The record, 23 mars 1984, Supplément 1
* ¦ ¦ • V m*» Mfo, Am '>1 ¦> T T K » Townships week Friday, March 23 F ?» * ?« 2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984 Catching up on the latest Country and Western news Historical milestones in country music this week include the birth ofJerry Reed on March 20, 1937, the death of Uncle Dave Macon on the 22nd in 1952, the wedding of Mother Maybelle Addington and Ezra Carter on the 23rd in 1926 and the induction of Elvis Presley into the U S.Army on the 24th in 1958.Congratulations to Ottawa songwriter Marguerite Karaday-Smith Organizers of the Ameri can Song Festival competition in Hollywood have informed her that her beautiful ballad Ribbon of Gold is one of three semi finalists chosen from more than 20,000 entries worldwide.A couple of years ago The Family Brown had a hit with the song.Incidentally, Laura Vinson’s next single, More Heat Than Light, is also a Faraday-Smith composition.Lee Greenwood and Barbara Y ^ M Country^ « / Music m ^ ; J; /m By DAVE MULHOLLAND Mandrel! are currently on a 25-date concert tour throughout the U S.There was supposed to be a Canadian tour as well, but Man-drell’s agent says they couldn’t get enough bookings to make it feasible.Greenwood’s son, Marc, who played drums for a short time withRonnie Prophet, is now playing in his father’s Trick Band.In 1978, Johnny Burke’s Wild Honey was voted single of the year by the Canadian country music industry.But since then the Rogersville, N.B., native has seldom been heard from.That changed last week with the release of Everybody’s Going Crazy, a new Burke single from a forthcoming album on Acclaim Records.Release of the single coincided with Burke’s performance on the-George Jones concert last week at Toronto’s Maple Leaf Gardens.One of rockabilly’s originators, Carl Perkins, was also the first country artist to make the rhythm ’n’ blues charts with his 1956 classic, Blue Suede Shoes.Perkins has donated his blue suede shoes, a stage costume and a guitar to the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville.It’s just one of many Hall of Fame exhibits fans can enjoy during a visit to Music City.A good time to do that is during annual Fan Fair activities, being held this year at the Tennessee State Fairgrounds June 4-10.You get to see more than 30 hours of concerts and have a chance to rub elbows with stars and would-be stars.For information, write Fan Fair, 2804 Opry-land Drive, Nashville, Tenn., 37214.In more Nashville news, Opry-land opens its 13th season March 31.The 145-hectare amusement park, located 14 kilometres from downtown, has something for everyone, including rides, restaurants and all types of music.Of course, the main attraction at Opryland is the Grand Ole Opry, but tickets to the Opry have to be purchased separately.To get them, write Opry Tickets, 2808 Opryland Drive, Nashville, Tenn., 37214.Repeat After Me; The Family Brown (RCA Records) The Family Brown keeps issuing albums that are enjoyable, but unexciting and unadventurous.The group’s current album, most of which was produced in Nashville, is no different.In fact, the best commercial song on the album, Did You Know, was produced in Toronto.It’s hard to zero in on exactly what the problem is.Barry, Tracey and Lawanda Brown have excellent voices and they’re singing better than ever.But somehow there’s a lack of magic, a lack of presence.It’s solid, but it’s safe.There’s enormous talent in The Family Brown.The group’s producers had better start taking some chances in the studio — before it’s too late.Superstar, Evita, Cats and now Starlight Express LONDON (AP) — From Bible stories and Eva Peron to Paganini and furry felines, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical sources defy expectation.But Starlight Express, his new show opening March 27, must be the most defiant of all.It is the first musical in which all the characters are railway trains, with men playing locomotives, women playing railroad cars and the whole cast performing on roller skates.The 35-year-old composer of the Broadway hits Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita and Cats couldn’t be more excited.“I think Starlight Express shows signs of breaking quite considerable new ground in staging terms,” Webber said in an interview.“It goes beyond Cats to bring a totally involving type of musical theatre to an audience that is perhaps not going to choose musical theatre as its immediate form of entertainment.” The new musical reunites Webber with his Cats collaborators, director Trevor Nunn and designer John Napier.At a cost of $2.9 million, it is the most expensive show yet staged in London, a theatre town where production costs are far lower than in New York.Like Cats, for which Webber won a Grammy, the physical production will require extensive alteration to the Apollo Victoria Theatre, which is just across the street from all the train traffic of Victoria Station.HAS MORE FREEDOM While the lyrics of Cats came from poems by T.S.Eliot, Webber feels more freedom in the new show’s text, written by Richard Stilgoe.“The songs themselves have a greater chance of coming out of the context of the show,” he said.C5 ?y Music Chart LAST WEEKS a benevolent despot.Others term him “It is my choir.It has to be.I have to NO.TITLE ARTIST WEEK ON autocratic, exasperating, a tyrant — have a concept of the sound and I have 1.Thriller Michael Jackson 1 9 and a national treasure.to be able to tell the choir how to effect 2.Jump Van Halen 3 8 But Elmer Iseler, conductor of the it.3.99 Luft Balloons Nena 4 8 Toronto Mendelssohn Choir and the “Getting it there, well, I can lose the 4.Nobody Told Me John Lennon 2 11 20-member professional Elmer Iseler whole choir getting to that place.Or 5.Politics of Dancing Reflex 7 11 Singers, says he has reached a ba- can at least create resentment." 6.Here Comes the Rain Again Eurythmies 9 8 lance after more than 30 years in cho- It has been Iseler who shaped the 7.Tubular Bells Keyboards Affair 10 8 ral work.sound, not only from the podium but 8.Girls Just Wanna Have Fun Cyndi Lauper 12 8 “Now, I am completely at home,” also backstage, auditioning and choo- 9.Karma Chameleon Culture Club 5 13 he said in an interview.sing each singer the past 19 years.10.A Night in New York Elbow Bones 6 12 “I enjoy my work and my whole life It was he who persuaded the Men- 11.Got a Hold on Me Christine Me Vie 15 7 immensely.I am no longer trying to delssohn’s board of directors to 12.New Moon on Monday Duran-Duran 18 8 figure out why we are all here and change its sound in 1967 by injecting a 13.Wrapped Around Your Finger Police 8 10 where we are all going.There isn’t professional core into its 73 years of 14.Yah Mo B-There Ingram/McDonald 14 9 much reason for volcanic eruptions.” amateur tradition.Then, the core 15.l^et’s Stay Together Tina Turner 20 6 In 1951, Mendelssohn conductor Sir group was Iseler’s 36 Festival Sin- 16.Somebody’s Watching Me Rockwell 21 5 Ernest MacMillan fired his assistant gers, the country ’s first full-time pro- 17.Talking in Your Sleep Romantics 11 15 because of complaints that “young fessional choir.Now, it is his 20 Elmer 18.Runner Manfred Mann 23 7 Iseler is too nasty,” Iseler recalls.Iseler Singers.19.Give it Up K.C.27 5 “I was only 24.I didn’t have the Iseler parted ways with the Festi- 20.Sunglasses At Night Corey Hart 22 7 sense of balancing a rehearsal atmos- val Singers’ board in May 1978 in what 21.Radio Ga Ga Queen 28 4 phere,” he said with a characteristic he calls the greatest test of his life.22.Sunshine Reggae/La Vie en Rose Martinez/Harris 26 5 chuckle.“Besides, I wasn’t very di- He passed.Within three weeks he 23.Footloose Kenny Loggins 31 4 plomatic in those days.” missed the contact with the professio- 24.Joanna Kool & the Gang 16 14 Thirty-three years later, Iseler nal choir so much, he founded a new 25.Send Me An Angel Real Life 25 6 hasn’t compromised his high stan- choir of professional singers, calling 26.I Want a New Drug Huey Lewis 33 3 dards.But he has developed a sense of it the Elmer Iseler Singers.27.Adult Education Hall & Oates 35 3 balance since stepping on to the po- Iseler hired his wife of 26 years to 28.Hyperactive Thomas Dolby 32 4 dium to stay in 1964.manage it and operated it with the 29.Miss Me Blind Culture Club 40 2 SUPPRESSES EGO support of the CBC, but without gover- 30.Red Red Wine U B40 19 11 nment grants.31.Automatic Pointer Sisters 38 2 “If I don’t suppress my ego, if I It was only when the Festival Sin- 32.An Innocent Man Billy Joel 13 11 don’t feel the choir and myself are gers declared bankruptcy the folio- 33.This Could be the Right One April Wine 36 3 one, there will be no performance," wing year that the federal gover- 34.That’s All Genesis 17 13 he said.“But if I don’t subject the nment finally kicked in the funds ne- 35.New Song Howard Jones 39 2 choir to my ideas, it will have no per- cessary for the Elmer Iseler Singers 36.Hold Me Now Thompson Twins PL 1 sonality.It is a delicate balance to survive.37.Against All Odds Phil Collins PL 1 between the two.Iseler accomplishes much of what 38.Come Back And Stay Paul Young PL 1 “But better my personality than no he does by making enormous de- 39.Hello Lionel Ritchie PL 1 personality,” said the portly tenor mands on his singers and on himself, 40.I Want You Back Sherry Kean PL 1 who worked his way through university by singing and dancing pop music said soloist Mary Morrison, one of his former sopranos.« Treasure or autocrat Iseler completely at home TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.MARCH 23.1984—3 Deadly Intentions as captivating as any fictional tale Kaleidoscope By RICHARD LONEY Deadly Intentions by William Randolph Stevens (SIGNET): $3.50, 303 pp.A Greek-American girl named Christina Bellies was courted by, and finally married, a young medical doctor, Patrick Henry.She knew him to be eccentric, and very set in his ways, but she could never have anticipated the nightmarish ordeal that she was destined to suffer through as her hus-band became a psychotic, compulsive threat to her life.After the birth of their child, Christina found that Patrick, became even more strange, and she suspected he even inflicted pain on their child in the midst of some of his tantrums.1 His erratic behaviour snapping close-up distorted photographs of Christina in pain, or as she was in the throes of a morning sickness vomiting episode, and even once enticing her into the alligator-infested waters of a florida swamp, so that he could capture Christina’s fearsome expression.His tales of chilling plans for retribution again anyone who crossed him included such atrocities as gutting the victim with a two-edged knife, inserting firecrackers in their orifices and watching the explosive results, and other mutilations.With such veiled threats haunting her daily, Christina did the only logical thing, fleeting from the enranged Henry’s home.Deadly Intentions is an incredible books about Dr.Patrick Henry’s attempt to have revenge on his estranged wife and their child, told by William Randolph Stevens, Pima County Arizona’s Chief Criminal Prosecutor.Dr.Henry pulled off an impossibly complex series of manoevers that would provide him with alibis when he decided to take his deadly revenge on his wife.Disguises, devious tricks with a briefcase full of incriminating torture implements, a Jekyll and Hyde personality that made Henry appear to be a dedicated doctor on the job, but a demented, macabre threat to Christina and baby Paddy at home, are just part of this unusual prosecution case.The fact that Henry never got to perpetrate his crime, but went through every meticulous planning detail up to the actual mor- ning assault on Christina’s parents’ home, doesn’t detract from this book’s grip on the reader.Stevens pits his criminal prosecutor’s mind against the insidious evil of Henry’s obsession for revenge, with results that are as captivating as any fictional crime-writing.The Cop Who Wouldn't Quit by Rick Nelson (BANTAM): $3.95, 354 pp.Houston homicide detective Johnny Bonds is the kind of cop they build TV series around, although his personal life would not afford much in the line of attractive details that make for high ratings.Bonds smelled a rat when an upper middle-class family seemed to have been victims of a suicide/murder—Diana Wans-trath was suspected of killing her husband and then shooting their fourteen month old son, and finally turning the gun on herself in a desperate family catastrophe.Only one catch—no gun was found in the fashionable Houston home.Johnny Bonds uncovered a web of criminal intrigue that implicated Diana’s half-brother Markham Duff-Smith in these deaths, as well as finding him responsible for the killing of his own stepmother for a greed-inspired share of inheritance spoils.Detective Bonds fought against all odds to bring Duff-Smith to justice, and the deeper he dug the more callous and inhumane the monstrous Duff-Smith became.His obsession with the case led Johnny Bonds into a divorce, destroyed his physical and mental well-being, but his dogged determination brought to Justice one of the most cold-blooded plotters the sordid world of crime has revealed.The Cop Who Wouldn’t Quit is an example of efficient police work that is not often publicized.Record Review Queen THE WORKS (CAPITOL) Queen’s first worldwide release for EMI-CAPITOL finds the band with the Beach Boys’ wall of sound vocals abandoning the approach that they usually incorporated on each album for, of all things, some impassioned pleas for awareness in the world.Some Queen fans may be surprized by the serious nature of some of the themes here—world hunger, the nuclear nightmare, the move to bytes and megachips.But there is probably something here that every Queen can get off on.Freddy Mercury hearkens back to the good time rock n’ roll feel of “Crazy Little Thing Called Love” with a driving number that sounds a bit like ELO.called “Man On The Prowl", with some frantic piano riffs by Fred Man dell.The lead track is a Roger Taylor song, “Radio Ga Ga ”, which despite its plea for a return to the wonders of radio's aural magic, ironically also happens to be Queen’s latest video showing.Recognizing that rock videos seem to have replaced the ear aspect of rock, Queen calls for a return to the power of radio.Brian May’s songs, “Tear It Up", and the nuclear warning “Hammer To Fall", are the most energized on the record, with much string-bending and trademark arpeggio flights of fret board artistry.THE WORKS abandons the vocal tour de force that Mercury likes to slip onto each album, but vhe overall effect is that Queen gets a balanced attack out of all the members and much of the material appears to be designed for accurate duplication on stage on those eccentric Queen visual extravaganzas.Leacock wit and eccentricity captured in latest book ORILLIA, Ont.(CP) — In the heady optimism of the 1970s, organizers of the Leacock Festival of Humor foresaw a national cultural event.The legacy of humorist Stephen Leacock, who spent his summers in this town 120 kilometres north of Toronto, was supposed to transform Orillia into another Stratford, Ont., home of the renowned Shakespeare festival.“In five years, I see this festival running two months per summer,” Martin Brons-tein, the festival’s first artistic director, said in 1975.Roy Wordsworth, his successor, vowed two years later to have a national revue ready for tour by the fall of 1978.But in the recession-battered ’80s, the financial curtain fell for the Leacock Festival, which never mounted an original revue or formed a touring company.On its 10th anniversary last year, the festival proper was called off as the board of directors found itself with a $15,000 debt from a disastrous 1982 season.START AGAIN Now, after months of deliberating, the board has cautiously resolved to resurrect the festival this summer under the guiding hand of a city-employed management consultant.But, at a time when many Canadian theatre companies are tossing nervously on a sea of red ink, the board must also look beyond 1984.“We have to start working on long-term plans, instead of shortterm plans,” says Jim Grossmith, spokesman for the 1984 festival committee.“We need a formula.” Helping draft that formula for survival is Marc Quinn, hired by the city last year to ma-nage the 90-year-old Opera House — the focal point for festival events.Quinn says this year’s festival has something to prove.“For 1984, the main thing is putting together a program that will go over with the public to sell well, to prove to all levels of government the festival is successful, that it does merit consideration for funding.” GRANTS FEW Corporate donations and government grants have been lean, or non-existent.“A humor festival doesn’t qualify as developing talent,” says Werner Rohmann, the 1983 festival chairman.“We are putting on a show.” Don Cullen, who served with Wordsworth as co-director for seven years, says the board didn’t get much financial help from the community.“It’s difficult to get support from local restaurants, hotels and so on because it’s summer and they do well anyway,” Cullen says.“They were constantly telling us: ‘Why don’t you hold it in the winter, or the spring or the fall?”’ Summer tourists have been a traditional mainstay of the picturesque city of 24,000 with its tree-lined streets of Victorian homes and the waters of two lakes lapping at its fringes.After all, it was those hazy summer days by Brewery Bay that drew Leacock to the area and inspired him to write Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town.ECONOMY HIT But the sunshine dimmed a little for Orillia as higher gasoline prices kept tourists at home and a belt-tightening economy brought layoffs to local industry.The eco- nomic one-two punch didn’t leave much money around to spend on a humor festival.Lacking the funds to mount an original revue, the festival relied on routines by established performers.The list of comics who have appeared at the festival reads like a who’s who of Canadian humor — Don Harron, Dave Broadfoot, Barbara Hamilton, Gordie Tapp, Jim Carrey, John Candy, Andrea Martin and Dave Thomas.But two years ago, the board decided to try something new, opting for the comedy troupe The Frantics.That experiment was a financial disaster.Cullen blames the failure on competition from rival theatre groups.Rohmann attributes it to expanding the run to 10 performances from two weekends.Another board member cites the loss of “the big Harron and Broadfoot following.” Whatever the reason, the festival was BELVEDERE 2 TEL.562-3969 next to Place Belvedere, Sherbrooke 3 Erotic Films 1 "Virgin's Dreams" 2 "Sensually Liberated Female" 3 "Blonde Fire" Week 7:30 Sunday continuous from 2 p.m.plunged into debt and last year the organizers cancelled the regular events, staging instead a three-night musical performance.As the festival enters its second decade, the board is plotting a course for survival.If Grossmith can steer the course his way, the festival will adopt a theme.“For example, you might say this year we’ll highlight new Canadian talent or we ll concentrate on an international theme,” he says.Only a hard-no»© writes off his kid- Only a hero has the courage to change.FOR ALL NBA/MAN BENSON Admission $4.50 Students $3.501420 years with cord Cinéma CAPITOL.59 King est 5B5-OTn Friday l Sot.: 7 001 9 00 Sunday 2 00 1 7 30 Monday to Than 7:30 only 4—TOWNSHIPS WEEK FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984 Jitters— A drama dept, within a play within a play By Timothy Belford Opening night jitters’ is something that every performer must learn to live with.The fear of a forgotten line, a missed cue, or — heaven forbid — a total blank, has haunted thespians since the classics of Greece were only being workshopped.The Bishop’s University drama department, with the added sup- port of Vancouver actor Dwight McFee, will examine opening night nerves next week when they present David French’s comedy Jitters at the Centennial Theatre.Jitters, as described by acting professor and director Greg Tuck, is a “warm but sarcastic slice of the problems inherent in trying to put on theatre in Toronto.” The play is a particularly good view of the real character types that inhabit the world of Canadian theatre — types that Tuck insists exist even within the theatre department’s own production.“It’s really incredible,” says Tuck, “the cast is gradually becoming the characters in the play.” The play is a “mainline” three act comedy.The first act takes place several weeks before opening night; the second opening night itself ; and the third encompasses the aftermath.One of the main characters is Patrick Flanigan, an ex-patriot, middle-aged Irishman — given, as usual, to a love for the liquor — who has spent a career, not unsuccessfully, in Canadian theatre.Flanigan is played by McFee who confesses that he had a bit of a problem with the character at first.“Initially I had a hard time with this,” he says.“It’s really hard not to get heavy with it.the alcoholism and all that.I could turn it into Ibsen really quickly.” McFee, has been involved in professional theatre since graduating from the University of Alberta, along with Tuck, in the early 1970s and his credits include work in television and radio as well as live theatre.It was, in fact, his friendship with Tuck and his broad experience that convinced the first-year Bishop’s professor to include him in the cast.As well as performing in the play, McFee has conducted classes and seminars with the students giving them an insight into the realities of professional theatre.“When I was in school nobody told me about the practical stuff,” he points out, adding that explaining to the students the ins and outs of resumé writing, auditioning and dealing with casting directors, is almost as important as the acting itself — if you want to work.To Tuck, the opportunity for students to perform and interact with an experienced professional is very important and Jitters, because it deals with actors carrying on their trade, is the perfect vehicle.In a sense you have would-be actors acting as actors acting.For better or for worse, Jitters is guaranteed to supply the au- dience with an amusing evening and the students of the Bishop’s drama department with an experience they may or may not wish to repeat.Tickets are available for Thursday, Friday and Saturday at $3.00 per person or $1.50 for students.Contact the Centennial Theatre box office for reservations.“A warm but sarcastic slice of the problems inherent in trying to put on theatre in Toronto” — Greg Tuck.|' f 4» “Initially / had a hard time.” — Dwight McFee.Theatre of Comedy a winner on all fronts say critics LONDON (Reuter) — A commercial British theatre company devoted to comedy is celebrating its first birthday in a happy glow of public, critical and financial success.After just 12 months in business, The Theatre of Comedy has shows running in three London West End theatre, a contract for television work and will perform in New York this summer.Its latest production, a revival of a 1944 vicarage farce See How They Run, opened in February at the Shaftesbury theatre to rave reviews.Unlike most permanent companies, the Theatre of Comedy has no public subsidy and is run by its creative artists.“Though there have been companies run by two or three actors, never before has one been formed by a group like ours.” artistic director Ray Cooney said in an interview.ALL IN THEATRE The company was founded by Cooney, a successful actor, writer, producer and director, with 30 eminent stage colleagues anxious to preserve popular comedy in the West End.They include actors Tom Courtenay and Tom Conti, both nominees for this year’s Academy Awards, playwright-barrister John Mortimer and actress Sheila Hancock of the Royal Shakespeare Company.Capital of $430,000 came in equal parts from the 31 founder members, from their colleagues in the theatrical profession and from an investment company working under the auspices of Britain’s business expansion program.The money went into a five-year lease on the 1,370-seat Shaftesbury theatre and to finance the first production, Ray Cooney’s own Run For Your Wife, farce which later transferred to the Criterion to make way for the company’s hit pantomime Aladdin.The group combines the profit motive with such high-minded aims as the nurturing of new talent, the running of a theatre club involving the public, and low seat prices.WAS OVERDUE It believes Britain boasts the world’s finest comic artists and feels a theatre devoted to comedy is long overdue."The main purpose of this company is to ensure that this comedic art will not die out,” Cooney says.Cooney believes some people who once came to London theatres for popular comedy have been put off by high prices and avant-garde comedies parading nudity and bad language.With seats from $2.20 to $13, the Shaftesbury has the lowest ticket prices for a major London theatre and unlike other commercial playhouses, gives free cast lists and charges normal prices for drinks in its bars."We are not out to fleece the public,” Cooney explains.HAS CLUB About 4,000 people have joined the compa-ny’s theatre club, which offers them a further $2.90 off top ticket prices as well as invitations to dress re-hearsals, play-readings and other activities.So successful has the company been that it has also taken a lease on the tiny Ambassadors theatre to serve as The Little Theatre of Comedy.Long the home of Agatha Christie’s re- cord-breaking thriller The Mousetrap, the Ambassadors now houses the group’s smaller productions, short runs of one-man shows, revues and avant-garde comedies.TED SILVER 6 a.m.-9 a.m.AL ROBERTS 2 p.m.-6 p.m.THE INCREDIBLE AM TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984—5 Diminishing sales abroad, South Africa faces glut Pa art Ku sUmi i ¦ i.PAARL, South Africa (AP) — Another bountiful grape harvest threatens to submerge South Africa’s wine industry in a surplus of spirits, and bottlers are trying to convert millions of blacks from beer to wine.The 1984 harvest could produce more than 900 million litres of wine, about the same amount as in record-breaking 1983 and slightly ahead of 1982.While northern cornfields wither in a third year of drought, vineyards at South Africa’s southern tip thrive in nearperfect weather and an unusual absence of vine diseases.The country ranks 16th in world wine production but its wine consumption is in a slump, with retail wine sales running at about half the annual crop.TURN TO BLACKS Wine bottlers say there is not much room for growth among South Africa’s five-million whites and export prospects are not pro- mising.So efforts are being made to turn more of the 22-million black majority into wine drinkers.That would amount to somewhat of a cultural revolution, since blacks all across Africa prefer beer.South African beer consumption has more than doubled since 1978.Some blame beer price-wars and a surge in anti-white feelings for the sharp drop in demand for wine following the black riots of 1976.Young coloreds — people of mixed race — registered their protest by refusing to drink wine, breaking the drinking habits of generations among the largest non-white group in Cape Province.“If we can get black South Africans to drink wine, the problem will be solved overnight,” said one industry spokesman, Piet-man Retief of the Oude Meester Group.“But marketing for blacks is tricky.No black language has a translation for ‘matured’ which is an important word for us.Their equivalent is ‘old’ or ‘rotten.’ “Ten years ago, blacks drank millions of litres of a certain low-quality white wine.Then rumors spread that it affected your manhood.Sales dropped overnight.” “Our research showed that blacks like the taste of ginger,” said Jan du Preez, Oude Mees-ter’s wine promotion manager.“Two years ago, we added ginger to a white wine and produced a ginger fizz.Sales went from zero to 24 million litres a year, at 1.20 rand (96 cents) a bottle.” Growers have asked Parliament to amend legislation barring the use of other flavor additives, like berries and peaches.Distillers, with storage tanks brimming, are struggling to find ways to diminish their supplies.South Africa managed to export almost 30 per cent of last year’s harvest — in the form of 250 mil- lion litres of industrial alcohol that was not matured into wine.The largest export customers for South African wines, in order, are Britain, Canada, continental Europe and the United States.But total exports are less than 10 per cent of the crop.This time laughter was definitely no laughing matter WINNIPEG (CP) — The electronic laughing box went off without warning in the orchestra pit and the piano leg collapsed, but it’s all in a day’s work — or a nightly performance — for the Royal Winnipeg Ballet.“Right in the middle of the pas de deux you could hear this (laughter),” master carpenter Doug King recalled of the night some time ago when the ballet was performing in Ottumwa, Iowa.The laughing box, usually used for gags, was stuffed in the purse of the ballet orchestra’s cello player.The sound it emitted was just one of many mini-disasters that have struck the ballet over the years.To silence the laughing, the cellist “took the point of her cello and started stabbing her purse,” says King, who has travelled with the troupe for 17 years.“That was the same night the piano leg collapsed and the conductor had to conduct with one hand holding up the piano.” Some of the zany occurences associated with the touring company hardly seem to fit in with the worldwide respect given the ballet, which travels the globe.TRAILER SINKS One night, a dancer banged into a sound speaker in the wings offstage and knocked herself out cold.Another night, a dancer was locked in the bathroom during intermission.On another occasion, the transport trailer that hauls costumes and sets sank on the lawn of a university.While ballet-goers rarely notice such disasters between the tutus and the toe-shoes, they are the stuff nightmares, and later laughter, are made of for dancers and crew.Soloist Svea Eklof is still chagrined at Wednesday night's performance here of Pas d’action.Fresh from an llth-hour rehearsal with choreographer Brian MacDonald, she stepped on stage for her part and danced past a whole section of the humorous ballet.“This is the kind of thing I’ll think a year from now (is) funny,” she says.“I really don’t know what happened.I was totally convinced I was fine.“As I came up off the floor, I looked at Martin (Schlaepfer on stage) and he had this look of absolute horror on his face.” It was then that Eklof realized she had another 16 counts of music to fill.But like a trooper, she started inventing.“I just started doing my own stuff and the audience kept laughing, so obviously they didn’t notice it,” she said.But an audience in Glace Bay, N.S., couldn’t help notice soloist Patti Caplette’s grand exit at a performance there a few years ago.It was a grand leap into the crowded wings when the stage went dark after the first segment of the dance.OUT COLD "I thought I had cleared the wall when I caught the speaker right between the eyes,” she said.“I just remember going ‘Ahhh.’ That was it, out cold.Meanwhile, the audience could see half of what was going on ” A doctor in the audience went to Caplette’s aid and an ambulance was called.She was later carried down the middle aisle of the theatre on a stretcher.Evelyn Hart, now the ballet’s principal dancer, filled the role.Another night, Friday the 13th in Portland, Ore., the ground in the civic auditorium wasn’t shaking because of thunderous applause.A small earthquake, compliments of an eruption from Mount St.Helens, was the culprit.Company manager Mark Por-teous recalled that near the end of the show, a “funny feeling started.” He looked in the theatre and “there were people running up the aisles,” scurrying for an exit.Porteous recalls another time when the troupe's 40-odd members were getting set to leave Belleville, Ont., and decided to stop for breakfast.Trying to serve the company proved too much for one harried waitress.With dancers coming and going at the same table and the orders getting as scrambled as the eggs, she stopped in her tracks.“That’s it, 1 quit,” Porteous recalled her saying.“And she took this tray with the breakfast orders on it and heaved it against the wall.” But dancer Gerard Theoret, seizing his only chance for a meal, quietly got up, “went over, scraped up his eggs and ate them." A JteaHhy Jtearl «*«• Artist finds WHITEHORSE, Yukon (CP) — Yukon artist Ted Harrison has no trouble selling his work today, but remembers clearly the leaner years.Harrison has come a long way since the time 14 years ago when he sold only one painting during a three-week showing at the Whitehorse library.And that was to the librarian.People now pay between $2,000 and $4,000 for differentsized works, although Harrison says he is as surprised with his success as anyone.The British-born former school teacher says he has found his nirvana, and the statement’s meaning becomes clear when examining the colors and contours of his work, which Harrison likes to compare with the movement of the sea, "I see the sky as a sea and the land as a sea,” he said.“The northern houses are like ships, nirvana in the Yukon and the valleys and dips which we see every time we go out for a walk or look out the window in the Yukon are like waves.“The Yukon doesn’t have a straight line in it.Even the houses are sunken and sagging from the heave of the permafrost.” ENGLISH UPBRINGING Harrison grew up in a coalmining town in northern England and says that’s where he got his inspiration.“I fantasized that the dark, black slag heaps were big beautiful mountains which I would someday climb.“When I was offered a job in Carcross (Yukon), the first thing I asked was whether there were any mountains.When I found out that there were, I didn’t think twice about going.” Harrison, who arrived in the Yukon in 1968, immediately fell in love with the town.“I saw brilliant skies, a wonderfully effective light on the clouds and mountains, especially in the wintertime when the snow seems to collect all of the colors.“The way of life here, the spirit of the Yukon and the way it challenges life is a big inspiration for my work.” Encourage our advertisers BOB B0ISCLAIR Weekends DANIEL COULOMBE Weekends THE INCREDIBLE AM 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984 Decline in cursing related to violence says author NEW YORK (Reuter) —Americans aren’t cursing as well as they once did, relying instead on a dozen sickly vulgarities without style or impact, says a former university professor turned curse scholar.“The average American now gets by with a vocabulary of 2,000 words from a time when a typical American had a vocabulary of 10,000 words,” said Reinhold Aman, editor of an small, internationally distributed journal on curses, slurs, and ethnic jokes.“Most urban dwellers use what I call “the dirty dozen’ — that common list of four-to-seven-lettered sexual and scatological curses,’’ Aman said in an interview.It has been a long time since the 47-year-old Aman has found an American insult as fine as the one he considers a classic from Alabama: “Your breath is so foul it would knock a buzzard off a manure wagon.” “I think there is a correlation between (the decline in cursing prowess) and the increase in physical violence.People can’t throw things off verbally any more.” TITLE MALED1CTA Aman, as publisher of Maledic-ta: The International Journal of Verbal Aggression, has tracked trends in verbal abuse for almost a decade through his own research and that of an informal network in more than 60 countries.He quotes Sigmund Freud to underscore the importance of capable cursing.“The first human who hurled a curse instead of a weapon against his enemy was the founder of civilization.” Unimaginative and lacklustre cursing spread as Americans be- came less respectful of authority and traded language skills for audio-visual pleasures such as television, said Aman.From his home in Waukesha, Wis., he publishes his paperbacksized journal once a year for 4,000 subscribers and collects books on verbal abuse in 200 languages.Aman said Hungarians and many other peoples curse much better than North Americans.“Oh, they’re so bad, you wouldn’t believe it,” he said of the Hungarians.INUIT DUEL Typical Turkish rhymed insults, Inuit singing duels, and Hindi family slurs are also far more muscular than the American dirty dozen.Yiddish has provided Aman with some favorites, including: “May you have three shiploads of gold and it should not be enough to pay for your doctor’s bill.” While cursing and swearing take distinctive cultural twists, ethnic jokes and insults are remarkably constant, he said.“Irish jokes in Britain turn up as Polish jokes in the United States,” he said.“You find anti-Brazilian jokes in Portugal and anti-Portuguese jokes in Brazil.You find the same jokes in Switzerland against Austrians .and against Minnesota in Wisconsin.“It’s always neighbors, either physically or culturally.” Cursing, Aman said, falls into three main categories: — WASP (White Anglo Saxon Protestant) cultures dwell on bodily parts and functions as well as sex.— Catholic countries use blasphemy, especially references to Jesus Christ and saints.— Cultures in Africa, Asia and Polynesia centre cursing on family ties, with a special emphasis on domestic sexual habits.In English, Aman has concluded, a good insult should focus on a changeable shortcoming of a person and contain one or more of certain harsh sounds such as “t”, “k” or “sh”.“To find a shortcoming, think like a child.Children, with their primitive little minds, are very good at picking out weaknesses, ’ ’ he said.Until 1974 a professor at the University of Wisconsin, Aman said he was denied tenure for his curse work.“They didn’t consider my research dignified or worthy.” Aman savors his last meeting with his college boss, when he told the curse-naive man in traditional Thai fashion: “Talking with you is like playing violin to a water buffalo.” Don’t throw out magazines—they may be Ephemera TUCSON, Ariz.(AP) — The next time your elderly relative asks you to clean out the garage, instead of complaining when you lift that crate of Depression-era Vogue magazines, be grateful Such a find could have your wallet bulging.Just ask Larry Michael Sandusky.For the last two years, Sandusky, 36, has made a living by buying and selling old magazine covers, advertisements, automotive literature, sheet music and comic books.Collectively, the paper goods are called ephemera in the antique business.Ephemera is a comparatively new field in antiques, and has only about 100 dealers in the United States, said Sandusky.“It started as a hobby in 1976 when I bought a hundred car ads from an antique dealer in Bis-bee,” he recalled.“I bought them because I was restoring antique cars at the time and I wanted any thing that had to do with antique cars.“I liked (the ads) and I began to look for large quantities of magazines because it was cheaper to find them that way.” Sandusky soon realized that there were people who were sel- ling the yellowing car ads at automobile swap meets.“When I saw that people would buy them, I decided to do this occasionally on weekends at automobile shows.I did this for about five years, just automobile things.” The turning point came at a swap meet in Fort Worth, Tex., when Sandusky was offered a batch of pre-1914 Saturday Evening Post magazines.He snapped them up solely for their automobile ads.“I brought them home and somehow, somebody heard that I had other things besides car ads,” including magazine covers.“They came over and I sold them some .extremely cheap because I didn’t know what they were,” he recalled.Sandusky decided he was on to something and he hasn’t looked back since.Today, he works out of his Santa Catalina foothills home, spending an estimated 70 hours a week thumbing through dogeared copies of Fribner’s, Harper’s Bazaar, the Atlantic and dozens of more obscure glossy periodicals, scanning worn pages for marketable art works.In sheer numbers, the automo- bile ads are still his best sellers, but at an average retail price of only $3 to $4 each, they produce only a quarter of his mail order revenue.The real money is in magazine art; first, that on the outside covers, and then that on the inside displays used to sell Jell-O, Crosley refrigeragtors, Hole-proof Hosiery and other goods.Sandusky is not a collector by temperament.“Everything is strictly from a business standpoint,” he said.He added, however, that his work has given him a new appreciation of art.Disney company making a big splash with adult-film HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Move over Snow White.Here comes Madison, a 1980s-type heroine whose record-breaking debut in Walt Disney Productions’ Splash, has plunged the family-oriented movie company into adult film making.The mildly raunchy Splash, which stars Daryl Hannah as a love-struck mermaid who cohabits with a New York bachelor played by Tom Hanks, took in nearly $6.2 mil lion at 829 North American theatres in its opening weekend to top all the competition.The movie's three-day total through Sunday topped thé.$6 million opening-weekend figures registered last July by a reissue of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Disney officials said Tuesday.Despite the conti-nui ig popularity of Disney classics such as Snow White, Disney’s film division registered more than $60 million in losses in 1982 and 1983 with such clin kers as Tex and Trenchcoat Old-guard Disney executives were swept out of their offices in 1983 as Disney began its pursuit of the 18-to-30-year-old audiences that are crucial to film success, the same audiences that traditionally spurn G-rated (general audience) movies.Disney announced its Touchstone Films division last month, which the company said was designed to create “timely entertainment” as opposed to the “timeless” fami-ly films that would continue to come out of the studio's Walt Disney Pictures division.Splash is Touchstone Films’ first release, and newspaper advertisements for the movie make no mention of Disney.The film is rated PG (parental guidance suggested) for what the New York Times noted was "some fleeting nudity and mild sexual overtones.” Theatre executives say the approach is working.“We’re getting young people, that’s where the market seems to be,” Robert Selig, president of the Theatre Association of California exhibitors t rade group, said Tuesday.MEANS UPSWING Noting that “the market just doesn’t seem to be there” for G-rated films, Selig said the success of Splash would cause Disney officials to “shoot for the market wherever it is, within the bounds of good taste, of course.” Lee Isgur, entertainment stock analyst at Paine Webber in New York, predicted that although Splash alone would not turn around Disney's film division, the movie could, when combined with the success of Disney’s Christmas 1983 release, Never Cry Wolf, return Disney films to profitability by the end of fiscal 1984.“Splash will mean at least a $20-million to $25-mitlion upswing in operating results for Disney’s film division," Isgur said Tuesday, noting that the film's success could quiet recent Wall Street criticism of Disney management.“This is going to begin to curtail some of the Wall Street criticism that Disney doesn’t know how to make popular movies,” Isgur said.Disney officials repeatedly have stressed that the company that created Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Herbie and Flubber was not abandoning its roots.“All across America, moviegoers want mature entertainment,” said the newspaper ads announcing Touchstone Films.“But they don’t want violence.They don’t want exploitation.They don’t want tasteless themes.They want quality.They want standards.And that’s what we want at Touchstone Films.” The ad went on to say that the Disney name always will stand for family entertainment — “Quality.Integrity.” But Splash exhibits some decidedly un-Disney-like traits — including Hannah’s unclad posterior.Television advertising shows Hannah — wearing nothing but her long hair — walking down a Manhattan street to the amazement of pas-sersby.Such elements in a Disney movie led to Monday’s announcement that Roy Disney, nephew of the late Walt Disney, had resigned from the board of directors of Walt Disney Productions.%J Give 1983' '1984 CENTENNIAL THEATRE BRUNSWICK STRING QUARTET MARITIMES’ FOREMOST MUSICAL ENSEMBLE FEATURING WORKS BY HAYDN, DEBUSSY &• MENDELSSOHM Mon., April 2, 8:30 pjn.TICKETS: $6.00 ($3,00 students) îLtlS- POST-PERFORMANCE RECEPTION Alexandre Lagoya Fri., April 6, 8:30 p.m.TICKETS: $8.00 (S4.00 students) bishops wnvBHsmr, lbhbtoxviixb 563-4966 TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.MARCH 23, 1984—7 Yes Virginia, there is a CBC .Well the CBC has come and gone.For one brief moment, as Andy Warhol predicted, we were all stars — or at least some of us were.Who can forget the pancake breakfast?The bon mots of Cecil ‘mayor of all the Lennoxvillains' Dougherty?The gorgeous eyes of Jennifer Fry?The wit and wisdom of Christopher Nicholl?We even heard the latest on the Quebec Farmers straight from the Grapes vine.Yes, it was wonderful to realize that we too are part of the national scene if only occasionally.I do have a minor grievance however, in that with all their resource people, researchers, production assistants, producers, clerks, soundmen and hangers-on, they managed, almost to a man, to mispronounce my name! It is TADEUSZ and rhymes with booze — surely a simple association for a journalist.Oh well, perhaps next time.My only real regret is being forced to use a stand-in for the actual interview.I would have much preferred to not only have done it myself but to have done it live, if only for the pleasure of twenty minutes in the company of the lovely Pauline Couture.I am sure the CBC — always the soul of generosity — will forgive my little deception.No sooner did Jean ‘fasten-your-seat-belt’ Chrétien announce that he would seek the Liberal leadership, than disaster struck.Sherbrooke MP Irenée Pelletier came out of the political closet and stated he would support Chré-tien’s bid — which is akin to being offered two tickets on the maiden voyage of the Titanic.Pelletier, who some people say has the record for the longest stay in the House of Commons without being given anything important to do — probably gave his support with the best of intentions.This, doesn’t alter the fact that nobody, least of all the citizens of Sherbrooke, is going to be impressed.Maybe if Who’s who By TADEUSZ LETARTE Chrétien really works at it, he’ll win Claude Tessier’s support as well.A little bird tells me that local lawyer and used clothes enthusiast François Gérin is taking every opportunity to drum up support for his bid as the Tory standard-bearer in Megantic-Compton-land get this Mr.Tessier) Stanstead Gérin was observed recently in Sherbrooke’s court house surrepticiously handing out ‘vote Gérin’ buttons to everyone but the members of the Grégoire-case jury.Even with the macarons, Gérin is going to have a full-size fight on his hands as old-time pol and long-time Union National wheel-greaser Fernand Grenier is rumoured to be out looking for a retirement home in Ottawa.From our Truth is Stranger than Fact Department: With nearly everyone in the province upset by the various auto-route tolls and with the government being forced to call a temporary halt to scheduled increases, what do you suppose has happened?A group of Parti Québécois MNAs — they’re easy to recognize; most wear expensive fur coats, refuse tips and prefer marble urinals — has decided that what our highways need is 35 new tolls! Committee member Elie Fallu told a staggered John Ciaccia that it would be a fine idea to establish more tolls on the commuter routes leading in and out of Montreal.Ciaccia, who as a Montreal MNA spends considerable time going in and out of the city.was.needless to say, flabbergasted.Meanwhile in Sherbrooke, a spokesman for mayor Jean-Paul Pelletier categorically denied that the city is considerering setting up tolls on Portland Street, King Street or Grand Forches.John Monro, counting on the support of his mother, the darts team from Local 521 of the United Steel Workers and the Conservative Party, announced that he too will seek the Liberal leadership.Monro, the man that put the ‘duh in dredging, joins cabinet colleagues Jean Chrétien, John what's his name, a fellow named MacGillan or something, a businessman from Westmount and an old friend of Pierre Trudeau’s who spent the last eight years in a restaurant in Toronto.Monro is running on a platform that he says is designed to keep the Liberals on the left.Since the only people in Canada to the right of the Liberal party are the Mulroney gang, Barbara ‘Reagan-is-a-pinko’ Amiel and possibly the Calgary Oilmen's Association, he shouldn't have too difficult a time.Speaking of the Liberal leadership race, the suggestion floating around Ottawa-Sur-Rideau, is that Jean Chrétien and John Crosbie form a national coalition government.The possibility, I must confess, has a certain fascination about it.Since neither man speaks English or French, but both are understood immediately by Canadians from all walks of life, it might be a workable solution.And, if they failed, they could probably get a contract with American television.At least they’d be an improvement over those idiotic McKenzie Brothers who are about as humorous as Herb Grey.A museum has her sarong but ‘DottieV still working TORONTO (CP) — To one generation of moviegoers, she was Ulah or Mima or Marama or Aloma.GIs voted her the pinup they’d most like to trap in a foxhole.She gamboled with Hope and Crosby on the Road to Singapore, Zanzibar, Morocco, Utopia, Bali and Hong Kong.And today?“Well, one of my sarongs is in the Smithsonian Institute, can you believe it?’’ laughs Dorothy Lamour, a grandmother.“A friend phoned me up and said he’d spotted it right beside The Spirit of St.Louis.” Lamour, still the jolly, kidding brunette, is back in Toronto to star in a new dinner theatre production of Barefoot In The Park.The still-handsome actress says she’s amazed people have been spotting her and stopping to chat.“It’s those Road pictures, I tell you.Even I watch them, because they’re so crazy.We never had dialogue, we’d just ad-lib.It’s the kind of comedy that holds up well — I hear they’re Woody Allen’s favorites.” Being straight girl to Bob Hope and Bing Crosby has helped Lamour outlast her competitors on the old Paramount lot.Where, indeed, are Paulette Goddard, Joan Caulfield, Betty Hutton and Lizabeth Scott these days?“Those Road pictures are my passport wherever I go,” she says.WORKS HARD Lamour, 69, is working harder than she has in decades.“Thank goodness for dinner theatre.It gets my generation out of the house and feeds them and entertains them with a few laughs.In the last six years, I’ve done Barefoot all over the States.Plus The Boyfriend, Side By Side By Sondheim, Hello, Dolly.I could work all the time, except I like to go home now and then and look at my kids.” Lamour says she had the original idea for the Road movies, but “I never thought we’d be at it for a decade.” At the time, she was the reigning sex symbol at Paramount in a series of jungle girl epics.“Edith Head designed my sarongs.They go topless in the tropics but we couldn’t get away with that.So Edith used crepe silk and draped it around me.The natives in Tahiti copied from us and now they all wear my kind of sarong.’ Lamour says she was bitten by the chimpanzees and lion cubs she had to work with and had dangerous diving scenes and underwater heroics to test the best athlete.In Cecil B.DeMille’s The Greatest Show on Earth she swung from the high wire with a bit in her teeth, even though she’s terrified of heights.When Lamour married businessman Bill Howard of Baltimore and had two sons, her career came second, she says.But at her peak, she received an astonishing 22,000 letters a week, mostly from lovelorn GIs.Lamour says she’s turned down film offers that would cast her as a prostitute or axe-swinging murderess.“That’s not me.I’ll do Love Boat, Hart To Hart.That’s me.I’m just Dottie.I like having a good time.And I want my fans to have some fun, too.” Smoking — is it really worth it?Join the Majority — Be a Non-Smoker.& 1510-RADIO-SHERBROOKE le nouucaii thoiH FtoUMhcent _____du lundi au vendredi, de 5 h 30 à 9 h 00.tenuccsant 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984 WHAT’S ON Music And they said it couldn’t be done.To the utter amazement of those who know me, I managed to somehow survive what could have been a devastating St Patrick's Day weekend and even made it to work on Monday.This ranks right up there with the Loaves and Fishes and a policy statement by Brian Mulroney in the Things Unlikely to Occur department, especially considering there was a full moon out last weekend plus the fact Mikey had abstained from fermented substances since the beginning of the year which ranks up there in a class by itself.In any event, it’s back to business as per usual so here goes: At Cal’s FL Hideaway this Saturday, a band called Idle Hands takes to the stage.This is a local outfit composed of Peter “the forge” Singleton.Sean and Danny Renaud, and Peter Judge.I have not heard this group play as such but am familiar with most of the members of the band from their having played with other outfits so I will have to wait and see.Singleton is probably best known (musically at least) for his collection of somewhat bawdy folk tunes many of which he regaled the masses with during celebrations last Saturday.Cal tells me the outfit plays Rock and Roll however, and says and I quote “They are really good.” Knowing that Cal wouldn’t lie about a thing like that, I must accept it as a fact.No music on Friday at the Hideaway due to a stag party for one of our local unfortunates.In Watervilie, Big Foot continues to pack them into the upstairs section of the Manoir Watervilie while Crossroads holds the fort downstairs.That gives the loyal Manoir habituées a pretty good choice.The great Kentucky are still down at the Maples in Stans-tead nearing the end of their month long sojourn in that venerable establishment.Gibson Creek continue to provide the country tunes at the Shady Crest in Ayer’s Cliff, also until the end of March.American Dream take to the stage tonight and tomorrow down at the infamous Del Monty which once made its name smuggling liquor into the States and now does it smuggling music out of them.Weird eh?KGB rocks on out at the Bar des Cantons in Sawyerville with some hard pounding rock and roll and some fancy footwork on the guitar by Kevin Groves.For those of you who would prefer I leave the hard stuff alone for awhile, The Old Tyme 4 provides the tunes for the Saturday dance at the Lennoxville Rifle Club.All are cordially invited.The Hut (Unit .318, of the Army, Navy and Airforce Veterans Association) in Lennoxville are also holding a dance this Saturday, with the music being provided by the group Long Shot It seems that Gord McDonald managed to have one hell of a birthday bash out at the Bretagne in Watervilie (route 143) last Sunday despite the fact that Mikey mentioned everything about it last week except where it was being held I guess it doesn't really matter since Gord’s fans all know exactly where to find him and his fine establishment but it is embarrassing nonetheless.Blows a nice big hole in any delusions of grandeur I might have had though, let me tell y a.Anyway, the Carrousels Country Riders are still there to provide the stimulus Friday and Saturday night, as are Real and Gale on Sunday afternoons.The Riders will be there for a while, but Réal and Gale are only there till the end of the month.In South Stukely ’s justly famous Station 88, The Koncords perform their popular show Friday and Saturday.In Stanbridge East, Herbie Sharman and the Syndicate Revival provide weekend entertainment at The Old Mill Hotel Fridays and Saturday evenings.Two events from the music department at Bishop’s University : First, on Saturday, March 24 at 7:30 p.m.in the student lounge — that’s in the student centre — the Toronto singing group Ammi will put on a concert.Ammi, which is Hebrew for 'My People’ is, according to university chaplain Bruce'Stavert, a Christian-rock group which entertains while proclaiming the personal faith of its members.This group has been around for a long time and has received a number of critically favorable reviews in Toronto.Tickets are $3 and can be purchased at the door.On Tuesday, March 27, Pamela Hail will give an organ recital in St.Mark's chapel at 8:30 p.m.Pamela is a student at Bishop’s who has managed to do a double major degree Music and Fine Arts — while working as the chapel’s organist.She is a particularly accomplished musician and the evening of works by Bach, Mendelssohn and others should be first class.When Pamela graduates this spring, there will be an opening for a student organist and chaplain Bruce Stavert says there is scholarship money available, for further information, contact Stavert at 589-9551.By MICHAEL McDEVITT Exhibitions/events An interesting exhibit of recent work by noted painter Denis Demers is presently enjoying a confusing dualshowing at both the Bishop’s — Champlain Art Gallery in Lennoxville, and the HORACE gallery on King street in Sherbrooke.Demers’ paintings make full use of the artist’s architectural background, and display an almost three-dimensional quality that is both different and exciting.Thoughtful and thought-provoking.At the Caisse Populaire de Sherbrooke-est Sawyerville’s own Denis Palmer continues his exhibit until March 30.Palmer is well known throughout the area and has earned a well-deserved reputation for the spontaneity and character of his sketches, engravings and watercolors.Palmer is primarily a sketcher and he chooses his subjects as he finds them on his travels.His work has that sense of being real and alive.The Caisse is located at the corner of King and Bowen streets.In Coaticook at the innovative Beaulne Museum, an exhibition entitled The Musical Culture of Black Africa has just opened.The exhibit, put together by the Department of Anthropology of the University of Montreal and McGill University’s Redpath Museum, dispels the popular myth that Black African music consists solely of drums and war cries and examines the myriad instruments, rhythms and purposes of this highly developed, yet still primitive art and communication form.The show will continue until May 5.Also at the Beaulne is the collection of photographs celebrating the architecture of the Protestant Churches of the Coaticook Region.Heritage Sutton's museum is now open on a daily basis and is currently featuring a display of early communications devices once used in the Sutton region.Antique telephones, telegraphs, radios and gramophones are included as well as pictures and historical information pertaining to Reginald Fessenden, the Eastern Townships native credited with the invention of the radio.A fascinating look at the early days of modern communication.Back in Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke Trust’s celebratory Collection en Art features as its March artist Richard Sylvestre.Internationally recognized, Sylvestre is a tireless worker who not only produces fine oil paintings and drawings, but also is actively involved in the promotion of Eastern Townships art in general.Sylvestre s work is on display at the Sherbrooke Trust branch at the Carrefour de TEstrie until the end of the month.It is the last weekend at the Musée Minérologique et Minier de la Région de l’Amiante of the commemorative Homage à Ti-Blanc Richard in Thetford Mines.This exhibit generously and fondly eulogizes the great Eastern Townships fiddler and recalls his more than 40 years in show biz.At the Sherbrooke Museum of Fine Arts at 86 Wellington North, the whimsical work of painter Jacques Barbeau is being displayed until March 30.Barbeau, a native of the Beauce, produces charming oil paintings that echo his traditional Quebec upbringing and culture.Primarily interested in people, Barbeau sees through the trappings to present vivid characterizations of everyday folk at work, rest and play.Fun At the Point de Vue gallery of the Sherbrooke CEGEP, the work of Pierre Janson is featured until the end of the month.At the University of Sherbrooke’s Galerie d’Art there is an exciting exhibit of Ancient Ceramics from the New World featuring primarily South American pottery both ritual and functional.The work is fascinating and very beautiful and demonstrates the rich and varied cultural life of the pre-Columbian natives of South and Central America.In the events department, the Carrefour de Solidarité Internationale features two theme nights this week at the Centre Léon Marcotte on Sherbrooke’s Frontenac Street.On Tuesday at 5.30 the topic is Nicaragua-Honduras: Between Two Wars which focuses on the rapidly deteriorating situation in Central America, where what can only be described as the blind, malevolent stupidity of American foreign policy has set the tone for major confrontation and violence.The tragedy of Central America is examined through film and discussion.On Thursday, same time, same place, a look at the famous Brazilian Miracle which saw that country’s economy explode in the early part of the 70s only to degenerate into a situation that has left the largest, most prosperous nation in South America on the verge of bankruptcy.Tomorrow atSp.m.at Arts Sutton, poet Richard Sommers will read selections from his six books of poetry.Sommers is a well-traveled American who now lives near The Pinnacle and he has been publishing prolificly since 1968.The reading is free and all are welcome.Arts Sutton is located across from the Town Hall on Main street in that beautiful Eastern Townships community.On Thursday at Centennial Theatre at ÏMsliop’s Œnibtrsitp at 4.30 p.m.Playwright David French will deliver a talk.French is currently the director of Centaur Theatrein Montreal, and his play Jitters will be presented at Bishop’s from March 29 to the 31st.For some comic relief, at 8 p.m., also at Bishop’s but this time at the Pub Quebec’s born-again Liberal Party leader Robert Bourassa will address the Business and Political Science Clubs of the august institution of higher learning.Bourassa, best-remembered for his ‘cool-under-fire’ hysteria during the October crisis of 1970 will discuss his and our future after he and his noble warriors rescue us from the separatists.Mikey is no fan of Bou-Bou’s, as you may have guessed, but he (Bourassa not Mikey) is an intelligent and interesting speaker and will probably be the next premier of this province unless something really surprising happens.Finally, on Wednesday evening Professor Douglas Kneale of the English Department at ütstiop’s ®nfotr«it?> will discuss The Language of the Self: Wordsworth, Rhetoric and Autobiography whatever that may mean.The lecture is open to all and will be held at 7.30 in room 125 of JRatUmnon Sail.Theatre Just a note to remind you all that the JSisbop’g aimPersitp Drama Department opens its production of Jitters by playwright David French (it takes an exceptional genius to tell one about a play written by a playwright, doesn’t it?) on Thursday, March 29, in Centennial Theatre at 8.30 p.m.The production is under the direction of Greg ‘the mad hat’ Tuck and starring noted actor (there I go again — a play starring an actor!) Dwight McFee.Movies At the Cinémas Carrefour this week the madcap takeoff (I read it in a review, honest) of space flics called The Ice Pirates is back for at least one more run.I confess that due to the incredible demands made on me to lecture United Nations assemblies.World Peace conferences and Girl Guide troops I have been unable to catch this film and have talked to no one who has actually seen it so I must leave you to your own humble resources to decide if you want to drop the $4.50 to see this one.Down in Inundationville at The Capitol the new Paul Newman vehicle Harry and Son hits town.This thing, co-starring Hobby Benson has been slammed by critics, but as you are all perfectly aware movie critics rarely have the same tastes as people and usually fill their columns with crap that is intended to convince other critics how sophisticated they are.Anyway, with Newman and Benson in a film about a father trying to reach rapprochement with his son, it should be a good one for mothers and teenage daughters to catch together as they can compare turn-ons and see if they’ve got anything in common.Over to Cowansville the Cinéma Princesse features the double feature of Unfaithfully Yours and The Star Chamber.Unfaithfully Yours is the tale of a musician (Dudley Moore) married to an extremely beautiful woman (Nastassja Kinski) who becomes dangerously jealous when he suspects her of having an affair with a friend.I can see his point.The Star Chamber deals with a group of highly influential individuals who decide that justice is not being served by the present legal system and who take matters into their own hands.Your basic vigilante-type plot but told with some high-class suspense and drama.Michael Douglas stars.Down at The Merril Showplace Cinemas in lovely Newport, Vermont where a buck will buy you 75 cents, they have a wide selection of films for your viewing entertainment.Hot Dog featuring all that wild free-style lunatic skiing; Blame it on Rio, the surprise hit about a couple of middle-aged men who take their teenaged daughters on a trip to Rio where one of them (Michael Caine has a wild and passionate affair with the other one’s child (17 year-old goddess Michelle Johnson, whose parents should never have let her out of the house); and The Ice Pirates (see above).Hang on, that’s not all.On Saturday and Sunday afternoons as a special treat for the kiddies Charlotte’s Web and The Last Unicorn two classic kid’s stories containing nothing damaging to a child except perhaps a sense of trust).Not a bad package for a young cinema complex now is it?Television Tomorrow afternoon at 12.30 channel 12 features The Defiant Ones, a 1958 message movie about two convicts — one black and one white — who escape from a chain gang.Bound together at the wrists, the two learn to overcome their mutual racial hatred in order to remain free.Sidney Poitier and Tony Curtis star.Movies dominate the rest of Saturday’s schedule too, as Channel 12 presents The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother, a slapstick bit of nonsense that almost — but not quite — makes it.Gene Wilder could have used a little help from Mel Brooks in this one although he gets ample aid from Madeline Kahn, Marty Feldman and Dom Deluise.At 9, Vermont ETV offers Johnny Belinda, the story of a Nova Scotia fishing village where a deaf mute girl is raped by the town bully.Jane Wyman won an Oscar for her performance in this 1948 classic.Back on Channel 12 at midnight, Paul Scofield recreates the life of Sir Thomas More and his feud with Henry VIII in A Man For AH Seasons.Another excellent film.On Sunday at 8.30, Radio-Québec’s En Scène returns with a concert by notorious Canadian singer-songwriter Bruce Cockburn who is very talented and very wierd.At 9, CTV presents the science-fiction thriller Alien, whose main focus has the distinction of being the character most imitated by Des McKeon in 1982.At 9.30, back on Radio-Québec, the highly praised Anglo-Swedish production Montenegro is presented.This is a un-nervingly provocative story of a bored housewife who becomes entangled with some crazy Yugoslavians in a Stockholm bar.Des hated this one, probably because because he couldn’t imitate anyone in it quite as effectively as he could the Alien At 10 (and midnight), Vermont ETV's The Unknown War relives the siege of Stalingrad.It was here, at the gates of the former city of Tsaritsyn, that the defeat of the Nazi armies became inevitable.Heroic resistance by Russian soldiers and civilians allowed for the city to be held and for winter and Red Army re-enforcements to surround the mighty Wehrmacht and inflict on Hitler his worst military — and political — defeat.Only 5,000 of the city’s 46,000 inhabitants survived and over a quarter million German soldiers were taken prisoner.On Monday at 4.30 p.m.The Way It Is, a National Film Board documentary, looks at the break-up of her parents’ marriage through the eyes of a 12 year-old girl.At 8, on Vermont ETV The Mind of a Murderer presents the second part of the chilling story of Kenneth Bianehi, the vicious, sadistic creep who became infamous as California’s Hillside Strangler.This animal managed to fool several prominent psychiatrists he suffered from “split personality” before his uncanny acting ability was revealed.I hope they’ve thrown away the key.Also at 8.on CBC, this week’s Howlingly Outrageous and Stupidly Tacky Idea (HOSTI) award goes to a special on the Quebec Winter Carnavalfeaturing such Québécois super-stars as Anne Murray, Bruce Murray, Glen Campbell and Dionne Warwick.They must have got on the wrong bus.At 9, Marsha Mason and the dangerously cute Kristy McNichol star as a highly successful Broadway actress and her precocious daughter in Only When I Laugh on CTV.On Tuesday at midnight Channel 12 presents all four hours of the excellent movie Exodus based on Leon Uris’ novel of the birth of Israel.Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint, Lee J.Cobb and Sal Mine© star.On Wednesday at 8, Vermont ETV’s Live at the Met presents Les Troyens (The Trojans), the opera based on Vergil’s Aeneid, by Hector Berlioz.Placido Domingo and Jessye Norman star.On Thursday at 8 on CBC, Some Honorable Gentlemen presents A Flush of Tories, a comic look at the dissolution of Conservative leadership following the death of Sir John, Eh?.Radio Way back in the 60s when Mikey was still a bright-eyed optimistic young lad, learning about girls and other controlled substances (both of which were harder to get but less expensive then than they are now) the blues, particularly from Chicago, was the music to listen to.Typifying this musical genre was the James Cotton Blues Band.Tonight at 7.30 on CBC Radio’s Variety Tonight this legendary outfit will be featured in a special concert presentation.At last, something Mikey can relate to.At 10.25, on Nightfall on CBC Stereo, a young man is hit by a truck and appears to suffer only a slight concussion.He is plagued, however, by the constant sound of Footsteps following him.Footsteps was written by Larry Le Clair and stars David Macllwraith and Janet Laine-Greene.At noon tomorrow on CBC Radio Quirks and Quarks continues its series on aging in the ’80s with a look at Alzheimer’s Disease, the mentally debilitating disorder that darkens the last years of millions of North Americans.At 2, on both CBC Radio and CBC Stereo Metropolitan Opera features a performance of Verdi’s La Forza del Destine starring Leontyne Price.In this tragic tale on the workings of fate, a young Spanish nobleman accidently kills his girlfriend’s father (accidently I swear) and incurs the vengeful wrath of her brother.James Levine conducts.Well whadya know! Another one Mikey can relate to.At 7.05 on Saturday Stereo Theatre, the story of four 60s type political activists who are reuinited after 15 years when a past incident threatens their present lifestyles is told in Reunion by Myrna Kotash.The times they are a-changin’.At 8.05, also on CBC Stereo Jazz Beat features the new-wave jazz outfit Baugrand in a concert taped at the Montreal International Jazz Festival.AT 11.05 Simply Folk profiles Don McLean in concert at the the Winnipeg Folk Festival (Festival Folklorique de Ouinnipegue?).McLean, you may recall, was the guy who contributed the classic ode to nostalgia American Pie to the am* iK \ ( ^ {ijlljk MES AC, ERIE OF FANCIFUL CREATURES — Children's story writer Beatrix Potter created a host of lovable animal characters such as Peter Rabbit, illustrating her books with quaint watercolor sketches pictured here.Pene- TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY.MARCH 23.1984—9 WHAT’S ON world’s musical lexicon.On Sunday afternoon at 1.05, on CBC Radio we get to hear the end results of somebody's bright idea to create a musical tribute to Howard Hughes in For the Love of Howard.Hughes’ lives and loves are recalled in flashback going back to his 19th birthday and the death of his parents.Cliff Jones wrote and directed the show, and Ross Petty stars as the billionaire.At 7.05 on Sunday Stereo Theatre The Scales of Justice presents Expert Evidence based on the criminal negligence trial of hockey coach Floyd Smith which raised many important questions on the use of expert witnesses in criminal proceedings.At 8.05, also on CBC stereo Celebration examines The Incarnation of Christ and discusses all the Biblical events leading up to the birth of Christ in celebration of the feast of the Annunciation, which is, of course the day the carpenter’s wife got news the rabbit died — hence the Easter Bunny.At 9.05 on CBC Radio the Ideas series The Victorians and the Death of God examines two great Victorian writers driven to despair by their loss of faith — Thomas Hardy and James Thompson.On Monday at 9.05 on Ideas the series dealing with profiles of some of the 20th century’s greatest scientific figures concludes.Tuesday’s Ideas finishes an examination of the The Cold War in Canada with a look at Un-Canadian Activities (an Ontario-based federal Customs official once confiscated several hundred thousand copies of an American magazine on the assumption that oral sex could be included in that classification.One wonders whom he asked).The show looks at Canadian involvement in the Korean War and the attack on Canadian Peace Congress leader James Endicott by Lester B.Pearson.On Thursday, Ideas looks at Between Two Spains — the attempt to maintain a delicate balance as the country tries to make the difficult transformation from Fascist dictatorship to democracy.* xi Æ Cm .4# lope Wilton (center) portrays the writer in "The Tale oj Beatrix Potter” on Mobil Masterpiece Theatre on Vermont ETV on Sunday evenings, March 25 and April I at V. 10—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984 Travel —____9«l ifBcara North Berwick—where the Scots take their holidays « North Berwick is just a short drive from Edinburgh’s spires.mM A /*?*r- wr f • ' X f-* NORTH BERWICK, Scotland (CP) — Since the mid-19th century, North Berwick has been a favored seaside resort of Edinburgh’s middle class.While still a teenager, Robert Louis Stevenson came with his family each year during the 1860s to spend August and September exploring the 50 kilometres of sandy beaches and the offshore islands.North Berwick, about 30 kilometres from Edinburgh on the south shore of the entrance to the Firth of Forth, offered much to fire the imagination of the future author.Fidra, a horseshoe-shaped island just west of the town, probably was Stevenson’s inspiration for Treasure Island.Fidra means “feathers” in the Norse language and probably derived from flocks of eider ducks which breed on the island.ROCK A FORTRESS About two kilometres off North Berwick is Bass Rock, one of the great natural fortresses of Scot- tish history.Centuries of North Sea tides have bored a tunnel through the mighty rock which is about 1.6 kilometres in circumference and about 106 metres high.In 1691, during the reign of King William, four Jacobites — supporters of the Stuart claim to the throne — overcame a small garrison on Bass Rock.For three hectic years the foursome held out against all attempts to recapture the rock.Finally, they surrendered their stronghold after negotiating terms that allowed them to walk away free men.Later, the rock was used for a time as a prison for political and religious offenders.Now Bass Rock is a sanctuary for 3,000 pairs of Solan geese, better known as gannets, huge white birds with wing spans up to two metres.They share the rock with puffins, terns, razorbills, guilli-mots, eider ducks and many species of gulls.Popular boat trips for birdwatchers and camera buffs sail around the rock from North Berwick.HOME TO DOUGLAS Atop a cliff about three kilometres south of Bass Rock is Tan-tallon Castle, the ancestral home of the fighting Douglas clan.In the early 14th century.Sir James Douglas — known on the English side of the border as Black Douglas—three times destroyed English garrisons that had occupied his castle, twice putting it to the torch.Tantallon Castle is open to the public with a small admission charge.North Berwick is a good base to tour the historic borderlands, including the Lammermuir hills made famous by Sir Walter Scott, and the many great houses and castles.Many bed-and-breakfast establishments on the country roads and in the area villages offer comfortable rooms and lavish breakfasts for about $15.Private airline clubs deal with ‘full-frill’ passengers LOS ANGELES (AP) — Not everyone is looking for bargain air travel.In fact, many are willing to pay extra to avoid the inconvenience of long lines and the crush of crowds in busy air terminals.Despite the fare wars, discount airlines and bankruptcies in the United States since deregulation of the industry, private airline clubs catering to the frequent traveller — mostly business executives and celebrities — are thriving.The clubs exist in every major airport, providing quiet, out-of-the-way lounges and refreshments for relaxation, private rooms for meetings and telephones and telex machines for conducting business.“When you travel a lot and may have to wait a couple of hours between flights, this is a pleasant place to relax," said William Mearns, who runs a development company in Vancouver.Mearns and his wife Loula were chatting in the subdued atmosphere of Western Airlines’ Horizon Club at busy Los Angeles International Airport.“Primarily, it’s a convenient place to rest and use the telephone,” said Ed Moreno, who works in the Los Angeles offices of United Technologies and was en route to a business meeting in Dallas.HELPS EXECUTIVES Every major airline has a private club catering to business executives, who account for about half of the industry’s revenue, said Chuck Novak of United Air Lines in Chicago.But executives aren’t the only ones who appreciate the privacy of the private lounges.Celebrities also prefer them.One wall of Western’s Los Angeles club has 169 framed, auto- graphed photos of stars who have frequented the facilities, including Jamie Farr and Loretta Swit, who for years starred together on the TV show M-A-S-H, and actors Lee Majors and Burt Reynolds, and actress Zsa Zsa Gabor.Even Ronald Reagan’s picture hangs on the wall.Air Canada and CP Air both operate clubs.Air Canada spokesman Brock Stewart said the company’s En Route Gold Club has about 14,500 members and a waiting list.CP Air would not reveal how many members its Empress Club has.Miami-based Eastern Airlines has its Ionosphere Room.American has the Admiral’s Club and TWA, the Ambassador Club.United Airlines has 200,000 members of its Red Carpet Club, which operates at 18 airports, while Pan American has been running its Clipper Club for two decades and has 30 of them around the world.A typical initiation fee is $45 to $50, then an annual charge of about $60.Lifetime memberships run from $600 at Western to $900 at United.Companies frequently pick up the tab.Members don’t have to stand in lines to buy tickets or check baggage.It’s all taken care of in the lounge.A SS .YOUR GIFT PROVIDES BETTER HOUSING lâËiCARlï S*’ t -, Send your gift to - Care Canada -1312 Bank Street Ottawa K1S 5H7 Smoking on planes will continue in U.S.WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S.Civil Aeronautics Board decided Monday it is impractical to ban smoking on airliners based on the length of a flight, leaving passenger.-?free to smoke as long as non-smokers are provided separate seating.The board voted 5 to 0 against a proposal that would have prohibited smoking on any flight shorter than two hours and said a less restrictive proposal banning smoking on one-hour flights would cause just as much confusion."It’s a decision that regardless of what we decide we’re going to have half of the people happy and half of the people unhappy,” board chairman Dan McKinnon acknowledged before the vote.The board had been ordered by the federal courts to re-examine the smoking issue, a controversy that has plagued the agency for 15 years.An anti-smoking group.Action on Smoking and Health, demanded in 1969 airlines provide a separate section for non-smokers.In 1973, the board imposed an order requiring separate no-smoking sections on all commençai aircraft, but has refused twice to impose any ban on cigarette smoking aboard jetliners.IMPACT SMALL The board did decide Monday to prohibit cigar and pipe smoking on all flights and cigarette smoking on aircraft of 30 or fewer seats.But those actions are expected to have little impact, since most airlines already have informally imposed such restrictions.John Banzhaff, executive director of the anti-smoking group, said he was disappointed the board did not order the ban on cigarette smoking on short-haul flights.He promised to continue fighting for such prohibitions.The fight will have to be before another agency as the aeronautics board goes out of business at the end of the year.It is still uncertain who, if anyone, will assume jurisdiction over the airline smoking rules.Recent concern about the issue in both Canada and United States was prompted by a fire aboard an Air Canada plane last June that forced it to make an emergency landing in Cincinnati, Ohio.Twenty-three people died and 23 others narrowly escaped death.Last month, Canadian Transport Minister Lloyd Axworthy appointed Kenneth Thorneycroft as the department’s first inspector general for safety and asked him to examine the smoking issue as one of his first asssignments.RESERVE NOW! MCMBCR 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—FRIDAY, MARCH 23.1984-11 Travel —_____ttei ifecara England’s Cotswolds are picture-postcard perfect CIRENCESTER, England (CP) — Deep in the heart of southwest England is a rolling green countryside where you can literally go to sleep counting sheep.In medieval times, Cotswold sheep gave some of the finest wool in Britain.Amid a rural and largely unspoiled setting, the wool industry established a prosperity that continues today.About 160 kilometres west of London, the Cotswold Hills are a chain of escarpments which extend from the northern tip of Somerset to the westernmost part of Wiltshire.They average 180 to 210 metres in height, and the highest hill — 330 metres — overlooking Cheltenham, goes by the romantic name Cleeve Cloud.Nestled in and on these hills are the picture-postcard villages of the Cotswolds.Upper Slaughter was named for the Slaughter family and the Elizabethan manor house, which was the family home for 500 years, is now open to the public.AGES PRESERVED Chipping Campden, bustling as an old market town should be, still has its 17th-century market hall and the main street is a delight for pedestrians, partly because it is not a main arterial road.Lining the main street are antique shops, tea rooms, gift shops, and such old buildings as the 14th-century Woolstaplers’ Hall containing medieval artifacts, a five-gabled house built in 1390 and the Grammar School, founded in 1487.Most old Cotswold buildings were built of local limestone, imparting a sense of visual unity to the whole area.The color of the limestone varies; in the south Cotswolds, it’s a creamier, greyer tone and in the north, honey-toned.Mellowing and hardening with exposure, it often is covered with lichens of various colors.Many old Cotswold homes are still thatched, a roofing method that goes back to the Bronze Age and was used on many English cottages in the Middle Ages.But as early as the 13th century, slate and later tile began to replace thatch on roofs in large towns.BIRDS DO NEST In the Cotswold area, thatching materials are dried and tied in bunches, then pinned over a timber roof frame.Thatchers often encase the finished roof in wire netting to discourage nesting birds.A thatched roof can last between 30 and 60 years.Cotswold towns are considered some of the prettiest in England.So proud are the residents of their towns that they compete for the Bledisloe Cup, which is awarded each year to the best-kept community.The early Romans settled in “ the Cotswolds and the remains of Roman villas can be seen at Great Witcombe, Frocester, and Whittington.One of the best examples is at Chedworth, 10 kilometres north of Cirencester, where the foundations and mosaics indicate that it must have been the country house of weal- thy, upper-class Romans about AD 200.Cirencester’s Corinium Museum contains archeological artifacts from excavations of the city’s Roman settlement and includes full-scale reconstructions of a Roman kitchen and dining-room.HIKE THE HILLS Tourists from seemingly everywhere descend on the Cotswolds during the summer, but there’s unlikely to be a crowd along the 160-kilometre hiking trail, the Cotswold Way, which links Chipping Campden to Bath.Perhaps the most spectacular view along the trail is from 293-metre-high Bredon Hill in the northwest Cotswolds.On a clear day you can see many counties, the purple outlines of the Malvern Hills, and the other well-known Cotswold peaks, Cric-kley Hill and Leckhampton Hill.The arèa has a number of pleasant places to stay.In Cirencester, former capital of the Cotswolds, the Stratton House Hotel is an early 17th century gentleman’s house with Persian rugs, paintings and antiques in the lounge and an elegant atmosphere.Another historic hostelry in Cirencester is the King's Head Hotel which dates to the 14th century.In Moreton-in-Marsh, both the 17th-century Manor House Hotel and the Redesdale Arms, an old coaching inn, have rooms with modern amenities.Chipping Campden boasts the charming Kings Arms Hotel on the market square and the family-run Noel Arms Hotel.v*/, v MM '.àStmttMSSlÊm ÉÉSitl L-M : Thatched houses are a common sight in the Cotswolds.Canadian sailor Pullen becomes guide to the Arctic OTTAWA (CP) — Capt.Tom Pullen’s latest Arctic adventure as the Canadian ice man is going to be done first class aboard a Swedish cruise ship, one more assault on the marine hazards he is credited with knowing more about than anybody else in North America.The former naval person will be guiding the Lindblad Explorer and its 92 passengers, each paying more than $20,000 for the privilege, through the fabled Northwest Passage toward Japan.“On a scale of one to 10 I give it an eight,” says Pullen, who has been there twice before and can gauge the probabilities.Pullen, in the eyes of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, is “North America’s foremost authority on Arctic navigation and icebreaking, explorer, surveyor and a major force in opening Arctic regions for shipping and economic development.” That is part of the citation for Pullen, chosen by the society as recipient of the Massey Medal it has been awarding since 1959 for outstanding work in geography.Other recipients include Tuzo Wilson of Toronto for his contribution to the theory of shifting land masses and Selma Barkham, for research leading to discovery of a Basque fishing galleon off Labrador.Pullen’s Arctic marine interest began when he commanded the naval icebreaker HMCS Labrador in the 1950s.But Pullen, a warm and outgoing man of firm convictions, didn't care for the integration of the armed forces engineered by then defence minister Paul Hellyer in the mid-1960s and he took early retirement at 47.As he says, he never looked back.He became an Arctic consultant.He was the expert aboard the American tanker Manhattan in a history-making voyage in 1969 through the Northwest Passage.The Manhattan, its hull reinforced but its engines underpowered, had to have help from Canadian icebreakers in probing routes that might be used to market Arctic petroleum.But the Manhattan did make it both ways through the passage.The Massey Medal citation ranks him with two Arctic titans, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen and Henry Larsen, RCMP superintendent.Amundsen made the first Northwest Passage penetration, taking three years from 1903 going west.Larsen took the little schooner St.Roche both ways in the 1940s.as a consultant, Pullen became involved in general Arctic development.Work for Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting included sailing in 1982 with a huge ore-processing plant aboard a barge, towed from the lower St.Lawrence to its Arctic Islands’ base.The project finished 10 days ahead of schedule, but Pullen says ice conditions were good.Forecasts of ice conditions in the short Arctic navigation season don’t give too much warning.But the Lindblad Explorer leaves St.John’s Aug.30, scheduled to be in Yokohama, Japan, in late September.Pullen was aboard as adviser several years ago when the luxury cruise ship travelled Eastern Arctic waters.Pullen is philosophic.“I’m riding, not driving.” Arthritis can be controiled.FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT YOUR ARTHRITIS SOCIETY.THE ARTHRITIS SOCIETY 12—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.MARCH 23, 1984 Travel Florence’s Oltrarno is the home of the city’s artisans ** >* ¦ * i.¦ ,WN«P»» -«iMSh.V «S 2>«^diai ilMi ,p " # •«?Florence’s works of art aren’t the only reason to visit.FLORENCE, Italy (CP) — The 01-tramo, Florence’s colorful artisans’ quarter, contains some of the best walks in Italy.The Ponte Vecchio leads into the heart of the Oltrarno.The bridge, which has existed from Etruscan times, was reconstructed in the 14th century and is now lined with gold and silversmiths.On Sundays, artists display their wares on mats.Dancing puppets, rings, scarves and treasures from nearby North Africa are offered for sale.The bridge leads into a neighborhood crammed with shops full of paintings or stuffed birds, cheap tavernas, warehouses, outdoor markets and pastry shops where you can enjoy hot cappucino and a sugared delicacy.Suddenly you turn a corner and a baroque street statue plunges you deeper into the quarter’s history.EXIST 600 YEARS The Oltrarno sprang up in the 14th century to handle Florence’s overflow population — the laborers, servants and artisans.At the same time, the expanding merchant class wanted building space for their new palazzos and they joined the migration.Piazzo Santo Spirito, the main square, was built in the 15th century when the crowded quarter needed space for meeting, marketing and making merry.It still serves as the unofficial political hub of the area.The square is dominated by a big church partially built by Brunelleschi.At the height of the Renaissance, the Church of Santo Spirito provided the quarter with libraries, a school, a hospital and a dormitory for pilgrims.In fact, Martin Luther was welcomed here while on his way to Rome.CLOSE FOR SIESTA Down from the church is a small open-air market full of fruit, vegetables and second-hand clothes.Like almost everything in Florence, it closes about 1:30 p.m.From then until about 4 p.m., only the tavernas remain open.Workers go home for a long lunch and perhaps a sleep.But around the square you can join artists, students and elderly people who linger over heaping plates of spaghetti enjoying good conversation and wine.At night, the square comes alive again when it fills with strollers looking for hearty, inexpensive food.Turn a corner from the square and you come to the small, dimly-lit church of Santa Maria del Carmine containing frescoes by Masaccio, including the famous Expulsion from Paradise.Move on past the narrow houses with orange facades and green shutters.Machiavelli, the political pragmatist lived here, as did those Victorian Romantic poets, the Brownings.SEE PALACE Soon you come to the impressive Pitti Palace, built by a 15th-century banker who wanted to surpass the grandeur of the wealthy Medici family.Ironically, the palace is filled today with Medici treasures.Inside are five sumptuous museums, the most popular being the Palatine.From the goldframed paintings and sweeping cupola ceiling painted on celestial themes, to the smallest red velvet chair where visitors may rest, the palace is a visual feast.From the palace, wander out to the Boboli Gardens, a profusion of fountains, grottos and statues, including one of an overfed Bacchus riding a petulant looking turtle.Within the Oltrarno the pensions, small basic hotels which often include continental breakfast, offer some of the best deals in Florence.One of the most luxurious is the Pensione Anna-lena at 34 Via Romana where for less that $30 a night you get a high-ceilinged double room with an elegance fit for a Medici.Tourists rediscover ‘Rus’, the ancient land of Russia SUZDAL, U.S.S.R.(Reuter)— Inhabitants of the multinational Soviet Union are used to their government telling them to put ethnic identity second to Soviet citizenship.But in ancient Suzdal, 185 kilometres northeast of Moscow, the emphasis is on being Russian.On a bitterly cold Sunday afternoon in March, with icicles dripping from the gutters of the wooden houses, Suzdal is full of tour buses of Russians come to rediscover “ Rus,” the ancient land of Russia.In the 12th century, Suzdal was the capital of the early Russian state of Prince Yuri Dolgoruky.the founder of Moscow.Today, it is a community of about 10.1MKI inhabitants.But 8(H),(HH) tourists annual ly come to wonder at the magical multiplicity of onion domes of every color and size.ONE STILL USED Religion is officially discouraged, only one of the churches is still in use but they are preserved as architectural monuments and symbols of Russian culture.The Suzdal town council promotes a “Russian winter” fete on March 8, when the winter traditionally ends though ice and snow still abound.Stalls serve Russian specialities — caviar and blini pancakes — and in a cellar restaurant tour groups jostle for a place at the bar, a slice of bread and caviar and a glass of “Russky myod,” an ancient drink brewed from honey.“Myod” is not available in the shops of Moscow or Leningrad.Many Soviet towns have lost their identity to the anonymity of high-rise apartments, but Suzdal has no apartment blocks.Most people still live in the small, brightly painted wmoden homes once familiar even in the suburbs of Moscow.MOVED TO MUSEUM On the edge of town, a museum of wooden architecture groups two windmills and two 18th-century wooden churches brought from distant villages and reassembled to add their peculiar onion domes to the profusion already here.The church’s major role in Russian history led Stalin to realize its patriotic potential, reversing a policy of anti-religious persecution to recruit it as an ally in the Second World War.The truce which has existed since then is symbolized by a certificate in Suzdal’s only functioning church, thanking the local religious community for supporting the Soviet peace committee.In nearby Vladimir, another ancient city, now an industrial centre of 300,000 people, the fur-hatted guide in the golden-domed cathedral points to 15th-century frescoes of Russian icon painter Andrei Rublyov.“You see how he imprinted in the faces those typical Russian qualities of toughness, decisiveness and tenderness,” says the guide.The churches of Suzdal represent “Russia” in a way that the doctrine of Marxism-Leninism does not.“There is a historical, esthetic appeal here that statistics about tractor production do not compare with,” said one Soviet visitor in Suzdal museum.But at the local museum bookstall next to pamphlets on the town’s history is one on local industry, and on the cover is a fleet of red tractors.The modern world intrudes incongruously in other places as well.A unique 12th-century church by a river is overshadowed by an electricity pylon.Slow restoration work has left the blue domes of the most famous Suzdal cathedral with bare patches where some gold stars have fallen off.But for some Soviet tourists Suzdal is just a place to have fun.Young people from Moscow in jeans or miniskirts and Finnish “moon boots” come to dance to Western music in the hotel bar and drink cocktails like “silver bells” a potent concoction of vodka, Soviet sparkling wine and Armenian cognac.Tjoyaged Haza Rack Far ait — 4157 Baurqua Btvd.564-BQ55 — JOB 2J0 Call or Drop In A Visit Us ACTA1 Let us help you in all your Travel Needs Travel TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984—13 «sa ifscora Hotel manager Fahmy says movie stars are the worst TORONTO (CP) — Ibrahim Fahmy has seen them all, from the Queen Mother to Marlon Brando, Prime Minister Trudeau to Eva Gabor.And as general manager of the King Edward Hotel in Toronto he knows many of their quirks and foibles.The Queen Mother likes to drink Noilly Prat vermouth and one of her favorite meals is roast lamb.Trudeau’s secret passion is oatmeal cookies.Comedian Jerry Lewis insists on having a chauffer-driven limousine available around the clock, even though he may only use it 30 minutes a day.And Marlon Brando was ‘‘very difficult.” Fahmy says he has enjoyed playing host to kings and queens, emperors and presidents, movie stars and corporate heavyweights during his career at various hotels.What’s it like tending to the needs of the famous?“They are very easy to please,” says the Egyptian-born Fahmy.“It’s the entourage that can be difficult to satisfy.“All the work is done before the person arrives, all the preparations made.It’s like someone coming to your home, you owe him security, comfort and to fulfil what he wants.But mostly their requirements are very simple.” GETS TO CHAT “That’s one of the plusses of my position to meet these people and to spend five or 10 minutes talking with them.not about government or politics but simple conversations about the weather or the city.“All heads of state, I know what they like and dislike.I get a list of what they want before they come.” What surprises most people, but not Fahmy, is that most people with caviar-and-champagne incomes rarely have exotic tastes to match.“The ones who can be difficult are the movie stars,” he says, although the late Bing Crosby was a hotel manager’s dream come true.“He used to walk in, walk out, grab a taxi to the airport.” Eva Gabor, however, is “not too easy.” “There is a big difference from the screen because you are expecting someone who is somebody else in person.” After graduating from school in Alexandria, Egypt, Fahmy was unable to get an exit visa to study engineering in the United States or England, so started work in the hotel business.He worked in many hotels before coming to the King Edward, known in Toronto as the Grand Old Lady of King Street, in 1982 and beginning his encounters with the stars.Encourage our advertisers Cardo Street is Jerusalem’s ‘heart’ JERUSALEM (Reuter) — On the street where merchants sold spices and perfumes 1.500 years ago, Jerusalem’s newest shopping mall now flourishes.Ruins of the ancient past, uncovered in a decade of archeological excavations, stand among the luxurious modern jewelry stores and art galleries at The Cardo.Most visitors come not just to shop but also to wander through 2.500 years of history in the area, which contains part of Jerusalem’s thick outer wall built by the Israelites in the 6th century B.C.A thousand years later, the Byzantines built Jerusalem’s major commercial street there, on the site of an earlier Roman thoroughfare.Some of the Byzantine columns that once graced the wide street on either side were uncovered in excellent condition and now stand again in the new mall.WAS THE HEART Like the Romans, the Byzantines called their main street, which stretched across the city from north to south, Cardo, Latin for “heart.” Centuries later, the Crusaders left their mark on the street, building a bazaar there.Prof.Nachman Avi-gad, who supervised the excavation of the area, said: “Most people want to understand archeological ruins, but they don’t really.At the Cardo, the ruins are living and speak to everyone.” Avigad was called in during the planning stages to renovate the Jewish Quarter of the Old City and soon began looking for the Cardo.“I knew what I was looking for, and approximately where to look for it, but I was surprised to find it in such good condition,” he recalled.POSTED CONFLICTS From then on, it was a constant tug-of-war between the desire to preserve the past and build the present.“The building plans changed all the time.We would discover something.We’d tell the builders ‘You have to stop, this is important' and the architects would have to go back to their drawing boards.” As a result, the mall is built on several levels.In places steep ditches descend about four metres to reveal walls from biblical times, while in another part modern stores rise above the Byzantine columns.Us austere hall and chic boutiques spill into the colorful, noisy Arab market, where oriental music whines from stalls and the smell of mint and roasting meat hangs in the air.PARIS AND MORE.UN WARDAIR CLASS VOYAGES ESCAPADE INC from 598 V “Holidays by Wardair™ Guarantee” Once you make full payment for your flight we guarantee that you will not be subject to any subsequent price increases that may occur, providing no change is made to your original booking.Hotels, Cafés, and Tours at Dream Rates Hotel • The Franklin et Du Brésil Hotel or Champlain Hotel — price per person, double occupancy per night $23 Car • Rent a Ford Fiesta: A minimum of seven days at $193" or a Renault 5 — 3 door for a stay of 3 weeks at $563 ' * If you require the car for a longer duration, ask us for the rates.The Good Life On Board Fly in comfort in wide bodied B747 or DC-10 aircraft with lots of little luxuries at no extra charge.• Stereo Headphones • Imported Wines and Fine Liquors • A Selection of Excellent Meals served to you on Fine English China.• Platters of Cheese, Fruit, and Desserts.• Refreshments Served throughout the Flight.• Surprises for the Kids.Unlimited Kilometers — Tax included.** Includes: Driver and passenger insurance • Third party and collision insurance • UNLIMITED KILOMETERS • New cars with manufacturer's warranty • Tourist registration (non taxable) • All-risk international insurance with no deductible • Custom papers valid in all of Western Europe.THE DIFFERENCE IS VITAL VOYAGES ESCAPADE inc.AMERICAN EXPRESS PERMIS DU QUÉBEC SHERBROOKE - 563-5344 VICTORIAVILLE-758-3151 DR%UMMONDVILLE - 477-3717 A Holder of a Quebec Permit ^Wardair Vive la différence. 14—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984 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 subject to change without notice.V.STATIONS LISTED & ( BKT - Montreal ( Radio Canada) O WCAX - Burlington.Yt.(CBS) 8 WPTZ - Plattsburgh, VY (NBC) O CBMT Montreal (CB( ) O CULT - Sherbrooke (TVA) O WMTW- Poland Spring, Me.(ABC) O © © œ © CKSII - Sherbrooke ( Radio Canada) CFTM • Montreal (T\ A) CFCF - Montreal WVNY - Burlington (ABC) Radio-Québec Vermont ETV - Burlington ?Saturda MORNING 8:00 O NEW YOU © UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR 8:30 © CIRCLE SQUARE 7:00 O WONDER WOMAN O CARTOONS O ODD COUPLE ©CISCO KID © GREAT SPACE COASTER 7:15 Q MIRE ET MUSIQUE 7:30© O CALIMERO O CHLDREN’S THEATRE © 100 HUNT1.EY STREET © GREAT SPACE COASTER Movie Rttlnga Outstanding Excellent Vary Good Good .Not Bad.Fair.- Poor .¦ 7:46 © O GRISU, LE PETIT DRAGON 8:00 B O NILS H0LQERS SON 8 CHARLIE BROWN AND AMOOPV 0 THE FUNTSTONE FUNNIES O © THE MON-OttCHS / LITTLE RASCALS / RICHIE RICH / SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK © SESAME STREET (R) 8:30 Q PASSE-PARTOUT Q SATURDAY SUPER-CADE 0 SHRT TALES © STORYTIME Topic: Cats 0:00 B O REMI 0 SMURFS Q © L'ANIMATHEQUE 0 © SCOOBY DOO AND SCRAPPY DOO SHOW © LET'S GO Topic: Colors.© TIME'S HARVEST 0:16 0 GOOD MORNING 9:30 B © CANDY O DUNGEONS AND DRA-rviNR O SESAME STREET Q Œ) LE PETIT PRINCE ORPHELIN O © PAC-MAN / RUBIK CUBE / MENUDO © SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON (R) © SYSTEMS PERFORMANCE 10:00 0© ALBATOR 0 TARZAN: LORO OF THE JUNGLE B ŒD SKIPPY LE KANGOUROU © TERRYTOONS © FOCUS ON SOCIETY 10:30 B O LA VALLEE SECRETE 0 BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER 0 ALVIN AND THE CH*>-MUNKS 0 THE MILLIONAIRE B LES P'TITS BONSHOMMES 0 © THE LITTLES © LES CHEVAUX DU SOLEIL ©SMURFS ©FOCUS ON SOCIETY 11:00 0 © LES HEROS DU SAMEDI 0 MR.T O BITS AND BYTES O© JOGGING O © PUPPY / SCOOBY DOO / MENUDO g © BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT 11:30 0 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN / INCREDIBLE HULK O TWILIGHT ZONE Q VIDEO STAR © JUSTICE POUR TOUS ©WRESTLING © BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT AFTERNOON 12:00 0 © LA SEMAINE PARLEMENT ARE O NCAA BASKETBALL "East Regional Semifinal" (from Atlanta.Ga ).**** ?AWN .AAA .A A h .AA .AN .A I Sports SUNDAY (CBS) NCAA BASKETBALL DOUBLEHEADER Championship Tournament (Regional Final).Game 1: Midwest Regional Final, live, from Checkerdome, St.Louis, Mo ; Game 2: West Regional Final, live, from Pauley Pavilion, Los Angeles, Calif.(CBS)SPORTS SUNDAY World Figure Skating Championships.John Tesh and John Misha Petkevich report.CBS Sports' second and final day of coverage (live/tape), from Ottawa.Ontario.(NBC)SPORTSWORLD Highlights: World Cross Country Championships featuring runners from 50 nations — (same day taped coverage) from East Rutherford, NJ, (NBC)GOLF Live championship round coverage of the Women's Kemper Golf Open tournament from the Royal Kaanapali Golf Course in Maui, HI.(ABC) THE AMERICAN SPORTSMAN (ABC)USFLFOOTBALL SATURDAY (NBC)BASEBALL Joe Garagiola takes a pre-season look at upcoming baseball: highlights ot a major-league all-star softball game Irom Sarasota.FL (NBC) SPEEDWORLO Highlights: Paul Page covers the World ot Outlaws sprint car race (taped) from Mesquite, TX, also Syracuse Mile motorcycle race from Syracuse.NY, (NBC) TENNIS Live seml-tinal coverage ot the Boca Raton Tennis tournament from Boca Raton, Ft (ABC)SPORTSBEAT (ABC) PRO BOWLERS' TOUR $125,000 Fair Lanes Open, Fair Lanes Capitol Plaza.Washington.D C (ABC) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (CBS) NCAA BASKETBALL DOUBLEHEADER The Final Four" (National Semifinals).Winner of Mideast Regional Final vs.Winner of West Regional Final: Winner of East Regional Final vs.Winner of Midwest Regional Final, Gary Bender and Billy Packer provide commentary, live, from The King-dome, Seattle, Wash.(CBS) GOLF Third-round coverage of the $800,000 Tournament Players Championship golf • tournament.Pat Summerall, Ken Venturi, Ben Wright, Steve Melnyk.Verne Lundquist.Clive Clark and Tom Weiskopf will provide the commentary, live, from Tournament Players Club at Sawgrass.Ponte Vedra, Fla.THE LONG HAUL For you millions of fans who thrilled to the cross country skiing in the recent Olympic Games, NBC has a treat lor you: the World Cross Country Championships.Seven hundred runners from 49 nations will compete for team and individual honors at the Meadow-lands Race Track, marking the first time in the 71 years of the meet — one ot the most important events on the international sports calender — that it has been held in the Western Hemisphere.NBC will carry the event as this week's ' SportsWorld" (Sunday.2:30-4:00).Don Criqui describes the action, and Frank Shorter, two-time United States Olympic medalist in the marathon and a four-time national cross-country champ, will provide the analysis.The features of the meet include a 12-kilometer (7.4 miles) senior men's race: a five-kilometer (3.1 miles) women’s race and an eight-kilometer (five miles) junior men's race As in Europe, where the sport is extremely popular, the championships will be contested on the infield and track of a horseracing facility tor the benefit ot spectators in the grandstands, not to mention the TV cameras.The U.S.team will be led by marathon record-holder Alberto Salazar from Eugene, Ore., two-time world champ Craig Virgin ot Lebanon, III , and the reigning national cross country titleholder, Pat Porter from Alamosa, Colo.North Carolina State's Belly Springs, NCAA champion in cross country events, leads the women's team.Competition includes defending champions Bek-ele Debele of Ethiopia and Crete Waitz of Norway, a five-time winner.Also on hand will be New Zealand’s Rob De Castella.a top-raled marathoner: Rod Dixon, last year's New York Marathon winner, and Italy's Alberto Cova, world 10,000-meter champion.O MAJA, THE BEE "Flip's Terrible Family" 0 © MIDI A QUATORZE HEURES ©THATTEEN SHOW © WEEKEND SPECIAL “The Amazing Bunjee Venture” Animated.Two time-travelling children find their way back to prehistoric times and return to their civilization with an elephant-like bunjee (Pari 1 ol 2) cp © A HOUSE FOR ALL SEASONS "Appliances" Rick Jury demonstrates fuel-saving use of household appliances and suggests lifestyle adjustments that can reduce monthly costs.Q 12:30 ©THUNDARR Q SPREAD YOUR WINGS "Richard And The Totem Pole" Richard Harris helps his father carve a 30-foot totem pole lor the university campus (R) Q © AMERICAN BANDSTAND Guests: Paul Young ( "Come Back and Stay," "Love of the Common People"), UB 40 ("Red Red Wine").CD MOVIE “The Defiant Ones” (1958, Drama) Sidney Poitier, Tony Curtis.After a black man and a white man shackled together by the wrists escape from a chain gang, their mutual inner hatreds of each other dissolve.© SQUARE FOOT GARDENING 1:00 O O D’HIER A DEMAIN “Portrait d’une ville: Quebec 1900” 0 CHILDREN'S THEATRE O STEPPIN' OUT Fea tured: An inteview with Yvon DesChamps.(R) Q) ACROSS THE FENCE 1:30 0 CELEBRITY FUN CRUISE Andy Gibb and Engelbert Humperdinck host this musical variety show aboard a cruise ship en route to Ensenada, Mexico.Guest performers include Barbi Benton, Rebecca Holden, Ruth Buzz) and Johnny Dark.© BUSINESS WATCH ©ONE DAY AT A TIME © AMERICA'S TOP TEN © VICTORY GARDEN Bob tours the Royal Horticultural Gardena in Wisley.England.(R) 2:00 O © CINE-FAMU.LE "Cas atrangea adultes" une histoire d'une petits fille en Rusais, et "Mélodie, ma grand-mers" l'histoire d’un garçon e huit ans qui passe l'ete chez aa grand-mere.© NCAA BASKETBALL "Mideaat Regional Semifinal" (Irom Lexington, Ky.).© © WILD KINGDOM O L'ANIMATHEQUE Œ) ENTRE NOUS Avec Serge Laprade © CHARLIE'S ANGELS © L'ACTUALITE ECONOMK2UE (R) © MOVIE AAA "The Fallen Idol" (1949, Drame) Ralph Richardson, Bobby Henrey.Based on a story by Graham Greene.A young boy tries to help his idol when he thinks he's guilty of murder.2:30 © SEEING IT OUR WAY "Deirdre McCey" © LOR HE GREENE’S NEW WILDERNESS © ORIGINAL SIX HOCKEY HEROES Boston vs Detroit © FEMMES AU TRAVAIL 3:00 © SPEEDWORLO (Prem iere) Featured: Stadium Compiled by the staff of the World Almanac Spits III.1.Name the only NBA player to have a career free throw average of better than 90 percent.2.Who scored the first Super Bowl touchdown?3.With which major league team did Rick Dempsey first play in the major leagues?4.Name the player who was chosen the ABA rookie of the year and MVP in 1970.5.Who has appeared in the most Stanley Cup playoff games?6.Name the former American League MVP's who are currently managing in the major leagues.7.Name the former National League MVP's who are currently managing in the major leagues.8.Name the athlete who became the first in this century to win three events at the U.S.track and field championships in 1983.SJM9-! JJBO 8 uosuiqoy yuBjj :ajjoi aop i LOSuiqcy tjuBij iBjjag ;6oa g 081 —pjBqqju (Juan s PoomXeh jeoueds t> sujmj.Bioseuujw c 3893W «BW Z XiJBg tpju l sjaiwsu?Supercross (from Anaheim Stadium in Anaheim, Calif.); Unlimited Hydroplane World Championship (from Clear Lake, Texas).© SPORTSWEEKEND Scheduled: Canadian men’s and women's national alpine skiing championships for the Export A Cup aeries; Embassy World Professional Darts Championships (from England): Canadian National Diving Championahipa (live Irom Calgary, Alb ); Canada-U.S.Snooker competition (from Toronto, Ont.).O © RACONTE-MOI LA MER Avec Gilles Pelletier.© SISKEL t EBERT AT THE MOVES ©SPORTSBEAT © SALON DU LIVRE DE HULL 3:30 © © LA ROUTE OLYMPIQUE "Jesae Owens" © © PBA BOWLING “$150,000 Miller High Life Open" (live from Red Carpet Celebrity Lanes in Milwaukee, WIs.).© WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: World Woman's Individual Gymnastics Championahipa (from Budapest, Hungary).© CROSSROADS: VERMONT'S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE Featured: performances by Sharon and Randy MIMer'a three-loot-tall marionettes; 19-year-old jazz pianlal Sarina Bachleitner (R> 4:00 © © BAGATELLE © FIGURE SKATING "World Championships" Ice Dance Free Skate program (live from Ottawa, Ont).© NOURRIR LE QUEBEC (R) © SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons review "Racing With The Moon" and "Misunderstood." 4:30© SPORTS SATURDAY Scheduled: World Figure Skating Championships (from Ottawa.Canada); Women’s Giant Slalom skiing (from Oslo, Norway).© LPGA GOLF Women's Kemper Open" Third round (live from Maui, Hawaii).© © COSMOS «090 "La Domain du dragon” © CONRAD LE ROBOT “Un air de famille" (R) © GREAT CHEFS OF NEW ORLEANS 6:00© © 164 JOURS D'AVENTURE © © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: Atlanta 500 Auto Race: NCAA Wrestling Championships (from East Rutherford, N.J.).© LA MARCHE AUX MAGES © GERMAN PROFESSIONAL SOCCER 6:30© © LES PETITS BONSHOMMES © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: Atlanta 500 Auto Race (from Atlanta.Ga.).6:46© LE MONDE / LOTTO 8/40 © LE DIX VOUS •(FORME / LOTTO8/40 EVENING 8:00 © IMPACTS Magazine de reflexion sur l'actualité. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FKIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984- 15 Saturday ABUSED CHILD Meeno Peluce (I.) guest stars as an abused youngster who confides in his friend (Ricky Schroder) on "Silver Spoons," airing SATURDAY, MARCH 24 on NBC.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME O IBnews Q STAR SEARCH O CSC NEWS Q 03 POP EXPRESS Une heure musicale avec Manuel Tadros et ses invites.O L'INCROYABLE HULK © PASSE-PARTOUT © SOAPBOX 6:30 O CBS NEWS O THS WEEK IN PARLIAMENT © NEWS S) HOCKEY MAGAZINE © WILD KINGDOM © ATELIER DE TELESERVICE La Sci-ence dans la cuisine" Les petits phenomenes inexpliqués auxquels s'intéresseront les animateurs de Teleservice.© ALL NEW THS OLD HOUSE Bob Vila viaits the Oak Park.Illinois home of architect Frank Lloyd Wright.Q 7:00 © Q LE MONDE MERVEILLEUX DE DISNEY "Les Enfants du capitaine Grant" (2e de 2) O HEEHAW 8 SOLID GOLD O GERALDINE Guest: Michel Robichaud.O Œ) LA PETITE MAISON DANS U PRAIRIE “La fete" O STAR SEARCH © MUSIC VISION Fee tured: John Cougar, Kool and the Gang, Kalagoo-goo, Elton John, David Grant, Kiss.© HOW THE WEST WAS WON QD PLANETE POLONAISE Une visite a la Bibliothèque polonaise de Montreal.€B AUSTIN CITY LIMITS "Jonny Rodriguez / David Allan Coe" Jonny Rodriguez sings "Foolin'" and "How Could I Love Her So Much," and David Allan Coe performs "The Ride." 7:30 Q FAME SAME Rich Ell-wood hosts with French Letter, Windsor’s Meadows, The Business and Musical Digital Print.CD JUST KIDDING Featured: a four-year-old boy who had a conversation with his mother one day after hia birth; a photographer of infants; two British youths describe how London bobbies deal with traffic offenses.£D JUSTICE POUR TOUS Chaque episode de cette sérié est assorti d'une courte dramatique qui illustre le propos de l'émission.8:00 O Q HOCKEY Le Cana dien de Montreal reçoivent lea Bruins de Boston O THE DUKES OF HAZ-ZARD Cooter confesses to charges of hijacking stolen auto parts to protect a friend being framed by a ruthless scoundrel.8 DfFF'RENT STROKES O NHL HOCKEY Boston Bruins at Montreal Canadiens O CE) LES GRANDS SPECTACLES "Le Renard de Brooklyn" (1978, Policier) Lee Van Cleef, Karen Black Un perceur de coffre est sollicite pour réaliser un cambriolage.Le vol accompli, il est abattu par ses associes et se réfugié dans une chambre d'etudiant.O © T.J.HOOKER Hooker muât accept the help of a psychic woman to find a kidnapped girl who'll die unless she is rescued, g CD MOVIE © SAMEDI SOIR: LES DAMES DE LA COTE "L'Ivresse (1917-1919)" Cette dramatique évoqué la naissance de la femme d'aujourd’hui a travers l'histoire de quatre femmes d’une meme maisonnée, entre 1910 et 1925.Avec Edwige Feuill-ere, Françoise Fabian et Fanny Ardant.(5e) © ALL CREATURES QREAT AND SMALL N 6:30 O SILVER SPOONS Ricky is shocked to learn his friend Toby is a victim of child abuse (R) 9:00 O AIRWOLF Movies SUNDAY (NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “TIME BOMB” (1984) Merlin Olsen, Joseph Bottoms, Billy Dee Williams.Morgan Fairchild.A team of trained transport agents are assigned to guard a truckload of plutonium that is the target ol a ruthless terrorist and her gang.(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “ALIEN" (1979) Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skenitt.An other worldly creature — a "perfect life form" — invades a commercial spaceship.MONDAY (NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE (ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE TUESDAY (CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “TERRIBLE JOE MORAN” (1984) James Cagney, Art Carney.Drama on the life of former boxing champion Joe Moran.WEDNESDAY (CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE FRIDAY (CBS) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE "THE WIZARD OF OZ” (1939) Judy Garland.Ray Bolger, Jack Haley.Bert Lahr.The classic musical tantasy about a larm girl whisked to the incredible land of Oz and her adventures with the scarecrow, the tin woodsman and the cowardly lion There are more things in outer space than anyone would care to dream of, “Alien." a tale of terror, airs Sunday, March 25 on ABC 0 PEOPLE ARE FUNNY o © LOVE BOAT The captain is appalled by the behavior of members of the Rhino Club; a soon-to-be-divorced couple takes one final trip as a pair; a man introduces his depressed friend to a woman (R)Q © MOVIE "John- ny Belinda" (1948, Drama) Jane Wyman, Lew Ayres A Canadian fishing village is scandalized by a young doctor's attentive behavior toward a deaf-mute girl and her illegitimate child.9:30 0 MAMA’S FAMILY Mama is confused when her estranged brother-in-law suddenly shows up in Raytown and pours on the charm.© LE LENDEMAIN DU FUTUR "Le Paysage du plaisir" Robert Hughes, journaliste repute de Time Magazine, explique de quoi retourne la culture moderne.10:00 O MIKE HAMMER Hammer is reunited with a former love only to discover ahe may be involved in a massive blackmail scheme.o THE YELLOW ROSE Chance, Roy and Quisto travel to a neighboring community and try to help oppressed workers in a sweatshop.Q Œ) SUR LA SELLETTE Avec Simon Noel 0 © © FANTASY ISLAND A mermaid claims to be tired of being immortal, and a banker fears he will lose hia job to a computer.(R) g 10:15© CINEASTES A L'ECRAN Dans ce documentaire "Quelques féministes américaines," Rita Mae Brown, Margo Jefferson, Kate Millet.Lila Karp, Ti-Grace Atkinson et Betty Friedan, toutes féministes notoires nous font part de leurs experiences, de leurs sentiments et de leurs theories.10:30 O Q LE TELE JOURNAL O CD LES NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS 10:50 0 SPORTS / LA POLITIQUE FEDERALE 11:000 O O NEWS Q THE NATIONAL O CINEMA CD CINEMA ?"Les Freres siciliens" (1969, Drame) Kirk Douglas, Alex Cord.Une histoire de trahison opposera deux freres taisant tous deux partie d'un puissant ayndi cat du crime.(B CTV NATIONAL NEWS ©ABC NEWS © AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE "Haunted1' A young woman viaits her eatranged adoptive parents after separating from her husband in thia drama written and directed by Michael Roemer, starring Brooke Adams, Jon DeVries and Trish Van Devers 11:16 ^ CINEMA "Le Mora aux dents" (1979, Drame) Jacques Dutronc, Michele Galabru.Un homme d'affaires vereux veut renflouer ses finances en par iant gros sur les résultats d'une course de chevaux arrangea a l'avance.0 ABC NEWS Q CINEMA "Bilitia" (1977, Drame) Patti D'Arbanville, Mona Kris-tenaen.Une adolescente s'éprend du photographe venu prendre la photo de (in d'annee su pensionnat ou elle est eleve.©SWITCH 11:20 0 NEWS ("Provincial Affairs" will precede the news.) © NEWS 11:30 0 MOVIE ?"New man's Law" (1974, Drama) Georgo Peppard, Roger Robinson.An honest cop wages a battle with the syndicate after he is framed in a narcotics bust.0 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE o BENNY HH.L 11:36 0 MOVIE ?"Smash Up On Interstate 5” (1976, Drama) Robert Conrad, Buddy Ebsen.A massive 39-car collision occurs on a California freeway at the close of a holiday weekend 12:00 0 SOLID GOLD CD MOVIE ?"A Man For All Seasons" (1966, Drama) Paul Scofield, Robert Shaw.Sir Thomas More, Chancellor of England, fights for hia life when he refuses to condone the divorce and remarriage of King Henry VIII.1:00 0 ROCK PALACE © GREAT PERFORMANCES "The Soldier's Tale" Stravinsky's classic tale is presented in an animated version, designed and directed by cartoonist Robert Blechman and featuring the voices of Andre Gregory, Max von Sydow and Galina Panova with music by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra.1:06 0 CINEMA "Typhon sur Nagasaki" (1958, Drame) Danielle Darrieux, Jean Marais.Un ingénieur dans une industrie nippon s'éprend d’une jeune orpheline japonaise lorsque survient une ancienne amie qui l'avait quitte peu auparavant.1:16 O CINEMA "L'Horoscope d’Elyae" (1974, Drame) Elizabeth Moorman, Tom Lee Jones.Une femme de dix-huit ans quitte sa famille de pauvres paysans pour aller vivre a la ville ou elle consulte un astro logue chinois O MOVIE ?*?"Wings Of The Morning" (1937, Comedy) Henry Fonda.John McCormack.A gypsy girl’s horse wins a major race after he is trained by a Canadian 2GO O AMERICA'S TOP TEN 2:20 CD MOVIE ?** "Zan dy'a Bride' ( 1974, Romance) Gene Hackman.Liv Ullmann.A warm understanding develops between a crude pioneer rancher and his new mailorder bride despite the harsh treatment he gives her.2:30 0 NEWS 4:26 00 THE WALTONS TVIjQ.By Elizabeth Gordon t.Who played Ruth Sherwood in the television version of “My Sitter Eileen"?2.Where did Nick and Nora Charles live in the television series “The Thin Man"?3.What were the names of the two principal characters on "Adam's Rib," the series based on the movie of the same name?4.Who re-created the above roles, which were originally portrayed in the film by Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn?5.A supporting character on the "Adam’s Rib" TV series was played by “Mother Nature" of TV-commercial fame.Who is she?6.Who played the title role in the TV series "Serpico”?7.There was a TV movie based on latter-day versions of Ellery Queen characters.What was its name?B.Who portrayed Paul Bratter In the TV version ot "Barefoot In the Park"?lieuDiiw Aeooos B .no* pumeg XOOni.UOQ,, z Aeuj|g piabq -g l|3|J)S|a buoq -g jeuuea eujAig pue pjeMOH uex -p jeuuog ep -ueiuv pue tuepv t enueAv xJBd z iptins •u|B|3 i SJ3AASUV /" DJUB 1 2 p— 4 P 5 6 7 ¦ 1 9 O 10 m 11 m o 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 9 19 20 o i 21 22 ¦ .24 3 II 25 26 27 o JjO If 28 29 30 M 31 1 32 33 34 35 36 o ¦ ?o &] | 37 38 39 40 ¦ Ô yjjj 42 ooooo V QOQO ACROSS 1 The of Will Sonnett" 5 A rising and falling (clue to puzzle answer) 9 Tear (clue to puzzle answer) 10 Actress MacGraw 12 Emmy, e g 15 Audrey Lanciers role 18 Sonny 20 Pertaining to aircraft 21 Bird's beak 22 The Wrecking 24 White heron 25 Shorten: abbr 28 Unit of resistance 31 Civil wrong 32 Aldo and Johnnie 34 Bobby Herbeck role 36 Rose Lee 37 Actress Lupino 39 Majors or Horsley 41 Author unknown abbr 42 Diane on Cheers DOWN 2 Suave 3 Nickel: abbr 4 Potato 5 Bangladesh currency 6 Monogram for 3 7 Across 7 Weight loser 8 Bedouin 1 1 Fame 13 Finished first 14 Remington Steele co-star 16 The Cracker 17 Mineral 19 Gene Barry role 23 Robin's partner 26 Ghost sound 2 7 ''Hotel' star 29 Occur 30 Mystery abbr 33 Synchronization abbr 35 Actor Cohen 36 He's Ed 38 Fulfill 40 Monogram for O'Brien Answer to puzzle on page 19 y 16—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984 Sunda MOANMO 5:26 © RHOOA 6:00 O COMMUNITY 6 ® UMVERWTY OF TOE AIR 6:30 O HEALTH FCLD © ROCKET ROOM HOOD © SPORT BILLY 7:00 © FOCUS S4 O this is the life © TOE WORLD TOMORROW © JOHN Y QUEST 7:16 0 MIRE ET MUSIQUE 7:30 0 O IL ETAIT UNE FOIS .L'HOMME p O IT IS WRITTEN O JIMMY SWAGGART © DAY OF DISCOVERY © THE JETSONS 8:00 O O WOODY LE PIC O WONDER WOMAN 0 DAY OF DISCOVERY © JIMMY SWAGGART © FATHER JOHN BER-xm i ipfy © SESAME STREET (R) 8:30 h O PASSE-PARTOUT O ORAL ROBERTS O THIS IS THE LIFE O GENS LES PLUS HEUREUX O SUNDAY MASS © LE CHEMIN DU ROI © JIMMY SWAGGART »:00 O O BOUT D'CHOU ET CASSE COU O SUNDAY MORNING O ROBERT SCHULLER O MUSIC AND THE SPOKEN WORD 0 AU CENTUPLE O THE WORLD TOMOR ROW © C'ETAIT L'BON TEMPS © ORAL ROBERTS © MISTER ROGERS (R) B:30 0 O KLIMBO O HOBBLEDEHOY O IT IS WRITTEN © REX HUMBARD © PETER POPOFF © WILDLIFE WOOD-CARVERS 0:46 0 O SI TOUS LES GENS DU MONDE 10:00 0 O JOUR DU SEIG- neur 0 MOVIE *** "Santa Fe Trail" (1940, Weatern) Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland The fight lor "bloody Kansaa" takes place during the pre-Civil War days when George Custer and Jeb Stuart began their military careers.O STAR TREK O IL EST ECRIT O DAY OF DISCOVERY © HELLENIC PROGRAM © THE WORLD TOMORROW © ACROSS THE FENCE 10:30 O FACE THE NATION Q © RUE ST-JACQUES O JERRY FALWELL © TELEDOMENICA © CELEBRATING CHRIST © CROSSROADS: VER MONT'S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE 11:00 0 O SEMAINE A L'ASSEMBLEE NATION ALE O YOU CAN QUOTE ME o REACH FOR THE TOP (R> O ETOILES DE LA LUTTE © ACTUALITES PLUS © MATINEE AT THE BIJOU 11 30 O TAKING ADVANTAGE O TO BE ANNOUNCED O © THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY AFTERNOON 12:00 0 O SEMAINE VERTE O SPORTS SUNDAY Scheduled World Figure Skating Championships (from Ottawa, Can ) O MEETING PLACE The Rev.John D Ford officiales Irom King's Edgehill School Anglican in Windsor, Nova Scotia Encourage our advertisers a © BON DIMANCHE Avec Reine Malo et ses invites, 12.30 O COMMUNITY 6 ©FORUM 22 © OCTO-PUCE Cette semaine, les commandes graphiques et les differences entre systèmes graphiqeus a haute et a laible resolution.(9e de 12) © 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 PROPOS ET CONFIDENCES invite: Maurice Bellemare (3e de 4) 0 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE Q COUNTRY CANADA O NBA BASKETBALL Boston Celtics at Philadel phia 78ers © TERRY WINTER ©OUR TOWN © OCTO-PUCE PLUS © WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 1:30 O O COULEURS DE L'ORCHESTRE Un chef d'orchestre explique ce qu'est un orchestre et dirige des extraits de places des principaux compositeurs classiques.Au programme: Danses slaves de Dvorak.O NCAA BASKETBALL DOUBLEHEADER Midwest Regional Final (live trom St.Louis, Mo.) and the West Regional Final (live from Los Angeles, Calif.).O HYMN SING The Char lottetown Canvadish of Prince Edward Island, featuring soloist PEggy Gooljarsingh, performs "Nobody Knows The Troubles I've Seen." © MOVIE WAH "Billie" (1965, Comedy) Patty Duke, Warren Berlinger.A stubborn male chauvinist discovers his daughter to be a better athlete than any boy around.© TO BE ANNOUNCED © L'E.N.A.P.PRESENTE L'administration publique.© WALL STREET WEEK "The Dow Theory" Guest: Richard Russell, editor and publisher, Richard Russell's Dow Theory Letters, Inc.2:00 0 Q UNIVERS DES SPORTS 0 TO BE ANNOUNCED O AUTO RACING "Brazilian Grand Prix” (from Rio de Janiero).0 © SPORT-MAG Avec PierreTrudel.(tere) © AMERICAN SPORTSMAN © DROITS ET LIBERTES DE LA PERSONNE Des luttes multiples" © MUSIC OF MAN 2:30 0 SPORTSWORLD Scheduled: World Cross Country Championships, featuring runners from 50 nations (from East Ruther ford, N.J.) O © FOOTBALL Football USFL (Premiere demie) © USFL FOOTBALL © SERIE SUR LES PERSONNES AGEES "On a toujuors le gout de l'amour" 3:00 0 WALT DISNEY The Misadventures Of Chip N' Dale" The two madcap chipmunks encounter the wiles of a femme fatale singer, wreak havoc on Donald's farm and outwit the villainous Black Pete.(R) © QUESTION PERIOD © EVOLUTION DE L'HOMME "La Musique des spheres" © MUSIC OF MAN 3:30 O MOVIE A A* "Strange Bedfellows" (1965.Comedy) Rock Hudson, Gig Young.After considering divorce, a corporate executive attempts to reconcile with his wile, whose fiery temper could harm hia image © FIGURE SKATING Highlights ol winning performances at the World Championshipa held in Ottawa.4:00 O MUSIQUE POPULAIRE SUISSE Ce documentaire diacule les instrumenta utilises pour celebrer las fetes en Suisse.0 LPGA GOLF Worn en's Kemper Open" Final round (live from Maul, Hawaii).O NHL HOCKEY Winnipeg Jets at Edmonton Oilers O © SPORT-MAG Avec Pierre Trudel.(2e) O HEURE LA BONNE NOUVELLE © DENTS D'AUJOURD'HUI Les grands ennemis" © YOUR TAX RETURN: 56 AND OLDER UPDATE Tax experts give instructions and suggestiona for income tax returns applicable tor people 55 years old and older, q 4:30 0 Œ) FOOTBALL Foot ball USFL (Deuxieme demie) (Suivi par Sport-mag) Q JUSTICE POPULAIRE © CORPS HUMAIN "La Respiration" 5:00 O O SECOND REGARD Les actualités religieuses.O HOW THE WEST WAS WON © OLYMPIAD The Incredible Five" Five Olympic athletes whose performances will live for all time.© EVOLUTION DE L'HOMME "L’Ame de la pierre" © VERMONT THS WEEK 5:30© AGRONSKY AND COMPANY 6:46 O © SPORT-MAO Avec Pierre Trudel.(3e) (Suivi par Le Dix vous informe) EVENING 6:00 O SCIENCE-REALITE Magazine scientifique.O CBS NEWS 0 FOCUS '84 O VIDEO STAR O ©NEWS O GRIZZLY ADAMS © AU ROYAUME DES ANIMAUX "Les Léopards de Sawai Madhopur" ©ABC NEWS g © PASSE-PARTOUT "Trop et assez” © SALT POISONING Nine international research authorities document evidence that connects salt consumption with hypertension.6:30 0 DOSSIERS DE PRESSE Sérié se proposant d'analyser le traitement de l'actualité par les médias.O TOE MUPPETS 0 SISKEL 6 EBERT AT TOE MOVIES O © HUIT.CA SUFFIT "Ah, ces cheres etudesl" O ABC NEWS g © AS IT IS ©WILD KINGDOM © CONRAD LE ROBOT “J'aime les aimants" 7.00 0 Q COURT-CIRCUIT 0 60 MINUTES 0 FIRST CAMERA Q FRAGGLE ROCK Uncle Travelling Matt comes back trom Outer Space lo spend time with his nephew Gobo O © RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT Featured: the historic legend of Jesse James: a helicopter fire-escape device for high-rise buildings; training frog performers: unusual animal courtship rites.(R) © HARDCASTLE t MCCORMICK Mark and the judge investigate a video dating service lor the wealthy that threatens the lives ol Its customers.© VISAGE "Silham Farhoud" Une rencontre avec une jeune restauratrice libanaise de quinze ans.©TOBE/NNOUNCED 7:30 0 O BEAUX DIMANCHES O THE BEACHCOMBERS The whole family becomes involved in the problems of a Japanese old timer (Carl Suzuki), g O © CENTRE MEDICAL © PROFESSION ECRIVAIN L'oeuvre da Gabrlelle eat marquee par la desir d’evaaion at de depart.© OPEN STUDIO Fea turad: representatives trom the Univeraitv of Ver- mont Student Association and the Elizabeth Lund Home.8:00 O SUZANNE PLESHETTE IS MAGGE BRIGGS Excited over her new job, Maggie attempts to change her IHestyle and loses her beat friend.o KNIGHT RIDER Michael is forced to retrieve KITT's state-of-the-art data program Irom a computer whiz who has stolen it.(R) 0 WAYNE AND SHUSTER COMEDY Featured: Johnny and Frank with favorite commercials: a global baldness panic; Newsnose returns; Smel-letelevision, a breakthrough in home entertainment; a motion sickness experiment from mission control In Houston, g O © HARDCASTLE & MCCORMICK Mark and the judge investigate a video dating service for the wealthy that threatens the lives of its customers © KNIGHT RIDER © DIMENSIONS DE LA SCIENCE Ce soir, les travaux des physiciens relies a l'isolation des particules élémentaires et a la verification d’hypotheaes variées quant a la composition du noyau atomique.© NATURE "Resurrection ' At Truk Lagoon” Sunken Japanese war machinery destroyed by the Allies during World War II in the South Pacific provides an environment for the underwater plant and animal life that is examined in this film, cp 8:30 Q O LE TELEJOURNAL Q DOMESTIC UFE O (D VEDETTES PLUS "Festival juste pour rire 11" avec Serge Grenier, Daniel Lemire, Sol, Jean-Yvea Bonno et Yolande Moreau.© FESTIVAL INTERNATIONAL DE JAZZ DE MONTREAL *82 Bruce Cockburn, guitariste canadien de grande reputation, nous propose un spectacle dans lequel il interprète quelques-unes de ses oeuvres dont "Création dream," "Waiting for the moon," et "Yankee go home.” 8:50 Q O BEAUX DIMANCHES "La Pepi-niere" Lea efforts d'hommes et de femmes qui, prenant conscience de leur faiblesse, ont decide de s'unir pour acheter une maison et creer une cooperative d'habitation.(4e de 5) 9:00 0 THE JEFFERSONS Ralph's livelihood as a doorman is threatened when the building owner announces ha will inatall an automatic door opener.Q MOVIE "Time Bomb" (Premiere, Drama) Morgan Fairchild, Joseph Bottoms.The leader of an international terrorist group plans to sttack an S.S.T.-a truck designed to haul radioactive materials.O FOR THE RECORD Two attorneys take opposing sides in the prosecution of a confessed child molester.Q O €0 MOVIE "Alien" (1979, Horror) Tom Skerritt, Yaphet Kot-to.The crew of a spacegoing scrap carrier follows a mysterious signal to a supposedly dead planet and, after landing, discovers that the message was a warning to stay away, g ID MOVIE ?* "Alien” (1979, Horror) Tom Skerritt, Yaphet Kot-to.The crew of a spacegoing scrap carrier follow a mysterious signal to a supposedly dead planet and, after landing, discover that the message was a warning to stay away.Q © MASTERPIECE THEATRE "The Tale Of Beatrix Potter" The life of Beatrix Potter is traced from her quiet childhood with her pets to the publication of her first book, "The Tale of Peter Rabbit." (Pari 1 of 2) g NUCLEAR GANG Left to right: Billy Dee Williams, Morgan Fairchild, Merlin Olsen and Joseph Bottoms star in “Time Bomb,” airing SUNDAY, MARCH 25 on “NBC Sunday Night at the Movies.” CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME 9:30 o ALICE Vera Is injured while trying to rescue a family of blue jays nesting in the Mel's Diner sign.O 03 SCIENCE ET TECH-noloqie © CINEMA ?** "Montenegro" (1981, Comedie) Susan Aspach, Erland Josephson.Lors'que son mari est an voyage, une lemma déséquilibrée felt la connaissance d'immmi-grants yougoslaves.9:60 0 0 BEAUX DIMANCHES "Le Sacre du printemps" 10:00 S TRAPPER JOHN, M O.Shoop feels guilty tor reiecting Dr.Macey'a marriage proposal when she learns he is terminally Ml.Q H IS FOR HEALTH CURING TOE ILLS OF MEDICARE Narrator Warren Davis takes a look at the financial and social controversies which have burdened Canada's Medicare system for more than two decades.© UNKNOWN WAR 10:30 O 03 LES NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS 10:36 Q O SPORT-DIMANCHE 10:60 0 O POLITIQUE PROVINCIALE 11:00 O CBS NEWS O NEWS O THE NATIONAL ("Nation's Business" will follow "The National ") O ©LA SUPER © MASTERPIECE THEATRE "The Tale Of Beatrix Potter" The life of Beatrix Potter is tracsd trom her quiet childhood with her pets to the publication ol her first book, "The Tale of Peter Rabbit.” (Pert 1 of 2) g 11:06 0 0 CINEMA **» "Les Contrebandiers de Moonfleet" (1955, Drame) Stewart Granger, Viveca Lindfora.Au XVIIIe siecle, un orphelin arrive a Moon-fleet pour demeurer chez l'ancien amoureux de sa mere.11:16 0 STAR TREK 11:20 0 NEWS O MANMX "La Victime de nulle part" © CINEMA **?"Nombre” (1987, Western) Paul Newman, Frederic March.Un homme eleve par les Apaches est attaque par des bandits qui s'emparent de la fortune et de la femme d'un des passagers.11:30 O ENTERTAINMENT THS WEEK Featured: Latino ainging group Menudo.0 NEWS © CTV NATIONAL NEWS © ABC NEWS 11:40 0 MOVIE "The Mountain" (1956, Adventure) Spencer Tracy, Robert Wagner.Two brothers attempt to reach a plana wrack high in the Alpinea.11:46 0 ABC NEWS © JIM BANKER 11:50© NEWS 12:00 Q SPORT86EAT © UNKNOWN WAR 12:20© LOT QUEBEC f 2:30 O THS IS YOUR UFE 12:50© MOVIE **** "Funny Girl" (1988, Musical) Barbra Streiaand, Omar Sharif.Fanny Brice, a sta-gestruck girl from New York’s Lower East Side, overcomea a series of heartbreaks to become one of America's moat beloved atars.1:00 O MOVIE + + V, "Together Again" (1944, Comedy) Irene Dunne, Charles Boyer.After a woman's late husband's statue is struck by lightning, aha commissions a sculptor to fix it.© NATURE "Reaurret tion At Truk Lagoon Sunken Japanese we machinery destroyed b the Allies during Worl War II in the South Pacifi provides an environmsr for the underwater plar and animal life that is ext mined in this film, g 2:30 0 NEWS 3:40 © TOE WALTONS 4:40 © EYESAT •MeHiSnes How ‘Tess’ became ‘Joe’ By Andy Noble “Terrible Joe Moran,” which CBS airs Tuesday, March 27.marks James Cagney's first major role in more than 20 years, except for a cameo in the 1981 film “Ragtime.” He plays the title character, a wheelchair-bound, retired boxing champion who is reunited with his estranged granddaughter (Ellen Barkin).Ironically, the 84-year-old Cagney was not in the picture when the project was conceived."Terrible Joe Moran" was originally going to be called “Terrible Tess,” a drama about a bitter, aging tennis star who reunites with her estranged granddaughter.Producer Robert Halmi envisioned the roles for Katharine Hepburn and Jodie Foster "We gave the idea to Hepburn, but she passed on it,” says scriptwriter Frank Cucci, who transformed ''Tess” into “Joe" in eight days, "I think she rather liked it, but I don't think she wants to do TV anymore.One article I read claimed she didn’t want the role because she believed close-ups would be unflattering, I think that's a lot ol baloney.’’ CBS was still enthusiastic about the project — but insisted that the sex of the protaganist be changed and ¦Cagney get the role.Cucci initially balked, but changed his mind when he says CBS threatened to take the project away from him, “I envisaged a horrible project.It turned out to be surprisingly easy,” Cucci says.“Hepburn and Cagney are very similar — both have the same kind of honest thrust.I wasn't changing a lot of the old Hepburn lines because they worked very well for Cagney."Both Hepburn and Cagney are noted for their fast delivery," says Cucci.“When they speak, it's machine-gun time.And that's the way it was written."But I don’t think he's able to do that anymore,” he adds, sadly.Cagney has suffered several strokes in recent years, is hard of hearing and virtually blind in one eye.Still, the powerful lure of Cagney, handicapped or nol, plus a cameo appearance by New York City Mayor Ed Koch, has generated even more publicity for "Terrible Joe Moran." But the movie is essentially little more than an overly sentimental tale.Under the big top on CTV Pierre Lalonde and Rumpy the Clown welcome the Weldes Dancing Bears from Copenhagen, Denmark on “Circus," airing Friday, March 30 on CTV.Other featured performers include the Bertinis, champions on unicycles from Prague, Czechoslovakia; camels, llamas and ponies from Kings' Mixed Animals; The Flying Vasquez Brothers on the trapeze; and the distinguished Canadian actoi Sean Mulcahy, singing the great music hall classic, “Burlington Bertie." TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, MARCH 2H, 1984-17 mssmm MORNING 6:00 © RHOOA (WED) 6:30 0© JMBAKKER 6:00 O CBS EARLY MORMNQ HEWS ¦ja MORMNQ STRETCH © ROMPER ROOM(R) 6:30 O CBS EARLY MORNING NEWS 0 NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE O ABC NEWS THIS MORMNQ © CANADA A.M.© JIMMY SWAQQART 7:00 0 CBS MORMNQ NEWS 0 TODAY O © GOOD MORMNQ AMERICA 0 MIRE ET MUSIQUE 7:10 Q FARIBOLES 7:30 O © PREMIERE HEURE 7:36 O LASSIE (MON) O FLIPPER (TUE) O FURIE (WED) O JOYEUX NAUFRAGES (THU) O DENSI LA PETITE PESTE (FRI) 7:46 © A.M.WEATHER 8:00 © SESAME STREET g S:06Q L’ARAIGNEE (MON, THU) O SUPER HEROS (TUE.FRI) O ROBIN FUSEE (WED) 8:30 O GOOD MORMNQ O TELE PATROUILLE 8:46 O FRIENDLY GIANT 9:00 O HOUR MAGAZINE 0 DONAHUE O WOK WITH VAN O© FORUM O MOVIE O AVIS DE RECHERCHE © MORMNQ EXERCISES © I LOVE LUCY © EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING 9:06 0 FARIBOLES 9:30 0 O EN MOUVEMENT O QUEBEC SCHOOLS © WHAT'S COOKING (R) © THE HONEYMOON-ERS 9:46 0 O ZOOM SUR L'ECOLOGIE (MON) 0 O 100 TOURS DE CENTOUR (TUE-FRI) 10:00 O O PASSE-PARTOUT O THE NEW «26,000 PYRAMID 0 THE FACTS OF LIFE (R) O QUEBEC SCHOOLS (MON, WED, THU) 0 CANADIAN SCHOOLS (TUE.FRI) O © ENTRE NOUS © GUESS WHAT (R) © BEVERLY MLLBILLIES © MARCHE AUX IMAGES 10:30 0 O ANIMAGERIE 0 PRESS YOUR LUCK 0 SALE OF THE CENTURY O MR.DRES8UP Q EDGE OF MGHT © DEFINITION ©BEWITCHED 10:46 0 O TAPE-TAMBOUR 11:00 O O RIEN QUE POUR VOUS (MON) 0 O DE BIEN BELLES CHOSES (TUE) GQZIGZAQ (WED) O O DROIT AU FEMININ (THU) 0 O OCTO-PUCE (FRI) 0 THE PRICE IS RIGHT 0 WHEEL OF FORTUNE O SESAME STREET O BONJOUR LA NUT 0© BENSON © L’ANIMATHEQUE © TATTLETALES 11:30 0 PTITS PIERRAFEU (MON) O PACHA (TUE) O UN AMMAL, DES AM MAUX (WED) O DEUX ENFANTS EN AFRIQUE (THU) O MORDICUS (FRR 0 DREAM HOUSE O © CAPITAINE COSMOS 0© LOVING 0 BONJOUR L’ESTRIE ©RALPH LOCKWOOD © TELESERVICE (R) © WHY IN THE WORLD (MON) © EXPLORING LANGUAGE (TUE) © FOCUS ON SOCIETY (WED) © BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT (THU) © NEW LITERACY: AN INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTERS (FRI) AFTERNOON 12:00 O PREMERE EDITION 0 NEWS 0 MORE REAL PEOPLE O NEWS / MIDDAY 0 P'TTTS BONSHOMMES 0 HERE'S LUCY © LE DIX VOUS INFORME © THE FLINTSTONE8 © FAMILY FEUD © MAKING THE MOST OF THE MICRO (MON) © SYSTEMS ORGANIZATION (TUE) © FOCUS ON SOCIETY (WED) © BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT (THU) © NEW LITERACY: AN INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTERS (FRI) 12:10 0 ACROSS THE FENCE 12:16 QLE MONDE 12:20 0 TELEX ARTS O A LA FERME 12:30 0 O ALLO BOU BOU 0 THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS 0 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN (MON, WED.FRI) O ALL M THE FAMILY (TUE.THU) O© CINEMA O © RYAN’S HOPE ©NEWS © EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING 1:00 0 DAYS OF OUR LIVES O 0 © ALL MY CHH_-DREN ©DONHARRON 1:30 0 O AU JOUR LE JOUR O AS THE WORLD TURNS © MARCHE AUX BriAQES (R) 2:00 0 © ANOTHER WORLD OTAKE 30 0 © ONE LIFE TO LIVE 2:30 0 O CINEMA (MON.TUE, THU) 0 O TEMPS DE VIVRE (WED) O O TELE-FEUILLE-TON: LES MYSTERES DE PARIS (FRI) O CAPITOL O CORONATION STREET O © LA PETITE MAISON DANS LA PRAME (A SES DEBUTS) © QUEBEC AU PLURIEL (TUE, THU) © PLAY BRIDGE (MON) © MAGIC OF OH.PAINT MG (TUE) © CALLKK iPHY WITH KEN BROWN (WED) ©NOVA (THU) © ENTERPRISE (FRI) 3:00 O GUCHNG LIGHT O SUPERFRIENDS O TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED (MON) O TALES OF THE KLONDIKE (TUE) 0 MINDER (WED) O ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL (THU) O BRIDE SHE AD REVISITED (FRI) 0 © © GENERAL HOSPITAL © QUEBEC AU PLURIEL (MON-WED) © OPEN STUDIO (MON) © KATHY'S KITCHEN (TUE) © YAN CAN COOK (WED) © VICTORY GARDEN (FRI) 3:30 O O DU NEUF AU ZOO (FRI) 0 BUGS BUNNY AND FRIENDS O TITANS (MON) O L'ANMATHEQUE © GRONIGO ET UE.© DAMES DE LA COTE (MON) © TELE-DOCUMENTS (TUE) © L'E.N.A.P.PRESENTE (WED) © A COMMUNIQUER (THU, FRI) © LILIAS.YOGA AND YOU 4DOOOBOBMO O ALICE O 8COOBY DOO (MON THU) 0 STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE AND THE BABY WITHOUT A NAME (FRI) O DO IT FOR YOURSELF O CHARLIE’S ANGELS (MON.TUE, THU, FRI) 0 ABC AFTERSCHOOL SPEUAL (WED) © L'AMMATHEQUE © WKRP IN CINCINNATI © THE CHARMKINS (MON) © THE FLINTSTONES (TUE-FRI) © RETRAITE-ACTION (R) (WED) ©SESAME STREET ?4:30 0 O LES SCHTROUMPFS g (MON) O O MICROPUCE (TUE) O O AU JEU (WED) O O TRABOULIOON (THU) O O MONSIEUR ROSEE (FRO O THE WALTONS (MON.WED-FRI) O CBS SCHOOLBREAK (TUE) 0 LOVE CONNECTION O JUST DOWN THE STREET (MON) O THE EDISON TWINS (TUE) O GOING GREAT (WED) O WHAT'S NEW (THU) O GRANGE HK.L (FRI) O © DANIEL BOONE © TAKE A BREAK / FAMILY FEUD © QH-LIGAN'S ISLAND (MON, TUE.THU, FRI) © ABC AFTERSCHOOL SPEUAL (WED) © PLANETE POLONAISE (TUE) © DIMENSIONS DE LA SUENCE (R) (WED) © LES APPRENTIS CUISTOTS (THU) 6:00 0 GRAND FRERE (MON) 0 L’INCROYABLE HULK (TUE) 0 GRIZZLY ADAMS (WED) 0 YEUX BLEUS (THU) 0 LA VE SECRETE DES ANIMAUX (FRI) 0 PEOPLE'S COURT O COMING ATTRAC DONS (MON, WED, FRO O HAPPY DAYS AGAIN (TUE, THU) O ST ARSKY AND HUTCH O CINEMA 0 THE PRICE IS RIGHT © WKRP IN CINCINNATI (MON, TUE, THU, FRI) © PERIODE DE QUE S DONS (TUE-THU) © LES BALLETS (R) (FRI) © MISTER ROGERS (R) 6:30 0 HORIZONS 2000 g (FRI) 0 TAXI 0 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT O © THREE’S COMPANY O © N'AJUSTEZ PAS VOTRE APPAREIL © ATELIER DE TELESERVICE (MON) ©3-2-1 CONTACT (R) g Monda DAYTIME CHILDREN'S SHOW 4:00© THE CHARMKINS Animated.The adventures of Lady Slipper and her trienda in Charm World are told, featuring the voices of Ben Vereen, Aileen Quinn and Sally Struthera.g DAYTIME MOVES 0-00 0 ?A "Tonight And Every Night" (1945, Musical) Rita Hayworth, Lee Bowman.A London show goes on during the wartime bombings.12:300 © AAV*, "Les S.R passent a l'attaque" (1987, Drame) Robert Lansing, Dana Wyntar.Un agent secret américain emprunte l'identite d'un touriste qui lui ressemble et réussit ainsi deux missions difficiles.2:30 0 O "Le Dernier Train: La petite maison" (2e de 2) (1978, Drame) Georges Staquel, Véronique Silver.Une enquete est menee afin de determiner la cause du drame: défaillance mécanique, erreur humaine?6:00 O "Cause toujours tu m'interesaes” (1979, Comedie) Jean-Pierre Marielle, Annie Girardot Un homme, fraîchement divorce, compose un soir par ennui un numéro de telephone au hasard, et il entre en contact avec une femme célibataire dans la quarantaine.EVENMG 8:00 o CE SOIR / SPORTS o o O 0 0 © NEWS 0 LE MONDE ©LE 18 HEURES © PASSE-PARTOUT "Chacun son tour" © MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR 6:300 AVIS DE RECHERCHE Presentation d'une personnalité bien connue dans differents milieux (politique, social, etc.), qui sera identifies par un jury a l'aide d'une photo prise dans son Jeune age.O NBC NEWS 0 © ABC NEWS g ©TELESERVICE 6:40 o LE 9 VOUS INFORME / SPORT 7:00 0 O DROLE DE VIE Emission fantaisiste constituée d'insertions de deux emissions américaines, "Real People" el "Gamea People Play." 0 CBS NEWS 0 WHEEL OF FORTUNE O ANKA Guest: Peggy Lee (R) O © GALAXIE Etoiles-peraonnalites: Joel Denis, Roger Giguere, Louise Latraverse, Pierre Marcotte, et Jacques Salvail.0 FAMILY FEUD ©M'A’S'H © LOVE BOAT © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE © BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 0 Q TERRE HUMAINE Lina prend connaissance des critiques sur sa piece.il FAMILY FEUD O M*A*S"H O GET TO THE POINT Jean Cournoyer hosts this live public affairs program.O © CHIPS "Lea Petites pestes" 0 BARNEY MILLER © THRILL OF A LIFETIME Featured: an amateur chef prepares a meal for celebrities: a high school flautist improvises with Paul Horn; a father and daughter are reunited after a 35-year separation.g © NOVA Un regard sur les performances athlétiques des animaux.© VERMONT REPORT Featured: Richard Sau-deh, Vermont's Commissioner of Public Service, talks about electric utilities.phone companies and their rate increase requests 8:00 0 O POIVRE ET SEL Hector fait un cauchemar; Marie-Roae le trompe avec un homme plus Jeune,, et il se reveille déprimé g O SCARECROW 6 MRS.KING 0 TV’S BLOOPERS AND PRACTICAL JOKES Q ANNE MURRAY'S WINTER CARNI- VAL.FROM QUEBEC Singers Glen Campbell and Dionne Warwick Join the country recording artist for the world's largest winter festival at Quebec's Chateau Frontenac.0 © AUTOMAN Influenced by viewing violent police dramas, Automan sets out to be the toughest cop on the streets.© BENSON Benson must pretend he's Kreus's husband when her parents come for a visit.(R) Q © FRONTLINE "The Mind Of A Murderer" This look into the case of Kenneth Blanchi raises questions about the use of psychiatric evidence in criminal proceedings.(Part 2 of 2) 8:30 0 O BONNE AVENTURE O © MATT HOUSTON "Qui veut tuer Ramona?" © SNOW JOB Deter mined to get her high school diploma, Gigi works during the day and studies for exams at night.© LES BALLETS Ce soir, les mélomanes apprécieront "Liebesiieder Walzer." 9:00 o o QUINCY Pendant une enquete le Dr Quincy est gravement blesse par une balle perdue.O KATE & ALLIE Kate's daughter, Emma, uses a videotaped version of life at her home for a school project.0© MOVIE O BUFFALO BILL 0 © MOVIE "Best Kept Secrets" (Premiere, Drama) Patty Duke Aatin, Frederic Forrest.A policeman's wife engages in a struggle to uncover a covert police-apying operation.© THE SHAKESPEARE PLAYS "Coriolanus” Alan Howard and Irene Worth star in this chronicle of a warrior's political fortunes in ancient Rome, g 9:30 0 O NEWHART Stephanie becomes jealous when a bevy of curvaceous women visits the inn for a beauty pageant.O © MICHEL JASMIN © LE 80-80 Vers 1970, toujours sur la lancee des années soixants, la culture québécoise est fortement influencée par celle des Etats-Unis.(R) 10:00 0 0 LE TELEJOURNAL 'l) CAGNEY « LACEY A patrolman's strike forces Chris and Mary Beth to be replaced on a case they've worked months to crack.© THE NATIONAL ! JOURNAL 1- © TELE-DOCUMENTS Une sérié de cinq films qui illustrent le phenomena de depoasession dont sont victimes les Amerindians.Ce soir, un coup d'oeil dans ces ecoles ou les Indiens se retrouvent entre eux, souvent dans des classe allegees.10:26 0 O LE POINT / LA METEO 10:30 Q NOUVELLES TVA © LES NOUVELLES TVA ! LE DIX VOUS INFORME 10:60 O MONDE REGIONAL 11:000 NOUVELLES DU SPORT ! TELEX ARTS O O 0 © NEWS O NOS EXPOS A L’ENTRAINEMENT / LES SPORTS/LA METEO O LES NOUVELLES DU SPORT / LE 9 VOUS INFORME © NOS EXPOS A L'ENTRAINEMENT / LES SPORTS © CTV NATIONAL NEWS © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE 11:06 0 NEWS 11:20 0 HISTOIRES EXTRAORDINAIRES (Debut)Maelzel arrive en Eapagne chez Don de Lope de Riviera Y Santana, ou II tombe amoureux de la jeune femme de aon hôte.O SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE / BONJOUR LA NUIT © SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE / LA COULEUR DU TEMPS ©NEWS 11:26 O BARNEY MN.LER Q CINEMA "Le Prix de pouvoir" (1977, Western) Geulino Gemma, Van Johnson.Ayant acquis la conviction d'un complot contre la vie du gouverneur du Texaa un jeune homme arrive a sauver l'homme politique d'un attentat contre le traîna dans lequel il voyage.11:30 0 SOAP 0 BEST OF CARSON Host: Johnny Caraon (R) 0 © ABC NEWS NIGHT-LINE © CA PREND UN VOLEUR "Le Magicien volant" © MOVE **** "The Howards Of Virginia" (1940.Drama) Cary Grant, Martha Scott A married couple from contrasting backgrounds find that thalr political altitudes toward the Revolutionary War exemplify the differences between them.DRAMA RETURN Sharon Gless (!.) and Tyne Daly star as N.Y.P.D.detectives who’ve earned the respect of their male counterparts at no expense to their femininity on "Cagney and Lacey," airing MONDAY, MARCH 26 on CBS CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME 11:660 MOVE The Life Of Emile Zola” (1937, Biography) Paul Muni, Gale Sondergaard.The famoua French novelist's life is highlighted by hia exposition of the Dreyfus case.Q KO JACK "Piege aux diamants" 12:00 O HAWAII FIVE-0 O EYE ON HOLLYWOOD Hosts: Paul Moyer, Tawny Schneider.CD MOVIE ?to "Angela” (1977, Drama) Sophia Loren, John Huaton.A woman discovers that the young man she is romantically involved with is the son who was taken from her in infancy.© 700 CLUB Featured: a Vietnam veteran's agonizing adjustment lo hie family, recipes for weight watchers 12:30 0 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN © TT9CKE OF THE MGHT 1:30© VERMONT REPORT Featured: Richard Sau-dek, Vermont’s Commissioner of Public Service, talks about electric utilities, phone companies and their rate increeae requests 1:46 © BOLD GOLD 2:00 ©NEWS 2:46 © RHOOA G«k' on the ball with our «traie»1 II s (uaranlaad to you tha mo»t advartiung reeulta lot your monay' The ruia* are «impie atMl your ultimata goal I rum buying lo «aibng wiN be achieved wNhout butting your budget Su play the Cla^eihad* | .ni pier n y oui ad’ SBoorH I 569-9525 18—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984 T uesda DAYTIME CHILDRENS SHOW 4:30 0 CBS SCHOOLBREAK "Weteome Home, Jellybean" A teen-age boy's life undergoes serious changes when his parents bring his retardeo sister home to live.DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 O A '-i 'Spooks Run Wild” (1941.Comedy) Bela Lugosi, Ava Gardner The Bowery Boys meet up with the fright of their lives.12:30 O CD "Vous n'aurez pas l’Alsace et la Lorraine" (1977, Comedie) Michel Coluche, Gerard Lanvin.Pendant que ses mousquetaires forcent les paysans a payer des impôts, le roi de France fait ripaille dans son chateau.2:30 O O "Les Quatre char lots mousquetaires" (1974, Comedie) Gerard Rinaldi, Gerard Filippeli.Soucieux de ne pas perdre leur emploi les valets du chevalier d'Artagnan et des trois mousquetaires s’emploient a protéger ceux-ci a leur façon dans les follies équipées ou ils se fourvoient.6:00 O "Le Jour ou l'on dévalisa la Banque d'Angleterre" (1960, Policier) Aldo Ray, Elizabeth Sellars Un Américain, un cambrioleur de metier, decide ni plus ni moins, de voler les briques d'or de la Banque d'Angleterre.EVENING 0:00 O CE SCHR ! SPORTS O Q O © NEWS O LES NOUVELLES OU SPORT I LE B VOUS INF OR MF © LES SPORTS I SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE © CTV NATIONAL NEWS 03 PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE Q) BUSINESS REPORT 11:06 Q NEWS O LES SPORTS / LA METEO 11:160 SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE / BONJOUR LA NUIT 11:20 0 RENCONTRES Invite: Olivier Poivre d'Arvor.© LA COULEUR DU TEMPS ©NEWS 11:26 0 BARNEY MILLER Q CINEMA ** "La Poursuite des tuniques bleus" (1968, Western) Gienn Ford, Georges Hamilton.A la fin de la guerre de Secession, un officer sudiste et ses compagnons reussisent a s'échapper d’un camp nordiste.11:30 0 SOAP O TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson.O ffi ABC NEWS NIGHT-LINE © KOJAK “Territoire interdit" © MOVIE "Sirocco" (1961, Adventure) Humphrey Bogart, Marta Toren.A soldier s love for a superior's wife proves to be his downfall.11:60 0 PATRIMOINE RELIGIEUX "Victor Bourgeau, architecte" Victor Bourgeau domine tout le milieu du XIXe siecle a Montreal.O CA PREND UN VOLEUR "Le Magicien volant" 11:66Q MOVE**** "Gone With The Wind" (Part 1) (1939, Drama) Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable.Based on Margaret Mitchell’s novel.A high-spirited Southern belle struggles against the devastation ol the Civil War and Reconstruction to return her family’s Georgia estate to its antebellum magnificence.12:00 O HAWAII FIVE-0 © MOVIE **** "Exodus" (1960, Drama) Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint.Jewish refugees escape from British internment camps on Cyprus to Israel with the help of a brave underground leader.© 700 CLUB Featured: singer Debby Boone, a thief "caught” by his conscience.12:16 0 CINEMA "Corruption au Palais de Justice" (1974, Drame) Franco Nero, Mara Danaus.Le nouveau ministre de la justice ordonne de prendre des procedures contre un industriel.12:30 0 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN O THKXE OF THE NIGHT 1:30© CROSSROADS: VERMONT’S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE Fee tured: a visit to the Isle of Shoals lighthouse off the New Hampshire coast; a performance by pianiat Natasha Koval-Paden.(R) 2:00 O NEWS 4:00 © THE WALTONS Wednesday BRUTAL LOCKUP Billy Warlock (foreground) portrays a middle-class boy who lands in a juvenile detention center after an inept attempt to snatch an elderly woman's pocketbook on the "ABC Afterschool Special'' presentation of "But It’s Not My Fault,” airing WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28 on ABC CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00Q "The Happy Time" (1962, Comedy) Charlea Boyer, Marsha Hunt.Puppy love and romance highlight life in a FrencvCanadian family during the 1920s.12:30 0 © A h "Services spéciaux, division K" (1967, Drame) Stephen Boyd, Camilla Spary.L’un des directeurs d'une importante entreprise de fabrication de jouets, se serl de cette activité pour couvrir lea operations d'un reseau d'espionnage en Europe 6:00 O A ?V4 "Le Grand Duc et l'heritiere" (1962, Comedie) Glenn Ford, Hope Lange Un homme du monde qui arrange des mariages parmi les gens de la bourgeoisie, s'occupe pour le moment de reunir une riche heri-tiere américaine et un duc espagnol.EVENING 6:00 O CE SCXR / SPORTS o 0 o o © © NEWS O LE MONDE ©LE 18 HEURES © PASSE-PARTOUT "La Cabane a sucre" © MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR 8:30 O AVIS DE RECHERCHE Presentation d'une per sonnalite' bien connue dans differents milieux (politique, social, etc), qui sera identifiée par un jury a l aide d une photo prise dans son jeune age O NBC NEWS O © ABC NEWS g © TELESERVICE 8:40 O LE 9 VOUS INFORME / SPORT 7:00 O Q DU TAC AU TAC Une jeune chanteuse donne un sac de marijuana a Gaétan qui le refile a Mario O CBS NEWS 0 WHEEL OF FORTUNE O HAPPY DAYS AGAIN o © GALAXIE Etoilea personnalités: Marcel Gamache, Fernand Gig-nac, Giilea Latulippe, Jan- ine Mignolet, et Denise Proulx.Q FAMILY FEUD © M*A*S*H © LOVE BOAT © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE © BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 0 O LE TEMPS D’UNE PAIX La nouvelle de l’accident survenu a Noel-la consterne tout le monde.Q o F AME.Y FEUD 0 M*A*8*H 0 STEPPIN’ OUT Fea tured: James Kudelka, Pat Chanel, Danny Solari O © SHERIF.FAIS-MOI PEUR "Deux drôles de shérifs" O BARNEY MILLER © MCGOWAN'S WORLD Featured: impressionist Rich Little; Don is Grand Marshall of the Mickey Mouse character parade at Florida's Epcot Center.© JUSTICE POUR TOUS Chaque episode de cette sérié est assorti d'une courte dramatique qui illustre le propos de l'émission.© GUEST OF THE HOUSE Featured: The Decentz, Burlington's new wave band.8:00 0 Q LES OISEAUX SE CACHENT POUR MOURIR Drame avec Richard Chamberlain et Rachel Ward La vie d’un prêtre brillant et ambitieux qui est divise entre deux amours, celui d'une femme et celui qu’il a pour son sacerdoce (9e de 10) O ONE DAY AT A TIME Sam ends six years of abstinence when he begins smoking cigarettes once again.0 REAL PEOPLE Fea tured a pig obedience class; an update on Vietnam MIAs, a woman who teaches her models to be human mannequins; aerobatic daredevils who perform in adverse weather conditions.(R) o SOME HONOURABLE GENTLEMEN Featured: a humorous look at the dissolution of Tory leadership following the death of Sir John A.MacDonald.(Part 3 of 3) O TWO X FORSYTH Author Frederick Forsyth hosts the dramatic presentation of two of his short stories, "A Careful Man," starring Dan O'Herlihy and "Privilege," starring Milo O’Shea.© © THE FALL GUY Colt helps a bail-jumping con artist arrange a title fight for his boxer with the heavyweight champion.© AGORA Cette emission spéciale, presente par lea télévisons de la Suisse, la France et le Quebec, est aur le theme de l'homoaexualite: est-il normale?, (’homosexualité feminine, et l'éducation des enfants par un couple homosexuel.© LIVE FROM THE MET "Lea Troyens" Jessye Norman (in her Met debut), Tatiana Troyanoa, Placido Domingo, Allan Monk and Paul Plishka.with Jamea Levine conducting, perform the Berlioz opera based on Virgil's "Aeneid." 8:30 0 MAMA MALONE A jealous husband wants to annihilate Father Silva when he learns the priest had dinner with his wife.O © PEAU DE BANANE Comédiens: Louise Des-chateleta, Yves Corbeil, Lucie Routhier, et Marie-Soleil Tougaa.9:00® MOVIE "I Was A Mail Order Bride” (1982, Comedy) Valerie Berlinelli, Ted Wass.O THE FACTS OF LIFE & 03 LES MOINEAU ET LES PINSON Comédiens: Fernand Gignac, Rita Lafontaine, Gisele Dufour, Gabriel Gascon, Sylvie Cote, Marcel Leboeuf.Yvan Benoit, et Robert Lavoie O © DYNASTY Dex dis covers Alexis and Rashid Ahmed together, and Blake faces an inquest into hia China Sea dealings.(Part 3 of 3) g © ST.ELSEWHERE Three women sharing the same room at the hospital become friends and learn to cope with their individual alimenta.9:30 OMGHT COURT Q FRONT PAGE CHAL- LENGE O 03 LA PAROLE EST A VOUS 10*0 Q Q TELEJOURNAL Q O ST.ELSEWHERE Three women sharing the same room at the hospital become friends and learn to cope with their individual ailments.O the NATIONAL ! JOURNAL O 03 HOTEL Christine is bothered by a secret admirer, and Mrs.Cabot rekindles an old flame.(R) HOTEL g 10:260 O LE POINT / LA METEO 10:30 O NOUVELLES TVA 03 LES NOUVELLES TVA / LE DIX VOUS INFORME 10:60 O MONDE REGIONAL 11*00 NOUVELLES DU SPORT / TELEX ARTS Q Q O S) NEWS O NOS EXPOS A L'ENTRAINEMENT / LES SPORTS t LA METEO O LES NOUVELLES DU SPORT / LE 0 VOUS INFORME ID NOS EXPOS A L’ENTRAINEMENT / LES SPORTS IB CTV NATIONAL NEWS 3) PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE 11:06 0 NEWS 11:200 LES MAI HAt Du Club Soda, interprétas per Serge Theriault et Claude Meunier, présentent des imitateurs et des monolo-guistes du rire.O SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE / BONJOUR LA NUIT O ï SS LUNDIS DES HAI HAt ID SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE / LA COULEUR DU TEMPS (B NEWS 11:26 O BARNEY MILLER «1:30 O SOAP O TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson O œ ABC NEWS NIGHT-LINE ID MANNIX “Qui m’a lue?” 11:660 MOVE "Gone With The Wind" (Pari 2) (1930, Drame) Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable.Baaed on Margaret Mitchell's novel.A high-spirited Southern belle struggles against the devastation of the Civil War and Reconstruction to return her family's Georgia estate to its antebellum magnificence.O DROLES DE DAMES "Kelly entend des voix" 12:00 O HAWAII FIVE-0 O EYE ON HOLLYWOOD Hosts: Psul Moyer, Tawny Schneider.CD MOVE **H "Capricorn One” (1978, Suspense) Elliott Gould, James Brolin.A reporter and three American astronauts are drawn into an elaborate hoax designed to cover up a malfunction aboard the tiret manned apace (light to Mars.03 700 CLUB Featured: a group ot reputable bikers called the Jericho Ridera, a atawardesa who quit drugs.12:20 0 CINEMA "Nous irons tous su paradis" (1977, Comedie) Jean Rochefort, Victor Lanoux.Quatre emit dans la quarantaine partagant depuis longtemps les bonheurs et les ennuie de chacun.O CINEMA "Detlre Lalarge et hollandais" (1978, Drame) Raymond Baillet, Julia Desire Lafarge et son épousa sa rendent en provence a Garoupe les-eaux pour y acheter une propriété.12:300 LATE MGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN Q T>KKE OF THE MGHT SB MOVE ?» "China Clipper" (1936, Adventure) Pat O'Brien, Marie Wilson.A determined man overcomaa endless obstacles in developing transpacific Airlines.2:00 0 NEWS 2:26 CD WAYNE THOMAS 3:26 CD RHODA Encourage our advertisers TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984—19 Thursday m i UPS AND DOWNS Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman are interviewed by Hugh Downs on “20 / 20 ' ' airing THURSDAY, MARCH 29 on ABC.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 Q ?"Harriet Craig" (1950, Drama) Joan Crawford, Wendell Corey.A woman alienatea her family and frienda by trying to dominate them.12:300 Œ) "Desert de feu" (1970, Aventures) Edwige Fenech, Georg Wang.Nee de pere français et de mere berbere, une femme reve d'aller en France et est prete a tout pour de l'argent.2:30 0 O "Honore de Marseille" (1956) Fernandel, Andrex.Temperament meridional, Honore raconte a sa maniéré son illustre lignee.6:00 O "L'Amour en question" (1978, Policier) Annie Girardot, Michel Galabru.A la suite de l'assassinat d’un architecte, le juge d'instruction est chargee de l'affaire.EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR / SPORTS O Q O Q (B æ NEWS OLE MONDE Œ) LE 18 HEURES Q) PASSE-PARTOUT "La Permisaion” Q) MACNEL / LEHRER 6:30 O AVIS DE RECHERCHE Presentation d'une personnalité bien connue dens differente milieux (politique, eociel, etc ), qui eere identifiée par un jury a i'aida d'une photo prise dane ton jeune age.ONBCNEWS O S3 ABC NEWS P S) TELESERVICE 6:400 LE 9 VOUS INFORME /SPORT 7:00 O QEMES EN HERBE O CBS NEWS Q WHEEL OF FORTUNE O FAME Q CD GALAXIE Etoiles-personnalites: Andre Allard (Sandu le Robot), Roger Giguere, Andre Lejeune, Jean Rata, et Paul Vincent.OFAMLYFEUD O GRAND PAPA © M*A*8*H © LOVE BOAT Q) PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE S) BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 O O LA VE PROMISE il FAMILY FEUO QM’Aa8‘H O C WALTONS 4:10© RHOOA EXCHANGE YOUR SALES SLIPS For CIMO-Coupons AT THE FOLLOWING PLACES: - BANK OF MONTREAL - SHERBROOKE TRUST - BANK OF COMMERCE (CARREFOUR DE L'ESTRIE BRANCH) MONDAYS TO FRIDAYS And also at The CIMO-106 Central Kiosque Thursday, Friday nights and Saturday ACCUMULATE YOUR COUPONS The CIMO Auction SATURDAY, MAY 26784 At The Carrefour de I'Estrie, Sherbrooke 20—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1984
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