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2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1983 ‘Song plugger’ Gant doesn’t have to play, or sing NASHVILLE, Tenn.(AP) — Ronnie Gant doesn’t write songs, sing them or play in recording sessions.But he’s responsible for the smash hit, Elvira, which sold more than two million copies for the Oak Ridge Boys two years ago.All Gant did was suggest that the flashy quartet record the snappy song after he heard it played by a house band in a Texas nightclub.Producer Ron Chancey took Gant’s advice, and the song became one of the most successful in history, “crossing-over” from the country music field to the pop charts.For Gant, one of 150 “song plug-gers” in Nashville, it was all in a day’s work, even if it didn’t earn him anything.Gant works for Acuff-Rose, Nashville’s oldest song publisher, founded in 1942.It’s his job to take songs written by Acuff-Rose composers and get them re- corded.“It’s not like selling a vacuum cleaner,” he says.“You can’t sit a song down and show them how it works.They (producers) have got to invest and then see how their investment works.” URGED RECORDING After Gant heard Elvira, he thought it was good enough to be recorded by a top artist or group, and Chancey liked the idea.Best known for its low part “oom pawpa mou mou,” the song won a Grammy Award and other laurels for the Oak Ridge Boys.“The ‘oom pawpa mou mou' was a big part of the record,” Gant said.“That was responsible for a million sales, maybe two.” For Gant, it was the summit of his 20-year career working in the song publishing business.Says Joe Bonsall of the Oak Ridge Boys, lead singer on Elvira: “If he had not had the idea, we might not have ever had the biggest single record out of Nashville, certainly our biggest.” Though Elvira became a major hit, the record’s success didn’t mean any more money for Gant.“I didn’t make a cent,” he says good-naturedly.“It generated a million or two, and I got nothing.” But he did get a replica of the gold record awarded to the Oak Ridge Boys to honor sales of the song.Good music, natural setting make Festival fantastic PARRY SOUND, Ont.(CP) — Good music, good food, and a great natural setting make the Festival of the Sound one of the country’s most enjoyable summer outings.Imaginative programming by pianist Anton Kuerti, together with a running live comentary by Lister Sinclair, one of the country’s most erudite scholars and showbusiness personalities, have carried the festival into its fourth season, this year dedicated to Johannes Brahms, the German romantic born 150 years ago.Sinclair, now executive producer of CBC-TV drama, said in his opening night commentary the world is still in the romantic musical era started by Beethoven and raised to its heights by Brahms.But with Kuerti’s programming touch, the festival is more than a pageant of Brahms’s music.Friday night’s opening concert, and another later this week, were titled Brahms and his Friends, with music by Edvard Greig, Robert Schumann and Antonin Dvorak.Another weekend program, Brahms and his Enemies, featured music by Richard Wagner, Franz Liszt, Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky and Hugo Wolf.PANORAMA OF STARS The opening weekend presented what amounts to a panorama of the younger stars who are establishing a national and international reputation — Steven Dann, viola, James Campbell, clarinet, Desmond Hoebig, cello, Andre Laplante and his wife, France DeGuise, pianists, with Kuerti accompanying many of them in chamber works.Sinclair, who doesn’t seem to shy at being called Canada’s Ren-naisance man, delivers a half-hour commentary before each concert and conducts weekend nature walks.Included in the festival’s three-week program are five concerts aboard the motor tour vessel, The Island Queen.It meanders through the 30,000 Islands, then cuts its engines and drops anchor in a quiet spot for a mini concert.Parry Sound is an old pioneer industrial town on an island-studded inlet off Georgian Bay, 250 kilometres north of Toronto.The scenery is magnificent and will be a perfect setting for a concert hall when the festival can afford to build one.Most concerts now are held in the local high school gymnasium.What should be forest peace was jarred opening night by the deisel blasts of passing freight trains and the twilight squawking of night hawks, birds rarely heard in the countryside since they are attracted mainly to flat-roofed city buildings.The good food for the occasion was supplied by squads of festival-supporting housewives who brought trays and bowls of home cooking for the post-concert reception attended by Ontario Lt.-Gov.John B.Aird.?a Music Chart LAST WEEKS WINNIPEG (CP) — The band star- but records weren’t.Rather than end NO.TITLE ARTIST WEEK ON ted playing and Bobby Curtola, dres- finishing as a loser, we quit the tou- 1.Every Breath You Take Police 1 9 sed in a loose electric-blue shirt, boun- ring in 1969 before the arenas were 2.Our House Madness 2 11 ced up on stage, cordless microphone empty.” 3.Too Shy Kajagoogoo 5 9 in tow.Curtola, discovered by music wri- 4.Baby Jane Rod Stewart 8 8 His first words to the opening night ters Basil and Dyer Hurdon while he 5.Flashdance Irene Cara 3 • 13 audience in the lounge at Viscount was performing at high school dances 6.Wanna Be Starting Something Michael Jackson 9 8 Gort Hotel: “Where the hell have you in Thunder Bay, Ont., had trouble co- 7.I’m Still Standing Elton John 6 11 been, Bobby?” Then, without pause, ping after the two men died in the 8.She Works Hard for the Money Donna Summer 10 7 he broke into song.early 1970s.9.China Girl David Bowie 14 7 Curtola, the man who made the Since then, he’s had trouble finding 10.Never Gonna Let You Go Sergio Mendes 12 7 “Things go better with Coca-Cola” the right kind of original material.His 11.Don’t Let It End Styx 4 12 jingle famous in the 1960s, is on the last album of original songs was re- 12.Fascination Human League 16 6 comeback trail after fading from the leased by RCA in 1976, but only in Ca- 13.Time Culture Club 7 13 public’s attention more than 10 years nada.14.Hot Girls in Love Loverbov 18 6 ago.“In the record business you have to 15.Come Dancing The Kinks 21 5 He’s shopping around for a record run with your priority items, and at 16.Guilty Lime 22 5 label to distribute his new album, ho- the same time, ours wasn’t one of the 17.It’s a Mistake Men at Work 26 4 pefully resulting in the top-40 hit he priority items,” Curtola said in an in- 18.Rock n Roll is King ELO 23 4 feels is necessary for him to get back terview.19.Electric Avenue Eddy Grant 13 15 into the limelight.‘“We got a lot of airplay in middle- 20.Wishing Flock of Seagulls 20 7 “1 ve never lost my faith in my of-the-road markets but the top 40 is 21.Stand Back Stevie Nicks 30 3 dream,” says Curtola, here until Aug.what everybody is interested in.22.Reach Out Narada Michael Walden 11 10 6.“I’m not afraid to change.Some- That’s what we’re going for.” 23.Change Tears for Fears 27 5 times it’s hard to do.You can’t do RESPONSE ENCOURAGING 24.Is There Something 1 Should Know Duran-Duran 29 6 anything about yesterday, it’s alrea- 25.The Woman in You Bee Gees 15 10 dy in the book.” Curtola, who received a polite and 26.Maniac Michael Sembello 35 3 Curtola and his wife Ava, who sings encouraging response from the 27.Overkill Men at Work 19 17 backup, are on the road singing in packed house on opening night, said 28.Sweet Dreams Eurythmies 32 4 clubs and for conventions about 10 he’d like to be able to perform his new 29.Saved By Zero The Fixx 33 3 months out of the year.From 1970 to hits along with the oldies.30.Round ’n Round Chillfactor 37 2 1975, Curtola spent six to nine months “I was part of their lives then, but 31.Stop In the Name Of Love Hollies 34 3 of the year singing in Las Vegas.He I’m alive and well today and so are 32.I’ll Tumble 4 Ya Culture Club 38 2 sometimes still performs there.they and I want to be part of their lives 33.Take Me To Heart Quarterflash 36 3 WENT TO TOP now,” said Curtola, who still wears 34.Let’s Dance David Bowie 17 19 Before that, as a teenager, he rode open shirts that reveal gold chains 35.I Love to Dance Voggue 40 2 and a hairy chest.36 Perfect The The PL 1 the wave of the 1960s with such adoles- His night club repertoire now in- 37.Through the Years Tim Finn PL 1 cent hits as his first one that went to eludes some of his own new hits, some 38.Video Kids Prototype PL 1 No.1 in Winnipeg, Hand In Hand With of his old smashes, some Kris Kristof- 39.After the Fall Journey PL 1 You.ferson and Willie Nelson songs and 40.Girls Night Out Toronto PL 1 “After 1967, we started to peter out,” he said."The tours were good other hits like MacArthur’s Park and Satisfaction.A long way back for 60’s idol Bobby Curtola TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.JULY 29.1983—3 Taxes and boxes the latest in the world of wine Wine bits BY TIM BELFORD Having spent the last two weeks on holidays — you know, those 14 days devoted to rest, relaxation and recuperation that are every Canadian’s God-given right, unless you’re a teacher or politician — I thought I might pass on a (ew tidbits gleaned during my vacation.Canadian wineries, particularly the larger ones based in Ontario, have come out with a new line of cardboard box containers for wine.Before you groan, bear in mind these wines are not your classics but everyday vin ordinaires quaffing.One of the leaders in the field is Labatt’s Ri-dout Wines which markets its products under the Chateau-Gai label in the east and as Casabello in the west.Ridout offers a one litre mini-cask and a quarter litre individual package.The boxes are sturdy, light and amenable to convenient storage.In fact they take up 30 per cent less room and are 40 per cent lighter than conventional bottles.The taste, I managed to try out the Chateau-Gait white recently, is perfectly fine — for the type of wine offered.There is no taste from the box and no indication that the wine, once in a glass, came from a carton.Andres Wines, that daring multinational I that brought you Cold Duck, turned a record profit last year, according to the company’s accountants.Sales for the year ending March 31, 1983 were $53,702,490 — up 14.5 per cent over the pre-vious year.This translates into pleasant news for shareholders and a blow to anyone who believes in fine wine.Champagne lovers will also be glad to hear that Canadians are still doing their part in the purchasing of the world’s lovliest drink.Nationally we consumed 1,099,363 bottles of the stuff — from quarter bottles to salmana-zars (a very big bottle of wine).Easily the biggest seller of the various types of Champagne available was the Brut version -724,733 bottles of the dryest of champagne.designed for daily San .’ Gabriel W Red wine * Vin rouge / Mini-Cos^ Light 1 litre HX5%dlcAoL **' tv «tern?» >« oi^.iK?*» Carboard boxes for your wine.1 litre »* /‘Sokvvoi.I S5 • • ;*&,< :** jf.t**.:* '-v'v- • « AIEXAN0ER SAIKIN0,.» CHRISTOPHER REEVE • RICHARD PHVOfl FOR AIL «P* "SUPERMAN III" JACKIE COOPER • MARC McCLURE ANNETTE 0T0OLE ANNIE ROSS PAMELA STEPHENSON • ROBERT VAUGHN,MARGOT KIODfR., .KENTHORNE : GIORGIOMOROOER .DAVID.LESLIE NEWMAN .ILYA SALKIN0 .PIERRE SPENGLER ,,,RICHARD LESTER y.‘v.l ’ " ¦ AILXANOERkILYA SALKINO-i Cinémas CARREFOUR Sherbrookq 565-0366 Tony Manero knows the old days are over-But nobodys gonna tdl him lie cant feel that good again.John Travolta SIRVine HUME PABAMmiNl PICIURtS PRfSFNTS A ROflfRI S1IGWOOO PRODUCIION • A SWfSTER SIAllONf HIM CÏN1RIA RHOMS • IINÜIA HUBRIS • SUW IRWOOO • If AIIIRINB SONOS B» 1HI Bll IllfS I KICDllVf PROOUCfR Rill HAWS ¦ WRI11IN fit SH«SI|R S1AI10NE AND NORMAN WltllR PROOBCin Bt ROBIBISIICMIOO ANO STIVISIIR SIAUONI ¦ DIRCIIO BÏ SMSIfR SIAUONI PASSES NOT ACCEPTED WMküys&Sat :6h35.8A55 Sunday h».3h50, 6tiî5.»45 CINEMA PASSES NOT ACCEPTED WMkdtys S Sat 7h15.9MS Sunday moo.3h00, ShOO.7h00.9h00 CINEMA We also purchased over a thousand bottles of the rosé version and some 373,00 bottles of the extra-dry.Unfortunately — as most of you are already probably aware — the bad news is that the government is going to sock it to us again with a 13 per cent hike in the excise tax.No more 6 and 5 for Marvellous Marc Lalonde.Canadians will pay through the nose for the privilege of enjoying a glass of nature’s finest with your evening meal.The whole concept is a little hard to take coming from someone as over-paid as Lalonde and his equally well-paid cohorts.When you make $60,000 a year, wine at $6 a bottle is nothing.I’ll have a little more to say about the tax system next week.One pleasant realiza- tion — the various wineries in Ontario seem to be thriving and most appear to be continuing the gradual replacement of North American grapes with European hybrids and vitis vinefera.Since the latter make much superior wine, we can hope for better things to come from our native industry.Enjoy the summer.Cheers! 10.5-:* ak voi Gabriel White wine • Vin blanc ««MCWMWMHunwt oDimensioms ALL NEW W' 4 admission: $5.00 students: $3.50 Weekdays & Sat.: It 7:00 and 9:15.Sunday 2:00, 4:00, 11 1 1 1111 7:00 & 9:15.IS THE TERROR.Cinema CAPITAL 59 King est 565-Om 4—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1983 Blue Highways a brilliant sketch of rural America Kaleidoscope By RICHARD LONEY Blue Highways by William Least Heat Moon (LITTLE BROWN): $19.95, 421 pp.The pages of fiction could never hold the vast panorama of starkly realized, accurately rendered American “characters” that make each page of William Least Heat Moon’s “Blue Highways” such a rewarding and memorable read.De Tocqueville, Anthony Trollope’s mother, Victorian scion Charles Dickens, John Steinbeck: each generation has seemingly offered a writer whose travels through America have been celebrated.Now William Least Heat Moon, a mixed blood Siouan Indian, gives us a wonderful tour of the blue highways of America — those secondary and worse roads that are coloured blue on maps, as main routes are designated by red lines to keep the journeying wayfarer on the right track.Moon leaves Columbia, Missouri in a modestly outfitted van and treks eastward to Kentucky, then swings south by southwest through Louisiana into Texas.Each region that the observant, curious Moon investigates provides the reader with considerable lore about the natives : their contemporary habits, their occupations, recreations, political leanings or personal gripes.But the real enigmatic character of Blue Highways remains the face of America.As with the most ambitious of travel books (Jan Morris’ Destinations or Paul Theroux’s The Great Railway Bazaar readily come to mind), the focus of Least Heat Moon’s writing is an understanding of self, deepened through an itinerant journey across the changing regions of continental America.Whether he is entertaining a hitchhiking Seventh Day Adventist recruiting for Jesus in Montana ; attempting to guage the hostility of blacks in Selma, Alabama almost 20 years after Dr Martin Luther King’s freedom marches ; or listening to the zany, droll conversations of the mountain folk of Tennessee, Moon's recording pen expresses the essential humanity of his subjects and places them in an unfolding narrative that carries the reader along on an exceptional journey.Blue Highways traces a path through Texas, along the deserts of Nevada, into Oregon, across Montana, with the author taking accurate measure of such roadside phenomena as the wildlife (lists of indigenous bird species), the sustaining crops, roadside eateries of exceptional merit ( Moon ranks them as to number of calendars on the diner walls, six being a superb establishment), and above all an attention to the local history of the particular location he finds himself in.As a member of perhaps the most persecuted minority in America’s sad social history, Moon has a keen eye for the plight of some of the doomed social groups fighting the enslaught of high-tech futurism.Crab fishermen in Main, the last of the cowboys in West Texas, holdouts in the general store business, are just several of the types of Americans that the writer sympathizes with.Blue Highways is a profile of the America seldom seen on the tube — the routes bristling with golden arches and taco stands are avoided, and the rural face of America is sketched brilliantly.With the proper blend of literary flare and the use of vignettes that reveal the citizenry of the country in a way that regional fiction only seldom manages to hint at, Least Heat Moon’s odyssey into the American backwaters is as delightful and adventuresome as Huck Finn’s flight down the Mississippi.Grand Theatre Company — Waiting For The Parade LONDON, Ont.(CP) — The Grand Theatre Co., a new $4.4 million multimedia theatre operation headed by Robin Phillips, is shooting its first television production, a wartime drama to be shown on CBC-TV next year.Waiting for The Parade, Calgary playwright John Murrell’s hit about five Canadian women who keep the home fires burning while their men are away fighting in the Second World War, is being filmed for TV by Toronto’s Primedia Productions.Phillips, former artistic director of the Stratford Festival, hopes the play will be the first of several productions that will be filmed and sold to TV.The producers are looking for foreign buyers as well as Canadian channels to make the theatre company’s name known abroad and to help finance its stage productions.Waiting For The Parade, also to be presented on stage this fall as part of the Grand’s inaugural repertory season, stars veterans Martha Henry, Carole Shelley, Sheila McCarthy and Susan Wright.The drama is set in the 1940s and as Phillips and cast discovered on a recent day of shootipg, keeping the 1980s at bay can cause headaches.NOISY FOR SHOOT The shooting of one scene at the local CP Rail station was plagued not only by street noise, but an air conditioner.In the middle of another scene, the exhaust fan at a nearby pizzeria came on unexpectedly, just when silence was needed.As soon as one noise was dealt with, another would crop up.A CP official’s walkie-talkie crackled into life in the middle of one shot, an errant gust of wind blew down a reflecting screen and a crow began squawking from a nearby tree.The rail station itself is old enough to fit the movie, but all tracesof the last 40 years were carefully erased or covered with Union Jacks or red, white and blue bunting.Antique trunks were stacked on the waiting platform, an antique wheelchair waited to accommodate any wounded soldiers, and a loudspeaker played The White Cliffs of Dover, Vera Lynn’s song about waiting for the war to end Shooting, which is expected to end next week, will proceed a little more smoothly, Phillips said, because most of it will be done inside where noise and light levels are more easily controlled.Side show freaks are coining back EDMONTON (CP)— born 20 or 30 years ago, “I was told I would their parents.Big Bruce jiggles his due to the blessed tech- be exhibiting myself,” It is mostly the usual enormous gut to disco nocracy of medical she says.“I don’t re- array of sword swallo- music and pretends to science,” he says.member the interview.wing, fire-eating car- bite the sideshow Alf Phillips, Conklin I was too scared, too nies, but includes the barker.Shows general mana- nervous.dwarfs and a fat man.The 328-kilogram fat ger, says Circus Uni- *T wanted to support For 50 cents extra, man only wants two que was brought back myself.I come from customers get to see a things out of life: the to Klondike Days be- poor people.” woman who’s been world heavyweight re- cause “we thought we Circus Unique draws “deliberately disfigu- cord and a wife he can needed something for a young crowd, indu- red” by a jealous hus- give ‘‘lots of heavy older people who’ve ding many children band so “no man would lovin’.” lost their desire to go who get in free with ever want her.” Then there’s the de- on rides.If some formed dwarf who uses people find it dehuma- the stump at the end of nizing, they don’t have his left arm to plunk to watch.” away at a tinny organ.But the managing di-The footless, handless rector of the Alberta midget is billed as The Community of Consu-Penguin.mer Groups of Disa- After a 10-year ab- bled Persons thinks the sence, the freak show show is in bad taste, is back at Edmonton’s “We’re trying to Klondike Days exhibi stress that disabled tion.Many people are people have abilities offended, but a sign in and that they’re part of front of the Circus Uni- the community,” says que tent proudly pro- Nancie Krushnelicki.claims, “Freaks, past “Disabled people have and present.” more choices these Owner Chris Chris days than to sell them-says freak shows are selves at freak shows.” back thanks to public Dolly Reagan, a 64-demand, but are slowly year-old midget in a dying out for lack of motorized wheelchair performers.who cads attractions at “There’s not as ma- the show, says she en-ny unusual people tered the business with being bom now as were her eyes open.f yiu/j RESERVE NOW! TRANS OCEAN TRAVEL Business or Pleasure Just Drop In.Or Give Us a Call Services are free 66 King West — Sherbrooke -Tel.: 563-4515 Zenith 59010 m Artistic Director: Pierre Rolland I FESTIVAL D’ORFORD 1 June 26 —Aug.21 Wednesdays and Fridays 8:30 p.m.Salle Gilles-Lefebvre — Student s Concerts | Saturday, July 30th St.Benoit du Lac Abby 16h.OO RECITAL: ALVARO PIERRI Guitar Sanz-llobet-Nobre-Villa Lobos Salle Gilles Lefebvre — 20H30 ' Chamber Music: Rodney Rreind, Violin Hotto Beyerie, AHo Mouricio Fuks, Violin Eleonora Schoenfeld, violicello with the participation of the young professional students of Le Centre d'Art Orford PROGRAMME: Honegger, Beethoven, Mendelssohn.SUNDAY “EN FOLIE” JULY 24th (in the meadow at Centre d'Art) Concert-Brunch - 10-12 noton Chamber music Concert Bouffe 17h Centre d'Art Orchestra Director: Leon Bernier Programme Suppe, Hindemith,-Tchaikovski-Borodine.Wednesday & Friday 20K30 Gilles Lefebvre Hall; Student concert •Interpretation course: open to trie public 27 June-Aug.6 •Visual Artist in residence Gemiom Desbiem: aluminium sculpture up to July 31st Yvon Robert; String Instruments up to July 31st Denise Morsan Robert Ceramics August 2nd to /Ri •Permanent Expositions •And.Nature walks, Guided Visits, Slide Presentations, Souvenir Shop, Cafeteria J.e Centre d'Arts d'Orford JMC Sortie 118 Autoroute des Cantons de l'Est (819f) 843-3981 1-800-5Q7-6155 (sans frais) 0 DOUBLE HOOK CANADIAN BOOKS LIVRES CANADIENS 320 RIVER ST.NORTH HATLEY, QUEBEC JOB 2C0 (819) 842-4245 — ALSO — 1235 A GREENE WESTMOUNT MONTREAL, QUEBEC H3Z 1A4 (514) 932-5093 TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1983—5 English violinist brings music and students to Orford W' "Isf èr- A moments relaxation before heading back to rehearsal By Timothy Belford “You keep going and going until you arrive at something fulfilling” Rodney Friend Simplicity itself.Yet, for a would-be concert violinist, the road to fulfillment can be a rather long and twisted one — long enough in some instances to lead all the way from London to Orford which is exactly what’s happened in the case of six young musicians presently calling the Centre d’Arts d’Orford home.The six, who number among them four natives of England, one Norwegian and a transplanted New Zealander, accompanied violinist and teacher Rodney Friend when Friend was invited to teach a course as part of the Centre’s summer session.Five of the six are students of Friend’s at the Royal College of Music in London while the remaining member of the group is a cellist also studying at the RCM.A native of Yorkshire, Friend studied at England’s Royal Aca- demy of Music and later at the Royal Manchester College of Music under renowned Hungarian violinist Andre Wolf.Studying under Wolf was actually Friend’s father’s idea - a man he describes as a “musician in the true amateur sense of the word”.After graduation, friend performed on the concert tour until he was offered — at the early age of 20 — a position as associate concert master with the London Symphony.He remained with the symphony for a year and a half and then decided he wanted to do more solo work.He was later appointed concert master to the London Philharmonic where he remained for eleven years.Friend’s first real experience with the North American music world came when he accepted the position of concert master with the New York Philharmonic.The change from London to New York was less dramatic than one would believe however since the job was “interesting and stimulating” enough to make the adjustment for he and his family comparatively simple.At present, Friend divides his time between the BBC Symphony, where he shares concert master duties, The Royal College of Music, where he teaches, and a variety of concert performances and guest appearance such as the summer stint at Orford.The six students, who friend says “are working far harder than they are likely to admit”, are unanimous in their praise of the Centre’s program and equally de-dicated to their trade.For Norwegian Bjorn “like the tennis player” Petersen, studying with Friend and visiting Orford Means “relaxing and working hard at the same time”.The six spend much of their time practising and studying with B’riend as well as preparing the weekly concerts performed at the centre.The opportunity is a unique one which allows the students, who would normally be on holidays from the RCM, to continue supervised study.Although each budding musician has his or her own ideas concerning the future.Friend expressed what appeared to be the general consensus when he stated “The love of music is first and formost.They all have to go through the process of developing their technical skills.You keep going and going until you arrive at something fulfilling.There is nothing sadder than wanting something more than you are capable of.” For each student, he added, the process is one of “arriving at the best level they can and then coming to terms with it”.Arriving at Orford for the sum mer was an expensive process which involved the co-operation and financial support of both the Orford Centre, the Royal College of Music and of the students themselves and although the trip is hardly a holiday the smiles on the faces of teacher and students alike would indicate that the money was well-spent.The love of music is first and formost’ Ete Dancers show the results of a summer’s effort By Michael McDevitt Québec Eté Danse reveals what it’s made of — and what it’s made — as three new original choreographic works will be presented for the first time from Thursday to Saturday nights.The new work is the result of the collaboration over the last six weeks between dancers, musicians , choreographers and even a comedic actor to produce original dance.It is one of the self-appointed mandates of Québec Eté Danse to provide the atmosphere, time and place where dancers and choreographers can in-ter-relate and continue the constant evolution that is necessary to creative process.While the dances will be presented for the first time this weekend, the purpose of the six weeks is not necessarily to create complete pieces that one places permanently in his repertoire.Rather it is the encouragement of the indefineable creative energy that is supposed to be nurtured and given free reign to help the artist, be he dancer, choreographer or musician.Vincent Dionne is a classically trained percussionist who has played professionally with the Québec Symphony, the Montreal Symphony Orchestra, and the CBC Montreal orchestra.He has also traveled and worked extensively in the United States and Eu- rope.Dionne says he began to find the life of a symphony musician a little too stifling to satisfy his own creative urges.He soon found himself in a situation where he needed a means to express his individual creativity.“When you play in an orchestra like that,” he says, “you find that eventually you just get bored doing the same things all the time.Playing somebody else’s notes in the same way.It becomes not enough, after a while.” While many musicians feel the urge to strike- out on their own eventually, the opportunities available to percussionists are few and far between in the music business.“It is back-up music,” he says pensively, “but it is the music that will eventually set the tone of a dance, or theatre piece in which movement and not words do the story telling.This gives me a great deal of input and freedom.If the composer and the choreographer understand what they are trying to do, and can convey these feelings to the dancers, then you have done it.” Dionne wrote the musical accompaniment to Gilles Maheu’s workshop offspring Quasimodo-Complexe 39, an intense and powerful combination of mime, theatre and dance.The mood he sets with taped music, some live instruments and a loud and threatening piece of sheet metal speak brutally of suffering, madness and horror implicit in the Quasimodo motif lifted from the Hunchback of Notre Dame.Dionne and Maheu have incorporated another motif into the piece, however — the terror of the incurably insane.“We have tried to get two images across,” says Dionne, “that of the hunchback and his fury and impotence.We have also used the Marat-Sade image to intensify the emotional impact.” Whether aware of the literary motif or not this weekend's audience will be unable to miss the point.Quasimodo-Complexe 39 is anything but subtle.Clad in hospital gowns, the dancers cavort painfully to Dionne’s thunderous accompaniement throughout a surreal set studded with littered car parts and raw dirt.The agony screams from the stage and attacks the audience, leaving it stunned.It is obvious that subtle structure was not the aim of this piece, rather an attempt to stretch the tolerance, both mental and physical of dancer and viewer alike.Maheu’s piece is one of three being presented at Bishop’s University’s Centennial Theatre this weekend, and if all are as effective as this one, then Québec Eté Danse will leave a marked impression on the area’s tiny dance audience.urn®* Vincent Dionne o 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1983 Children’s Theatre workshop opens on August 8 By Merritt Clifton DUNHAM — The Centre d’Art de Missisquoi’s second annual children's theatre workshop is now seeking students.The bilingual program will begin on Monday, August 8, and run through five four-hour sessions before concluding on Saturday, August 13, with a dramatic performance written, produced, danced, and acted by the ch ildren themselves.The theatre workshop is open to children of all ages, from 4 to 16.Younger students will be more involved in the dance and music aspects, organizer Bernice Sorge says, while the more demanding writing, acting, and technical jobs will go to older students, according to their abilities.English students will deliver lines on stage in English, French students in French.Thirty students were enrolled last year and although there is presently no limit on registration, the organizers believed this is about as many as can be accommodated again this year.Artistic director for the second year is Marie Dumochel, a summer theatre veteran with expe- rience in both children’s theatre and prison theatre.She attended drama school in St.Hyacinthe, and taught at the Granby CEGEP.Other instructors will include Sorge, of Dunham, a noted painter; Michel Viala, of Pigeon Hill, a potter by trade, who will be in charge of scenery; Susan Surette, of Brigham, a former schoolteacher, who will teach costume-making; musician and writer Hilary Farrington, of Abercorn, who will lead in developing the script; and artist Sylvie Bertolini, of Brome, who will employ experience in making masks and puppets as prop-mistress.Bertolini is a former Massey-Vanier Regional High School art teacher.Registration will cost from $20 to $30 per pupil, depending upon the size of an expected subsidy from Dunham Township.The town has sponsored various Centre d’Art de Missisquoi programs for children for six years now, beginning with medleys of instruction in dancing, sculpture, and arts and crafts, that were rapidly copied by arts associations in adjacent townships.So far, however, the theatre project is unique.Unlike last year’s pageant, entitled The Fantastic Pinnacle and concerning the Pinnacle Mountain overlooking Abercorn, the group will be producing a series of related short pieces this year.The general theme is Seasons And Peace.Each student will be asked to pick a favorite season, and will then work with others on the sketch concerning that season.The organizers explain that having smaller groups and separate productions makes coordination easier, and also gives more children a chance to star.Registration day will be Saturday, August 6, when sign-ups will be accepted at the Dunham library from 10 to 12 in the morning.Registration can also be done by mail and telephone, via Sorge, at R.R.3, Dunham, JOE 1M0, 248-3969.The theatre workshop sessions will run from 9a.m.each day until 1 p.m.IPS •Ss* W ' ™ - The Missisquoi Children's Theatre workshops offer youngsters fun and experience.Festival Lac Massawippi Festival Lac Massawippi continues its series of evening readings at 7:30 on Wednesday, August 3 at the Ripplecove Inn.The three featured readers are D.G.Jones, Monique Baril-Jones and Michel Muir.This reading is sponsored financially by the Canada Council.D.G.Jones, originally from Ontario, has lived in North Hatley and worked in the Département des études anglaises at l’Université de Sherbrooke since 1963.His work includes the well known critical study of Canadian literature, Butterfly on Rock, (1967); a translation of selected poems of Paul Marie Lapointe, The Terror of the Snows, (1967); as well as five volumes of poetry.Among these are Under the Thunder the Flowers Light Up the Earth.(1977).winner of the A.J.M.Smith Prize and the Governor General’s Award for poetry ; and his latest, A Throw of Particles, New and Selected Poems, (1983).Monique Baril-Jones (who translates under the name Grandmangin) is a native of Québec born in Temiscaming.Her education in Québec and Switzerland involved studies in both French and English.Besides teaching at an Indian reservation school in Kipawa, Québec and at a high school in Sherbrooke, Baril-Jones has taught French at Bishop’s University, and techniques of translation at l’Université de Sherbrooke.Her translations have appeared in Ellipse and Dentelle/Indented, (Colorado, 1982) which contained her translations of poems by Ralph Gustafson and D.G.Jones.Currently Baril-Jones is working on a translation of D.G.Jones’ selected poems.Michel Muir was born in Windsor, Québec where he attended primary and secondary school.He attended l’Université de Québec where he obtained a Bachelor’s degree.He then went on to l’Université de Sherbrooke to study literature at the master’s level.Among his volumes of poetry are Rieuse, (1978) and J’adresse aux Oiseaux, (1980).Festival Lac Massawippi is happy to welcome three such accomplished readers and invites everyone to attend this Soirée de Poésie.ItACormrfo, SONS -tt BRIOCHES cLÙyiw SUAMES à HATLEY IToo k ST.JAMES CHURCH, HATLEY ILoo AM FESTIVAL LAC MASSAWIPPI TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.JULY 29.198.V-7 Peter Newman would never stoop so low.That smarmy bunch at Maclean’s Magazine is at it again.Managing Editor Robert Lewis had the affrontery to write to my editor, old what’s his name, and complain that I overlooked the fact that Barbara ‘Mozambique is really ugly’ Amiel and Allan ‘the dwarf who writes like a man’ Fotheringham weren’t the only representatives of the Toronto based publication at the Digressive Preservatives convention.To set the matter straight — pay attention, I won’t do this again — I realize that Maclean-Hunter’s answer to Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum were only part of the Maclean’s contingent.I have since also come to realize that it took Maclean’s twelve assorted reporters, cameramen, editors, camp followers and flunkies to do the job.And they have the nerve to complain about the civil service! I suppose a job at Maclean’s is out of the question now.Oh well, I’ll burn that bridge when I get to it.It’s a dog’s world department.In a move designed to offend dog lovers everywhere, the United States Army announced this week that they would shortly begin testing combat wound treatment.To do this, they intend on drugging unwanted puppies and then shooting them — don’t worry they’re only going to wound them.This way they can see how living creatures react to such fun thing as the extreme shock, loss of blood, loss of limbs etc.caused by the assortment of nasty weapons produced by the Pentagon.In the same delightful vein, the Canadian government, obviously not wanting to ignore our NATO committment, has announced that they will begin giving dogs north of the border massive doses of radiation to study the effects of nuclear fall-out.It is not clear as yet whether the Canadians will use the dogs before or after the Americans shoot them.In order to do my part for national security I have applied for a grant to carry out experiments to test the tolerance of dogs for alcohol in order to determine whether or not they can be considered eligible for grants from, or work with, the Canada Council.Donations are now being received for the purchase of a chesterfield for presentation to Lion Pub regular Dr.John so he can take his lovely companion home and stop making Who’s who By TADEUSZ LETARTE the rest of us jealous.From our Drinking is sinful department comes the following suggestion from Entertainment Editor and wine lover, Timothy Belford who, upon hearing that the government was about to raise the excise tax on wines and spirits by 13 per cent, was heard to mutter, “May botrytis cinerea infect both his (Finance Minister Marc Lalonde’s) nasal passages”.My spies tell me that botrytis cinerea, otherwise known as ‘noble rot, is a type of mold essential to the development of sherry and other sweet wines.Unlike other sniffable substances however, it is not calculated to do any good for Lalonde whose hooter, if inverted would make the James Bay hydro reservoir look like a miniature holding tank.Hewart Grafftey will not be running for the leadership of the Liberal Party of Quebec.The former Digressive Preservative representive for Brome-Missisquoi and the Islands, joins Raymond Garneau, Claude Ryan, possibly Reed Scowen, definitely Desmond McKeon, Gary Carter and an unnamed representative of the Canada Council in rejecting a run at the top spot.Robert Bourassa, who has so far denied he is actively seeking the post, was unable to interupt his campaign long enough to comment on Grafftey’s decision.Meanwhile an unnamed MNA presently residing in the Orsainville holding facility, is considered by insiders as unlikely to make the jump to the Liberals despite a rumour to the contrary.He is said to be concerned about the party’s alleged discrimination on the basis of age since they intend to forbid anyone under the age of 16 a vote in the coming leadership convention.Keep them notes, cards, threats and lawsuits coming in folks.I love to hear from you.» 1.' i’ • Hiram Kopechny of East Hereford, pictured here with his dog Phil, is the latest Quebecer to announce he will not seek the leadership of the Liberal Party.Hiram is a distant cousin of pollution specialist Merritt Clifton.No, he’s not Rich Little or John Wayne or Groucho EDMONTON (CP) — Fred Little does impressions of a good many famous characters but Rich Little isn’t one of them.Yet wherever he goes, Fred is mistaken for his younger brother, who used his impressions to make it big on American television and in night clubs.“I’ve been thanked as Rich, introduced as Rich and phoned up as Rich,” says Little, who shares his brother’s dark good looks.Like his 44-year-old brother, Fred Little imitates actors and politicians but specializes in imitating voices of about 50 cartoon characters, including Elmer Fudd and Bugs Bunny.J ^ SMOKïf Its the telephone.Use it to report anybody or anything that might start a fire.Mimicking others came naturally to the Little family.Growing up in Ottawa, the three boys — Rich, Fred and Chris — imitated their movie heroes.They were encouraged by their doctor father and their mother, who loved music and theatre.Little, now appearing in benefit perfor- mances at Edmonton’s Klondike Days, says that for years he moonlighted as an impressionist.He went into show business full-time last January, ending 19 years as a child-care worker in an Ottawa psychiatric hospital.“I wanted to relax a little more,” he says.“When I left it was like a weight lifted off my shoulder.” Having a famous brother has given Little an edge in the cut-throat world of entertainment.“I didn’t have to send an audio tape or video tape (to get to perform at Klondike Days).” The Little brothers have performed together several times, including Las Vegas in 1979.“Rich likes me to do cartoon characters when we’re on together.” Little says.“He couldn’t compete with me there.The competition comes when we do voices because Rich tries to be better.“I’m careful not to put myself on the spot so I do ones I know I do better, like Flip Wilson and Paul Lynde.” Little now is building a house in New Brunswick for his wife and 13-year-old son.He’s comfortable making a living in Canada and has no desire to break into the American market his brother so successfully conquered.FLIGHT INTO HISTORY Curtiss Seagull It’s 1924, and natives along the Amazon River Valley are puzzled by a strange noise overhead.Looking skyward, they quickly realize it's a bird like no other they've ever seen before.For cruising over the rain forest is a Curtiss Seagull, and it's the first air- ¦ ^ National Museums Musées nationaux B ^ o( Canada du Canada craft to penetrate the interior of Brazil.The Seagull's mahogany hull is painted bright silver, and its wings are adorned with the flags of the United States and Brazil.Through 1924 and into 1925, three American explorers fly their reliable Seagull along the lush, forbidding Amazon.Their exploits are described in the National Geographic Magazine of April 1926.Their aircraft is on display, with its hull restored to its origined mahogany finish, at the National Aviation Museum in Ottawa.Canada A PublK Smut of Tim Ntuipapr & TV AJvrtiiunf Coumd 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1983 WHAT'S ON Music Hi! Those of you who saw the Monty-Bouchard Jazz Blues Fusion last weekend at Calvin Picken’s Hideaway in Ix;nnoxville do not have to be told what a delight it was and I’m sure you’ll all be equally pleased to hear they’ll be back again this Saturday — almost.Brian Monty, who represents the blues in the fusion tells me bassist extraordinaire Normand Bouchard has to be elsewhere this weekend so he’ll be filled in for by the very capable Jim Buck As for the rest of the line-up I’m pretty sure it will be much the same as that last Saturday.But one never knows.These jazz types (you know —the kind who can read music and everything) tend to be able to come in and perform marvelously with little preparation.Apparantly the sax player who dazzled us last week only met the rest of the band an hour before show time.As Brian points out, “Wait till we’ve rehearsçd.” The Bluesbusters are doing the playing tonight at the Hideaway in their usual wonderful manner.By the way, folks I’m also aware that I didn’t give anybody advanced (‘advance, you twitt,’ says my editor, ‘not advanced — nobody in that crowd is advanced’) uh, make that advance, warning about the $2 cover charge that seemed to spring out of nowhere, but I have taken steps to see that such informational oversights are not repeated.The band is worth the money, no problem about that, but it is nice to be told.The band also plays every Wednesday night at the Hatley Inn during dinner hour until 11.At the border Force of Habit bring their music to the Del Monty for the weekend.I’m told this is a reformed version of a band called Lovechild which has played in the area before.What do I know?Bigfoot with the addition of Mike Goodsell is playing at the Maples in Stanstead this weekend.This will be their last gig for a few weeks as the boys are planning a much deserved rest before coming back to play at the Manoir Waterville toward the end of August.The Manoir is presently not hiring for a while due to somebody else’s vacation.Ziggy’s has come up with a surprise for next week from Monday to Wednesday as Penny Doheny and Chameleon come out of hiding for a gig.Penny’s voice is one of the most remarkable instruments it has ever been my privilege to hear, and when that lady decides to belt ’em out, they know they’ve been belted.1 haven’t heard her sing for years and don’t even know what kind of music she’s into these days, although I’ve heard rumors she’s left behind the purer folk and drifted slowly, but inexorably toward jazz.Only rumors mind you, but whatever the lady’s singing I’ll be there to hear it.Hell you could be half way to St-Herménégilde and you’d still hear it.Be careful you don’t make Penny belch, however, the noise has been known to knock birds and small aircraft right out of the sky.She turned down a contract with NORAD to dedicate herself to music.At the Knowlton Pubin beautiful Knowlton, they seem to have fallen in love with Rollex a band that concentrates on keeping the customer satisfied.They seem to play the kind of stuff that everyone likes —certainly everyone in Knowlton.Rollex takes over the stage from Sunday through Wed-, nesday evenings, and there is no cover charge.And the good old boys at Station 88 are still swinging on Saturday nights with Storm Harbour whom I haven't heard yet, but who also must be doing something right.The Motel Bretagne is back in the music business, I notice, bringing up The Drifters a traditional down-home country band for Friday and Saturday nights.The Bretagne is situated on Route 143 outside Waterville and the music starts at 9 p.m.The Bar Lac Dennison is featuring Country Pride this weekend and every weekend until the end of August.The band plays from Thursdays until Sundays.This is just an advance warning but it is remarkable enough to justify itself so here goes : Next Saturday, at the Bromont Sports and Cultural Centre the Bromont Festival will be presenting the Preservation Hall Jazz Band straight out of New Orléans.This guys bring the great New Orléans jazz tradition right to our very doorstep, and are sure to be a rare treat.Tickets are a little pricey, $12, but this will be a great show.So, keep in mind The Preservation Hall Jazz Band in Bromont, Saturday, August 6, at 8.30.Now tomorrow, July 30, and on Sunday, there will be another concert at The Old Brick Church in West Brome.Musica Camerata a four -person ensemble will be performing pieces by J.S Bach.Milhaud.Saint-Saëns, Aldana and Stravinsky.How these people at the Old Brick Church can continue to offer this kind of quality for nothing I don't know, but I don’t expect I'll be complaining soon.The concerts are at 8 p.m.on Saturday and at 3 in the afternoon Sunday.Down south in Newport at North Country Union High School a Pops Concert is being offered by the Vermont Symphony Orchestra, on Sunday at 7.30.Featured solo ' soprano will be Kim Waters, a Newport native making her ft * 1 By MICHAEL McDEVITT career out of New York, New York.Festival Massawippi presents another Sons et Brioches performance this Sunday with Francine Beaubiennd Keith Clark on piano, and Stacey Clark singing soprano.These delightful little concerts offer a nice informal atmosphere in which to enjoy a little music and some socializing on a Sunday morning.They are held every Sunday at 11 a m atSt.James Churchin the village of Hatley.Coffee is available for those who find Sunday mornings unfriendly — but only before the concert.As a final thought, don’t forget the almost continuous flow of music emanating from the Orford Arts Centre and Festival Orford.This week at the Centre’s Salle Gilles-Lefebvre there are concerts tonight and Wednesday at 8.30 by the music school orchestra, as well as a chamber music concert Saturday featuring Rodney Friend, Hatto Beyerle, Mauricio Fuks, and Eleonore Scoenfeld along with some of the students at the music school, also at 8.30.At St Benoit-du-Lac Abbey tomorrow at 4 p.m there will be a guitar recital by Alvaro Pierri There is also a concert at Sherbrooke’s Parc Chauveau as part of the free Hors les Murs series.This concert begins at 8 p.m.On Thursday, Hors les Murs goes to St.Stephens Church in Coaticook at 8.30 Theatre and dance Québec Eté Danse winds up its session for this summer with productions tonight and tomorrow of new work developed over the last six weeks.Choreographers Gilles Ma-heu, Daniel Léveillé, and Robert.Desrosiers have been working with the troupe of six professional dancers who have been participating in the Québec Eté Danse workshop and have come up with three new pieces which will be presented for the first time.The choreography workshop is the aspect of the summer dance school which allows established artists the opportunity to create and interact with their peers.Mikey was over at Québec Eté Danse this week and caught a glimpse of Gilles Maheu’s Quasimodo — Complexe 39 and I don’t mind telling you it’s quite a piece of work.It is a very powerful, very disturbing presentation that left me rather stunned for about ten minutes after it was finished ('ten minutes?’, asks my grouchy old editor).If the other pieces are anything like it we’re in for quite a night.Daniel Léveillé has produced Ecris-moi.n’importe quoi which uses dancers and a comedic actor while Robert Desrosiers presents a surrealistic fantasy entitled Hôtel Perdu.This is where all these magnificent bodies that have been decorating Lennoxville for the last six weeks get a chance to really strut their stuff.I’d personally like to thank Yves Cousineau for his fine efforts in maintaining the program and Marie-Josée Rosa for her help and for being so damn cute.Showtime at Bishop’s University’s Centennial Theatre is at 8.30, and tickets are $8 — $5 for students.Once and for all I have nothing to do with the feud between that aristocratic upstart Tadeusz Letarte and The Piggery, so I don’t want to hear anything more about it.That guy causes more trouble than Gilles Grégoire in an orphanage.Despite Tadeusz’s rather tasteless remarks, however, the North Hatley theatre is doing booming business, and it appears that Flicks playing until Auguste is a smash success.I haven't had a chance to get up to see it yet, but intrepid editor Tim Belford informs me it is a really great show, and 1 have never known him to be wrong except about most things.Anyway the curtain rises at 8.30 Tuesday through Friday evenings and at 6 and 9 p.m on Saturday.There is a matinée at 2 on Wednesday afternoon, and a benefit performance for the Quebec Young Farmers Association on Tuesday.Tickets can be reserved by calling (819) 842-2191.Comedy is the main theme for French-language theatre in the area from the sublime up to and including the riidi-culous.At Le Théâtre de Marjolaine in Eastman a bright little comedy about five young Quebec women who enlist in the army during the second world war.Du Poil aux Pattes commes les CWACS was written by Maryse Pelletier with music by Jean Sauvageau Showtime is 9 p.m.Tuesday through Friday, with shows at 7 and 10.30 on Saturday.Sunday’s performance is at 8.For tickets call (514) 297-2860.At Le Vieux Clocher in Magog, Les Cass’ de Bain put on their show this summer.This is a comedy team consisting of well-known Quebec comedians Pierre Claveau and Pierre Lebeau with music by Christian Montmaquette.This is a basic comedy revue featuring sketches, monologues, songs and some downright silliness, but it’s a nice change of pace.Shows are at 8.30 Tuesday through Friday, with performances at 7 and 10 on Saturday.For reservations — (819) 847-0470.Le Théâtre de l’Atelier and its new home in Jacques Cartier Park are presenting a musical comedy revue entitled Roméo & Julien, starring Jacques Leblanc, Jacques Girard and author Pierre Potvin.Shows are at 8.30 Tuesday through Friday, and at 7 and 10 on Saturday.There is also improvisational theatre at 1’Atelier on Sundays and Mondays at 8.30.At La Grande Coulée in Kingsey Falls, Meurtre à Guichet Fermé, which describes itself as a police comedy plays every night except Sunday and Monday.More information and reservations can be had by phoning (819) 848-2818.The Théâtre Entre Chien et Loup is presenting the fanat-sy Deux Billets pour l’Anse à deux tasses in which a young couple suddenly find themselves inexplicably in a strange land where things talk and people won’t answer their questions.The show starts at 8.30 p.m from Wednesdays through Saturdays at the Au Thé des Bois in Deauville.For information (819) 864-9569.Exhibitions The Loyalists are still here in Sherbrooke demonstrating their pluck at the Eastern Townships Historical Society at Howard Park.The exhibition is celebrating the two hundredth anniversary of the first Loyalist settlement in Quebec.The show consists of 14 panels with explanatory texts and is really not that bad when you consider the subject matter.It remains in Sherbrooke until Friday.There will be an exhibition of the newest drtawings by veteran Québec painter Aristide Gagnon at the Galerie-Boutique Canard de Bois located at 232 Alexandre Street in Sherbrooke.The vernissage is at 7.30 Saturday evening.A show and sale of fine crafts opens at The Brome County Historical Museum in Knowlton next Friday which will last until August 14.The show will feature the ceramics of Stanley Lake and Ellen Riker, the silk paintings of Gina Watson, the hand-painted eggs of Louise Cimon Annett, the jewelry of Katherine M’Seffar, and the weaving of Louyze Caro, Gail Lamarche, and Naomi Kahane.The vernissage for what sounds like a very interesting show is between 5 and 8 p.m.Friday.It’s the final weekend of the show at Auberge Cheribourg by photographer Jane K.Hugessen and painter Rhoda Wurtele Eaves.Both ladies are passionate nature enthusiasts, and this is very evident in their work, which is largely of mountain scenes from Canada and Europe.The show closes Monday.Beginning Tuesday at Hovey Manor, Festival Lac Massawippi presents a show of the photography of Paulin Gau-dreau and Rosaire Langlois.The varnishing, as our own photographic genius Perry Beaton would say, is on Tuesday evening at 7.30.The exhibit runs until August 7.Speaking of Festival Lac Massawippi, they will be having another poetry reading on Wednesday at the Ripple-cove Inn in Ayer’s Cliff.Featured artists will be D.G.Jones, a winner of the Governor General’s Award for poe-try, Monique Baril-Jones, who translates under the name Grandmangin, and Michel Muir.Now, I have a hard time sitting through this stuff, so I’m not much of a judge, but it sounds to me like a pretty good roster all things considered.At the Mena’sen Gallery at the Pommery (on North Road, between North Hatley and Hatley), there will be an exhibit of works by several young artists in the region this Sunday.The show includes the drawings of Sarah Colby and Roxanne Bergeron, prints by Anita Elkin, oils by Patricia Lapointe, watercolors by Mary Martha Guy, and graphite drawings by Jacynthe Gaulin.The exhibit will be open from 2 to 5 p.m.If you happen to be wandering around Thetford Mines this week you will probably be surprised to realize that the TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1983—9 WHAT'S ON silly people over there are holding their annual Asbestos Festival.Now an asbestos festival sounds very much to me like the kind of thing you use to scare naughty children with — like bogey men or Charlie Bury.Celebrating asbestos makes about as much sense as writing a love song about AIDS, but never let it be said that Mikey disapproves of a party — whatever the reason.There will be entertainment and games and all that usual stuff so if you’re into glorifying that stupid rock Thetford-les-mines is the place to do it.If you’re heading out to Orford Arts Centre this weekend, drop in and catch some of the exhibitions they have up there.Opera in the World, the weaving of Anne Huet, La Belle Epoque, a collection of 19th century posters, and The Art of Mosaic are just a few of the displays permanently on exhibit.The above-mentioned are all on display in the Man and Music pavilion, while other shows are displayed in various places throughout the complex.At the Beaulne Museum in Coaticook, they have two talented artists exhibiting.First, Lucille Hotte who works with enamel on copper.Hotte has travelled extensively studying the use of enamel and has applied this knowledge well.Her work is of local scenery and landmarks, and the brightness and clarity of her use of color is very pleasing.Also displaying at the Beaulneis pastel painter Yvan Da-genais, who is also an avid student of his art.Either one of these shows is worth the visit, together they make it a bargain.Movies The Man of Steel is back again and this time should be the last unless they can find another Christopher Reeve to play the superpowered ninny.Reeve has declared unequi-vocably that after he has banked the millions Superman III is sure to earn him he will hang up his funky little tights forever.Who can blame him.The latest in the Superman movies opens at the Carrefour this weekend and besides Reeve, it boasts the talents of super-comic Richard Pryor as a genius duped into helping the bad guys try to kill Superman.Margot Kidder as flaky fluff Lois Lane is also back for more.Across the hall at Cinema Carrefour 3 John Travolta is Staying Alive — or trying to.This is a sequel to Saturday Night Fever, which made Travolta absolutely famous.It didn’t do the Bee Gees any harm either.Anyway if you can stomach any of this let me know and tell me all about it.You will not see me there.In Cowansville it’s the return of The Return of the Jedi, the latest in the saga of space empire, robots, really bad Bad Guys, and princesses in distress.What’s to say?If you don’t know what these marvelous adventure comic books are like yet, you must’ve spent the last hundred years on Poet Monique Baril-Jones will join husband Doug in a reading of their work at the Ripplecove Inn Wednesday as part of Festival Lac Massawippi’s summer program.the moon or somewhere equally exotic.The movie is being held over at exotic Cowansville’s Cinema Princesse.South of the border at the Newport Cinema they get to see Porky’s II The Next Day a useless piece of Canadian-made drivel that goes a long way toward getting even for the acid rain they keep sending us.Actually it is a harmless (but equally pointless) sample of toilet humor that will bring back nostalgic memories to the more masochistic of you out there.Tonight and tomorrow at the Derby-port Drive-in, perpetual adolescent Ron Howard and Cindy Williams of La-verne and Shirley infamy join forces for More American Grafitti.I mean, I don’t really care, and I realize Howard needs bucks to run his fledgling movie company and everything but I’m sure he could have come up with something a little less obvious than this.The original American Grafitti made Howard rich and co-star Richard Drey-fiiss famous and I may be wrong, but I have a deep-seated bias against sequals to movies that don’t need them.This one isn’t needed, and Ron Howard is wearing a little thin as your freckle-faced all-American kid.On Sunday, Kramer vs.Kramer — a very good movie is playing for one day only.Starring Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep (just for you, Caroline).It is the story of a man fighting to keep custody of his children after his estranged wife returns to try to take them.It gets a little — no make that a lot — corny at times, but as a whole it holds up pretty well.From Monday through Thursday, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is playing — an ideal movie for both kids and nostalgic parents.This is one of the very first feature length cartoons to come out of the Disney studios, and it has been charming young people for three generations now.If they were going to make a film with that title today they’d probably be very heavy into kink and the dwarfs wouldn’t be small everywhere, but this film was made in a simpler age when all you had to do was tell a good story well.Times have changed.Finally next Friday, John Travolta like a nasty case of herpes afflicts us in Urban Cowboy.This is the stupid film that gave credibility to all those nuts who’ve never been west of Kitchener parading around downtown Toronto in $200 designer cowboy hats and jeans pretending they’re macho.It also popularized those idiotic machines who’s only purpose is to hurl helpless idiots all over the place in imitation of bucking broncos.Our species is deteriorating at an alarming rate.Television Tonight’s episode of Mystery! on Vermont ETV is Agatha Christie’s Magnolia Blossom, the story of beautiful woman torn between her duty to her husband and her passion for a handsome stranger.On Saturday at 9, Vermont ETV presents two classic old films starring the great Edward G.Robinson.Little Caesar co-stars Douglas Fairbanks and has Robinson in his most familiar role — a gangster.Sea Wolf co-starring Ida Lupino and John Garfield has Robinson as a brutal sea captain whose toughness strikes fear into the hearts of both passengers and crew.These films are as good a sample of any of the kind of work that made Edward G.Robinson one of the early Hollywood stars.At midnight Channel 12 presents Women in Love, a powerful film of love and passion starring Glenda Jackson, Alan Bates, and Oliver Reed.On Sunday at 7.30 Vermont ETV takes a look at the history of Pioneer 10 which became the first man-made object ever to leave our solar system.The program traces the voyage of this remarkable craft and looks at some of the questions that have been — and continue to be — answered by its experiments.At 8 p.m.CBC presents the Festival Ottawa production of Eugene Onedin Tchaikovsky’s opera of love and power in 17th century Russia.At 10 on Vermont ETV Igor Stravinsky’s son, a composer and musician in his own right, pays tribute to his late father in celebration of the 100th anniversary of his birth.The show features both music and scenes from the Swiss home where Stravinsky did much of his composing.At 12.20 Channel 12 presents Royal Flash starring Malcolm MacDowell as the nefarious Harry Flashman — rogue, thief, army captain and determined raver in this story based on the book by George MacDonald Fraser.The movie does not have the same sense of history as Fraser’s excellent novels do, but the humor is still there as everybody’s favorite villain becomes entangled in all kinds of political intrigue in 18th century Europe.On Monday at 10 p.m.Dame Margot Fonteyn takes a look at some of the dancers who have tried to extend dance’s artistic frontiers.Included in this episode of The Magic of Dance are clips of Isadora Duncan and Mikhail Baryshnikov.Tuesday also brings us a present I’m sure we’ve all been waiting for at midnight when Channel 12 has the sense of humor to present Hellcats of the Navy starring the world’s most brilliant actor Ronnie ‘zap’ Reagan.Reagan shares the bill with luminaries such as Nancy Davis, the idiot's silly wife and Arthur Franz who’s probably ambassador to Red China or something.Reagan romps around the Pacific during World War Two trying to blow Japanese subs out of the water.Sound familiar.On Thursday at 8 John Candy, Al Waxman and a host of other nobodies star in a Canadian-made horror flick.Clown Murders.A practical joke at a Hallowe’en party leads to a complex web of kidnapping and murder.Also at 8, and probably more interesting, is a documentary called Diamonds in the Sky, which examines the incredible change brought about by man’s having learned to fly.The program studies the sociological, cultural, and psychological effects this change has brought.It will also look at how some of the world’s more primitive people have learned to cope with the airplane, although my boss tells me that is actually the purpose of the Ronnie Reagan movie.Radio In keeping with my normal, sound policy of trying to point out some of the more interesting things I come across, I single out tomorrow’s Quirks and Quarks which features a report on Stephen Hocking, a brilliant mathematician and physicist, who suffers from a crippling nervous disease.Hocking has made many great contributions to science in his career despite being confined to a wheelchair and virtually helpless.He is a man who’s courage is inspiring.The program airs at 12.05 p.m.on CBC Radio.On The Entertainers on CBC Stereo at 11.05, actress Simone Signoret talks about her 37 year film career in such movies as Room at the Top and Ship of Fools.CBC Stereo will be presenting what I hope r this year's final production of anything by Richard Wagner when the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra under the direction of Georg Solti performs Gotterdammerung the final opera in the four part Ring Cycle.Since this is the one hundredth anniversary of his death, the Bayreuth Festival has decided to outdo themselves in theiur tribute to Hitler’s favourite composer.However, enough is enough.At 7.05 on CBC Stereo Saturday Stereo Theatre presents Where the Sun don’t Shine a black comedy by Hugh Graham.A small-town bank clerk in the early part of this century becomes bored with his life and signs up as a hired hand while trying to find adventure.The family he works for consists of a wild and unruly bunch who are the terror of the county.Misadventure follows upon misadventure as the plot thickens.Dave Van Ronk is featured in concert on Simply Folk tomorrow at 11.05 p.m.on CBC Stereo.Van Ronk is one of those old folkies who's been around since the heyday of the Greenwich Village folk scene.He is a gifted performer however who has managed to stick around because he’s good.On Sunday at 1.05 on CBC Radio Through the Ears of George Martin relives those magic days when the young producer first heard of a group of long-haired musicians who called themselves The Beatles.Martin, whose participation in the Beatles’ musical legacy cannot be overstated, produced 11 albums for the group.At 4.05 CBC Radio’s excellent Scales of Justice series presents According to Hoyle, a dramatization of one of host Edward Greenspan’s own trials.In this case, a young Toronto man named Michael Hoyle is accused of murder following the shooting death of a drug-dealing bully.Al Waxman stars as Greenspan.At 8.05 on CBC Stereo’s Testament examine’s one of the Judaeo-Christian tradition’s most puzzling theological paradoxes in a program entitled Job, Suffering and a Loving God.In the Book of Job, held by many to be the Old Testament’s most beautifully written book.The old man is brutally tested by the Lord.The question of how a loving, caring god could allow, let alone cause, so much suffering and misery in the world has plagued believers ever since.At 9.05 Ideas Presents offers the first of two reports on From Leverage to Cash Flow: Hard Lessons for Hard Times.The program examens the Canadian West of the 70s, where the contrast between economic boom and bust have been so startling.The show will also look ahead into the 80s, at some of Western Canada’s new business and economic leaders.At 10.15 on CBC Radio Sunday Side Up takes a humourous look at the world of dating with the help of Rowan and Martin, The Saturday Night Live crew and David Steinberg among others.On Tuesday evening on CBC Stereo at 9, a recital by pianist André Laplante is presented from Toronto.La-plante is a dazzling virtuoso who has received outstanding reviews from all over the world.He will be playing pieces by Tchaikovski, Liszt, Ravel, and Rachmaninov.Finally, on Wednesday, Summer Camp presents an hour of humour and nostalgia, particularly an episode from the old Jack Benny radio show.A classic from the golden days of radio. 10—TOWNSHIPS WKKK—FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1989 This week's TV V- Listings for this Corp While we c-*^i y sub/ed to chonge without notice week s television programs as supplied by Compulog make every effort to ensure their accuracy they are I je without notice V STATIONS LISTED O CBFT - Montreal ( Radio Canada) O W'CAX - Burlinuton, Vt.(CBS) 0 Wl’TZ • Plattsburgh, N.Y.(NBC) O CBMT • Montreal (CBC) O CULT - Sherbrooke (TVA) O WMTV - Poland Spring, Me.( ABC) O CKSII- Sherbrooke ( Radio Canada) © CFTM - Montreal (TVA) (B CFCK - Montreal (CTV) ® Vermont ETV - Burlington Saturday MORNING 5:30 O NEW YOU 0:00© UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR 8:30 O PRIME OF YOUR LIFE © CIRCLE S0UARE 7:00 0 WONDER WOMAN O OR SNUGGLES (B ROCKET ROBIN HOOD S3 GREAT SPACE Mov/a Rating» Outstanding ?Excellent Very Good ?Good ?H Not Bad .Fair ^ .?* Poor .?COASTER 7:30 O THAT TEEN SHOW © 100 HUNTLEY STREET © GREAT SPACE COASTER 8:00 Q P0PEYE A OLIVE B THE FLINTSTONES O © SUPERFRIENDS £B UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR 8:30 O PANDAMONIUM O THE SHIRT TALES O 60 PAC MAN / LITTLE RASCALS ! RICHIE RICH © ARAB WORLD © UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR 8:45 Q MIRE ET MUSIOUE 9:00 O O BELLE ET SEBASTIEN B MEATBALLS A SPAGHETTI B SMURFS © UNTAMED WORLD The smallest people on Earth, the Mbutu Pygmies, are profiled in the forbidding Ituri Rain Forest of Africa.(R) © UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR 9:30 Q Q CANDY O BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER O GRONIGO A CIE.B 60 PAC-MAN © STORYTIME ffi UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR 10:00 O O QUATRE AMIS FANTASTIQUES O SCOOBY DOO O © SCOOBY DOO / PUPPY p © ZIG ZAG © PROGRAMMING FOR THE GIFTED 10:30 0 B YOGI ET CIE.O THE DUKES B THE GARY COLEMAN SHOW O © GOLDORAK © WRESTLING © PROGRAMMING FOR THE GIFTED GRID WARS — Don't look now, but the National Football League is rolling into the 1983 season.Even if it is only mid-summer.Get set for the first full weekend of NFL pre-season games, from Thursday, Aug.4.through Sunday, Aug.7.Many stations broadcast the games of their local team, sometimes replaying exhibition contests on a tape-delayed basis.In the next few weeks, eight preseason NFL games are slated for nationwide television.The first three are: the New York Giants at Pittsburgh (ABC).Aug.12; New England at San Francisco (NBC), Aug.14; and the New York Jets at Cincinnati (CBS), Aug 18.A prime-time rematch of Super Bowl XVII — the Washington Redskins vs.the Miami Dolphins — will highlight the NFL pre-season TV schedule.The Dolphins will travel to Washington to meet the Redskins in a game to be aired Friday, Aug.19 (8 p.m., ET).It is the final ABC pre-season NFL telecast Also to be broadcast nationwide are: Philadelphia at Green Bay (CBS), Aug.20; Pittsburgh at Dallas (NBC), Aug.20; Los Angeles Raiders at Cleveland (NBC), Aug.26; and Houston at Dallas (CBS), Aug 27 Four teams — San Diego and Miami of the AFC and San Francisco and the New York Giants of the NFC — are playing their complete 11:00 0 O LES HEROS DU SAMEDI o BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER B INCREDIBLE HULK / AMAZING SPIDER-MAN O © LA FOURMI ATOMIQUE B (B MORK & MINDY / LAVERNE & SHIRLEY © SYSTEMS ORGANIZATION 11:15 B GOOD MORNING 11:30 B SESAME STREET 0 LES CHEVAUX DU SOLEIL © ADELE © SENSATIONAL SEVENTIES © PERSONAL FINANCE AFTERNOON 12:00 O O UNIVERS INCONNUS O GILLIGAN’S PLANET B THE HARDY BOYS / NANCY DREW MYSTERIES O © CINE-WEEKEND AAH "Le fils de Geroni- Pete Rozelle preseason schedules against interconference opponents.Going into 1983, the AFC leads in preseason games against the NFC 342-315-12 — after a 25-16 record in 1982.The AFC also leads in the regular season series 286-241-7.The 1983 regular season opens with 13 games on Sunday, Sept.4.Washington, which became only the fourth NFC team to win a Super Bowl when it defeated Miami 27-17 in Pasadena’s Rose Bowl last January, is also the star of the first ABC-TV Monday night game.The Redskins will begin defense of the NFL title by hosting NFC Eastern Divisional rival Dallas on Sept.5.The postseason playoffs begin Dec.24; the AFC and NFC championship games will be played Jan.8; and Super Bowl XVIII, on Jan.22, at Tampa Stadium.No wonder NFL czar Pete Rozelle is smiling.mo" (1952, Western) Charlton Heston, Susan Morrow.Un jeune garçon est adopte par le chef de la tribu qui a attaquée et tuee ses parents.O WILD KINGDOM © WEEKEND SPECIAL "The Winged Colt" A man (Slim Pickens) and his nephew (Ike Eisenmann) settle their differences through joint ownership of a magical colt born with wings (Part 2) (R) g © PERSONAL FINANCE 12:30 0 FAT ALBERT O WILD KINGDOM O S3 AMERICAN BANDSTAND Guest: James Brown © THIS WEEK IN FOOTBALL Œ PERSONAL FINANCE 1:00 Q O D’HIER A DEMAIN Q BLACKSTAR O dr.SNUGGLES O CONSUMERSCOPE © MOVIE "Coach Of The Year" (1980, Drama) Robert Conrad, David Hubbard.A paralyzed former pro football player takes a job as a football coach at a juvenile correctional facility.Œ ACROSS THE FENCE 1:30 0 CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL "The Old Junkman" Annoyed by the constant vandalizing of his junkyard, an elderly man (Anthony Voykovich) blames the wrong group of children.(R) O IT’S YOUR BUSINESS O TWILIGHT ZONE O SUPERCHARGERS S3 AMERICA'S TOP TEN © VICTORY GARDEN Bob Thomson adds a bumper crop of vegetables to the suburban garden, surveys the perennial garden, and checks the progress of the fruit orchard.2:00 O O CINEMA **U; "Audrey Rose" (1977, Drame) Marsha Mason, Anthony Hopkins.Un homme tente de convaincre un couple que leur fille est la reincarnation de sa propre fille decedee sept ans auparavant dans un accident d'auto.O WONDER WOMAN O BASEBALL Regional coverage of Milwaukee Brewers at Boston Red Sox or Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers.O SPORTSWEEKEND O (D BASEBALL O © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS "AFC-NFC Hall Of Fame Game” New Orleans Saints vs.Pittsburgh Steelers (live from Canton, Ohio).© MOVIE "The Desert Rats" (1953, Adventure) Richard Burton, James Mason.A British commando in charge of an Australian division in North Africa forces his men to defend a strategic desert outpost.3:00 O MOVIE "Larceny.Inc." (1942, Comedy) Edward G.Robinson, Jane Wyman.An ex-con buys a luggage store as a means of access to the bank next door, but discovers he doesn’t have to steal to make money © PLAYERS INTERNATIONAL TENNIS Vitas Gerulaitis vs.Ivan Lendl 3:30© CHAMPIONS OF AMERICAN SPORT This profile of some of America's greatest athletes over the last 150 years, featuring intimate interviews and rare film footage, is hosted by Merlin Sports SATURDAY (NBC) BASEBALL Primary game.Milwaukee Brewers at Boston Red Sox; alternate game: Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers.(ABC)GOLF Live coverage of the U S.Women's Open Golt tournament from the Cedar Ridge Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.(ABC) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (ABC) FOOTBALL Live coverage of the AFC-NFC Hall of Fame game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the New Orleans Saints from Canton, Ohio.(CBS) GOLF Third-round coverage of the $425,000 Canadian Golf Open with Pat Summerall, Ken Venturi, Frank Glieoer.Ben Wright and Steve Melnyk providing the commentary, live, from Glen Abbey Golf Club in Oakville.Ontario, Canada.SUNDAY (CBS) SPORTS SPECIAL The 141h running of the Talladega 500 Auto Race, live, from Alabama International Motor Speedway in Talladega, Ala.Ken Squier.Ned Jarrett.Larry Nuber and Donnie Allison provide the commentary.(CBS) GOLF Final-round coverage of the $425,000 Canadian Open Golf tournament, live, from Glen Abbey Golf Club in Oakville, Canada.Pat Summerall, Ken Venturi, Frank Glieber, Ben Wright and Steve Melnyk provide the commentary.(NBC) SPORTSWORLD Highlights: Gold Cup Unlimited Hydroplane Race from Evansville, Ind.; PKA Championship karate from Atlantic City, N J.; Survival ot the Fittest competition — women’s climb and rappel, and white water swim and raft — from Sun River.Ore.(ABC) GOLF Fourth round of the 31st U.S.Women’s Open Golf Championship from Cedar Ridge Country Club in Tulsa.Okla.MONDAY (ABC) MONDAY NIGHT BASEBALL FRIDAY (ABC)GOLF PGA Championship Highlights from the Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles, Calif.(SP0RTS PRQbID NFL ’83 begins to attract TV viewers Olsen 4:00 © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: Canadian National Tennis Championships (live from Ottawa, Ont ); Rothman's Week Of Racing (from Greenwood Race Track in Toronto, Ont ); Canadian Synchronized Swimming Championships team event (from Regina.Sask ); Canadian Gymnastics Championships (from St.John's, Nfld ).© SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons host an informative look at what’s new at the movies.4:30 O O MELI-MELO O PGA GOLF "Canadian Open" Third round (live from the Glen Abbey Golf Club in Oakville, Ontario) © SQUARE FOOT GARDENING 5:00 0 Q BAGATELLE Q DRAG RACING "Springnationals" O SKIPPER AND CO.O © AU ROYAUME DES ANIMAUX © SUPERSOCCER 5:30 0 RYAN’S FANCY ON CAMPUS O © LES P'TITS BONSHOMMES O © WOMEN'S U.S.OPEN GOLF Third round (live from the Cedar Ridge Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.) 5:45 0 © LE 6/49 / LA QUOTIDIENNE EVENING 6:00 0 Q LES ECRIVAINS FRANÇAIS O © NEWS O SOLID GOLD CELEBRATES THE '70S Hosts Rex Smith, Marilyn McCoo.Guests include Three Dog Night.America, Captain & Tennille, Way-Ion Jennings and The Hollies.O CBC NEWS O © JEUNESSE © LAST CHANCE GARAGE Brad Sears gives tips on auto maintenance in high style, after taking a trip in the original 1907 Rolls Royce Silver Ghost, g 6:30 0 Q LE MONDE MERVEILLEUX DE DISNEY O CBS NEWS O SEEING IT OUR WAY Featured Marion Nicoll O U.M.O.MAGAZINE © MUSIC VISION Fea tured: the Whispers V-2 Talking Heads, Kix, Prince.© HAPPY DAYS AGAIN © SAY IT WITH SIGN 7:00 Q HEE HAW O CFL FOOTBALL British Columbia Lions at Hamilton Tiger-Cats O © SOIREE CANADIENNE O THOSE AMAZING ANIMALS © DIFF’RENT STROKES Arnold invites a street-cor ner Santa (Garrett Morris) to join the Drummonds for Christmas dinner.(R) g © CHARLIE’S ANGELS © THIS OLD HOUSE It's time to insulate the house and replace the old furnace with a new energy-efficient heating system.(R)g 7:30 0 O BASEBALL Les Expos de Montreal reçoivent les Cardinals de St-Louis © CIRCUS Cal Dodd and Sherisse Laurence welcome Petey and the Dog Catcher, the Waltens' champion balancing act, fire juggler Pat Davidson Compiled by the staff of the World Almanac Spurts I.L.1.What is Billy Martin’s real first name?2.What is the nickname of the Florida State Univ.football team?3.In which arena do the Atlanta Hawks play its home games?4.In which city is the annual Peach Bowl football game played?5.Which right-handed pitcher struck out the most batters in 1982?6.Which team finished first in the Patrick Division of the NHL last season?7.In which hall of fame is Hank Luisetti enshrined?8.Which sport's award did Don Meineke win in 1954?9.Who won the men's singles title at the French Open this year?10.Which nation won the most medals at the 1980 Winter Olympic games?Aueuueg tseg oi qeoN «P'uuba '6 jeeA eg) jo aigooi vbn '8 liegtexseg * sieAij eigdiapeimd -g ojos open g ejueuy p lutuoeiu ç seiounueg z pejjIV i S J3/WS\J\? TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FHIDAY, JULY 29, 1983-11 Saturday and the acrobatic Tabaka (R) Q) WILD AMERICA "Mountain Monarchs" A look is taken at the special adaptations that allow alpine animals to live in the severe high mountain ecosystem.(R) 00 0 WALT DISNEY The Sky Trap" A young sailplane pilot (Marc McClure) is blackmailed into smuggling a cargo of heroin across the Mexican border (Part 1) (R) 0 DIFF’RENT STROKES Arnold invites a street-corner Santa (Garrett Morris) to join the Drummonds for Christmas dinner.(R) p o Œ) LES AVENTURES DE LAGARDERE (2E) En 1710.a l'epoque ou la Regence dirigeait une société corrompue, un homme lutte pour la defense des causes justes et fait triompher la vérité o œ T.J.HOOKER Hooker stalks an arsonist who plans the death of a veteran investigator (Eddie Egan) to cover up his crimes.(R) Q CB SOCCER Europe vs.World Œ ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL 8:30 0 SILVER SPOONS Ricky and Edward spend Christmas with an impoverished father and son (Rick Lenz, Joey Lawrence) living in a cave behind the mansion.(R) 9:00 O MOVIE "Holo caust 2000" (1978.Horror) Kirk Douglas.Simon Ward.A demonically possessed young man proves to be the key to impending nuclear disaster and ecological destruction.0 QUINCY Quincy is jailed for contempt of court after trying to defend an innocent man against abuse from a grand jury attorney (Eugene Roche) (R) O Q3 LOVE BOAT An elderly man (David Wayne) meets a former college friend (Ted McGin-ley) who apparently hasn't aged.Isaac has an ill-fated romance with a beautiful woman (Tracy Reed), and a newly married couple (Lynda Good-friend.David Naughton) encounter shipboard disaster (R)Q QD MOVIE ?"Little Caesar" (1930, Drama) Edward G Robinson.Douglas Fairbanks Jr An insignificant hood works his way to the top of the underworld.10:00 O O BIZARRE.BIZARRE Q MONITOR O THE FACTS OF LIFE Having lost religious faith since the divorce of her parents, Blair argues with her cousin Meg (Eve Plumb), who is planning to become a nun.(Part 2) (R) 9 Q GD LE VRAI VISAGE O © FANTASY ISLAND Two newlyweds (Linwood Boomer.Randi Oakes) learn that one must die so the other can have eternal life, and a woman (Sandra Dee) is surprised by her date with a movie star (Ron Ely) (R) g 10:20© MOVIE "The Sea Wolf" (1941, Adventure) Edward G.Robinson, John Garfield.When he realizes he is going blind, a brutal and heartless sea captain tries to destroy everything and everyone around him 10:30 0 O LE TELEJOURNAL / SPORTS Movies This attractive woman is actually Timothy Bottoms in disguise.He assumes this identity in an effort to escape from a Mexican prison, where he's been imprisoned on a drug charge, in “Escape." airing Wednesday, Aug.3 on “The CBS Wednesday Night Movie." SUNDAY (NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE (ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “ASSAULT FORCE" (19801 Roger Moore.Anthony Perkins.James Mason.A suspenseful thriller about an underwater expert sent to rescue hundreds ot innocent people aboard a hiiacked ship in the North Sea.MONDAY (NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE TUESDAY (CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE PROMISE” (1979) Kathleen Quinlan.Stephen Collins.A romantic drama ot a young couple whose plans for the future are destroyed by a tragic accident and by the interference of the young man's mother.WEDNESDAY (CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “ESCAPE” (1980) Timothy Bottoms.Kay Lenz.Colleen Dewhurst.A suspenseful true story about a young American who intends to be the first man to escape Mexico’s Lecumberri Prison since Rancho Villa did in 1913.Ask Kate ‘Little House’ not razed FANTASY ISLAND Stella Stevens guest stars as the beautiful ruler of an island kingdom where she has reigned for 2,000 years in the "Eternal Flame" episode of ABCs "Fantasy Island," airing SATURDAY, JULY 30 Linwood Boomer (r.) plays a newlywed who travels to the island in search of eternal lite.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME O WAYNE AND SHUSTER The Burning Of Rome" Slavius Maximus (Wayne) and Chief Scipio Superbus (Shuster) join forces to solve the hundred-year-old mystery of the burning of Rome.(R) g O CD les nouvelles TVA / SPORTS E PETE'S PLACE t1:00Q Q NEWS O THE NATIONAL O CINEMA ?*'
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