The record, 19 août 1983, Supplément 1
¦m ¦ : ¦.si- ¦;v-; I; ' iHPiS;; /* -" - * * 1 s .• ««li iMMi .^ ^4 M *Sw*»r îü^5:, .¦ *œ*ïis* »* - .W: .V.'A'- **i.*' ••***;».x_ ¦ ^ ' ' 2-TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, August 19,1983 Veteran singer Haggard leads music nominations NASHVILLE, Tenn.(AP) — Veteran country music singer Merle Haggard, with six nominations in five categories, leads the field of finalists for the Country Music Association annual awards, it was announced Tuesday.Willie Nelson, Ricky Skaggs and John Anderson follow Haggard with nominations in five of the 11 catagories.The popular progressive group Alabama collected four nominations.The winners will be announced on a televised show at the Grand Ole Opry House on Oct.10 when Nelson and three-time Grammy Award winner Anne Murray host the program.Haggard, best known for the 1969 hit Okie From Muskogee, joi- ned Barbara Mandrell, Alabama, Nelson and Skaggs as finalists for the top CMA award.Entertainer of the Year.Haggard, an ex-convict who was pardoned by Ronald Reagan in 1972 while he was governor of California, won the award in 1970.The singer spent two years and nine months in California’s San Quentin Prison for breaking into a cafe in 1957 and was parolled in 1960.TWO-TIME WINNER Mandrell is the only person to win Entertainer of the Year twice, an award Nelson won in 1979 and Alabama received in 1982.Skaggs, who was chosen No.1 male vocalist a year ago, Hag- gard, Anderson, Nelson and Lee Greenwood were named as finalists for Male Vocalist of the Year, while finalists for Female Vocalist of the Year are Lacy J.Dalton, Emmylou Harris, Reba McEntire, Mandrell and last-year’s winner, Janie Fricke.Haggard was nominated twice in the Vocal Duo of the Year Category — once with Nelson and once with George Jones.Other duo finalists are David Frizzell and Shelly West — who have won the award the past two years — Eddie Rabbitt and Crystal Gayle, and Don Williams and Harris.Haggard and Nelson’s album, Pancho and Lefty was also nominated for Album of the Year.Skaggs’ album Highways and Heartaches, Fricke’s It Ain’t Ea- sy, Alabama’s The Closer You Get, and Anderson’s Wild and Blue round out the finalists for the top album award.Swingin’, Anderson’s catchy tune about front-porch romance, was nominated for Single of the Year, which is awarded to the singer, and Song of the Year, which is given to the songwriter.Other finalists for Single of the Year are Skaggs’ Heartbroke, I Always Get Lucky With You by George Jones, I.O.U.by Greenwood, and Pancho and Lefty by Haggard and Nelson.Johnny Christopher, Wayne Thompson and Mark James, who won Song of the Year awards last year for Always On My Mind, are again finalists in that category for the same song.Other finalists are Vern Gosdin and Max Barnes for If You’re Gonna Do Me Wrong, I.O.U., written by Kerry Chater and Austin Roberts, and 16th Avenue by Thomas Schuyler.Alabama, the Oak Ridge Boys, and The Whites are finalists in the Vocal Group of the Year and Alabama, The Whites and the Oak Ridge Boys Band are the nominees for Instrumental Group of the Year.The Bellamy-Brothers and the Statler Brothers round out the top vocal group award category.The Statlers have won Vocal Group of the Year eight times.Alabama has won the last two years.Ray Charles American music’s self-styled utility man CHAUTAUQUA, N.Y.(Reuter) — Ray Charles, the music legend known as “the genius”, prefers to think of himself as a “utility man’’ — like the baseball player who fills in for several teammates.Charles, 52, has not had a big hit record since the 1960s, but remains one of the most respected American popular singers.To many musicians and fans, both black and white, he is a hero who transformed popular music in the late ’50s by merging moaning, foot-stomping gospel music with rock ’n roll to create soul music.Although best known for his revolutionary fusion of the secular and spiritual, Charles has always been involved with a variety of sounds, “I’m not a country singer, you couldn’t call me a jazz or blues singer; I’m a singer that sings those kinds of songs,” he said in an interview after a concert at this resort in western New York.“I’m like a utility man — he plays a little shortstop, a little third base, a little of everything,” he said, laughing.LIKES ALL MUSIC Charles is a trim, black man with greying hair.Dressed in a cream-colored suit, black shirt and his familiar wrap-around sunglasses, he said: “Remember, I like all kinds of music, what’s going on around me musically.I’ve been a very blessed man; I can do the music I want.” Charles was bom Ray Charles Robinson Sept.23, 1930, in Albany, Ga., and grew up in Greenville, Fla.At age six, he saw his younger brother drown in a was-htub.By the time he was seven, he had lost his sight to glaucoma.A boogie-woogie player near his home taught him to play the piano and when he was seven he was enrolled at the St.Augustine School for the Deaf and Blind, where he learned music theory and composition.In his early career.Charles imitated the styles of Nat King Cole and Charles Brown.But in the early to mid-50s, he began using gospel patterns for his songs.He wrote in his 1979 autobiography, Brother Ray: “If I was inventing something new, I wasn’t aware of it.In my mind, I was just bringing out more of me.The basic line, the basic struc- tures, the basic chord changes were throwbacks to the earliest part of my life on earth.” In 1955, I Got a Woman was a hit, and in 1959, What’d I Say was his first record to sell a million copies, although many people were shocked to hear secular songs sung like church music and some radio stations banned the record.Charles did not believe he was doing anything wrong.“What we do in this world depends on how we feel,” he said in the interview.“I can only say what I feel, the way I feel it.” cs ?Music Chart LAST WEEKS NO.TITLE ARTIST WEEK ON 1.Every Breath You Take Police 1 12 2.China Girl David Bowie 3 10 3.She Works Hard for the Money Donna Summer 5 10 4.Baby Jane Rod Stewart 2 11 5.Fascination Human League 6 9 6.Wanna Be Starting Something Michael Jackson 4 11 7.Hot Girls In Love Loverboy 10 9 8.Guilty Lime 9 8 9.Stand Back Stevie Nicks 12 6 10.Never Gonna Let You Go Sergio Mendes 8 10 11.It’s a Mistake Men at Work 14 7 * 12.Rock n Roll is King E.L.O.15 7 13.Maniac Michael Sembello 19 6 14.Is There Something I Should Know Duran-Duran 17 9 15.Sweet Dreams Eurythmies 21 5 16.Too Shy Kajagoogoo 7 12 17.Change Tears for Fears 18 8 18.Saved by Zero The Fixx 20 6 19.Our House Madness 11 14 20.Round' Round Chill Fact-Orr 23 5 21.Come Dancing The Kinks 13 8 22.Perfect The The 24 4 23.I’ll Tumble 4 Ya Culture Club 25 5 24.Flashdance Irene Cara 16 16 25.Stop In the Name of Love The Hollies 26 6 26.Through the Years Tim Finn 29 4 27.Take Me to Heart Quarterflash 28 6 28.Video Kids Prototype 33 4 29.I Love to Dance Voggue 30 5 30.After the Fall Journey 32 4 31.Heartache Avenue Maisonettes 35 3 32.Girls Night Out Toronto 34 4 33.Mistake Mike Oldfield 36 3 34.I.O.U.Freeze 38 2 35.Tell Her About It Billy Joel 39 2 36.Hold Me ’til the Morning Paul Anka 37 3 37.Don’t Cry Asia 40 2 38.Never Said I Loved You Payolas PL 1 39.King of Pain Police PL 1 40.Human Nature Michael Jackson PL 1 Winnipeg rock promoter just a ‘working man’ WINNIPEG (CP) — At 36, Bruce (Bones) Rathbone has spent half his life in the pressure-filled, often crazy world of rock ’n’ roll promotion and survived.He has wild stories about sex and drug abuse in the business but he is tired of retelling those yarns and nowadays only talks about how “cocaine is a big problem in our industry.” Rathbone, who has been in on most of the major concerts held in Winnipeg and has worked outside of Manitoba as well, recently set up an independent promotion company called Nite Out Entertainment.Not the kind of person who’s interested in hobnobbing backstage with every visiting star, Rathbone considers himself first and foremost a businessman.“I’m a working man.” What does it take to be a concert promoter?Mostly hard work and sometimes a little luck.Concert promotion is a risky business and the risk increases when the promoter lets personal taste guide his choice of shows.That’s why Rathbone spends a lot of time testing his ideas on others.CHECKS WITH KIDS “Before I bring a heavy metal act to town, you can be damn sure I talk to some kids.I’ll just drop it and say, ‘Well, how will Iron Maiden do?’ And if I ask enough kids, I can get a cross-section.” Through his informal surveys, he has come to know that heavy metal acts such as Def Leppard, or middle-of-the-road rock bands such as Journey do well on the Prairies.“That’s what Winnipeg is known for.It’s in this conservative midwes-tem grain belt.” Bands that are less easy to define, such as The Tubes out of San Francisco, are harder to sell.It’s a matter of educating Winnipeg now to see them,” said Rathbone, a self-confessed Tubes fan who for a recent concert worked overtime on a promotion blitz.One of his first major forays into the business was in 1970 when he coproduced the ManPop Festival, held to mark Manitoba’s centennial.Lined up here such major groups as Led Zeppelin, Iron Butterfly and The Youngbloods but heavy rains shorted equipment and threatened to kill the festival.MOVED TO ARENA But an Uth-hour decision to move the show next door to the Winnipeg Arena using local stage equipment saved the day.“The arena was over-capacity,” Rathbone recalled.“Kids were pounding on the doors and breaking glass while he were inside along with all the different local bands.” Another triumph snatched from the jaws of disaster was an Aerosmith concert in the early ’70s.The U.S.rockers had already cancelled two Winnipeg dates but made good for the third with a young support act called AC-DC, a then-unknown Australian heavy metal band.The show was a hit and Rathbone still treats it as one of the high points of his career. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, August 19, 1983—3 Dutch Shea Jr.— a close look at American justice Kaleidoscope By RICHARD LONEY Dutch Shea Jr.by John Gregory Dunne’s Dutch Shea Jr.The writer who made the whacky New York City underworld into a minor literary art form that culminated in the Broadway success Guys & Dolls, would chuckle when encountering the world of Dutch Shea Jr.Shea is a continuation, in the form of a criminal lawyer, of the Spellacy brothers — one a priest, the other a cop — the rich characters that made Dunne’s True Confessions a great read and a movie that also had its moments.As Dutch Shea Jr.opens, the reader learns of the death of the man’s daughter Cat, caused by a bombing in a restaurant in London.There are continuing introspective flashbacks in the book, from within the mind of Shea, but the real delight comes when the parade of pimps, snitches, cons and perverts passes through defense counsel Dutch Shea’s purview.Dunne has a way of bringing his characters to life that is a trait of only the finest novelists — the techniques include portions of cross examinations and dialogues from courtroom scenes, interviews with prospective clients and chance encounters with underworld figures he has defended in the past.Shea’s life since his estrangement from his wife and the tragic death of his daughter has almost mirrored the descent into the sleezy side of society that most of his clients undergo.He lives in the seamier section of a city that is like New York, but also resembles Los Angeles in many respects — a blending the author admits in a short forward.Shea’s reputation for accepting cases that others find repulsive is candidly revealed through such devices as having the lawyer overhear his colleagues discussing some of his clients while he is in a justice building lavatory.The reader might become easily depressed when bombarded with the endless array of social misfits in this book if it were not for the brilliant comedy that relieves the sociological trauma.Some scenes are wildly ribald and hilarious in a black comedy way, but the quips, jokes and clever asides of Shea himself make him one of the most likeable and sympathetic characters Dunne has created.Du'ch Shea Jr.gets a lot closer to the reality of the criminal justice system in America than many other novels have, thanks to its comedy and the array of memorable characters.ANY TROUBLE (EMI-AMERICA) This debut of Brit group Any Trouble might get lost in the deluge of slick, computer-driven bands being spat out of the Europop machines currently, were it not for the producer’s trademark sound.David Kershenbaum, an L.A.impressario who until now worked out of Producer’s Workshop in Music City, or under the Alpert & Moss imprint, brings this English quartet into recognition with an album that is as pleasing melodically as it is in its gambles with synths and clever orchestrations.As he did with obscure but memorable bands such as the Tar-ney-Spencer Band, Kershenbaum gets Any Trouble to rely on their vocal blends to sell such Neptune Theatre’s Kerr wants a new second stage HALIFAX (CP) — Tom Kerr, new artistic director of Neptune Theatre, says working toward another professional theatre for Halifax is one of his goals, but he is frustrated and critical of actors who choose a “lifestyle” over a career in theatre.“It’s very noble to want to sit by the sea in Nova Scotia,” he said Friday.“But you have to choose.” Kerr replaced John Neville as artistic director in May and has tried a couple of times to float the idea of a second stage, separate from Neptune.Ideally, he would like to see three professional companies present two plays each in 1984.He said Halifax is one of the few major cities in Canada without a second stage.Each province has a regional theatre and a second stage or a community theatre.Neptune is a regional theatre and has a national and in- Be Water Wise July is the month when most drownings occur So, Play It extra Safe.The Canadian Red Cross Society ternational image to maintain.It is not, Kerr insists, a community theatre.The first step toward Kerr’s goal was taken this week when local theatre people formed a committee to investigate the possibility of finding a space to be shared by several theatre groups.Kerr said there are several theatre groups in and around Halifax which call themselves professional.However, he said, professo-nial here can mean simply that someone has been paid to perform.It does not mean an actor is a member of Canadian Actors’ Equity Association.“This is the only area where I have met this kind of nebulous evaluation of professional,” said Kerr, who most recently was head of the drama department at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon.SEEM FRAGMENTED Kerr said the various groups here appear to be fragmented.He would like to see them pull together, find a space, and perform opposite Neptune, which right now is “the only game in town.” He would like to hire more local actors, but he can’t.He would like to see more of them employed, hence the need for a second stage.Kerr said one of the reasons he went to Saskatoon several years ago was because he sensed a “renaissance of energy and everyone wanted to get going.” Kerr says that energy is here too, but unless actors are willing to move and grow they will not have a career in theatre.“And most of them here are not willing to, so they sit here with the frustration of not being able to work as artists should, as much as possible.” Kerr is not afraid of being accused of being the new boy in town or of being heavy handed.“I would like to be a little kinder about it, but if actors want a career in the theatre they have to be more realistic about what a career in the theatre demands.“I have never known any good actor or good director in this country who hasn’t had to travel.And furthermore who wouldn’t want to travel; who wouldn’t want to experience theatre in the West or in Toronto .“That’s what it’s all about.I wouldn’t want to be stuck by the seaside.” Kerr, who spent many years in theatre on the West Coast, said he never thought he would enjoy living on the Prairies, but he learned to love Saskatoon and he helped the theatre community in that city grow to where it is sustaining two or three professional theatre groups.A second professional theatre for Halifax is just one of Kerr’s goals.He also “desperately” wants a second stage for Neptune to create more work for actors and give him a chance to experiment.Other goals include an exciting regional theatre season “not limited to two-handers just because of budgets,” an expanded touring season, a lunchtime theatre series, and — to pick up where Neville left off— a new theatre for Neptune.At this point a committee investigating a possibility may not seem like much, but then the new boy in town has only just begun.songs as Touch and Go, which comes across as a Michael McDo-nald-style medium paced ballad.The cut that follows that one, Foundations, reveals the sophistication of the second wave of the New Wave, as it were.Joining the hypnotic rhythms of Linn drums with Fifties style sax riffs is a neat bit of rock dovetailing, and FM stations have picked up on Any Trouble’s resemblance to bands such as Split Enz or early Squeeze.This is a fresh, appealing band, whose assimilation into the Europop stable of contemporary rock acts will be handled without Any Trouble.Toronto GIRLS NIGHT OUT (SOLID GOLD-A&M) The visual effects of the cover of Toronto’s fourth album take advantage of the revival of the 3-D craze that attempted to zap a little life into the cinema biz when TV had it on the defensive in the late Fifties.A roller coaster scene which jumps off the cover when viewed with the specially provided 3-D glasses, might make it appear that the album is marketed to hit the same consumers that ask mom to pick up the cereal with the prize enclosed.But Toronto’s Eastern Sound product is the least teeny-bopper oriented pressing to date.Toronto’s style continues to tai- lor a sound around the big voice of lead singer Holly Woods, who was voted Best Female Vocalist in the 1983 Technics All Star Band.Rather than just allow Toronto to shove Woods into the spotlight and chug along as a backing band, producer Steve Smith appears to have decided that four albums into a career is a good time to get the Hogtown crew all pulling together.More keyboards from Scott Krcyer, and some spirited choral singing from the other three T-town members make GIRLS NIGHT OUT an al bum from a band that appears to have matured into a permanent fixture on the Canadian rock scene.cA (Jtecttthy^iecu't give.heart fund 0?You won't believe what goes on ^ and what comes off in.Adultei , R BEN EFRAIM.,.“PRIVATE SCHOOL" PHOEBE CATES • BETSY RUSSELL- MATTHEW MODINE • MICHAEL ZOREK „ .RAY WALSTON .SYLVIA KRISTEL , .DAN GREENBURG Admission $4.50 Students 14-20 $3.00 (withcard) Cinéma CAPITOL 59 King est BBS-QTTI Psycho II: Evenings at 7:30; Sun 1:30 & 7:30 Private School.Evenings at 9:35; Sun.3:35 & 9:35. 4-TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, August 19, 1983 International wine salon has star-studded 1983 lineup Haul Schoeters By Timothy Beltord The Second International Wine and Spirits Show is all set for the last week in September and organizers of the exhibition kicked off what is expected to be a lavish promotional campaign on Wednesday in the wooded splendor of Montreal’s Hyatt Regency.Following last year’s excellent but badly publicised event, President Paul Schoeters is taking no chances.Schoeters spoke to members of the press and emphasised that this year’s show would be bigger and better than last year’s.Over 60 exhibitors representing all facets of the wine and spirits industry have already signed up according to Schoeters, and there are more expected.As an added plus this year, there will be a restaurant set up in the display are of the Velodrome where the exhibition will take place featuring a variety of mouth-watering treats designed to compliment the available wines.Another addition to this year’s event will be a judging of the wines presented, by a panel of noted oenolo-gists headed by Cleo Boudreault.All wines on display at the show will be elligable for a variety of medals in various classes that will constitute what organizers are calling the Selections Mon-diales-Montreal 1983.The show, which will run from September 26 until October 2, provides an opportunity for the general public to taste an amazing variety of wines, liquors and cheeses all presented in a carnival-like atmosphere.Admis- sion is $5 per person and samples range from $.50 and up.Representatives of the various wine companies and national exhibitors are also on hand throughout the event and happy and willing to give out information concerning their product.It is also possible, should you find something you really like, to purchase a bottle or two on the spot of any product presently listed on the SAQ’s repetoire.You can also order wines not normally available directly through the dealers at the show.With over 2,000 different types of wine and liquors to be presented from 25 different countries, the Second Salon International des Vins et Spiritueux should be a wine lovers dream come true.' Z4* There will be over 2,000 wines and spirits to try.At 12 Lucille Ball still the reigning Queen of comedy LOS ANGELES (Reuter) — Her hair is still a blazing red, but there are a few more lines round her neck.She retired eight years ago, but millions watch her every night on television.The world still loves Lucy.To celebrate the 72nd birthday of Lucille Ball, a Los Angeles television station has just run 13 hours of non-stop l Love Lucy shows - and the station reported it drew more viewers than any of its rivals.The series is still being seen in 27 countries overseas and in 143 cities and towns in the United States.Yet the last show was filmed in 1957, 26 years ago.The I Love Lucy series has become an entertainment phenomenon.It turned a screen actress who had spent much of her time making feature films into the most widely recognized comedienne in television.“I cried a little when I saw 26 of my shows being run one after another on television,” she said.“It brought back so many memories.“I have a great love for the Lucy character.I think I know her, but I’m not as exaggerated as Lucy for the most part.Also, I’m not as easily cowered.” TEAMED WITH ETHEL As Lucy, Ball played a giddy housewife who became entangled in madcap schemes which often ended with a stern rebuke from her bandleader husband Ricky Ric-cardo, played by her then husband, Desi Ar-naz.The Riccardos were constantly interrupted by their neighbors, Fred and Ethel Mertz.William Frawley and Vivian Vance, who played the neighbors, have died and Ball and Arnaz were divorced in 1960.But the show keeps going.A spokesmen for Viacom, which sells syndicated shows to television stations, said I Love Lucy has earned at least $50 million in reruns.“It has always been our biggest show,” says Pat Argue.“Everybody know I Love Lucy.In the United States it reaches 91 per cent of homes with television sets.” Ball, a multimillionaire, no longer receives a percentage of the profits from the reruns, but she still owns the rights to six years of reruns of Here’s Lucy, a later series in which she appeared with Gale Gordon.Still, everybody, it seems, remembers her for I Love Lucy.DOESN’T WORK NOW “I don’t work any more because I could not improve on what I have done,” Ball said.“We were pioneers and we took the opportunities we were given.Who gets a chance these days?“I worked in radio, films and television and television was the most rewarding.I had the greatest time of my life.I can’t believe there will ever be such a combination of characters in a show again.“I was never beautiful, but I had good eyes.I was happy, I was eager and that covered a lot of things.” CBS agreed in 1951 to let Ball and Arnaz have their own show, but the network was so doubtful about I Love Lucy it insisted the pair put up part of the production money in return for rights to the show.A few years later, the network paid them $4.5 million for the rights.Ball and Arnaz set up the Desilu studio which, besides the Lucy shows, produced such hit series as Star Trek, Mission Impossible and The Untouchables.BOUGHT OUT STUDIO When she and Arnaz were divorced, she bought his share of the studio to keep the operation intact.A year later she married Hollywood comedian Gary Morton, who became her manager.In 1967, she sold the studio to Gulf and Western Corp.for $17 million.At 72, Ball spends her Gimli is not amused David Arnason ranges from New Brunswick to Chicago in his collection of short fiction.Fifty Stories and a Piece of Advice, but his home town of Gimli, Man., is more concerned about its image in the book.Of the 18 pieces in the book — the title refers to the first story, a series of one-paragraph anecdotes — about half are set in Manitoba’s Interlake region, where Icelandic immigrants have made their mark.The town of Gimli, a fishing community near the south end of Lake Winnipeg, is split over the book and the local school board received a complaint about one story, Sleeping Jesus and the Scavengers.In the story, Arnason, who teaches Canadian literature at University of Manitoba, describes the life of a pair of garbage collectors who have a running battle with petty thieves at the Gimli garbage dump.One of the garbage men, nicknamed Sleeping Jesus, stakes out the site one night with his partner, Barney Olson, armed with shotguns and shells loaded with salt that inflict a painful sting.SUSPENDED OVER DUMP But in the confusion of the ensuring gunfire, the only victims are a 16-year-old German prostitute, whom Olson promises to marry, and Sleeping Jesus, who catches a shotgun blast and ends up spread-eagled and hanging from an iron bar, suspended over the garbage dump.The story concludes with Sleeping Jesus, who has always professed to despise scavengers, stealing a long-coveted lawn mower from a home along his collection route and carrying it off in the garbage truck.RESERVE NOW! TRANS OCEAN TRAVEL Business or Pleasure Just Drop In.Or Give Us a Call Services ore free 66 King West — Sherbrooke — Tel.: 563-451S Zenith 59010 time between her sprawling white mansion in Beverly Hills, a regular stop on guided tours of films stars’ homes, her New' York apartment and an apartment in Palm Springs, Calif.She heads Lucille Ball Productions, which is producing two films, All the Right Moves and Sentimental Journey.But she leaves the running of the company to her husband.Ball spends as much time as possible with her grandsons, Simon, age two, and Joseph, eight months.They are the sons of her daughter, Lucy Arnaz and Lucy’s husband, actor Laurence Luckinbill.Artistic Director: Pierre Rolland FESTIVAL D’ORFORD LAST WEEKEND CONCERT Salle Gilles-Lefebvre — Student’s Concerts SATURDAY.AUGUST 20thl St.Benoit du Lac Abby I6h.00 RECITAL: Clifford Benson, piano PROGRAMME: Mozart, Brahms, Benson RECITAL: William Bennett, flute Clifford Benson, piano PROGRAMME: du Trémais, Hindemith, Taffanel, Prokofiev SUNDAY ‘EN FOLIE' AUGUST 21st Musica Antigua Kolh Orchestra Music Baroque on instrument of that era Director: Reinhard Goebel Programme: Bach, Telemann At Gilles Lelebvre Hall FALL ACTIVITIES August 21st til September 26th, 1983 Visual Artist in residence Marie-Paule Sirois, wood carving til Aug.21st Denis Boucher, Ceramic, Aug.26th, 27th, 28th Hugue Mercier, Mosaic and wood, Sept.2, 3, 4, 5 Suzanne Adam, Paint, Sept.9,10, 11 Louise Gauthier-Tapin, Brodrerie, Sept, 16, 17,18 Group Exposition Sept.23rd, 24th, 25th Exhibition: World of Opera The Mosaic Art The good old time (Posters) Tapisserie Art (Beauchemin) Carving: (Simonin-Neveu-Beaudoin) Exterior Sculptures Collection of old Art Books from Wallonie and also from Bruxelles ALSO: Nature Walks, Guided Visits, Slide Presenta-_______tion, Souvenir Boutique, Cafeteria _______ Le Centre d'Arts d'Orford JMC Sortie 118 Autoroute des Cantons de l'Est (819) 843-3981 1-800-567-6155 (sans frais) TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, August 19, 1983-5 Hobbs-Jones perfect pairing of painting and photos By Timothy Belford Festival Lac Massa-wi^ppi, the summer-long arts festival that has been providing consistently fine exhibitions of arts, crafts and poetry, opened what is perhaps its best show yet earlier this week.Making use of the ambiance of Hovey Manor’s Tap Room, the festival is presenting a joint exhibition of the paintings of Anthony Hobbs and the photography of Doug Jones.Hobbs, a native of Southampton England and a graphic designer by trade, studied art and design in London before em migrating to Canada in 1965.For the last several years, he has divided his time between Montreal and the Eastern Townships — a fact reflected in his many landscapes depicting local scenery.His work combines an excellent use of vibrant color with a sense of style and composition — perhaps a result of his training in graphic arts — often lacking in the works of many of the regions other painters.Doug Jones, better known for his excellent poetry, shows another facet of his remarkable talent with a display of photographs featuring local scenery, particularly that surrounding Lake Massawippi.The works impart a sense of peace and solitude — even when featuring human subjects — that compliment perfectly the brighter textured Hobbs paintings.The exhibition, which runs until August 21, is an ideal combination of photography and painting featuring two of the areas more talented artists.Color and texture are the keynotes in Hobbs' landscapes.Doug Jones vr*- Poet Jones is showing another side to his talent.9Mm\ W^m'4 fym.F estival Lac Massawippi Anthony Hobbs 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, August 19, 1983 Young Company opens with Love’s Labour Lost STRATFORD, Ont.(CP) — The Stratford Festival Young Company made its 1983 debut Saturday in a gracefully appealing production of Love’s Labor’s Lost with John Neville the star.This is Shakespeare at his most lyrical and Michael Langham — a former festival artistic director who is now head of the Julliard Theatre Centre in New York — at his most sty- i Ugh.It is also Neville’s festival debut piece, a sterling example of a seasoned actor’s best.Neville commands attention to every line with his expressive eyes and his rich baritone voice, even speaking softly.Costumed like an aged Don Quixote, he walks across the stage as though picking his way among cowflaps, careful not to soil his spurs.The story is negligible.The bachelor King of Navarre persuades three of his courtiers to join him in a pact to study philosophy and forgo feminine society for three years, remembering too late that a French princess is to arrive on a diplomatic mission.She, of course, is accompanied by three attractive ladies and all four men immediately forget their vows to court them.They seem on the point of winning when word comes of the French king’s death and the princess — now queen — adjourns everything for a year of mourning.CHARACTERS FANCIFUL The play is fleshed out by the presence of assorted fanciful characters, a faded Spanish lord (Neville) who thinks himself a philosopher, a schoolmaster in disreputable dress and habits, a seedy parson, a bumptious page, a rough country youth, a slatternly serving wench and the princess’ foppish diplomatic aide.The Young Company, again so-called after being Shakespeare 3 for one season, plays at the festival’s Third Stage, a former arena now decked out by designer Desmond Heeley with a new playing area and seating arrangement patterned after the Festival Theatre.It is primarily a company of young actors furthering their knowledge of classical theatre by working with some of the best Stratford has to offer, including this season Nicholas Pennell from the mainstage company.Langham, who succeeded founder Sir Tyrone Guthrie as festival artistic director, is carving out a considerable niche for himself in the festival with this production and Much Ado About Nothing.Neville had a triumphant record at London’s Old Vic, first as a child actor, before coming to Canada to head the Citadel Theatre in Edmonton and, lately, Neptune Theatre in Halifax.After this summer, he joins Robin Phillips’s new Grand Theatre Company in London, Ont., for the winter season.The cast is a large one.Garrick Hagon is the king, with Joseph Ziegler as Berowne, the principal courtier.Neville is Don Armado, with Shelagh McLeod playing his page, Moth.Maria Ricossa is the princess (svelte, stately and assured), with Sally Singal as Rosaline, Berowne’s intended.Pennell is Boyet, the diplomatist, while John Franklyn-Robbins is Holofernes, the schoolmaster and Diego Matamoros the parson.The cast has been moulded by Langham into a fine ensemble.Little slips — and there were few at the opening performance Saturday — are quickly and smoothly covered over.Style is the hall- mark.This is a play of graceful language and Langham makes it one of graceful movement.Nobody ever seems to walk in a straight line from one point to another.They all sweep in circles and arcs, matched by the swirl of the courtier’s academic gowns and the ladies’ dresses.The four men appearing as Muscovites in a wild Russian dance is a highlight.Embroidered and so-metimes re- embroidered, the language of Love’s Labor’s Lost does not fall easily on modern ears.But there are scenes of high hilarity and of such beauty and meaning that the audience sits rapt, as in Berowne’s ode to Love and in the dramatic unravelling of the plot at the end.Sheila McCarthy joins new company “I’m definitely the envy of all my cohorts in Toronto,” says Sheila McCarthy, an actress more familiar with tap-dancing than with Shakespeare.She’s one of the versatile young performers signed by Robin Phillips to be part of his new Grand Theatre Company at Theatre London, where she will dance and sing in such shows as Godspell and The Club, and also have her first crack at Shakespeare.Her route to London, Ont., has been by way of Toronto, Charlottetown, Victoria and New York.Where the future takes her doesn’t really matter at the moment.She’s in London for the fall, winter and spring, which is a lot further ahead than most performers can look.A slim, petite sharp-featured woman with short-cropped hair, McCarthy has twice before worked for Phillips, in productions he directed in Calgary and Toronto after leaving the Stratford Festival and before settling in London.“I met him at the Dora Mavor Moore Awards a year ago and just shook hands,” she said.“Some time after that my agent called me and said Robin Phillips wanted me to play a 19-year-old retarded prostitute.“I don’t know what my hand-shake told him.He hadn’t seen my work, that I know of.I suppose people had mentioned me to him.But that was the beginning of my being here.STARRED AS NETTIE She went to Calgary to play Nettie in John Murrell’s Farther West.Then, back in Toronto, she was cast as Sonia in the Young People’s Theatre production of The Prisoner of Zenda, a show that Phillips will mount again with the Grand Theatre Company in December.She has already done her first TV show with Phillips directing, a film version of Murrell’s Waiting for the Parade, and will play the part of Eve again when it goes on stage in September.She also has a part in the gala opening show, Godspell, and in Timon of Athens, Shakespeare’s little-known play.Working with Phillips is a delight, she says.“Robin has a real understanding of how human beings do actually behave in given situations.“And he deals with each actor individually.All five of us in Waiting For the Parade are individuals, and different types of actresses, perhaps.But his concentration — when you think of how much he must have on his mind — is entirely with you.When he is rehearsing with you, nothing else has his attention.” McCarthy began as a dancer, studying with Alan Lund, for many years the artistic director and producer of the Charlottetown Festival.She was a member of Les Feux Follets, the national dance company that made its base in Charlottetown, and was in the Charlottetown Festival for four years.ONLY TWO WOMEN There are only two parts for actresses in Timon of Athens and McCarthy has one of them.“I’ve never done Shakespeare, so it’s fascinating for me to sit and watch William Hurt (cast as Timon) work in it as easily as I would do tap-dancing.“But again, Robin makes Shakespeare into something everybody can understand.” McCarthy says she has asked to sit in on rehearsals for Hamlet, which John Neville, the great English actor and former director of The Citadel and Neptune Theatres, is directing for the Grand Theatre Company.Perhaps, she says with a distant look in her eye, she’ll be allowed to understudy the part of Ophelia, at least unofficially.Hamlet is being played by Brent Carver who took over the lead in the second year of the Charlottetown Festival production of Kronborg: 1584, the musical Hamlet by Cliff Jones.It was a hit in Charlottetown and on tour in Canada, but failed when it went to New York and was jazzed up as Rock-a-Bye Hamlet.McCarthy was a moonbeam in the Charlottetown show.Puppetry isn’t what it used to be.EDMONTON (CP) — A pair of veteran puppeteers stood in a downtown park, watching quizzically as the Brick Bros.Circus worked its magic in front of a young audience.“To me, that isn’t puppetry,” one said as the watched the ordinary building bricks, dressed as imaginary circus performers, being manipulated through a series of farfetched antics.The critique brought a smile from Toronto’s David Powell, who along with sister Ann, masterminds Puppet-mongers Powell.The Powells’ brick circus was one of the diverse puppet troupes entertaining at the Puppet Picnic, part of Edmonton Summerfest’s cultural entertainment package.“I remember one woman stomped out of the show saying it isn’t a puppet show, it isn’t entertaining and it isn’t for children,” Powell said with a grin.The seven companies participating in the week of free afternoon shows reflect puppetry’s evolution and future.Traditional acts included Poppinjay Puppets, two Cleveland, Ohio, puppeteers who use beautifully designed marionettes in a variety act.Karagiol-sis, a traditional Greek shadow play, was performed by Kostas Zou-ganelis of Sydney, Australia.At the other end of the spectrum was Roger Mara and the Mara Berries.Mara uses plain white gloves, adorned with a collection of eyes, hair and costumes, to tell the tale of Super Grannie saving her niece from the hilarious Pygmy Giant Worm.Creating a variety of inane characters from simple hand move- ments is the challenge faced by the Los Angeles performer, who also has four skits he uses in an adult nightclub act.“You have to practise every motion just like a marionette,” he said, climbing into the black-and-white suit he wears during the show.“It takes a fair amount of flexibility.” Powell, a professional puppeteer for the last eight years, said “taking puppetry to the extreme” is the concept behind the brick circus.The siblings, dressed in outlandish overalls and hard hats, are in complete view of the audience as they direct the antics of the acrobatic brick, the high-trapeze brick and the terrifying wild brick.“The bricks play most of the act,” Powell said.“We just stand there and manipulate them.” As the show pro- gresses, the humans disappear and the bricks soon take on real images.“This show is very much an imagination stimulant,” Powell said.“People like being entertained.If it gives them some entertainment, its worth seeing.” While Mara and the Powells forge pupper-ty’s new horizon, the craft’s traditional values are kept alive in the skilful hands of Poppinjay’s Bob Vese-ly and Roger Dennis.For the past 15 years the team have used string-operated and hand-held puppets to tell classic fairy tales such as Little Red Ri-dinghood and Rum-plestiltskin.“Our intention is to keep the old stories alive," said Dennis, a one-time actor who manufactures marionettes that sell for as much as $250 each.The face of puppetry has changed as witness The Muppets.• • • i • V Æ * TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, August 19, 198&-7 Congrats to Alfredo Stroessner— 29 years of terror Overheard at the Quebec Amateur Golf Championships recently.“Why do all the John McEnroes belong to the Milby Golf Club?” I’ll let you figure that one out for yourselves.Congratulations to Stan Smith newly appointed computer person at I'hampLm t’olUgc.Rumor has it that Smith has been placed in charge of the college’s giant abacus but insiders say it is highly unlikely that Stan would be caught ‘fingering his beads’.In his first tutorial held last Saturday near Hatley Common, Smith was observed practicising class management.The two-year-old gelding however, could not be induced to sit.Ex-premier Robert Bourassa made it official this week announcing that he would in fact be seeking the nomination as leader of the provincial Liberal Party.The announcement caught several people by surprise — all recently returned from a two year stay in the foothills of Tibet.Bourassa is best remembered as the politician who led the 1976 Liberal equivalent of Custer’s Last Stand which resulted in the decimation of the party and the onset of ‘social democracy’.The Social Democrats have since managed to give Quebec the highest taxes, gasoline prices and liquor costs of any province in Canada while reducing needless things such as health care, minority language rights and jobs.Bourassa however, is out to change all this and lead Quebec backdown the road to prosperity.If you believe all this please contact the federal government who will be more than willing to sell you shares in Canadair at a very reasonable price.I understand congratulations are also in order to General Alfredo Stroessner who was sworn in as President of Paraguay on Monday.Stroessner, who has been in charge of this tiny South American ‘republic’ since taking over in a 1954 coup, was virtually unapposed — hardly unusual since previous opposition has had a strange way of ending up arm wrestling with the piranhas living in local rivers.Not wanting to be unduly critical, something I have been accused of in the past, let’s just say that anyone who numbers Dr.Joseph Men-gele among his friends and aquaintances is not likely to grace my dinner table.Mengele, for those of you who suffer from Kiegstra’s Disease — “the holocaust didn’t really happen”—is the man who took medicine to a new low in the German concentration camps where he carried out genetic experiments on living human beings.Who’s who By TADEUSZ LETARTE I The latest appointee to Ronald Reagan’s foreign affairs team is pictured above appearing before a Senate subcommittee.As of writing this column, the City of Sherbrooke’s white collar workers are still out on strike.Now, far be it for me to defend or reject the justice of their cause, but the latest tactic adopted by the city’s paper shuf- flers is not going to win them many friends in the general public.The boys and girls who normally handle your bills have taken to using the crosswalk in front of city hall on Wellington Street as a ‘quasi-leual' and very effective road block.They accomplish this by walking in single file, at a leisurly pace, across the road safe in the knowledge that the law forbids oncoming automobiles from running them down.The result is a traffic snarl that backs its way back to the King Street lights It seems, the strikers have forgotten that their quarrel is not with the general public but with Mr.Moustache — Jean-Paul Pelletier.The action definitely shows more nerve than brains given the fact that the propensity for a Quebec driver to ignore a cross walk varies directly with the number of people crossing at any given moment.One of my spies was in Montreal recently to attend the opening press conference for the Second International Salon des Vins et Spiriteux scheduled for September.The event took place in one of the many rooms of the Hyatt Regency.For those of you who aren’t members of the National Assembly or independenlty wealthy as I am, this will mean little.To enlighten you however, let me say that the Hyatt is the rich man’s equivalent to the Holiday Inn where a guest can pay all kinds of money to receive exactly the same things as everyone else.One of those in attendance was CBC entertainment-food critic Wayne Grigsby.Grigsby was apparently resplendent in his CBC summer uniform — beige safari suit, sandels and white socks.Bernie St.Laurent, Eastern Townships bureau chief for the CBC, denies that the outfit is a uniform, pointing out that he has had his safari suit since working for CJAD.Milby’s answer to Billy Martin, Pat Clowery, was ejected from the local CLASS League All-Star game last Monday when he disagreed a little too violently with umpire Vincent Cuddihy.Clowery, who is rumored to have once cross-checked his grandmother during a pick-up hockey game, apparently to exception to a call made by last year’s winner of the Lech Walesa look-alike contest.For his part, Cuddihy, fearing Clowery would kick sand on is Pierre Cardin shorts, wasted no time in given the errant ball player the heave ho.It never ceases to amaze me how a ‘grown’ man can turn a fun ball game into a replay of a grade one school-yard tantrum.Nash outdraws John Travolta in Canada’s northland GRISE FIORD, N.W.T.(CP) — Knowl-ton Nash is currently more popular than John Travolta here in Canada’s most northern community.A satellite receiver was installed two weeks ago among the sled dogs at one end of town, bringing CBC radio and television for the first time to this settlement of 100 Inuit on Ellesmere Island.Residents have had a surfeit of John Travolta, Clint Eastwood and Bruce Lee.Films are shown almost weekly at the squat community hall and most residents are members of a mail-order video club in Edmonton, 3,000 kilometres away.But CBC television is a novelty with The National, anchored by Nash, and The Journal getting the highest ratings so far.“We have gone for weeks in winter without any news from elsewhere in the Northwest Territories, Canada or the world,” says settlement chair- man Gamaliel Akeeagok.‘‘Things improved when we got telephone service (via satellite) three years ago.‘‘Now we are very happy to have both radio and television.” The receiving dish is so far north it stands almost upright, aimed 3.4 degrees above the horizon at the Anik-B satellite.Larry Audlaluk, another resident, says most people in Grise Fiord have more friends in Qanaq, Greenland, than elsewhere in Canada.Almost everyone had television sets before the dish was installed and more than half the 21 houses were equipped with videoplayback machines.Those without playback equipment wired their sets to a neighbor’s, creating an informal cable network.Almost every home has radio sets too, says RCMP Cpl.Allan Watson.Edmonton author a little bitter over Canadian rejection EDMONTON (CP) — It’s a modem tale of two cities which has left author June Bhatia confused and even a little bitter.Just four months ago Bhatia, 64, was the toast of Liverpool, England.Her latest book, By the Waters of Liverpool, the seventh published work written in Edmonton, sold in excess of 250,000 copies in one month in England.There were newspaper, radio and television interviews while she was in England.At one store, fans lined up for two hours to meet her.“And when I went out to shop I was just pounced on by people who wanted to talk,” she said.“I think I’ve done something to replace The Beatles.” But the attention ended when she came home.Back in her comfortable Edmonton bungalow, Bhatia finds the silence “absolutely deadening.” For the most part, she is seen as just another greyhaired mother and housewife, the rather retiring spouse of a tenured University of Alberta professor of theorectical physics.The lack of recognition her writing has received in the pro- vince she has called home for the last 28 years has left the native of England miffed.She has received achievement awards from the City of Edmonton and the province, but enjoyed none of the sustained attention given Rudy Wiebe or W.O.Mitchell.“I don’t think people here are interested in the basics, so to speak, of human suffering,” she said.“This is a rather well-off part of the world, relatively.And I deal with basics, with survival.In fact, all my books are about that, one way or another.” Knowlton Nash is welcome in the north. 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, August 19, 1983 WHAT'S ON Music Most of you arc glad to see I've survived another week of physical and mental abuse and am back on the job full force once again.I have a bet going with my publisher to see if I can get through this stuff without offending anybody so here goes.At the Hideaway this weekend, a band featuring Micky Hall, Chris Griffith, Jim Buck and Denis Lajoie is back again and they are a lot of fun.It’s like old home week for me to hear all those great Micky Hall tunes played the way they should be, and having grown up (as much as I'm going to, anyway) with Highstreet these songs bring back a lot of memories.The four musicians know each other very well both personally and musically and the result is good tight music that can make anybody want to dance.Next week Cal Picken has actually gone out of town to find The Jimmy James Band who comne in from Montreal (you know, that big pile of smog just west of Bromont).They’ll be playing from Thursday to Saturday.At the Del Monty this week the Larry Patten Band play tonight and tomorrow, and beginning next Thursday through Sunday Boogey Beastis back by popular demand for two weeks.The Del is going all the way with hard driving, no foolin', rock’n’roll.The Manoir Waterville is getting back into the scene again after a short break in a very big way with Bigfoot next Friday and Saturday.This band has always had a goad following at the Manoir, and I'm sure its return there will be greeted with Waterville’s usual serenity and good behaviour.Kentucky is seemingly doing very well at the Bretagne, also in Waterville, and they too are back for another two nights tonight and tomorrow.They play a very good and wide selection of all kinds of country music.They’ll be there for the rest of the month.The Bretagne also features Gordie Smith and Ian Crawford every Sunday between 3 and 7 p.m.Chez René has a dynamite band this coming week (Tuesday and Wednesday) in The Waller Family This large group does a fantastic show featuring the best of ‘funk’ hits, and the crowd just laps it up.If you can handle the sardine-city atmosphere of Chez René catch them — they’re great.At the Knowlton Pub another good band is playing, Sin City whose name belies the fact that they play a good selection of all the most popular tunes.Good sound for the Pub’s good-time atmosphere.The Band plays from Sunday to Wednesday evening.At Station 88 in South Stukely, Storm Harbour is back again this Saturday doing their good old country routine.At Salle Veilleuxin Sawyerville tonight and tomorrow, Rod Bray and the Countrymen finish off a week’s gig with two shows per night, at 9.30 and at 1 a m.At the Haskell Opera Housein Derby this Saturday, folksinger Chris Rawlings is giving a concert.Rawlings is an excellent performer and the show should be an extremely entertaining one.At Auberge Glen Sutton this weekend, tonight and tomorrow, The James Macdonald is making an appearance.This is an extremely tight and versatile outfit that has been very popular during previous visits.This weekend caps off the Bromont Festival and there are two great shows happening.Tonight, at Bromont’s St-François Xavier Church Celin and Pepe Romero will be entertaining on classical guitar.These fellows are very prestigious musicians in their own right and have performed all over, this being their second appearance at the Festival.Tickets are $8.By MICHAEL McDEVITT Tomorrow, the Festival wraps it up with a gala Country and Western Show at the Centre Sportif et Culturel at 8 p.m.The show features Bobby Hachey, The King Family, Georges Hamel, Marie-Lise et les Country Boys and The White River Bluegrass Band.That is a pretty strong lineup and it promises to be a pretty wild ending to a great music festival.At St-Benoit du Lac Abby tomorrow evening, there will be a piano recital by Clifford Benson at 4.He will be performing some Mozart, Brahms, and three of his own compositions.At 8.30 at the Salle Gilles-Lefebvre at the Orford Arts Centre Benson teams up with flautist William Bennet for another recital.We bid farewell to another beautiful season at the Orford Festival as well with this performance.Exhibitions There’s a real treat in store for flower lovers this weekend as the Emmanuel United Church Flower Show opens its doors tomorrow at 2 p.m.in Cowansville.The show I includes flower arrangements, house plants and all kinds of horticultural delights will be on display for perusal.Prizes will be awarded at 4.15, after which some arrangements and plants will be on sale.Tea will be served at 2.30 and is included in the $2.50 admission fee charged nonexhibitors.There is also a $2.50 exhibitors fee.Children wunder 12 will be admitted for $1.Georgeville potter Jason Krpan will be holding an exhibition this and every weekend until Labor Day featuring his latest works.The exhibition will be open from 11a.m.until 7 p.m both Saturdays and Suridays, and directions to the show are posted in both of Georgeville’s stores.The will be a special demonstration of weaving techniques at the Sutton Saturday Market tomorrow featuring local weavers Mary Amos and Marilyn Currin The market also features the sale of various kinds of handicrafts and collectibles as well as antiques and foods.The Market is open from 11 a.mn.until 4.30, and is located on the Legion Grounds in Sutton.The first Sherbooke International Painting Salon is still going full swing at the old CN Station on Depot Street in Sherbrooke.This fine exhibit features art and artists from all over the world, although Quebec painting is by far the best represented, which is to be expected for a first show.Some of the area’s finest painters are on display here as are painters from all over Canada and the United States.Admission is free, and this show provides an excellent opportunity to view a cross-section of modern painting.The Salon is open until August 28.The Beaulne Museum in Coaticook continues its summer exhibit of four fine artists from the Townships area.Available for viewing are the works of Yvan Dagenais, an exciting pastel painter; Lucille Hotte, who does fine enamel on copper work; Anne Huet, who works with hand made paper to produce lovely pasper- and flower sculpture; and Jeannine Bourret, an engraver.The Beaulne is an excellent little museum, as has arranged a great set of exhibitors who will be there until September 5.Festival Lac Massawippi opens a show on Tuesday evening featuring the work of Neave Foster, Virginia Powell and Marika Szabo at St.James Church Hall in Hatley.Szabo works in antique stained glass using the Tiffany technique.Powell is known for her beautiful landscape watercolors of the Eastern Townships region, and Foster paints in acrilics, oils and watercolor with a predominantly water-oriented theme.The vernissage is on Tuesday evening at 7.30, and the show continues until September 4.The exhibit is on display every day between 11 a m.and 4 p.m.At the Musée Laurier in Arthabaska, the fine art of bookbinding demonstrates that it is still alive and well with the exhibition of work by four Québec practitioners of the noble art.Marthe Forcier, Louise Blais-Séguin, Odette Drapeau-Milot, and Jean-Paul Beaudin all bring a distinct originality to this craft.The display remains until September 6.While at the Laurier, visitors can view the outdoor sculptures of Germain Bergeron, Michel Rodrigue, Auré-lio Sandonato, Ivanhoé (you’ve got to be kidding) Fortier, and Doménico Di Lazarro in a small but delightful sampling of this decorative medium.The Orford Arts Centre maintains a collection of permanent exhibits which pay homage to many art forms and handicrafts as well as stamps and a collection of art books.These exhibits are an interesting sidelight to any visit to the Centre and offer some genuinely fascinating glimpses into art forms (like mosaic) that do not benefit from a great deal of public exposure.There, now I think I got through that without offending anybody, but in case I’m wrong, the number is 569-6345 — ask for Charlie.Movies We have a complete change of programs this week, leaving me deeply sorry I didn’t get a chance to express some more ideology’ concerning John Travolta.Oh well, you can’t win ’em all.At the Cinéma Carrefour in Sherbrooke beginning this weekend War Games offers the disturbing scenario of a brilliant young computer wiz and electronics games freak tapping into the the U.S.Defence Department’s computer banks and bringing the planet close to the brink of nuclear war.This is reputed to be a particularly good example of this kind of film with fine production and acting being singled out.At the Capitol one of those teenage sex-fantasy movies comes to town, but again, the reviews for this one have been particularly good.It features a cast which includes Phoebe Cates (Paradise, FastTimesat Ridgemount High) and Mathew Modine as the leads, and it also stars Ray Walston (My Favorite Martian) and the beautiful Sylvia Kristel as the Sex Education teacher with the inspiring name Regina Copuletta.Sounds like more of the same to me, but I’m very subjective when it comes to personal opinions.Since my boss, who’s a fan of teenagers, asked, I’ll tell you the name too; Private School.In Cowansville Cinema Princess brings in a double bill featuring Octopussy and The Black Stallion Returns.Now I wiii try not to sound too much like an idiot, but it seems to me this is an odd pairing of movies.Octopussy—a wonderful James Bond film doesn’t sound to me like the kind of film that appeals to the same crowd that wants to see a movie about a horse.(In this case it’s reversed: I don’t like horses, but love some horse people).However, be that as it may.They are both passably good films.Down at the Derby-Port Drive-in this week we have sort of a mixed bag.Tonight and tomorrow, one of the great adventure films of all times returns: Raiders of the Lost Ark is by any stretch of the imagination one of the most fun films ever, and I have no doubt that some people who will go down to see it ha ve done so already at least three or four times.It really is an exciting film.The storyline is a bit much, butin a way that only seems to add to the fun.A very unpretentious movie.On Sunday, they have dug an oldie out of the attic for us in the form of The Paper Chase, another excellent film.It Peter, Paul and Mary are back on ETV on Sunday.¥ ^ r/A* i: tells the story of a bright and ambitious young fella from the American midwest and his attempts to excel during his first year at Harvard Law School.The film is wonderfully cast with Timothy Bottoms as the student, and Lindsay bionic woman’ Wagner as the romantic interest with a secret.John Houseman shines as the feisty old Contract Law professor who both terrifies and inspires his students.1 like this movie.From Monday through Thursday a movie which gained incredible notoriety even before its release will take up the main slot.Twilight Zone The Movie (as a opposed to Twilight Zone the dog food) gained instant fame when a tragic accident killed actor Vic Morrow and two teenagers who apparently were working in contravention of California child-labor laws.That case is still before the courts, and in the meantime the film is making a lot of money.I don't know if the movie can live up to the television show but without Rod Serling’s genius, that is unlikely.At the Norton Drive-in in Norton Vermont, tonight and tomorrow Octopussy is playing.On Sunday, a horror film called Gates of Hell, of which 1 know nothing.Finally, on Tuesday and Wednesday, outdoor smut returns with On White Satin starring Seka.who, to avoid being assinine, is probably a very loving wife and mother and a pillar of her particular community.Television Vermont ETV brings a delightful old British light drama to the screen with The Lavender Hill Mob starring Alec Guinness and Stanley Holloway as two rather unlikely perpetrators of a million dollar bank heist.British moviemaking at its best.On Saturday at 6.30 p.m.CBC presents a documentary entitled Special Kids which looks at three methods now used in special education in Ontario, comparing segregated and integral schooling.At 11.37 also on Channel 6, the late show features Far from the Madding Crowd, based on the novel by Thomas Hardy.In this romantic drama Julie Christie co-stars with Peter Finch, Alan Bates and Terence Stamp in the story of a beautiful young farm heiress’s complicated love life and unhappy marriage.Sunday is a great music lover’s night on Vermont ETV which starts off at 7 with the Beach Boys’ 20th Anniversary Special, a repeat of a show filmed to commemorate the anniversary of the Beach Boys’ first record way back in 1961.It includes film from performances over the years culminating in a special outdoor concert appearance in Washington D.C.that attracted over half a million of James Watt’s undesirables.At 8, Evening at the Pops presents a concert by those legends of popular American folk music Peter,Paul and Mary.The group is joined by John Williams and the Boston Pops for a concert of old classics and some new tunes which demonstrate that wealth and middle age have not dampened the social conscience of a group which transcended the Beatnik and hippy eras.At 10.20 Cab Calloway leads a memorable tour of the ¦ War Games hits the Carrefour this week.Harlem of the 30s and 40s when the area was ruled by an aristocracy with names like Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Nat ‘King’ Cole.Clips of performers like Lena Horne and Fats Waller are also featured.On CTV’s Monday Night Movies this week a little bit of silliness breaks out all over in the form of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother.This movie attempts to recreate the magic formed by the team of Gene Wilder, Madeleine Kahn and Marty Feldman in Young Frankenstein, but without the guiding hand of Mel Brooks falls a little bit short of that ambitious goal.It’s a good piece of entertainment anyway, however.The movie airs at 9 p.m.Some major competition must be decided upon Tuesday when two excellent programs air at 8 p.m.On Vermont ETV Nova features an amazing documentary called The Miracle of Life.This incredible film follows the development of a human fetus from the time of conception through gestation up to and including birth, using the latest in photographic techniques.This straightforward presentation brings the mystery of this process up front and allows us to share in what is truly a miracle.The educational value ot this program is immeasurable.The program faces some competition, however, from CBC which airs the second of a series of four Jacques Cousteau specials also at 8.In this program Cousteau sails up the St.Lawrence River where they rescue a whale tangled dangerously in fishing nets.The crew of the Calypso also succeeds in finding the wreck of, among others, The Empress of Canada which sank off Rimouski in 1914.Vermont ETV gives us some more nature documentaries on Wednesday with Australia's Animal Mysteries at 8, a National Geographic Special which examines the unique forms of life found only on the isolated continent.This is followed by Following the Tundra Wolf at 9.10 which follows this misunderstood creature across 500 miles of the north in his quest for food.The north remains the theme at 10.15 when North to the Top of the World follows a couple in a daring journey to Canada’s High Arctic islands.The show features excellent photography of the harsh but breathtaking scenery in the last frontier.At midnight, Channel 12 presents The Three Musketeers, the 1974 comic rendition of Alexandre Dumas’ story of love and adventure in pre-revolutionary France.The delightful cast features Michael York, Raquel Welch, Oliver Reed, and Charlton Heston in an unlikely, but wonderful performance as Cardinal Richelieu.On Thursday, for those who can handle a little bi-culturalism Radio-Québec is presenting a one-hour biography of Colette, one of the liberating forces of modern French literature.This program offers a singularly documentary look at a remarkable woman who made an indelible mark on her society.At 8, CBC presents a National Film Board portait of Hugh MacLennan, a Townships resident who is perhaps Canada’s most influential living writer.His works have examined Canadian society with a critical eye and have had a major impact on how we see ourselves.His Two Solitudes, about the problems of a bicultural society has given the name to one of our country’s most pressing problems.At 9, CBC presents the first in a four-part series called ,f : rw ¦/ it 9! Ht TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, August 19, 198^ 9 WHAT'S ON Australia’s Animal Mysteries — Wednesday at 8.Women of the Sun in which the history of the conflict between the aboriginal peoples of Australia and white settlers is told through the eyes of four womwn.In tonight’s episode, Alinta — the Flame a young girl finds two half-drowned convicts on the beach — an encounter that spells the beginning of the end for a culture that is over 50,000 years old.Radio Taking into consideration who my most avid readers appear to be, I must tell you that Quirks and Quarks, tomorrow on CBC Radio at 12.05 answers a number of oft-asked science related questions including Why do dogs have cold noses?’ (I really do like the critters you know, particularly puppies.) At 2.05 on CBC Stereo, Saturday Afternoon at the Opera presents the San Francisco Opera Company presents Na-bucco by Verdi.This opera tells the story of the plight of the Jews under Babylonian captivity and the conversion of the Baylonian king Nebuchadnezzar over the strenuous objection of his daughter.At 7.05 Saturday Stereo Theatre presents Black Sheep, a play by Hans Boggild about a man who returns home for Christmas to discover that his aging father still holds him responsible for an accident which claimed his twin brother’s life.At 10.10 on CBC Radio Anthology features the reading of The Unknown Woman, a short story by Rachel Wyatt Also a visit by Morley Callaghan and the reading of some war poetry in commemoration of the anniversary of the suicidal debacle of Dieppe where, 41 years ago, 60 per cent of a 5,000-man Canadian raiding party failed to return.On Sunday at 9 a.m Sunday Morning features an interview with Canadian author and Governor General’s Award winning author Alice Munro whose better-known works include Lives of Girls and Women and Who Do You Think You Are?.At 1.05 p.m.Through the Ears of George Martin focusses on the years 1966-67, when Martin’s most prestigious group, The Beatles, began to experiment along new and untried lines.The two albums that most signified the change the group was about to inflict upon contemporary music, Revolver and Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearets Club Band, are examined.At 4.05 on The Scales of Justice, on CBC Radio The Black Thread examines the case of an East-Indian immigrant who kills his Hungarian girlfriend in Regina, and is convicted of a reduced charge of manslaughter because the jury believes he may have been provoked.When the Crown appeals, however, the Supreme Court rules, that the defence of manslaughter should not have been available to the defendant and a new trial is ordered.The screenplay was written by Dr.Ian Malcolm an author and forensic psychiatrist.At 7.05 Sunday Stereo Theatre completes its broadcast of The Lord of the Rings.In the final two episodes.The Hobbits, having arranged the defeat of Sauron the Dark Lord find their adventures are not over when they return home to find their beloved Shire in the hands of some of the evil remnants of the just-completed struggle.At 9.05 on CBC Radio Ideas Presents offers part three of Indian Life at Grassy Narrows, with a look at the mercury poisoning of the English-Wabigon River and the manner in which this tragedy was dealt with by a largely uncaring or ignorant white society. 10-TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, August 19, 1983 - , ^ This week's TV Listings for this week s television programs as supplied by Compulog Carp While we make every effort to ensure their accuracy they ore subject to change without notice STATIONS LISTED ¦\ e (BFT ¦ Montreal (Radio Canada) *» WC’AX - Burlington, Yt.(CBS) B WPTZ- Plattsburgh, N.Y.(NBC) O ( KMT - Montreal (C BO O (TILT* Sherbrooke (TVA) O WMTW - Poland Spring, Me.(ABO O CKSII - SherbriMike ( Radio Canada) O CFTM ¦ Montreal (TVA) 09 CFCK • Montreal (CTV) ® Vermont ETV - Burlington y Saturday Movie Rttlngt Outstanding .***?Excellant ., A*** Vary Good .AA* Good .AAk, Not Bad .AA Fair .AW Poor .A MORNING 5:30 O NEW YOU 8:00© UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR 8:30 O PRIME OF YOUR LIFE © CIRCLE SQUARE 7:00 Q WONDER WOMAN O DR SNUGGLES Sports SATURDAY (NBC)BASEBALL Primary game: Kansas City Royals at Baltimore Orioles; alternate game: Atllanta Braves at Chicago * Cabs.(NBC)GOLF Semifinal round coverage of the Sammy Davis Jr.Greater Hartford Open from the Wethersfield Country Club in Wethersfield, Conn.Lee Trevino, Charlie Jones, Bob Goalby, John Brodie and Jay Randolph will report.(NBC)GOLF Semi-final round coverage of the World Championship of Women’s Golf from the Shaker Heights Country CLub in Shaker Heights, Ohio.(ABC)SPORTSBEAT (ABC) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (ABC)SPORTSBEAT (CBS) PAN AMERICAN GAMES Continuation of the IX Pan American Games from Caracas, Venezuela.(CBS) FOOTBALL Pre-season game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Green Bay Packers, with Pat Summerall and John Madden providing the commentary, live, from Green Bay, Wis.SUNDAY (CBS)PAN AMERICAN GAMES Coverage of major events of the IX Pan American Games from Caracas, Venezuela.(NBC)GOLF Final-round coverage of the Sammy Davis Jr.Greater Hartford Open from the Wethersfield Country Club.Wethersfield, Conn.(NBC)GOLF Final-round coverage of World Championship of Women's Golf, from Shaker Heights Country Club, Shaker Heights, O.(NBC)SPORTSWORLD Highlights: Coverage of Ihe Summer National Drag Races from Englishtown, N.J.; and women's survival run in the Survival of the Fittest competition.MONDAY (ABC) MONDAY NIGHT BASEBALL FRIDAY (NBC)NFL FOOTBALL Pre-season tilt between Los Angeles Raiders and Cleveland Browns.© ROCKET ROBIN HOOD fB GREAT SPACE COASTER 7:30 O THAT TEEN SHOW © 100 HUNTLEY STREET S) GREAT SPACE COASTER 8:00 Q POPEYE & OLIVE O THE FLINTSTONES O © SUPERFRIENDS (B TO DANCE FOR GOLD The 1983 2nd International Ballet competition in Jack-son, Mississippi features performances and behind-the-scenes looks at individual dancers, the city of Jackson, the competition organization and the international ballet school 8:30 Q PANDAMONtUM O THE SHIRT TALES O © PAC-MAN / LITTLE RASCALS / RICHIE RICH © ARAB WORLD 8:45 Q MIRE ET MUSIQUE 9:00 © O BELLE ET SEBASTIEN O MEATBALLS & SPAGHETTI O SMURFS © UNTAMED WORLD Various members of the cat family - including lions, leopards, pumas and cheetahs - are highlighted.(R) 9:30 O Q CANDY O BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER Q GRONIGO & CIE.O © PAC-MAN © WRESTLING 10:00 O O QUATRE AMIS FANTASTIQUES O SCOOBY DOO O © SCOOBY DOO / PUPPYQ Q) NOVA The Pleasure Of Finding Things Out" A candid portrait ol Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman is presented.(R) p 10:30 O O YOGI ET CIE.Q THE DUKES Q THE GARY COLEMAN SHOW O Œ) GOLDORAK © MACPHERSON Janet.Jim and Paul Coburn enjoy a more down-to-earth lifestyle at a cattle ranch 11:00 0 O LES HEROS DU SAMEDI 0 BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER 0 INCREDIBLE HULK / AMAZING SPIDER MAN O © LA FOURMI ATOMIQUE O © MORK & MINDY / LAVERNE & SHIRLEY Q) SYSTEMS ORGANIZATION 11:15 Q GOOD MORNING USA’s ‘Sports Probe’ offers solid journalism SPORTS JOURNALISM — A new era of substantive sports journalism on television has dawned with the emergence of “Sports Probe" on USA Cable Network.The series airs on Fridays at 7:30 (ET) and is repeated at various times throughout the week.The show, which made its debut on Oct.3, 1980, has won an Award for Cablecasting Excellence (ACE) given by the National Cable Television Association.The concept behind the half-hour show is simple.Each week, host Larry Merchant and a panel of experts confront a major, newsmaking sports personality in an attempt to uncover the complete stories behind everyday headlines.Lawrence F.O'Brien, commissioner of the National Basketball Association and a guest on the "Sports Probe” hot seat, was one of the first to recognize the significance of the series’ distinctive qualities."I think this a format that is long overdue," he said."The concept is terrific.What do you get on the television sports news?This show gets beyond merely giving the scores of games and brief wrapups.'Sports Probe’ gets in to subject matter and topics that are important." When Arthur Ashe, former tennis star and captain of the United States Davis Arthur Ashe Cup team, was a guest on ''Sports Probe," he revealed that he had been successful in his efforts to prevent a proposed $1 million-plus tennis match between Bjorn Borg and John McEnroe in South Africa."Sports Probe is a show that makes sports news, rather than being content with reporting it," said Sanford H.Fisher, who along with Bob Briner is executive producer of the series.Host Larry Merchant's credentials include 20 years as a sports columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News and New York Post, two years as a sports commentator and producer for NBC-TV, radio work with WNEW in New York and a television stint with WBZ in Boston.He now writes a general interest colurYtn for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner and has written three books.11:30 0 SESAME STREET O LES CHEVAUX DU SOLEIL © ADELE S) PERSONAL FINANCE AFTERNOON 12:00 0 O UNIVERS INCONNU O GILLIGAN'S PLANET O CARTOON FRIENDS O © CINE WEEKEND ?"Propre a rien" (1950, Comedie) Bob Hope, Lucille Ball Une femme riche trouve les mésaventures dans l'ouest O WILD KINGDOM Œ WEEKEND SPECIAL "The Ghost Of Thomas Kempe" A 17th-century ghost tries to recruit an unwilling youngster (Shane Sinutko) to become his apprentice.(Part 2) (R) Q ® PERSONAL FINANCE 2:30 O FAT ALBERT O WILD KINGDOM O ® AMERICAN BANDSTAND Guests Stray Cats.(B THIS WEEK IN FOOTBALL © PERSONAL FINANCE 1:00 Q Q D'HIER A DEMAIN O PAN AMERICAN GAMES Scheduled events: basketball, swim ming and diving, boxing and gymnastics (live from Caracas, Venezuela).O BASEBALL Regional coverage of Kansas City Royals at Baltimore Orioles or Atlanta Braves at Chicago Cubs Q CONSUMERSCOPE Topics: dry cleaner mediation board; office environment: humidity; care of indoor plants; protection for consumers in dealing with door-to-door sales.CD TENNIS "Player’s Challenge Semifinals" Top female players in the world compete (live from York University in Toronto, Ont,).© ACROSS THE FENCE 1:30 O TWILIGHT ZONE 0 MUSIC MAKERS IN CONCERT © AMERICA S TOP TEN © VICTORY GARDEN Bob Thomson compares the progress of the more than 60 varieties of tomato plants in the suburban garden.2:00 0 Q MELI-MELO O SKIPPER AND COMPANY O CD BASEBALL © GLEN CAMPBELL MUSIC SHOW © MOVIE "Broken Lance” (1954, Western) Spencer Tracy, Richard Widmark.Conflicts erupt in the family of a Texas cattle baron, weakening his power.2:30 O O UNE FENETRE SUR LE MONDE O RYAN’S FANCY ON CAMPUS O SUPERCHARGERS © BARBARA MANDRELL & THE MANDRELL SISTERS 3:00 0 O JEUX D'ETE DU QUEBEC O NFL FOOTBALL "Pre-Season Game" Philadelphia Eagles at Green Bay Packers O SPORTSWEEKEND Scheduled: Canadian Windsurfing Championships highlights (from Brome Lake in Quebec City, Que); Esso Cup Swim Meet (from Montreal.Que.); Canadian Diving Championships highlights (from Montreal, Que), British Motorcycle Grand Prix; World Rhythmic Gymnastics Selection Meet (from Toronto, Ont,).O LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS "Entertainment Tonight" reporter Robin Leach interviews stars on location all over the world to get a look at the lifestyles of the rich and famous; featuring Liberace, Roger Moore.Loretta Lynn, Lin da Evans, Rod Stewart and Princess Caroline 3:30© THE ROAD TO LOS ANGELES 4:00 0 PGA GOLF "Sammy Davis Jr.Greater Hartford Open" Third round (live from the Wethersfield.Conn.Country Club).© WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: the Molson 300 Late Model Stock Car Race (from Cayuga Speedway in Ontario); the Ironman Triathlon (from Hawaii); the Royal Bank Equestrian Challenge (from Spruce Meadows, Alb ).© SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons host an informative look at what's new at the movies.4:30 © SPORTSBEAT © SEA POWER 5:00 0 BAGATELLE 0 GOLF World Cham-pionship Of Women's Golf" Third round (live from the Shaker Heights, Ohio Country Club).O © AU ROYAUME DES ANIMAUX O © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS SPECIAL EDITION Scheduled: The Summer Special Olympics (live from Baton Rouge, La) OLA LUTTE © SUPERSOCCER 5:30 0 © LES P'TITS BONSHOMMES 5:45 0 © LE 6/49 / LA QUOTIDIENNE EVENING 8:00 O LES ECRIVAINS FRANÇAIS O © NEWS 0 ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK Featured: Jerry Lee Lewis talks about marriage; Don Adams' new cartoon based on "Get Smart the new surge ol dancing in movies.Q CBC NEWS O © JEUNESSE O LES PIERRAFEU SB AGELESS AUTO 8:30 0 Q LE MONDE MERVEILLEUX DE DISNEY O CBS NEWS O SPECIAL KIDS This documentary explores special education in Ontario O COUNTDOWN TO THE CUP © MUSIC VISION ffi HAPPY DAYS AGAIN © SAY IT WITH SIGN 7:00 O HEE HAW 0 SOLID GOLD O THE FACTS OF LIFE Mrs Garrett’s jogging partner (Murray Mathe-son) unexpectedly asks her to marry him.(R) Q 0 © SOIREE CANADIENNE O THOSE AMAZING ANIMALS © DIFF’RENT STROKES Arnold is shocked when he finds a beautiful woman in Mr.Drummond’s bedroom (R) ?© LIBERTY MUTUAL SPECIAL © THIS OLD HOUSE The kitchen walls are plastered, the chimney Compiled by the staff of the World Almanac Sports I.E.i.Which pitcher has won the most major league all-star games?Which team drafted Clyde Drexler in the 1983 NBA draft?Which AFC quarterback completed the most passes In 1982?Which NFL team drafted Dan Marino in the 1983 NFL draft?Name the two active major league pitchers who have been 20-game winners in both major leagues.Name the two NBA players who have twice been ctiosen MVP in the playoffs.In which sport was Chris Lybbert the leading money winner in 1982?8.Who won the 1983 Indy 500?9.Who finished second?10.Name the Chicago Bulls' first pick in the 1983 NBA draft.2.3.4.5.6.7.ueejQ Aeupis 01 jesumv '6 BA8US uiox -g oepoy ¦/ uosuqop PiBeyFpeea shum '9 uqop Aiuuioi fueiusoo» Ajjep -g liuem y 81Z 'uoszepuy ue» t puBRJOd Z £'zetuoo Aue-| l sja/wsuv Saturday TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, Aunust 19, I9K$ II gels some attention and woik starts on the crumbling Iront porch (R) n 7:30 O O CINEMA Aw A "Les Muppeis: Ca c'est du cinema" (1979, Come die) Met Brooks.Charles Burning.Les aventures diverses des personnages du Muppet Show O SEEING IT OUR WAY "Ernest Lindner” (B CIRCUS Csl Dodd and Shensse Laurence wet ' come single trapeie artist Senonta Erendira, juggler Mike Williams, the single-linger balancing Great Duvall, and the Mary Ruth Canine Aristocrats (R) œ WILD AMERICA Bighorn!" A band of wild Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep is observed through the seasons.Irom one spring into the next.(R) 8:00 O MOVIE AAA "A Rumor 01 War” (1980, Drama) Brad Davis.Keith Carradine The Vietnam War experiences of Philip Caputo, who later documented hia lira) hand view ol the horrors of combat in a Pulitzer Prize-winning book, are dramatized (R) O DtFF’RENT STROKES Feeling that Arnold is too young to go on a lirst date alone.Mr.Drumr.ond insists that Willis and Kimberly go along.(R) ?O MOVE AAA Tfe Tenth Month" (1979, Drama) Carol Burnett, Keith Mitchell A middle-aged, divorced woman becomes pregnant and decides to keep the baby O CD LES AMBITIEUX (2E) Alors conseiller juridique du president Nixon.John Dean raconte les laits entourant la crise du Watergate, et les moments dilliciles qu'ils vécurent, lui et sa femme Movies SATURDAY (CBS) SATURDAYKIGHT MÔVIE “THE WIZ" (1978) Diana Ross.Michael Jackson.Nipsey Russell, Ted Ross, Lena Horne, Richard Pryor.A lavish musical mat retells the story ot the Wizard ol Oz in contemporary terms ot a young Harlem schoolteacher who is whisked away into an extravagant world ol fantasy SUNDAY (NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE TOWERING INFERNO" (1974) Paul Newman, Steve McQueen.William Holden.Faye Dunaway.An action drama about a maior tire that breaks out in a new skyscraper as the building is being dedicated.(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE BIG FIX” (1978) Richard Dreyfuss.1960s campus radical-turned-private eye becomes involved in murder mystery.Burt Reynolds ponders the meaning of life in 'The End," a comedy airing Monday, Aug.22 on "NBC Monday Night at the Movies." MONDAY “THE END" (1978) Burl Reynolds.Dorn DeLuise.Sally Field, Joanne Woodward.Kristy McNichol.A satirical comedy about a philanderer who is startled by the revelation from his doctor that he has a short time to live Torn by tear, resignation and misery, and alter a series of mishaps, he finds a new perspective on life TUESDAY (CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE GIFT OF LIFE” (1982) Susan Dey, Paul LeMat, Edward Herrmann.Cassie Yates.The story of a young wife, the mother ol two, who undertakes a contractual surrogate pregnancy for another woman and encounters severe family and social disapproval WEDNESDAY (CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “CRISIS AT CENTRAL HIGH" (1981) Joanna Woodward, Charles Durnmg, Henderson Forsythe.William Russ.A powerful drama, based on the journals of Elizabeth Huckaby, a high school teacher and girls' vice principal, that recreates one of integration's earliest flashpoints, which exploded into a national issue when nine black sludenls were ordered by the Supreme Court of the United States to be admitted into the previously all-white student body FRIDAY (ABC) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE BEST LITTLE GIRL IN THE WORLD” (1981) Melanie Mayron, Jenniler Jason Leigh, Charles Durning.A dramatic look at a teen-age girl afflicted with anorexia nervosa V.THE WIZ Diana Ross stars as Dorothy, a young Harlem schoolteacher who is whisked away to a world of fantasy, in "The Wiz," which CBS rebroadcasts as a special movie presentation on SATURDAY, AUG.20 CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME Maude.O G0 T J.HOOKER Romano is scorned by his fellow officers after refus ing to shoot a juvenile cop killer at point-blank range (R)n ©MOVIE The Warriors" (1979, Drama) Michael Beck, Dorsey Wright.Blamed for the murder of a charismatic leader at a New York street gang convention, members of a Coney Island gang must fight their way back to their home turf.€£ ALL-STAR SWING REUNION Teddy Wilson (piano), Clark Terry (horn).Red Norvo (vibes), Zoot Sims (sax), Louis Belson (drums) and Mel Hinton (bass) perform a concert of swing music at Artpark in Lewiston, N Y.0:30 0 THE FACTS OF LIFE Natalie visits a military academy to watch her boyfriend (John P Navin Jr.) fight the toughest boy in the school (R) 9:00 O NFL FOOTBALL Pre-Season Game" Pittsburgh Steelers at Dallas Cowboys O © LOVE BOAT A woman (Mary Martin) brightens the lives of a former flame (Max Showalter) and his son, two beauties (Caren Kaye.Judy Landers) compete for the same man (Ben Murphy), and Gopher gets involved in a feud between a man and his father-in-law (Milton Berle).(R) ?9:30© JUKEBOX SATURDAY NIGHT Eddie Albért hosts a three-hour musical spectacular focusing on the singers of the swing era; special guests include Betty Hutton, Bob Crosby, Margaret Whiting, Keely Smith, Helen O’Connell and Jack Leonard.10:00 0 O BIZARRE.BIZARRE O NIGHT STORY The Captain's Story" O © LE VRAI VISAGE O © ABC NEWS CLO-SEUP "The Cocaine Cartel" In locations including Bogota.Colombia and Miami, Fla , correspondent Bill Redeker traces the "laundering" of billions of dollars used to purchase drugs © DINAH CHRISTIE PRESENTS CANADA "The Best Of.All Canada" 10:30 0 O LE TELE JOURNAL / SPORTS O WAYNE AND SHUSTER The source of the mighty Don River in Toronto is traced, and Wayne tries to infiltrate a women's group plotting to take over the world.(R) Q O © LES NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS 11:00 O NEWS O THE NATIONAL O CINEMA A % "Pascual Duarte" (1976, Drame) Jose Luis Gomez, Diana Perez de Guzman.§©*')€ NEWS CTV NATIONAL NEWS 11:06® CINE-NUIT "La Vie passionnée de Vincent Van Gogh" (1956, Drame) Kirk Douglas, Anthony Quinn.Les grands mo(ment8 de la vie de Van Gogh jusqu'a son suicide a I age de trente ans O CINE SOIR **'4 "Le diable par la queue' (1969.Comedie) Madeleine Renaud, Yves Montand.Ruinee une vieille marquise a transforme en hôtellerie le chateau ancestral.11:15 0 NEWS O BENNY HILL © ROCK N’ ROLL TON [TE 11:20© NEWS 11:30 O MOVIE ** "The Law" (1974, Drama) Judd Hirsch, John Beck.A sensational homicide trial leads to unsavory maneuverings behind the scenes 11:35 0 MOVIE A AAA Far From The Madding Crowd" (1967, Drama) Julie Christie.Terence Stamp A willful young farm girl betters herself, but destroys three men in the process 11:45 0 SOLID GOLD 12:00 O NEWS © MOVIE AAA "The Revolutionary" (1970, Drama) Jon Voight, Jennifer Salt A college youth is slowly drawn into the role of political revolutionary.12:30 0 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Host: Michael Keaton.Guest: Joe Jackson (R) © GREAT PERFORMANCES "Bndeshead Revisited Julia" 12:45 O MUSIC MAGAZINE 1:10 0 LES NOCTAMBULES A A'?"Trahison a Stockholm" (1971, Drame) Ken Clark, Beda Loncar 1:15 0 CINEMA A AS "La Colline des bottes" (1969, Western) Woody Strode.Bud Spencer.Un pistolero se réfugié dans un roulotte d'un cirque ambulant, apres qu'il est blesse par des assaillants mystérieux O SHA NA NA 1:30© WILD AMERICA "Bighorn!" A band of wild Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep is observed through the seasons, from one spring into the next (R) 1:45 0 SHA NA NA 2:05© MOVIE A A "Mikey And Nicky" (1977.Drama)Peter Falk.John Cassavetes A gang of thugs and hit men run a small district in Chicago 2:15 O WEEKEND REPORT 4:25 © THE DUKES OF HAZ-ZARD Tele ^ Canada Cousteau in Canada Jacques Cousteau's voyages through Canadian waters In the research vessel Calypso will air on CBC In tour parts on Tuesdays.Each one-hour program.Introduced by George McLean, takes viewers on an adventurous journey from the Gulf ol St Lawrence to the head ot Lake Superior Along the way.Cousteau and his crew dive lor sunken wrecks, join the great ice-breakers that keep the waterways open, and tilm a variety of marine lile On the show airing Aug 23.divers succeed in treeing a trapped whale, and the Calypso finds the wreck ot the Empress ot Canada, which went down in 1914 near Rimouski, Que Ch»ck Mating* for local achoduMng.TV I.Q.By Mlchetl* Morgan 1.What was tha name oftha'SO* tarlaa in which Fay Wray portrayed Catharine Morrison?2.Who portrayed Abraham Lincoln Jonas In thassries, "The Law »nd Mr.lones”?3.Who wrote and sings tha theme song from "The Dukes of Hazzard"?4.Where did Darrin Stephans work on "Bewitched' 5.In which early 1960s series did Warren Beatty appear as Milton Armitage?6.In which '70s Western did Harry Morgan portray Ooc Amos Coogan?7.Who hosted the 1950s discussion series, "Life Begins af 80'"> 8.Who portrayed Elizabeth in "Life with Elizabeth"! 9.Name TV's longest-running soap opera.,,moijouioi JO/t/ueas,, 6 Mteg '8 Ajjeg xoer L ^Aasweg x>h„ -g .shod woo jo soaoj Àueyv am,, s Aou®6e pe ifjoa mon e ‘ejej.pue uueftDft mp sBujuuep uoi/e/vt ç ejouiimM seuiep z •»il jo apuj aifi,, •(.SJ3M.SUV L 2 3 4 K 5 6 7 1 8 M 9 Q To 11 o B ?12 13 1^1 15 16 17 Ï8 19 ^ 20 ?21 » 22 23 24 Hi o 25 26 27 'v' 28 29 30 M ¦¦ 31 0 o 32 o 33 34 35 36 5 E o ^37 38 b 39 40 n ?42 O ACROSS 1 " - Essence" 5 "Evening at 9 "The Odd Couple" 10 Much About Nothing 12 Tiny units 15 " You're on Candid Camera" 18 Ancient letter 20 An image 21'' and Sympathy 22 Month of the new season- abbr.24 Hazzard family 25 Hair style 28 Author Fleming DOWN 2 Can Win 3 He was Gen.Blankenship; mit 4 Female sheeps 5 Harrington and Paulsen 6 A Davis: mit 7 ••— Woman 8 Open 1 1 Oldie " Questions 13 Egyptian king 14 Audrey or Jayne 16 "— Impossible" 1 7 Cut off 19 " Good Look" 23 Bird of prey (clue to puzzle answer) 31 Theater pioneer Marcus 26 "Run — your Life" 32 Leave out 34 A peak (clue to puzzle answer) 36 "— Landing" 37 Long time 39 Desire 4 1 Cosby/Culp series 42 Dines 27 He was Clark Kent 29 Add up 30 Young louse 33 Russian ruler 35 Love Sidney" star 36 Actress Ballard 38 Out of print abbr 40 He was Lou Grant: mit Answer to puzzle on page 16 V oooo ooooo 12—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.August 19, 1!W3 Sunday MOflNMO 6 00 O NEW ZOO REVUE © UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR B ao © LET S 00 r 00 Q LONE RANGER / ZOR RO O COMMUNITY 8 © THE WORLD TOMOR ROW © JONNY QUEST 7:30 O KWICKY KOALA O JIMMY SWAQGART © DAY OF DISCOVERY © THE JETSONS 7 46 O MIRE ET MUSIQUE 8 00 O WONDER WOMAN O BAGATELLE © JIMMY SWAGQART ©SPORT BILLY © SESAME STREET (R) 8 30 ËI ORAL ROBERTS O SUNDAY MASS © JIMMY SWAQGART 8:60 O GOOD MORNING S 00 O O WOODY LE PIC O SUNDAY MORNING 0 DAY OF DISCOVERY O O THIS IS THE LIFE O AU CENTUPLE © ORAL ROBERTS 1:15© SESAME STREET (R) >30 fa O LES FANTOMES DU CHATEAU 0 O IT IS WRITTEN O MUSIC AND THE SPOKEN WORD © REX HUMBARD © JIM WHITTINGTON 10:00 0 O LE JOUR DU SEIG NEUR 0 ROBERT SCHULLER O STAR TREK O IL EST ECRIT O DAY OF DISCOVERY © HELLENIC PROGRAM © THE WORLD TOMOR ROW 10:30 O YOU CAN QUOTE ME O LES GRANDS NOMS DU COUNTRY O JERRY FALWELL © C'ETAIT L'BON TEMPS © TELEDOMENICA © CELEBRATING CHRIST © CROSSROADS: VERMONT'S PUBLIC TELEVI SION MAGAZINE 11:0000 FILMS D'ART O ALICE O ELEMENTARY BRAIN STRAIN O LES ETOILES DE LA LUTTE © MATINEE AT THE BIJOU Featured Jean Hersholt in "The Courageous Dr.Christian" (1940): a 1936 cartoon; a 1945 short starring Frank Sinatra, and Chapter 5 ol "Lost City 01 The Jungle" (1946) (R) 11:30 O FACE THE NATION O FAST FORWARD O © THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY AFTERNOON 12:00 O O LA SEMAINE VERTE O WONDER WOMAN 0 FOCUS '83 O FROM NOW ON Q © BON DIMANCHE 12:30 O MEET THE PRESS O PERFORMACE O COMMUNITY 8 © FORUM © THE LAWMAKERS Lilt du Wertheimer, Cokie Roberte end Peul Duke present an up to the mm ule summary ot Congre* aionel activities 100 QO AINSI VA LA VIE O PAN AMERICAN GAMES Scheduled events basketball, swim mmg and diving, bosing and gymnastics (live Irom Caracas.Venetuelt).8 THAT TEEN SHOW MEETING PLACE Rab bi Michael Stroh officiates at Temple Har-Zion In Thornhill, Ont (R) O MOVIE **h "Viva Las Vegas" (1964.Musi cal) Elvis Presley, Ann Maigret A Las Vegas swimming instructor becomes the objecl ol allection lor a sports car nut andhia Italian Inend © TENNIS Player s Challenge Finals' Top female players in the world compete (live from York University in Toronto, Ont ) OUR TOWN OD WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 1:30 eS CHRISTIAN CHILDRENS FUND Œ WALL STREET WEEK "A Long Hot Summer” Guest host: Carter Randall.Guest Martin D Sass, president, M D Sass Investors Services, Inc 2:00 O O UNIVERS DES SPORTS Q PGA GOLF "Sammy Davis Jr Greater Hartford Open" Final round (live Irom the Wethersfield, CT Country Club) O LIFE ANOTHER WAY O (D CINE WEEKEND + + b "La Famille Macahan" (1976, Western) James Arness.Eva Marie Saint Au cours des années i860, et devant l'imminence de la guerre, une famille de la Virginie decide d aller s'établir en Oregon Q) BERNSTEIN / BEETHOVEN Leonard Bernstein and the Vienna Philharmonic perform Beethoven's "The Creatures Of Prometheus, Opus 43" and Symphony No.8 in F Major, Opus 93.(R) 2:30 ® GLEN CAMPBELL MUSIC SHOW 3:00 O WALT DISNEY Baseball Fever" Animated Goofy and Donald Duck introduce seven classic cartoons.including "Casey At The Bat," that illustrate various aspects of the game of baseball.(R) O MOVIE "The Story Of Dr.Wassell" (1944, Drama) Gary Cooper, Laraine Day.Dr.Roy-don M.Wassell.a heroic Navy man, rescues American troops from the Japanese.© BARBARA MANDRELL & THE MANDRELL SISTERS © THE MAGIC OF DANCE "Tha Magmlieent Bagmmng" Dame Matgol Fonteyn reveals Ihe back stage secrets ol an t8lh century Ihealer during a visit to Versailles, the place ol ballet's royal birth (R) 4:00 0 O FOOTBALL CANADIEN l es Stampeders de Calgary reçoivent les Tiger Cals de Hamilton O SPORTSWORLD 0 CFL FOOTBALL Hamil ton Tiger Cats at Calgary Stampeders © TRAVEL '83 Featured Algarve Goll © FM TV © NOVA "The Pleasure 01 Finding Things Oui" A candid portrait ol Nobel Prue winning physicist Richard Feynman is pre sented
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