his films, and his still active social conscience.The program is rebroadcast over CBC Radio on Sunday at 1.30.At 7.05 on CBC Stereo Saturday Stereo Theatre presents From Failing Hands a special Remembrance Day offering by Roy Sallows.At 8.05 on CBC Radio , guitarist, composer, writer, comedian Mason Williams is presented in concert at the Edmonton Folk Festival.Williams reached his greatest public acclaim with his 60s instrumental Classical Gas which gave the accoustic guitar a reputation it had pre- viously not enjoyed in the popular music field.Williams, however, despite being an extremely talented musician and composer, was also a well known comedy writer whose work contributed greatly to the enormous success of The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour.On Sunday at 4.05 on CBC Radio The Canadians continues the adventures of Stephen Nowell, who has now grown and become a Jesuit sent out to convert the moody Oneida tribe.At 8.05 on CBC Stereo Testament brings us part 2 of its tribute to Martin Luther the great reformer whose campaign against corruption and the selling of indulgences in the Church of Rome led to the break-up of monolithic Christianity and the schism that still exists today.Pope John Paul II has recently acknowledged Luther’s piety and his contribution to Christian thinking, a gesture thought by many to be a sign of possible reconcilliation between the Catholic and Lutheran Churches.Luther was for centuries reviled by the Church of Rome as a heretic yet now, the 500th year of his birth, he is seen as a man of vision.At 9.05 on CBC Radio Ideas begins a four-part Sunday series entitled Aldous Huxley: Perceptions and Prophecies.Aldous Huxley was one of those very rare human beings whose mind never stopped wondering, and as an artist he never stopped sharing his thoughts and discoveries.He seemed to be a jump ahead of everybody else and spent a lifetime as one of the English language’s most controversial writers.Born into an incredibly accomplished family, British upper-class to the bone, Huxley chose to spend his life questioning everything and trying to find answers.His novels encompass a vast area of enquiry and his solutions sometimes ask more questions than they answer, yet the changes the man wrought on the way we think are undeniable.At 10.15, also on CBC Radio Sunday Side Up presents various comedians and their spoofs of radio announcers featuring George Carlin and Foster Brookes.On Morningside this week, the story Once Around by Christopher Heide about a couple from the Maritimes who build their own boat and sail it around the world, will be read.On Ideas this week: Monday; The Loyalists, a look at the people and history of the Loyalists who celebrate the 200th anniversary of their arrival in Canada this year.Tuesday; The Social Construct of Female Biology a lecture by Dr.Ruth Hubbard.Wednesday; Public Sex.No, that wasn't an invitation.It is the name of a series of four Wednesday programs, dealing with the emergence from the closet of the discussion of sexual matters, the availability of pornography and sexually explicit material, and the changing public attitudes towards all things sexual.Therapist-writer Varda Burstyn begins the series with a visit to New York’s 42nd Street, where the sexual marketplace is doing brisk and varied business.ssr, jSSBÊ mi "ft?¦ÜK.» ' Rit f» i i jÊH ^ hm.The paintings of the rural lifestyle of Ontario’s Mennonite community by Peter Etril Snyder are on display at The Homestead November 14-24. 10—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1988 This week's TV Listings for this week's television programs as supplied by Compulog Corp While we make every effort to ensure their accuracy they are rubject to change without notice STATIONS LISTED O UBKT - Montreal (Radio Canada) O W( AX - Burlington, Vt.(CBS) 0 WPTZ - Plattsburgh, N.Y.(NBC) Q CBMT - Montreal (CBC) O CULT - Sherbrooke (T\'A) O WMTW- Poland Spring, Me.(ABC) Q CKSH - Sherbrooke ( Radio Canada) CE) CFTM - Montreal (TVA) CB CFCF - Montreal (CTV) ® Vermont ETV - Burlington aturday Sports SATURDAY (ABC)SPORTSBEAT (ABC)NCAA FOOTBALL (NBC) SPOHTSWORLD Highlights: Live coverage ot a scheduled 10-round middleweight fight between John Mugabi and Curtis Parker from Tampa.Fla.; British Grand Prix Motorcycle Championships (sidecars) from Silverstone, England.(CBS) NCAA FOOTBALL Consult local listings for teams and time.(CBS)SPORTS SATURDAY SUNDAY (CBS)NFL FOOTBALL Consult local listings for teams and time.(NBC)NFL FOOTBALL Consult local listings for teams and time.MONDAY (ABC) NFL MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Los Angeles Rams at Atlanta Falcons.Compiled by the staff ot the World Almanac Spurts I.U.1.With which NHL team will Ron Duguay play this season?2.With which team did Tony Armas first play in the major leagues?3.Which NFL team fumbled most often during the 1982 regular season?4.Name the coach of the Texas A & M football team.5.Name the last man to win both the singles and doubles title at the U.S.Open tennis championships.6.Name the last woman to win both the singles and doubles title at the U.S.Open tennis championships.7.Name the Villanova player who was chosen In the first round of the 1983 NBA draft.8.What is the nickname of the Colgate Unlv.football team?9.In which swimming event did Matt Grlbble recently set a world record?Xgjeunq Jejeui-oot '6 sjepiey pay -g jeBuejg iJBMeis v E961 SAOIHBJABN BUllJBim -g 1861 eojugon uuop s iiiijeus •np*r 62 'sAoqMOO sbiibq e sejBJid MBjnqsHid 2 bBuim pen lK>Jt®a l SJ3M.SUV MORNING 6:30 O NEW YOU 6:00© UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR 6:30 O HEALTH FIELD © CIRCLE SQUARE 7:00 O WONDER WOMAN O CARTOONS O CHILDREN'S THEATRE "Curious George" Animated.The inquisitive monkey sets off for adventure with his friend, the Man in the Yellow Hat.© CISCO KID © GREAT SPACE COASTER 7:16 0 MIRE ET MUSIQUE 7:30 O O CALIMERO / MERCI M.NOE OTHATTEEN SHOW © 100 HUNTLEY STREET © GREAT SPACE COASTER Movfe Rëllnga Outstanding.Excellent.Very Good.Good.Not Bad.AA Fair.Alt Poor.A 6:00 O O NILS HOLGERS-SON O the biskitts Q THE FLINTSTONE FUNNIES O 6B SCOOBY DOO / MENUDO © UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR 6:30 O O PASSE-PARTOUT O SATURDAY SUPER CADE Q THE SHIRT TALES O œ THE MON CHHICHIS / LITTLE RASCALS / RICHIE RICH © STORYTIME © UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR B:00 O O REMI 0 SMURFS n O 60 L'ANIMATHEQUE © LET'S GO © CONTEMPORARY HEALTH ISSUES 9:30 Q O CANDY 0 DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS O © PAC-MAN / RUBIK CUBE / MENUDO © SWISS FAMILY ROB-IN SON © CONTEMPORARY HEALTH ISSUES 9:46 O GOOD MORNING 10:00 0 O ULYSSE 31 (spQrts prQbê) Phi Slamma Jammas try again to beat ‘Pack PLAY IT AGAIN, SLAMMA — The college basketball season gets an early start Saturday afternoon when NBC presents the Hall of Fame Tip Off Classic from the birthplace of the hoop game, Springfield, Mass.Two teams who played for the NCAA championship last season, the Houston Cougars, better known as the Phi Slamma Jammas, will try once more to beat the champion North Carolina State Wolfpack.Pro basketball’s Tom Heinsohn has followed his former teammate, Bill Russell, and joined the ranks of old pros who have taken over a network microphone.Heinsohn, the former Holy Cross College All-America, former all-pro with the Boston Celtics and later coach of the Celtics for nine years, joined CBS as lead basketball analyst and is working the National Basketball Association’s games this season.This will not be Heinsohn's first shot in the broadcast booth.When he retired as a player in 1965, he was hired by Boston’s Channel 56, and for three years he announced the Celtic games, hosted a weekly telephone call-in show and served as nightly sports anchorman.In 1978 he was expert analyst for HBO's 22-game NCAA basketball schedule.And in the past two years he has been analyst for the Sports Channel covering the Celtics and the Big East college conference.Sugar Ray Leonard When WBC featherweight champion Hector "Macho” Comacho defends his title for the first time against WBC No.1-ranked contender, Rafael Solis, in a 12-round bout in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Friday night, he better be at his best.Macho, who has often been called the "next Sugar Ray Leonard,” will have his fighting style analyzed by Sugar Ray himself.The original Sugar Ray, or should we say Sugar Ray II, since he was named after the great Sugar Ray Robinson, will be on hand as expert commentator along with analyst Larry Merchant and blow-by-blow announcer Barry Tompkins.The bout will be carried live at 9 pm.(ET) on HBO.CUTTER TO HOUSTON Alec Baldwin (I.), Shelley Hack and Jim Metzler star in "Cutter to Houston,” a dramatic medical series, airing SATURDAY, NOV.12 on CBS.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME 0 PLASTtCMAN Q SESAME STREET O © SKIPPY LE KANGOUROU © TERRYTOONS © FOCUS ON SOCIETY 10:30 0 Q LA VALLEE SECRETE 0 CHARLIE BROWN AND SNOOPY 0 CARTOONS Q © LES CHEVAUX DU SOLEIL O © THE LITTLES © SMURFS © FOCUS ON SOCIETY 11:00 0 O LES HEROS DU SAMEDI 0 BENJI, ZAX AND THE ALIEN PRINCE 0 MR.T O PETS PLEASE O © MADAME ET SON FANTOME O © PUPPY / SCOOBY DOO I SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK © CONFLICT AND STABILITY 11:30 0 BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER 0 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN / INCREDIBLE HULK 0 TWILIGHT ZONE O TELECO © JOGGING © PEOPLE AND ORGANIZATIONS AFTERNOON 12:00 0 Q LA SEMAINE PARLEMENTAIRE 0 NCAA TODAY O MAJA THE BEE Maja and others are trapped by a raging forest fire.Q © MIDI A QUATORZE HEURES 0 WILD KINGDOM © OCEANS ALIVE © ABC WEEKEND SPECIAL ’’All The Money In The World" After he rescues a leprechaun who grants him one wish, an impoverished farm boy learns that money cannot guarantee friendship.(R) bi BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT 12:30 O NCAA FOOTBALL 0 THUNDARR O SPREAD YOUR WINQS A 14 year-old Zanzibar boy becomes the apprentice to a master builder of "dhows,” wooden sailing boats.(R) Q 00 AMERICAN BAND- STAND (B THIS WEEK IN FOOTBALL ® BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT 1:00 O O D'HIER A DEMAIN 0 CHILDREN’S THEATRE "The Little Mermaid" Animated.Richard Chamber-lain narrates Hans Christian Andersen’s story about a mermaid who wants to become a human being.0 CANADIAN JUNIOR FOOTBALL "Championship Game" (live from Windsor, Ont.) 0 MOVIE ?"Escape From The Planet Of The Apes" (1971, Science-Fiction) Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter.Simian creatures with a startling human intelligence arrive in Los Angeles, where they create paranoia among humans who believe the apes will someday rule the world.00 ACROSS THE FENCE 1:30 0 IT’S YOUR BUSINESS O AMERICAN BANDSTAND’S 30TH ANNIVERSARY A celebration of the music and stars the TV series has showcased over the last three decades is presented: among the stars making appearances are: Kenny Rogers, John Travolta, Jerry Lee Lewis, George Burns and Loretta Lynn.® AMERICA’S TOP TEN © VICTORY GARDEN 2:00 O O CINE-FAMILLE "Comment extraire la molaire d’une baleine" 0 MOVIE AA "Casino" (1980, Adventure) Mike Connors, Lynda Day George.A saboteur boards a lavish gambling ship on its maiden voyage.O © ENTRE NOUS 00 SARAJEVO ’84 © MOVIE AAA "An Affair To Remember" (1957, Romance) Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr.Two lovers aboard ship agree to postpone the consummation of their love, but tragedy intervenes before the rendezvous.2:30 © S O S J’ECOUTE 3:00 Œ) WRESTLING © SPORTSBEAT 3:30 0 SPORTSWEEKEND Scheduled: the Mercedes-Benz International Challenge equestrian competi- tion (from the Royal Winter Fair in Toronto, Ont ); a CFL regular-season review.o © JUSTICE POUR TOUS O © NCAA FOOTBALL 4:00 0 Q BAGATELLE Q SPORTS SATURDAY Scheduled: World Cup Sports Acrobatics (from Cedar Rapids, Iowa): World Figure Skating Championship Performances (from Helsinki, Finland); John Madden’s Journeys.0 SPORTSWORLD Scheduled: John Mugabi / Curtis Parker 10-round middleweight bout (live from Tampa, Fla.); British Grand Prix Motorcycle Championships - Sidecars (from Silverstone, England).O © COSMOS 1999 © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: Parcours de Chasse Equestrian event (from Spruce Meadows, Alta.); Canadian Arm Wrestling Championships (from Toronto, Ont.); Pre-Olympic Diving competition (from Los Angeles, Calif ).© NOURRIR LE QUEBEC © SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons review "Osterman Weekend” and "Deal Of The Century ." 4:30 © ARCHIBALD LE MAGI-CHIEN © WINE.WHAT PLEASURE "Light Wines And Roses" Roses from Robert Mondavi and Inglenook, and light wines from Paul Masson and Los Hermanos are featured 6:00 O Q LA COURSE AUTOUR OU MONDE O PLANETES DES SINGES © L'UNIVERS DES JEUNES © LE MARCHE AUX IMAGES © GERMAN PROFESSIONAL SOCCER 6:30 O THE CHRISTMAS RACCOONS Animated.Three raccoons and a dog help save and protect Christmas trees Irom a crazed lumber baron.Q LES P'TITS BONSHOMMES 6:46 0 LE MONDE / LOTTO 6/49 © LE DIX VOUS TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983-1! Saturday INFORMES / LOTTO 6/49 EVENING 8:00 O IMPACTS Q TO BE ANNOUNCED Q STAR SEARCH Q CBC NEWS O 03 POP EXPRESS O L'INCROYABLE HULK (0 NEWS QD PASSE-PARTOUT 'La ¦patience" ® HOUSEWARMING WITH CHARLIE WING "Doors" The importance of proper insulation around doors is explained.6-30 O THIS WEEK IN PAR LIAMENT © HOCKEY MAGAZINE © ECHEC AU ROI: SPAS SKY ! LARSEN ET SMYLOV / BOTVINNIK © SAY IT WITH SIGN 7 00 C) Q LE MONDE MER VEILLEUX DE DISNEY Q HEE HAW Q SOLID GOLD O GERALDINE Popular Montreal entertainer, Geraldine Ducet, chats with prominent local personalities from the world of entertainment, sports, science and politics - today she talks with Tommy Schnurmacher - - sometimes referred to as “the dean of Canadian gossip columnists".O CD L’HOMME QUI VENAIT DE L’ATLANTIDE ‘‘La Font des pôles” Q STAR SEARCH CD GOODNIGHT, BEAN-TOWN Jenny’s on-air opinion about the treatment of an alleged bank robber (Larry Hankin) places her in jeopardy.© HOW THE WEST WAS WON © PLANETE ARABE ‘El Kurd: poesie arabe engagée” © NEWTON’S APPLE 7:30 O FAME GAME Danny Bonk hosts a competition among musical groups from Windsor, Ont.; contestants include Soldier, Movies Robert Stack plays a harried air-traffic controller in the 1980 spoof film ''Airplane!,'' airing Sunday, Nov.13 on "NBC Sunday Night at the Movies." SUNDAY (ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE "FOR YOUR EYES ONLY” (1981) Roger Moore.Roger Moore is up to his eyebrows in hotter water than ever when James Bond becomes shark bait for a Greek millionaire.(NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “AIRPLANE" (1980) Robert Hays, Lloyd Bridges, Julie Hagerty.Refer Graves, Leslie Nielsen, Robert Stack.A former pilot, now deathly afraid of flying as a result of his wartime experiences, boards a Los Angeles-Chicago flight in pursuit of his girlfriend, a slewardess, but en route, food poisoning incapacitates the crew and he must land the craft with the assistance of two crazed experts.(CBS) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE "CHIEFS” (1983) Charlton Heston, Keith Carradine, Stephen Collins, Brad Davis, Wayne Rogers.Billy Dee Williams, Paula Kelly.An epic six-hour miniseries about a small Southern town harboring a mass murderer whose crimes go undetected for decades, and about three police chiefs who, one by on®, stumble upon the crimes and how their discovery irrevocably changes their lives.MONDAY (NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE "ORDINARY PEOPLE” (1980) Mary Tyler Moore, Donald Sutherland, Timothy Hutton, Judd Hirsch.An acclaimed drama, based on the best-selling novel by Judith Guest, focuses on the struggles of a family torn apart by an emotional crisis.TUESDAY (CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “CHIEFS” (1983) Charlton Heston, Keith Carradine, Stephen Collins, Brad Davis, Wayne Rogers, Billy Dee Williams, Paula Kelly An epic six-hour miniseries about a small Southern town harboring a mass murderer whose crimes go undetected for decades, and about three police chiefs who, one by one, stumble upon the crimes and how their discovery irrevocably changes their lives.WEDNESDAY (CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE "CHIEFS” (1983) Charlton Heston, Keith Carradine.Stephen Collins, Brad Davis, Wayne Rogers, Billy Dee Williams.Paula Kelly.Conclusion of this epic six-hour miniseries.Meadows, The Punch and The Jets.© JUST KIDDING Chil dren’s humorous views on various topics are cap tured in on-location segments introduced by hosts John Kastner and Cheryl Wilson; subjects include the "penalty" for not loving someone and the “dangers" of eating with a fork.© NORD-SUD © WILD AMERICA "Ant lered Kingdom" The many members of the deer family, from the whitetail to the moose, are perfectly adapted to their surroundings, even in the face of advancing civilization.8:00 Q O LA SOIREE DU HOCKEY Les Maple Leafs de Toronto reçoivent les Flyers de Philadelphie o BUGS BUNNY THANKSGIVING DIET Animated Bugs gets into the holiday spirit by conjuring up a special Thanksgiving diet for his friends.(R) 0 DIFF’RENT STROKES A chain reaction of events makes matters worse after Arnold mistakenly gets a draft notice, n © NHL HOCKEY Philadelphia Flyers at Toronto Maple Leafs CS CD LES GRANDS SPECTACLES "La Filiere française" (1971, Policier) Gene Hackman, Roy Schedier.En suivant un individu qui lui semble louche, un detective newyorkais de la brigade des stupéfiants croit avoir trouve la cle d’une importante affaire de contrebande de drogue, o © TJ.HOOKER Hooker uses his own off-duty time to travel to Mexico in search of a missing child.Q © MOVIE ?“Airplane!" (1980, Comedy) Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty.A former pilot traumatized by war memories is forced to take the controls of a passenger-packed jet whose crew has been affected by food poisoning.© SAMEDI SOIR Les Secrets de la Princesse de Cadignan" © ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL II 8:30© DAFFY DUCKS THANKS-FOR-GIVING Animated.Daffy decides to 'celebrate the holiday by giving his fans a chance to show their appreciation of his talents.(R) © SILVER SPOONS Ricky's happiness about hunting with Grandfather Stratton (John Houseman) fades when he is faced with the reality of killing.9:00© MOVIE AAA 9 To 5" (1980, Comedy) Jane Fonda.Dolly Parton.Three working women rebel against oppression from their male chauvinist boss.(R) © TV’S CENSORED BLOOPERS Dick Clark is joined by Ted Danson (“Cheers") and Vicki Lawrence ("Mama's Family’’) for the sixth edition of clips highlighting celebrities’ flubs and goofs.© © LOVE BOAT A car nival director (Howard Keel) has an emotional reunion with a woman from his past, two comics (Michael Lembeck, Christopher Mayer) pursue the same woman, and a palm reader (Crystal Bernard) debates whether to be honest with her groom n] © MOVIE A A AM?The Sea Hawk" (1940.Adventure) Errol Flynn, Brenda Marshall.A dashing swordsman becomes the hero of the high seas.9:40© PATIENCE ET AZUR "Le commencement” 10:00© THE YELLOW ROSE The Champions try to get their herds to market, despite the scheming Jeb Hollister’s plans to thwart them.O CD SUR LA SELLETTE © © FANTASY ISLAND A retired dancer (Cyd Charisse) wants to perform again, and a wealthy widow (Lee Meriwether) in _A- LÜ?mwow€ ïbrrrrrrr nnnryntfy EDUCATING RITA (Columbia — PG) + * * Starring Michael Caine.Julie Walters.Michael Williams By J.T.YURKO love with her butler (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.) hopes to learn that he also cares for her.?© PIERRE LALONDE 10:10© HOLLYWOOD “Le Scandale” 10:30 © Q LE TELEJOURNAL / SPORTS / POLITIQUE FEDERALE O QD LES NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS 11:00 ©NEWS © THE NATIONAL O CINEMA AA “Le Dernier Baiser” (1977, Corne die) Annie Girardot.Maria Pacome.Plaquee par son amant, une femme qui exerce le metier de chauffeur de taxi prend la resolution de ne plus accepter que des femmes comme passagères.Q ® ABC NEWS 03 DAN AUGUST (Q CTV NATIONAL NEWS Q) CINEASTES A L'ECRAN ÉB GREAT PERFORMANCES "The Life Of Verdi” The years in which Giuseppe Verdi premiered "Luisa Miller," "Il Trova-tore" and began "Rigolet-to" are dramatized.11:15© CINEMA A A & "Berlin tunel 21-1" (1981, Drame) Richard Thomas, José Ferrer.Apres la fermeture de la frontière entre l’est et l'ouest de Berlin un jeuhe soldat est séparé de sa fiancee.©NEWS © BENNY HILL O CINEMA A A & “Comme sur des roulettes" (1976, Comédie) Evelyne Bugle, Francis Huster.Une fille et sa mere sont des maniaques de la television.© SWITCH 11:20© NEWS ("Provincial Affairs" will precede the news.) ©NEWS 11:30© SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Host Teri Garr Guests: Mick Fleetwood's Zoo.11:35© MOVIE A A “ The First Time" (No Date) Jennifer Jason Leigh, Peter Barton Moral conflict erupts between a mother and her 17-year-old daughter when the young woman runs away from home to join her boyfriend.11:46© MOVIE AAA '?"The Prisoner Of Second Avenue" (1975, Comedy) Jack Lemmon, Anne Bancroft.Based on the play by Neil Simon.An advertising executive loses his job and his sanity due to an economic recession and the hectic pace of Manhattan.O SOLID GOLD 12:00© MOVIE AAA "The Last Detail" (1974, Drama) Jack Nicholson, Otis Young.A pair of rowdy shore patrolmen attempt to teach their emotionally withdrawn prisoner the facts of life 12:30© GUEST OF THE HOUSE 1:00© THE ELECTRONIC WEB The dark side of the information revolution, the threat to individual privacy in the computer age, is documented.1.36© CINEMA A A Vè "Jeux a trois" (No Date) 1:45 © AMERICA S TOP TEN © MOVIE AA^ "Riding High" (1950, Musical) Bing Crosby, Coleen Gray.A man struggles with his 3-year-old racehorse, who has never had the chance to prove his abilities on the racetrack.2:15© ABC NEWS 3:46© CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Mrs.Min, a young Vietnamese "boat person" seeks admission to the country.(Part 2) There are four types of British characters in this film.One is Denny.Rita's husband He’s blue-collar, and as happy as he wants to be A good day's wages, a night in fronof the telly, and weekends at the pub are the staples of his existence.He doesn’t want any changes.Then there's Rita's mother.She leads what can best be described as a life of quiet desperation.Married and pregnant when she was in her teens, she now feels trapped.She’d like to change, but can't Of course, there’s Rita (Julie Walters).As a hairdresser at least she has a job to take her out of the house and avoid her mother’s loneliness.But Denny wants her to settle down and have a baby.She wants to leam more about things far removed from hairstyles and diapers.She wants to learn about some of the finer things in life such as great literature, and perhaps in the process learn a few things about herself.She wants to change — and does.She goes to college and signs up for lessons with a private tutor.So begins the process of "Educating Rita " The last type of character is the tutor, played by Michael Caine.Years in the classroom have left him a bit jaded; years of trying to be a worthwhile poet have left him a bit discouraged; and all ot it has led to Caine turning to a bottle of Scotch tucked behind his textbooks.He’s someone who would like to change and has tried but failed, while Rita has succeeded If this sounds like a stuffy English drama, it’s not.In tact."Educating Rita” is a delightful and occasionally even insight ful little comedy A scholarly British tutor teaching pu per English and literature to a damsel with a heavy cockney accent is reminiscent of "Pygmalion, ” and the con .par ison fits quite well.Miss Walters and Caine car ry the film with wit, ease and style.If they gave an Academy Award to the best performance by a couple, this pair would be a shoo-in.Tele ^ Canada ‘Ordinary People’ on CTV "Ordinary People." which was voted the best picture of 1980 by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.airs Monday, Nov.14 on CTV.The film, based on Judith Guest's best-selling novel, tells the story of a troubled upper middle-class family.Starring are Mary Tyler Moore, Donald Sutherland, Timothy Hutton and Judd Hirsch.Check luting* for local scheduling.(T 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ¦ 9 0 ¦ 10 ! n ii o n ¦ 12 13 14 L Ï5 16 _ 17 18 ¦ *19 ËÜ 20 o 21 o Ü 22 o 23 4 24 o 0 ¦ 25 26 27 28 29 30 1 31 o 32 33 34 0 35 36 o 0 „„ 0 BB 37 38 39 40 J 41 o 5 42 o j ¦ oooooooo V QQOQOOO ACROSS 1 Coach on "Cheers" 5 She was Mrs.Muir 9 Actress Britt 10 Soldiers' address 12 Family on "The Rousters" 15 Nickname for Trisha (clue to puzzle answer! 18 Pass over quickly 20 An image 21 Hawaiian garland 22 Blood vessel 24 She was Ethel Mertz 25 Hour: Sp.28 "Mayberry, —’* 31 Monogram abbr.32 Pertaining to aircraft 34 One who eats 36 "Lou Grant" star 37 Before 39 Sam on "Quincy" 41 Type of code 42 "Webster's" last name DOWN 2 Soak 3 Monogram for Atkins 4 "Whiz —" 5 Role for Powers 6 Role for Berme Casey: init.7 "— Woman" 8 Belonging to Miss Arden 11 "Here s —” 13 "— in the Family" 14 "— Benjamin” 16 Belonging to Geraldo 17 — -disant (self-styled) 19 For Love and —” 23 Leaders of a group (clue to puzzle answer) 26 "Love Rooftop" 27 He's Jack Tripper 29 Doctor on "Cutter to Houston" 30 Director of Religious Education: abbr 33 Evangelist Roberts 35 Co-star of 1 Across 36 Shrub 38 Concerning 40 "Hart Hart" Answer to puzzle on page 16.y 12—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983 / Sunday W M CHIEFS — Stephen Collins stars as Billy Lee, a returning war hero who sets up a law practice in the town of Delano, and Victoria Tennant stars as his war bride, Irish, in “Chiefs.” The three-part CBS miniseries airs Sunday, Nov.13, Tuesday, Nov.15 and Wednesday, Nov.16.MORNINQ 8:00 O NEW ZOO REVUE (B UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR Œ SPORT BILLY 8:30 © ROCKET ROBIN HOOD 00 THE FLINTSTONES 7:00 O MEATBALLS 8 SPAGHETTI Q CARTOON FRIENDS O THIS IS THE LIFE © THE WORLD TOMORROW 0B JONNY QUEST 7: ISO MIRE ET MUSIQUE 7:30 O O MISHA LA BOULE O GILLIGAN'S PLANET O JIMMY SWAGGART © DAY OF DISCOVERY © THE JETSONS 8 00 O O TOM ET JERRY O WONDER WOMAN © JIMMY SWAGGART © GLORY OF GOD © SESAME STREET (R) 8:20 ^ GOOD MORNING 8:30 O O PASSE-PARTOUT Q ORAL ROBERTS O THIS IS THE LIFE O SUNDAY MASS © JIMMY SWAGGART 9:00 O O LES CONTES DE LA FORET VERTE O SUNDAY MORNING O DAY OF DISCOVERY O MUSIC AND THE SPOKEN WORD O AU CENTUPLE O THE WORLD TOMORROW © G.l JOE © ORAL ROBERTS © MISTER ROGERS (R) 9:30 Q Q KLIMBO / SI TOUS LES GENS DU MONDE O O IT IS WRITTEN O HOBBLEDEHOY © LE CHEMIN DU ROI © REX HUMBARD © TO BE ANNOUNCED © ART AND THE MEANING OF IKEBANA 10:00 © a LE JOUR DU SEIGNEUR Q ROBERT SCHULLER O STAR TREK O IL EST ECRIT O DAY OF DISCOVERY © C’ETAIT L ’BON TEMPS © HELLENIC PROGRAM © THE WORLD TOMORROW © ACROSS THE FENCE 10:30 Q FACE THE NATION O LES ETOILES DE LA LUTTE O JERRY FALWELL © TELEDOMENICA © CELEBRATING CHRIST © CROSSROADS: VERMONT’S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE 11:00 Q Q FILMS D’ART O YOU CAN QUOTE ME e THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY MUSIC O MEETING PLACE The Most Rev.Charles A Hal-pin and Rev James Weis-gerber officiate at Holy Rosary Roman Catholic Cathedral in Regina, Sask.© MATINEE AT THE BIJOU Featured: "Yukon Flight" (1940) starring Sgt.Renfrew of the Cana dian Northwest Mounted Police, a 1937 short titled "Bad Housekeeping" and starring Edgar Kennedy; a 1938 cartoon called "Boy Meets Dog”; 1939 short, "Snow Falls"; chapter 1 of "Winners Of The West." 11:30 O TAKING ADVANTAGE 0 FOCUS ’83 O © RUE ST-JACQUES O © THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY AFTERNOON 12:00 0 O LA SEMAINE VERTE 0 LORNE GREENE’S NEW WILDERNESS O MEET THE PRESS O COUNTRY CANADA The Ontario Veterinary College at the University of Guelph is highlighted O (D bon dimanche 12:30© NFL TODAY G NFL '83 O HYMN SING Selec tions include "Hallelujah Day." "Work For The Night Is Coming." "His Eye Is On The Sparrow" and Mine Eyes Have Seen The Glory ” (R) O COMMUNITY 8 © FORUM © OCTO-PUCE "L’Ordinateur et l’ecole: le débat est ouvert" @3 THE LAWMAKERS Correspondents Linda Wertheimer and Cokie Roberts join Paul Duke for an up-to-the-minute summary of Congressional activities.1:00 0 O FOOTBALL CANADIEN "Demi-finale de l'Est" © NFL FOOTBALL Phila delphia Eagles at Chicago Bears G NFL FOOTBALL Buffa lo Bills at New York Jets O CFL FOOTBALL "Eastern Division Semifinal" O MOVIE "Jour- ney Back To Oz" (1972, Fantasy) Animated.Voices of Liza Minnelli.Paul Lynde Dorothy returns to the Land of Oz and encounters the sister of the Wicked Witch of the West © TERRY WINTER © OUR TOWN © OCTO-PUCE PLUS © WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 1:30© MISS OKTOBERFEST BEAUTY PAGEANT Glenn Smith hosts the 15th Annual Kitchener-Water-loo Oktoberfest Festival Beauty Pageant © NASHVILLE MUSIC © L E.N.A.P.PRESENTE "La Productivité" (6e) œ WALL STREET WEEK "Fast Profits In Fast Food?” Guest Michael Esposito, sr vice president, Oppenheimer & Co., Inc.2:00 © © CINEMA * * "Le Pont de Cassandra'' (1976, Drame) Richard Harris, Sophia Loren Au cours dun attentat au Centre international de santé a Geneve, un terroriste pénétré dans un laboratoire ou l'on poursuit des experiences bactériologiques.© STEVE AND EYDIE "Our Love Is Here To Stay" Joining in a tribute to the musical genius of George Gershwin are pianist Gerald Robbins, the New World Philharmonic Orchestra and special guest Gene Kelly.© LA PUBLICITE AU QUEBEC "Changez d'attitude" S) GREAT PERFORMANCES "Live From Lincoln Center: New York City Opera’s 'The Cunning Little Vixen' " 2:30 S) LE CORPS HUMAIN "La circulation" 3:00 Q HERSELF THE ELF Animated.Priscilla Lopez, Jerry Orbach, Denny Dillon and Georgia Engel provide some of the voices in this fantasy story of an elfin princess who learns to rely on her friends when her magic wand is stolen by a spiteful villain.© UNTAMED WORLD The three remaining giants in the world of nature -the rhinoceros, the giraffe and the elephant - and their survival methods are examined.(R) © MOVIE ?*% "Jour ney Back To Oz" (1972, Fantasy) Animated.Voices of Liza Minnelli, Paul Lynde.Dorothy returns to the Land of Oz and encounters the sister of the Wicked Witch of the West.© LA SCIENCE EN QUESTION "La Mémoire des choses" 3:30 O THE CHARMKINS Ani-mated.The adventures of Lady Slipper and her friends in Charm World are told, featuring the voices of Ben Vereen, Aileen Quinn and Sally Struthers.tP QUESTION PERIOD Moderator Bruce Phillips and a panel of guest journalists interview top newsmakers about current domestic and international issues © LA SCIENCE EN QUESTION "A cause d’un détroit" 4:00 0 TRAITS DE MEMOIRE "Du cole de chez Hansi" O NFL FOOTBALL Washington Redskins at New York Giants G ANOTHER EVENING WITH THE STATLER BROTHERS: HEROES, LEGENDS & FRIENDS The Brothers' attempt at writ ing a TV show is the springboard for a series of musical sketches including Reba Mclntire on horseback, a tribute to the song "Elizabeth," a gos pel sing with the Masters V and a Western operetta featuring Mel Tillis as a stuttering sheriff.Q SANTA CLAUS PARADE Highlights of the second annual event (from downtown Toronto) -hosted by "Sesame Street's" Oscar the Grouch and Sharon, Lois and Bram - feature floats, marching bands, clowns and baton twirlers.O AMERICAN BANDSTAND'S 30TH ANNIVERSARY A celebration of the music and stars the TV series has showcased over the last three decades is presented; among the stars making appearances are Kenny Rogers, John Travolta, Jerry Lee Lewis.George Burns and Loretta Lynn.O ICI ET LA EN ESTRIE © CFL FOOTBALL "Western Division Semifinal” (“Yesterday In The CFL’’ profiles Ezzret "Sugarfoot" Anderson.) © LA PUBLICITE AU QUEBEC “Plaie ou bienfait" 4:300 QUARANTE ANS POUR OUBLIER O © SPORT MAG Avec Pierre Trudel.Q JUSTICE POPULAIRE © LA PUBLICITE AU QUEBEC "Le Citoyen, L’Etat, le publicitaire" © FRITZ SCHOLDER: AN AMERICAN PORTRAIT Internationally acclaimed American Indian painter Fritz Scholder is profiled.6:00 0 O SECOND REGARD O HOW THE WEST WAS WON © SALUTE © L'EVOLUTION DE L’HOMME "Au rythme des saisons" © VERMONT THIS WEEK 6:30 Q CBC NEWS © AGRONSKY AND COMPANY 6:60 O LE MONDE (D LE DIX VOUS INFORME EVENING 8:00 0 SCIENCE REALITE 0 FOCUS '83 O WALT DISNEY Back-stage Al Disney " O VIDEO STAR O© ABC NEWSn Q GRIZZLY ADAMS 03 AU ROYAUME DES ANIMAUX "M'Bogo safari" © PASSE-PARTOUT Le Chocolat" © INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY "Ted Turner ~ How He Did It" This entrepreneur discusses his career from the age of 24 to his present status as one of the most powerful forces in American broadcasting.0:30 G LE SENS DES AFFAIRES G O SISKEL & EBERT AT THE MOVIES 0 03 CHIPS "Force sept" © WILD KINGDOM © CHARLIE BROWN “Du football au bal" © WOODWRIGHT'S SHOP "Inner Woodworking" Roy talks about future projects and illustrates underlying principles that link man and material.7:00 G O COURT-CIRCUIT 0 60 MINUTES G FIRST CAMERA Lloyd Dobyns examines the growing problem of mental patients under the care of institutions that no longer have room for them; Rebecca Sobel reports on Cargill, a family-held enterprise that is the worlds largest grain treating company, and its problems with the 1RS; Steve Delaney profiles Joe Kapp, the University of California’s head football coach.Q FRAGGLE ROCK Wembley argues with Gobo, then follows him to a fearsome beast's dwelling n O © RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOTI © CHIEFS After being appointed the first police chief of the town of Delano by banker Hugh Holmes (Charlton Heston) and the city council in 1924, farmer Will Henry Lee’s (Wayne Rogers) ability to handle the job is tested by the bizarre deaths of two runaways.(Part 1) © PLANETE JUIVE “Leavitt et Schnaiberg, deux familles de Montreal" © BRADSHAW ON THE EIGHT STAGES OF MAN "Don’t Start The Crisis Without Me" During adolescence, physical and intellectual growth is often accompanied by an identity crisis.7:30 0 O LES BEAUX DIMANCHES "Gilles Latu-lippe" Q THE BEACHCOMBERS Traveling gypsies enchant Jesse so much that he ponders leaving Gibsons with his family to follow them.Q O ©CENTREMEDICAL © VOYONS DONC Comédiens: Normand Brathwaite, Daniele Panneton, Gaston Lepage et Louise Lapare, Louise Dufresene and Raymond Cloutier © OPEN STUDIO Featured: spokesmen for the Vermont Handcrafters Association and The United Way.8:00 O CHIEFS After being appointed the first police chief of the town of Delano by banker Hugh Holmes (Charlton Heston) and the city council in 1924, farmer Will Henry Lee’s (Wayne Rogers) ability to handle the job is tested by the bizarre deaths of two runaways.(Part 1) 0 KNIGHT RIDER KITT becomes the bait in Michael's plan to expose a gang of thieves who steal customized cars.Q VANDERBERG Hank is hospitalized after a fight with Sandra's friend, and Elizabeth has her baby after learning of Hank’s love affair.0 © HARDCASTLE & MCCORMICK Judge Hard-castle becomes temporary guardian of a young gang member (Stoney Jackson) targeted by his former comrades and a vicious mobster ©A TOUTE VITESSE La Medecine" Un aperçu des nouvelles techniques employees par la medecine moderne.© NATURE "Secret Weapons" Insects such as the beetle, firefly and moth make use of their natural chemicals as weapons against their enemies.8:30 0 G LE TELEJOURNAL O © VEDETTES PLUS “Rene Martel: C’est mon histoire" Avec la participation de Marcel Martel, Noella Therrien, le groupe "des Sortileges,” et Richard Huet.©EN SCENE “Art Blakey et les Jazz Messengers" 8:60 0 Q LES BEAUX DIMANCHES ’’Les Grands Esprits" Dialogues drama tiques et humoristiques entre des personnages historiques.(2e) 9:00 G MOVIE ?"Airplane!" (1980.Comedy) Robert Hays, Julie Hager ty.A former pilot traumatized by war memories is forced to take the controls of a passenger-packed jet whose crew has been affected by food poisoning Q WAR The role of mankind in initiating wars is examined (After the episode, Patrick Watson interviews series host Gwynne Dyer.) pj O © © MOVIE “For Your Eyes Only” (1981, Adventure) Roger Moore, Carole Bouquet.Secret agent James Bond finds himself caught between two bitter enemies when he tracks a stolen, top-secret British defense device to Greece.8) MASTERPIECE THE-ATRE “Pictures" Ruby finally attains her goal of starring in "The Movie Nut" and is determined to make her marriage work in spite of outside influenc- 9:30 O © SCIENCE ET TECHNOLOGIE Avec Claude Prefontaine.© CINEMA ?“Chauffeur de taxi” (1975, Drame) Robert De Niro, Jodie Foster.Un veteran de la guerre du Viêt-Nam qui souffre d’insomnie, trouve un emploi de chauffeur de taxi a New York.9:60 G O LES BEAUX DIMANCHES "Le Pere Levesque” 10:00 O TRAPPER JOHN.M.D.Gonzo falls for a beautiful new staff member (Lori Hallier) who is very interested in a patient (Whitman Mayo) claiming to be 119 years old.Q (D L’EVENEMENT Avec Giselle Gallichan.© ASCENT OF MAN 10:30 O JUST A LITTLE SPECIAL Pianists Oscar Peterson and Jorge Bolet combine talents for a program including the selections “Stormy Weather" and "Place St.Henri.” O © LES NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS 10:36G O SPORT DIMANCHES / LA POLITIQUE PROVINCIALE 11:00 0 O CINEMA "L’Enfance de Gorki” (2e) (1938, Biographie) Alexei Liarski, Mikhael Troianovski.Quelques années de la vie du célébré écrivain russe Gorki.O CBS NEWS G NEWS O THE NATIONAL ("Nation's Business" will follow "The National ") O DROLES DE DAMES © MASTERPIECE THE- ATRE "Pictures'' Ruby finally attains her goal of * starring in "The Movie Nut" and is determined to make her marriage work in spite of outside influenc- • 11:16 0 STAR TREK 11:20 0 NEWS 11:30 G ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK Featured: interviews with Ray Milland, Linda Evans; a look at three top movie composers - Giorgio Moroder (“Flashdance’’), Jerry Goldsmith ("Psycho H"), and James Horner ("Star Trek II: The Wrath Of Khan").11:40 0 MOVIE ?Vè "Desire Under The Elms" (1958, Drama) Sophia Loren, Anthony Perkins.Based On Eugene O'Neill's play.On a New England farm in the 1880s, a beautiful seductive woman develops a passion for her stepson.11:460© ABC NEWS © CTV NATIONAL NEWS 12:00 O SPORTSBEAT © JIM BAKKER © ASCENT OF MAN 12:05 © NEWS 12:30 O THIS IS YOUR LIFE 12:46© MOVIE "Futureworld" (1976, Science-Fiction) Peter Fonda, Blythe Danner.Two reporters dig beneath the surface of a fantasy world where patrons pay handsomely to live out their wildest dreams among a population of robots.1:00 O MOVIE "Up River" (1980, Adventure) Morgan Stevens, Jeff Carey.A young pioneer becomes obsessed with revenge after his wife is killed by a local land baron who resents his success.© NATURE 'Secret Weapons” Insects such as the beetle, firefly and moth make use of their natural chemicals as weapons against their enemies.2:30 O NEWS 3:06 © FANTASY ISLAND 4:06 © EYESAT s TOWNSHIPS WEEK-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 198£-1H morning 6:30 O Œ JIM BAKKER 6 00 B CBS EARLY MORNING NEWS B MORNING STRETCH (B ROMPER ROOM 6:30 8 CBS EARLY MORNING NEWS B NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE o ABC NEWS THIS MORNING (Q CANADA A M.(Ë JIMMY SWAGGART 7:00 B CBS MORNING NEWS 0 TODAY Q © GOOD MORNING AMERICA 7:A5 Q MIRE ET MUSIQUE CEI A M.WEATHER 8:00 Q TELE PATROUILLE EE) SESAME STREET (R) 6:30 3 GOOD MORNING O £0 GRONIGO & CIE 6:45 Q FRIENDLY GIANT O L'ARRAIGNEE (MON, THU) O SUPER HEROS (TUE.FRI) O ROBIN FUSEE (WED) 8:00 B HOUR MAGAZINE O LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE Q WOK WITH Y AN Q CD PREMIERE HEURE O MOVIE (B MORNING EXERCISE © I LOVE LUCY © EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING 8:06 B FARIBOLES 8:10 O FARIBOLES 8:30 B O EN MOUVEMENT O QUEBEC SCHOOLS © RALPH LOCKWOOD © THE HONEYMOON-ERS 8:46 B O SUR LE BOUT DE LA LANGUE (MON) B O LES 100 TOURS DE CENTOUR (TUE-FRI) 10:00 B Q PASSE-PARTOUT B THE NEW $26,000 PYRAMID B DIFF'RENT STROKES (R) O QUEBEC SCHOOLS (MON, WED, THU) B CANADIAN SCHOOLS (TUE, FRI) Q GUESS WHAT © DICK VAN DYKE © LE MARCHE AUX IMAGES 10:30 B O A TIRE D'AILE / TAPE-TAMBOUR B PRESS YOUR LUCK B SALE OF THE CENTURY B MR.DRESSUP O "Une chronique des années 30" (4e) (1960, Drame) Michael Nouri, Brian Benben Lucky Luciano veut former le syndicat natinal du crime organise.O BARNEY MILLER © MCGOWAN'S WORLD Featured: Jamie Farr; a person who’s interest is falcons; a person who builds ships in bottles; McGowan attempts to wash the windows of Montreal's skysraper, Place Ville Marie.6D NORD-SUD © GUEST OF THE HOUSE Featured: the Winooski-based Pete Smith Band performs songs about squatters, immigrants and nomads.8:00 O COUP D'OEIL Q WHIZ KIDS Richie matches wits with a clever criminal (Guy Stockwell) who uses the police computer system to steer officers away from the sites of his felonies.Q REAL PEOPLE The people who live along America's rivers are saluted on a cruise aboard the Mississippi Queen steamboat that takes the cast from Cincinnati to St.Louis.Q NATURE OF THINGS A magazine edition examines the Hindu sect known as the Bishnois, the synthetic fungus drug Cyclosporin (used during organ transplants), and freezing water.Q © © THE FALL GUY A gangster (Richard Anderson) tries to prevent Colt from testifying against him by having Terri kidnapped.O COUNTRY POP © DROIT DE PAROLE ® DON'T EAT THE PICTURES: SESAME STREET AT THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART Big Bird, Cookie Monster and the rest of the gang visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, n 8:30 O O VIVRE A TROIS 9:00 8 O LE LEADER 8 © CHIEFS Tyler Watts (Billy Dee Williams) SU3 Nostalgia By Marie landiorio The ABC series "The Courtship of Eddie's Father” told the often-moving story of magazine publisher Tom Corbett.Tom was one of TV's many widowers faced with the responsibility of running a motherless household.In this case, his son Eddie, a freckle-faced 6-ye tr-old, did most of the series ' scheming.Eddie had a special penchant for getting his father romantically involved with prospective brides, which led to many warm and comic moments.Rounding out the cast were Mrs.Livingston, Tom's dependable, philosophical but sometimes confused housekeeper; Tina, his secretary; and Norman Tinker, a mod photographer and family friend.Question: Bill Bixby (pictured in his current series, "Goodnight, Beantown") played Eddie's father.Do you know who played Eddie f znjj uopurjg uamsuy SUCH REAL PEOPLE?Byron Allen (I.) plays Scarlett O'T., Skip Stephenson (center) plays Missy; and Sarah Purcell (r.) is Rhett Butler, in this spoof of "Gone with the Wind," airing on the WEDNESDAY, NOV.16 edi tion of NBC's "Real People." The fun was filmed during the cast’s recent steamboat trip along the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME becomes Delano's first black police chief in 1962, and the prejudice against him fails to keep him from investigating the long-unsolved crimes that have haunted the town for years.(Part 3) 0 THE FACTS OF LIFE Jo is skeptical about a street girl (Pamela Segal!) who later sets up Mrs.Garrett and the other girls for extortion.?Q MARKET PLACE Christine Johnson and Bill Paul report on the marketing of a device to help sufferers of chronic pain, the pros and cons of sports shoes, and various brands of wood stoves; “White's World" examines "man's best friend." o © DYNASTY ?© OPTIONS Maha Cal-las" Ce documentaire décrit et explique la fascination qu'exerça cette chanteuse célébré auprès des mélomanes du monde entier.© THE KID WHO COULDN’T MISS Eric Peterson stars in this portrait of Billy Bishop, Cana-da's most famous World War I flying ace.9:30 O FAMILY TIES Alex develops a special relationship with a 40-year-old listener (Carolyn Seymour) while he is working at the school radio station.O FRONT PAGE CHALLENGE O © MICHEL JASMIN 10:00 O Q TELEJOURNAL / LE POINT / LA METEO O ST.ELSEWHERE Dr.Craig performs St.Eli-gius's first heart transplant, using the heart of Dr.Morrison's late wife to accomplish the operation.G THE NATIONAL / JOURNAL O © HOTEL Racial hatred erupts at the St.Gregory, while a young mute woman (Dawn Jef-fory) finds romance with a mime who shows her a new way to communicate 10:30 O LES NOUVELLES TVA © LES NOUVELLES TVA / LE DIX VOUS INFORME 0D CONTRE-JOUR "Exer cice pour une comparution" © GRAND CENTRAL Archival photographs and clips from old Hollywood musicals focus on the history, architecture and mythology of Grand Central Station.10:60 0 LE MONDE REGIONAL / SPORTS ! LE METEO 11:00 B NOUVELLES DU SPORT / TELEX ARTS EIOO©news O SPORTS / LE 9 VOUS INFORME © LES SPORTS © CTV NATIONAL NEWS © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE (R) © BUSINESS REPORT 11:06 Q NEWS 11:16 0 REFLETS D'UN PAYS "350e anniversaire de la fondation de Trois-Rivières" O BONJOUR LA NUIT (D LA COULEUR DU TEMPS 11:20 0 CINEMA "Ciao le mecs" (1980, Comedie) Gerard Herold, Anne Lonnberg.Plaque par sa compagne, un homme cherche un peu de consolation auprès de ses amis, Italiens transplantes a Paris comme lui.® NEWS 11:26 O BARNEY MILLER 11:30 O SOAP 0 TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson.0 ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE CD MANNIX "Vue sur le néant" © BENNY HILL © TELESERVICE (R) © MOVIE ?% "The Invaders" (1942, Adventure) Laurence Olivier, Leslie Howard.During World War II, a group of Nazi U-boat survivors struggle to reach safety on the Canadian mainland.11:46 O KOJAK "Chantage a la mort" 11:66 0 MOVIE AAA "Gold Diggers Of 1935" (1935, Musical) Dick Powell, Gloria Stuart.A reluctant young woman is prompted to start a romance with an older man by her mother, who wants her to become 12:00 0 HAWAII FIVE-0 © MOVIE AAA "Obsession" (1976, Mystery) Cliff Robertson, Genevieve Bujold.A lonely widower encounters a strange, beautiful young girl who bears a startling resemblance to his wife who was murdered 16 years before.© 700 CLUB 12:168 CINEMA AAH "Une nuit très morale" (1978, Comedie) Carla Romanel-li, Margit Makay.12:30 0 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN Guest, actress-comedienne Andrea Martin.O THICKE OF THE NIGHT Scheduled Carl Wolfson, restaurateur Wolfgang Puck, Brian Mitchell ("Trapper John, M D "), comedian Arsenio Hall.TV columnist Bob Osborne 1:30© GRAND CENTRAL Archival photographs and clips from old Hollywood musicals focus on the history, architecture and mythology of Grand Cen tral Station 1:66© WAYNE THOMAS 2:00 O NEWS Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00O A A A "The Tall Men" (Part 2) (1955, Adventure) Clark Gable, Robert Ryan.Two brothers decide to go into the cattle business with a tycoon rather than rob him.2:00 0 03 A A "Pile, je te tue, face, tu es mort.on m’appelle alleluia" (1971, Western) George Hilton, Charles Southwood.Un aventurier américain est dans le service d'un general révolutionnaire mexicain.2:30 0 O AAVè "Les Bidases s’en vont en guerre” (1974, Comedie) Gerard Filipelli, Jean-Guy Fechner.Quatre copains font ensemble leur service militaire et commettent gaffe sur gaffe, ce qu'il leur vaut de nombreux séjours au cachot.6:00 O A A% "Du sang dans la poussière” (1974, Western) Lee Marvin, Gary Grimes.Trois jeunes garçons, fils de fermiers viennent en aide a un criminel blesse.EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR / SPORTS 8 0 0 0©© NEWS O LE MONDE ©LE 18 HEURES © PASSE-PARTOUT “J’ecoute el je regarde" © MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR 8:30 8 AVIS DE RECHERCHE Q NBC NEWS O© ABC NEWS Q © TELESERVICE ^ 6:40 Q LE VOUS INFORME / SPORT 7:00 8 GENIES EN HERBE Q CBS NEWS 8 WHEEL OF FORTUNE Q FAME The President of the United States announces plans to attend an upcoming fundraiser at the School for the Arts.(R) O © GALAXIE Etoiles-personalites: Raoul Duguay, Elaine Bedard, Tex Lecor, Huguette Olig-ny, Daniel Lemire.O FAMILY FEUD Q GRAND PAPA ©M-A-S’H © CHARLIE'S ANGELS © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE © BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 Q O LA VIE PROMISE 8 FAMILY FEUD Q M-A-S-H Q © HOCKEY Le Canadien de Montreal reçoit les Red Wings de Detroit Q BARNEY MILLER © LITTLEST HOBO A plane crashes in a remote region of the Canadian North, stranding several passengers.(Part l)n © CINEASTES A L’ECRAN "Le Grand film ordinaire" © CROSS-COUNTRY SKI SCHOOL “Introduction And The Diagonal Stride" Stephan and Luise Sander demonstrate the stride which is the basis of good cross-country technique.(R) 8:00 8 Q CINEMA A A "Tu fais pas le poids shérif" (1977, Comedie) Burt Reynolds.Sally Field.Un chaffeur de camion expert est charge de rapporter du Texas en Géorgie un chargement de biere de contrebande en un temps limite.8 © MAGNUM.P.l.O GIMME A BREAK The mayor interferes with Nell's plans to raise funds for her church through a telethon.O THE UNDAUNTED Knowlton Nash examines the fortress of Louisbourg, a seaport that was destroyed by the British in 1760 but has since been restored.?O © WORLD'S FUNNIEST COMMERCIAL GOOFS © VERMONT HOTLINE "Death And Dying" Advice for friends and relatives of the terminally ill will be presented.8:30 0 MAMA'S FAMILY Distraught when her husband abandons her, Ellen begins a romance with a much younger man.9:00 O SIMON & SIMON A.J.and Rick go undercover at a nudist colony to find a missing business executive.G WE GOT IT MADE Beth arranges for Jay to become a finalist in a contest for New York’s most eligible bachelor.O HOME FIRES Terry decides to marry Bruce upon his return, while Sydney and Anna get ready to set up their own house-hoidjn 8 © TRAUMA CENTER A middle-aged couple’s vintage car causes danger on a freeway, and an unarmed Six takes on a tiger that mauled a lovely model.?© LIVE IT UP The baby-food business; the first competition for aspiring communicators; playgirl entertainment; reggae-music artist Jimmy Cliff.!d) SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons host an informative look at what’s new at the movies.9:300 CHEERS Sam's sportscaster friend (Fred Dryer) tries to break up the romance between Sam and Diane to win a bet.© BIZARRE "MeJoke In The Box”; "Joe Rivers," the fictional brother of comedienne Joan Rivers; a marriage counselor; an elderly flasher.© LES TRAVAILLANTS "Se syndiquer c'est pas des farces" © ALL NEW THS OLD HOUSE Bob Vila visits a Sherborn, Massachusetts couple, who dismantled, moved and reassembled an historic house 10:00 0 Q LE TELEJOURNAL / LE POINT / LA METEO 0 KNOTS LANDING Diana reveals information on Chip's involvement in Ciji's death to the police, while Gary tries to locate Ciji’s mysterious look-alike.0 © HILL STREET BLUES A well-mannered thief robs every bank in the area of the Hill Street station, then escapes from Goldblume and takes a woman hostage.0 THE NATIONAL / JOURNAL 0 © 20 / 20 Geraldo Rivera profiles Barbra Streisand, who produced, directed and stars in the new film "Yentl." © L'AME DES VIOLONS Dans ce documentaire, le professeur Jack Fry nous parle des differents types de violons et de leur construction.© INSIDE STORY 10:30 Q LES NOUVELLES TVA © LES NOUVELLES TVA / LE DIX VOUS INFORME © NEW TECH TIMES Nicholas talks with Slew-art Brand, the man responsible lor "The Whole Earth Catalogue," about his new projecl, a guide to the electronic marketplace.10:60 8 LE MONDE REGIONAL / SPORTS / LE METEO 11:008 NOUVELLES DU SPORT / TELEX ARTS O 8 O © NEWS 8 SPORTS / LE 9 VOUS INFORME © LES SPORTS © CTV NATIONAL NEWS © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE (R) © BUSINESS REPORT 11:06 O NEWS 11:16 8 A PREMIERE VUE Q BONJOUR LA NUIT © LA COULEUR DU TEMPS 11:20 8 CINEMA A*H "Mai tresse legitime" (1979, Drame) Laura Antonelli, Marcello Mastroranni.Au début du siecle une femme d'un négociant en vins se desoie des nombreuses absenses de son mari.©NEWS 11:26 O BARNEY MILLER 11:30 O SOAP 0 TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson Q ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE © DROLES DE DAMES "Ca route pour elles" © BENNY HLL © TELESERVICE (R) © MOVIE ititYi "Saturday's Children" (1940, Drama) John Garfield, Anne Shirley A woman and her husband learn the t relative unimportance of money from her father 11:46 8 CINEMA * * It "Nous maigrirons ensemble" (1979, Comedie) Peter Ustinov, Bernadette Lafont.Un cinéaste en panne de travail constate qu'il a pris de l'embonpoint.O NERO WOLFE "Echec au fou" 11:66 0 MOVIE AA "Colleen" (1936, Musical) Ruby Keeler, Dick Powell.An eccentric millionaire decides to enrage his nephew by allowing a young woman to manage a newly purchased dress shop.12:00 O HAWAII FIVE-0 © MOVIE ?A "CHOMPS." (1979, Science-Fiction) Wesley Eure, Valerie Bertinelli.A clever young man invents a computerized robot dog programmed to stop crimi nais and solve crimes © 700 CLUB 12:30© LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN Guests: musician B.B.King, actor-comedian Andy Kaufman Q THICKE OF THE NIGHT 130 O CINEMA A A "Com ment l'esprit vient aux femmes" (1951, Comedie) Judy Holliday, William Holden Pendant la guerre un financier vereux s'amene a Washington pour obtenir un contrat du gouvernement.© SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons host an informative look at what's new at the movies 2:00 O NEWS ©MOVIE A A Hercules, Samson And Ulysses" (1965, Adventure) Kirk Morris.Richard Lloyd A trio of heroes pit their combined forces against the Philistines.3:46 © FANTASY ISLAND 16—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1983 DAYTIME SPECIAL 3:00 O THE IRISH ROVERS IN CONCERT IN NEW ZEA LAND DAYTIME MOVIES 0:00O *** The Dark Past" (1949, Mystery) William Holden, Lee J.Cobb While waiting for his boat to freedom, an insane ex-con broodingly bides his time in the home of a psychologist.2:00 O 03 % "Operation casseurs" (1976, Policier) Maurizio Merli, Barry Sullivan Un commissaire de police s'emploiera a détruire le racket de protection opéré par les hommes du chef de la pegre locale 5:00 O "Tick Tick Tick.et la violence ecla ta" (1969, Drame) Jim Brown, George Kennedy.Dans un comte du Sud des Etats-Unis, un noir vient d'etre élu shérif EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR / SPORTS O O
de

Ce document ne peut être affiché par le visualiseur. Vous devez le télécharger pour le voir.

Lien de téléchargement:

Document disponible pour consultation sur les postes informatiques sécurisés dans les édifices de BAnQ. À la Grande Bibliothèque, présentez-vous dans l'espace de la Bibliothèque nationale, au niveau 1.