The record, 18 mai 1984, Supplément 1
mJL p-f-'ï V—N, w.: â: '•*& 5^;*S ¦*» % '^, ; \ I ^_ % ^ X :,.; •sürSH^t v # *#v 2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984 ‘Old timey’, ‘Hillbilly’ or Country it’s all the same Before country music was called “country," it was known as "country and western,” and before that it was called "old-timey” or "hillbilly.” It’s not known how the term hillbilly originated, but it was widely used at the turn of the century to describe backwoods people of the southern United States.We do know, however, how the term became associated with the folk songs of rural southerners.In January 1925, a string band recorded in New York City.A1 Hopkins led the group, which didn't have a name.When record company executiveRalph Peer asked Hopkins what the group should be called, he replied: ‘‘Call the band anything you want.We are nothing but a bunch of hillbillies from North Carolina and Virginia anyway.” Peer ignored Hopkins’s lack of Country^ ^ Music ,c f if ( vi By DAVE MULHOLLAND self-esteem and named the band The Hillbillies.The name spread from there, although some record companies thought “hillbilly" was derogatory and used the term "old-timey music.” At the time hillbilly music was confined mostly to the rural south, but in the mid-1930s the Hollywood western became popular and such “cowboy ” singers as Tex Ritter, Gene Autry and Roy Rogersbegan to have a strong influence in spreading the popularity of rural folk songs.The term “western” became associated with the music, rivalling “hillbilly,” which was frowned on because of its backwoods, hayseed connotation.“Western music,” on the other hand, suggested a style develo ped by cowboys but, in fact, the performers weren’t real cowboys and real cowboys had little influence on western music.Western music had a parallel development in the mid-1930s and became known as “western swing.” The style combined old-timey fiddle music with big-band jazz, and its most influential group wasBob Wills’s Texas Playboys.But the influence of Hollywood movies instilled the term “wes- tern” in association with the music, and hillbilly singers — who had never ridden a horse or branded a steer — adopted the cowboy image by wearing western clothing and giving themselves cowboy names.While this development was ta king place in the southern and western United States, in the north and the east the music was called “folk” because the term presented a more acceptable self-image to people who didn’t want to be identified with backwoods hillbillies.Then as the music’s popularity spread, more of its performers realized that being called hillbilly singers was limiting their potential by causing adverse reactions in urban areas.In the late 1940s, a movement developed among artists to replace “hillbilly” with “country.” Minnie Pearl said in an interview that following a Carnegie Hall concert in 1947, she, Ernest Tubb and other entertainers decided they had to change the name of the music, and since most of them came from the country, they opted for “country music.” Since western swing was still quite popular, the term “western” was added, as in “country and western.” Record companies were persuaded to drop “hillbilly” and “old-timey” and use the new term.In June 1949, Billboard, the music industry trade publication, adopted the term for its chart of the week’s top hits.With the decline in the polulari-ty of western swing, the industry and those writing about the music dropped “western,” and by the mid-1960s the diversity of styles became known as “country music.” The search is on for updated 1984 Chiquita Banana NEW YORK (AP) — Elsa Miranda is a Latin from Manhattan who once was a top banana.Now she’s aiding in a search for a new top banana As the famous Chiquita Banana, Miranda helped make a jukebox hit of one of radio’s first singing commercials some 40 years ago — a song whose lyrics offer advice a little out of date now.“I’m Chiquita Banana and I’ve come to say,” the lyrics began.“Bananas have to ripen in a certain way.“Bananas like the climate of the very, very tropical equator, “So you should never put bananas in the refrigerator.” The new Chiquita, to be selected in New York from nine regional finalists early this summer, will be singing a slightly different tune, now telling consumers that once bananas have ripened it’s OK to keep them in the refrige- rator.Entrants in the talent search, in addition to possessing singing ability, must create a hat best typifying a contemporary Miss Chiquita, with judging to be on the basis of imaginative design, poise, articulate manner and outgoing personality.The winner will probably have a busy life if she follows in the footsteps of Miranda.In her banana days, Miranda — no relation to Carmen — sang the calypso-style jingle with the Boston Pops Symphony, appeared as a guest star on the top radio shows of the day, toured the United States making personal appearances and even christened a banana freighter.Her Chiquita portrayal also served as the text for a church sermon, was editorialized in a national newspaper and appeared in cartoons.“I’d love to play the role again, but I’m too old,” said Miranda, now a vivacious 62-year-old grandmother and sales secretary for a major New York insurance brokerage.“What they want is a bubbly chickee.” The five-foot-two Miranda may no longer be a chickee, but she still bubbles.She can sing in five languages, speaks three fluently and is studying a couple more.o . TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984—5 Two new summer wine buys and one is French ! ! ! f VIN - WINE RASTEAU C®f IS-DM 16 Nil VILLAGES APPELLATION CÔTES DU RHONE VILLAGES CONTRÔLÉE j__________________________________________________ 13,5%alc./vol Elevé et mis en bouteille à la propriété par la 750 ml CAVE DES VIGNERONS 84110 RASTEAü TRANCE ¦ ' ¦ PHODUiî Ht.F-HANCF PRODUCE OC ( «ANCL + b-1 LÜ x- ?-vl It’s been an unusually good week for tippling.Not only was I the most grateful recipient of an unusually good bottle of Bahamian rum — a beverage I am inordinately fond of — but I also discovered two new wines that promise to be summertime hits.The first is an ideal after-work sipping wine but one that will serve equally as well as an aperitif or a dinner wine with white meat, salads or seafoods.Castillo de Melida comes from the little-known (at least as far as wine is concerned) region of Navarre in North-eastern Spain.Navarre is an ancient Basque kingdom that straddles the French-Spanish border and was a longtime hive of independence producing not only good warriors but a king of France in the person of Henry IV.The Spanish section of navarre became an official province of Spain in 1841 having been conquered by Ferdinand of Aragon some three hundred years earlier.Wine By TIMOTHY BELFORD The Melida is produced by the one hundred and fifty-year-old firm of Julian Chivite and is a pale straw colored wine with a hint of flowers to it.Unlike the Italian whites, the Melida is not bone dry and is thus excellent by itself.The bottle I sampled earlier this week, proved to be excellent with a mild cheese and a sampling of hors d’oeuvres that included bits of chicken breast, breaded, fried and seasoned with pepper and tarragon.At $4.15 per bottle it is a steal.The second bottle of wine that 1 came upon in my browsing this week is both French and inexpensive! The Rasteau Cotes-du-Rhone Village sells at $5.90 a bottle which for anA.O.C.wine of any sort is a good price.It also has the added attraction of being a delicious full-bodied example of the Cotes-du-Rhone at its finest.Sixteen villages of the Cotes-du-Rhone are entitled to a separate appellation on the theory that they are a cut above the run-of-the-mill wines from the region.It is a Burgundy cherry color, with great legs and a nice aftertaste that makes it ideal for the barbecue.Hamburgers, steaks or chops, this one is a good bet.Beware however, the Rasteau is typical of the latest Rhone wines in that it is also 13.5 per cent alcohol, which makes it pretty potent stuff.From time to time, I’ll attempt to pass on the names of what I think are perhaps the best wines for summer drinking.Don’t let that stop you from experimenting yourself however, and let me know what you find.I’m always keen to hear of new discoveries.Cheers! Shumka Dancers still amateurs and quite proud of it EDMONTON (CP) — In the last couple of years, the Shumka dancers of Edmonton have swirled and twirled before the Queen and President Reagan and have toured the Far East and Africa.But two things haven’t changed from the days when they used to perform in church basements.All 40 dancers are still amateurs and they still draw their inspiration from Ukrainian roots.“The most powerful audience is still our own Ukrainian people because they are the ones who understand the authenticity of what we do,” says artistic director John Pichlyk.“It’s something we never forget.” On stage, the troupe makes an exhilerating sight, their vivid costumes whirling into a blur of color.LEAPS AND GRACE Men in Cossack garb leap and kick with amazing athletic prowess while women in embroidered dresses move with balletic grace.In April, the dancers finished a cross-Canada tour celebrating the group’s 25th anniversary with a rousing performance before an enthusiastic home-town audience.In those years, the company has gradually evolved its own style.“We made a very important decision in the early ’70s,” says Pichlyk.“We incorporated a storyline approach to our productions and no longer merely presented a number of unrelated folk dances.Now what we do is a folk ballet.” No one in the company is paid and all of the dancers double in administrative capacities.“And because everyone sacrifices his time, there is a commitment there that bonds the people together,” says Pichlyk, who makes his living as a salesman for a door-manufacturing firm.“It becomes a lifestyle.” Each dancer puts in nine hours of rehearsal each week, plus the time spent touring, plus the time spent on administrative duties.Everyone devotes their vacation time to touring.Pichlyk, 28, said the company is like a family — both literally and figuratively.This summer, he is marrying another member of the troupe.“The company has many advantages,” he said with a smile.The dancers — who do not have to be Ukrainian, although most are — spend an average of 10 years with Shumka.For Pichlyk, it has been seven years.“Shumka gave me an opportu- nity to be able to fulfil my own belief in the culture through movement, to be able to express what’s inside,” he explained “I CALGARY (CP) — There’s more to a tutu than meets the eye, says Jennifer Craig, costume designer for the Alberta Ballet Company.Almost 11 metres of tulle go into each of the short frilled skirts frequently worn by female dancers on the classical ballet stage.A dextrous hand is needed to stitch together all the material in to a creation that can help transform a performer into a swan, a fairy, a butterfly or a bird.Craig said the art of making a tutu is “a tricky one,” dependent on the knack of balancing the layers of fabric to lie flat at their base.The classical tutu is the 35-centimetre short skirt, composed of 15 layers of tulle, each two centimetres longer than the other.Craig has turned out hundreds of the costumes, beginning in the days when she was a dancer in the Royal Ballet’s opera company in London.feel very strongly about my culture.” There is only one area Pichlyk said the company feels it has yet “I was always interested in what I wore,” Craig said.“I made my own clothes and, when I danced, I became interested in how my costumes were constructed.” The knowledge proved useful soon after when Craig and her actor husband, Peter Curtis, found themselves in Cape Town, South Africa.Craig formed her own modern dance company, which operated on a shoestring budget.“I had to make all the costumes myself.” She became known as a top South African ballet costume designer, a role she maintained on her return to England and when she moved to Canada.Craig has firm ideas on how a tutu should look and fit.She contends the classical tutu should rest on the dancer’s hips.“In many American companies tutus are worn higher and the girls bottoms are revealed.It to conquer.“We would like to get into the Ukraine and show them what Ukrainian-Canadians can do.” makes them look like ducks.“I was watching an American version of The Nutcracker on television a few months ago and I nearly died laughing.There were all these snowflakes with their bottoms hanging out." It doesn’t pay to specialize only in tutus, Craig said.Many of the athletic modern ballets are per formed in tights or short tunics because the stiff tutus get in the way of acrobatic movement.“If the dancer sits on partner's shoulders her tutu will cover his face,” Craig said.“If he turns her upside down the audience will get a view of a pair of legs stemming from a froth of frills.” Craig can whip off two of the short tulle skirts in a day bu tnow is content to fill private orders in Edmonton and cater to the needs of the ballet company.Her prices average $250 a tutu, but she had made some for as low as $50 for students.“I do it now as my contribution to ballet.” Designers’ job is just tutu much Ballet Guild keeps visiting dancers off the junk food CALGARY (CP) — While the ballet dancers are on stage, a team of dedicated women in Calgary is also on its toes backstage prearing sumptuous food before and after each performance and rehearsal.The Alberta Ballet Guild began the task of feeding visiting dancers four years ago.On tour in unfamiliar cities and pressed for time by the gruelling demands of rehearsals, dancers often rely on junk food for their hurried meals.This is where the 25 members of the guild come in.The dancers no longer have to think about food.The guild prepares it for them.Caroline Davies, founder-president of the guild, set the pattern which still gets encores from grateful dancers.SPREAD HEALTHY Before an evening performance, the women serve a health food addict’s idea of a feast — lots of yoghurt, vegetable dips, grano- la and fresh fruit washed down with mineral water or fruit juice.“It is like feeding a team of athletes,” says Davies.Variety comes with cold meats, cheese and crackers.Usually a large cauldron of thick soup made from barley, meat and fresh vegetables is simmering for anyone who fancies something hot.“Often they (the dancers) would come back in between their appea-rances and take another quick bite be- fore going back on stage,” says Davies.“You would see them eating their sandwiches in the wings.” Guild members, many of whom are busy professional women, divide up into groups of six for each serving.By sharing the load they enable everyone to see the performance itself, impossible while ministering to dancers’ needs backstage.FED SADLER’S The guild usually caters to around 25 dan- cers, although the numbers did hit the 80s with the Sadler’s Wells Ballet Company from London.Many ballet companies, familiar only with the usual round of receptions with wine and cocktail snacks at host theatres, are delighted at the attention to their needs in Calgary.“Every visiting company says this is the first time they have had this sort of treat ment,” said Heather Baker, current guild president.“And they are quite overwhelmed by it.” Davies is preparing a special ballet cookbook, using recipes from dancers, board members and the guild as well as administrative staff Save your life.and those you love Give.THE HEART FUND 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984 DçviPs Disciple to open the Shaw Festival May 23 NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, Ont.(CP) — The Shaw Festival’s announcement that its 23rd season would observe the Ontario Bicentennial this summer with Bernard Shaw’s American Revolution story.The Devil’s Disciple, seemed to rate only a yawn.Now it promises to be anything but.Artistic director Christopher Newton has chosen Larry Lillo, a young director from the country’s thriving collective, improvi-sational and experimental theatre to make not only his Shaw Festival debut, but display his first public encounter with the cantankerous Irish-English playwright on the festival’s opening night May 23.Here in the 800-seat Festival Theatre, Lillo will attempt to show that George Bernard Shaw is not yet dead to the world though he did die, physically, in 1950 at the age of 94.PLAY EARLY SHAW The Devil's Disciple is one of Shaw’s early plays, written in 1897 and loosely based on a real incident in New England in 1777, with Shaw’s usual preachings and odd interpretation of society.Odd, that is, in his day.Lillo now thinks otherwise.An athletic 37-year-old ex-navy English scholar from northern Alberta, Lillo says the play has remarkable insights into contemporary affairs, which he intends to bring out in the production.He hopes U.S.tourists seeing it will recognize it as more than just an Englishman’s view of America.Jim Mezon, one of the festival’s fast developing talents, plays the Devil’s Disciple, Richard Dudgeon; Michael Ball the virtuous parson; David Hemblen as Col.Burgoyne; and Jennifer Phipps is Mrs.Dudgeon, to whom Shaw gave a most unflattering description, “not prepossessing,.disagreeable.” “The play,” Lillo said in an interview, “is a remarkable insight into perception, our perception of evil and good, how we tend to divide everyone into the good guys and the bad guys, the East and the West, and so on.He’s saying it’s not necessarily like that.You could find yourself on the other side tomorrow.“I think it’s a very pertinent play today, especially with the Americans apparently on the very verge of walking into Central America.The spirit of Nicaragua now is not that different from the spirit of America then.How soon we forget America was a country founded on the spirit of freedom and fresh life.I think that was what Shaw was talking about.“I’ve developed a great deal more respect for Shaw through this work than I had when I began,” Lillo said.“He was really a man of the theatre and not just a political polemecist.Whenever we’ve run into difficulty in rehearsal, we’ve gone back to see precisely what it was he says, and he’s right.” It’s far too late now to criticize the play as a play, Lillo said.It has been done successfully many times.If this production doesn’t work, it will be his fault, not Shaw’s.This old colonial town seems the ideal setting.It was here in 1792 that the first parliament of the British colony, now Ontario, met one hot August afternoon in the shade of an oak tree, a spot now marked by a plaque on a school a few blocks from the Festival Theatre.Newton, who rides around town on a bicycle, has shaken up Shavian traditionalists by making the festival a lively event.Three weeks before the opening, more than 40 per cent of the season’s tickets had been sold.“Christopher has set the tone of this place, something very special,” Lillo said.“Where else are you given the freedom to make mistakes, to try things, to experiment?There are not many places where you can walk into the mainstage theatre and open their season and be given room to experiment.” From here, Lillo goes back to Vancouver to direct his first Shakespeare play, The Taming of the Shrew, and he recently did his first Restoration comedy, She Stoops to Conquer.With Disciple, this constitutes a trio of plays in five months that is a remarkable sally into classical theatre for a stranger to it.After Shrew, Lillo intends to sit down and think about his future directions.Shaw was meticulous and elaborate about the stage directions he wrote into his scripts.Shakespeare’s texts are virtually devoid of them.Lillo thinks this will be to his advantage when he works on Shakespeare’s Shrew and, next year.Twelfth Night.“I suspect this might be the place where my kind of experimental theatre background and my interest in classical theatre text and poetry might actually be able to come together.” .While Jennifer Phipps stars in Skin of Our Teeth NIAGARA ON-THE LAKE, Ont.(CP) — Jennifer Phipps does get herself tangled in theological problems.Last winter she toured out of Toronto’s Tarragon Theatre with Christopher Durang’s Sister Ignatius Explains It All for You, a play that created such a stir in Ottawa that one of the school boards wouldn’t let youngsters see it without priestly guidance.Now she’s cast as the mother of all those Antrobuses in Thornton Wilder's The Skin of Our Teeth at the Shaw Festival.As the figure of Eve, married for 5,000 years and the mother of the world, she had to stop herself in rehearsal one day recently to ponder.She has a line near the end of the play in which she remarks that her father was a parson and it seemed she could hear his voice even though he has been dead those many years.Who was Eve’s father?God, of course, she was reminded.“It’s an extraordinary connotation if He’s been dead for 5,000 years,” she said in an interview.“But maybe that’s it.He has passed it all on to the human race and we’ve got to keep it going, as children are eupposed to do.That may be what Wilder is saying.” But such penetrating theological insights probably aren’t necessary.Wilder’s 1942 play, which he described as a history of the world in comic strip, won for him his second Pulitzer Prize and has been grabbing audiences ever since.This is the first time, however, that one of the Wilder plays has come to the Shaw Festival.Phipps has been a leading actress in just about every part of Canada since she came as a visitor from Britain 24 years ago.This fall she'll probably fill the one big gap remaining in her Canadian travels and play at the Phoenix Theatre in Edmonton.She’s a thoroughly practised character actress — a term she doesn’t particularly relish.“We’re all playing characters,” she said.IN TRELAWNEY For 10 years she was a leading lady under the direction of Leon Major at Toronto Arts Productions, the theatre wing of St.Lawrence Centre, now known as CentreStage.Its celebrated production of Trelawney of the Wells, in which Phipps played an aging actress losing her grip, is still fondly remembered among theatre people.When she first played the Shaw Festival in its early years, it only did two plays a season and actors were engaged for under 10 weeks.Now rehearsals begin early in April and the season runs to mid-October, with seven main shows in three theatres.Last season, Phipps was the tippling housekeeper in Ben Travers’s Rookery Nook.The current operating budget is $5.2 million, of which 80 per cent is expected to be taken in at the box office, leaving $200,000 to be earned otherwise and $450,000 to be raised privately after government grants totalling $600,000.But the festival also has a $1-million capital expansion and improvements program spread over several years to enlarge the Festival Theatre, help restore the old Court House on which the festival has taken a 10-year lease, and rebuild backstage facilities at the Royal George Theatre.All this, plus new equipment and furnishings, should be finished in preparation for the festival’s 25th birthday in 1986, says festival producer Paul Reyolds.REVIVE HIT The Skin of Our Teeth opens May 24, the day after George Bernard Shaw’s The Devil’s Disciple, an American Revolution story staged to mark Ontario’s Bicentennial and the arrival of United Empire Loyalists in the area.The festival is also reviving Noel Coward’s Private Lives, a hit last season with Fiona Reid and festival artistic director Christopher Newton.These three productions will play in repertory at the Festival Theatre beside the village green, while down the street at the Royal George there will be a new pocket version of the old and extravagant musical Roberta, by Jerome Kerf and Otto Harbach.Newton is directing the Wilder play and co-directing Roberta while playing in Private Lives.Bugs or snakes Kate Capshaw’s only choice in Spielberg flic LOS ANGELES (AP) — Actress Kate Cap-shaw had a choice: snakes or bugs.Theordercame from Steven Spielberg, and he is a director actors listen to.And so Cap-shaw, who stars opposite Harrison Ford in Imdiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, underwent the ordeal of having a variety of tropical bugs crawl over her body.It could have been worse.In the first Indiana Jones caper, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Karen Allen had to descend into a pit writhing with hundreds of snakes.Cap-shaw had only one to contend with."It was a python that was 14 feet long and weighed 150 pounds," she recalled of the filming at the Sri Lanks location.“It was supposed to wrap around me in a pond, and it didn’t sound like something I wanted to do.“I never said 1 wouldn’t do the scene, but Steven got the message.So I had to do the bugs instead.“Steven couldn’t have been more considerate and kind.He appointed a 'bug patrol’ to pick them off my body as soon as he said ‘Cut.’ We had a nice relationship throughout the picture.He never asked me to do anything he wouldn’t do.HI had bugs, he had bugs.” This is the summer of Kate Capshaw.Not only is she starring in Indiana Jones, which could be the year’s big-gest grosser, but within the space of a few months she will al- so be seen in a drama, Windy City, the science-fiction, Dreamscape, and Best Defence with Dudley Moore and Eddie Murphy.Not bad for a Missouri native who was teaching school a few years ago.“I always wanted to act,” said the 30-year-old actress, who grew up Kathleen Nail in Florissant, near St.Louis.“I loved Audrey Hepburn when I was a girl.*‘I was crazy about Gidget when she was played by Sally Field.Mario Thomas in That Girl was another favorite of mine.I watched all her shows and soaked them in.” An acting career seemed impossible, and Capshaw earned a bachelor’s degree in edu- cation and a master’s in learning disabilities.After she had taught for a few years, she and her husband decided to try their fortunes in New York.“I said to hell with this,’ even though I realized I was leaving the worthy and admirable service of young minds for selfish reasons,” she said.“We literally went to New York on a string and a prayer.” Her husband became a stockbroker, and the marriage fell apart, leaving Capshaw with a daughter Jessica, now 7, and his name.As Kate Capshaw, she became a model for Eileen Ford, but never achieved her goal of becoming a cover girl.She found success as an actress — in TV commercials.Meanwhile, she took drama lessons and landed a movie, A Little Sex, opposite Tim Matheon.“Unfortunately, it wasn’t a success,” she said.“I was just a girl who had made one movie and it didn’t do well.“I started all over again.I continued with my lessons, and I did eight weeks of a soap opera, Edge of Night.Finally, in August of *382,1 decided to come to Los Angeles and try to find work.” After Windy City, she was summoned to a meeting with Spiel-bert.“I tried to remain very calm, despite myself,” she recalled.“I kept telling myself, ‘He’s not a superman, he’s just a guy.’ “When I’m frightened, I try to simplify things, so I went in wearing blue jeans, work shirt, tennis shoes and no makeup.” Spielberg was impressed enough to give flbter ykwui FOLLOW RED CROSS SAFETY TIPS.PLAY IT SAFE-HELP YOURSELF.her a test on tape.A few weeks later, he telephoned her to say: “You’re Willie Scott.” 9t'â a Have Afftu* A BRIDE IS .THE REASON FOR OUR BEING IN BUSINESS: Featuring one of the largest selections of Qownt tor the entire bridal party.Newest styles in Nan’s Tuxedo Rentals from tH.V and l Prom A Ear Ing Downs m sues) from ttl.tr and up.On* 0* fenqwno ¦ 334-8000 M MAIN STREET DOWNTOWN NEWPORT.VT. __ __ TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.MAY 18.11*84-7 Look over your shoulder Irenée, here comes big blue Roll over Maurice Duplessis.Not since the days of ‘Le P’tit Gars de Prince Albert’, John George Diefenbaker, has there been such activity amongst Les Bleus.Turn over a rock nowadays and like as not you’ll find a Tory under it.For the first time since 1958, to be a ‘committed’ member of the Regressive Preservatives in Quebec doesn’t mean to be a guest in a provincial looney bin.A reflection of the party’s new-found popularity is the virtual run on arena rentals.Gone are the bad old days when a Tory nominating meeting in La Belle Province could be held in a phone booth with room left to dial.Crowds of two, three and four thousand delegates are becoming as common as candidates for the Liberal leadership.Only two months ago, 3,000 over heated Conservatives from Megantic-Compton-and the other place watched lawyer François Gérin beat the pants off (he probably wanted them for his collection) old-line Bleu Fernand Grenier.By winning, Gérin earns the right to take on incumbent Liberal MP Claude Tessier in the next federal election.Who’s who By TADEUSZ LETARTE Since Tessier says he’s not afraid of cheap popularity, Gérin probably hasn’t got a chance — unless they count the votes or something silly.Still more recently, 800 of the party faithful gathered in Coaticook and actually paid to have supper with Brian Baloney.For his part, the king of all the Tories has reportedly had his nose buried in the King James version of the bible paying particular attention to the part where Abraham led the Israelites out of the wilderness.Tuesday, the phenomenon actually reached Sherbrooke which witnessed a Conservative revival that has Liberal MP Irenée Pelletier looking over his shoulder.A couple of thousand screaming Conservatives flooded the Eugene Lalonde arena complete with two brass bands, 12 million balloons, a full set of cheer leaders and a determination to go for the Liberal jugular that has to rival the intensity of Sitting Bull's Sioux at the Little Big Horn.The result was the nomination of 25-year-old lawyer John-James Charest who combines youthful energy, a sharp mind and the physical appearance of Harpo Marx in tweeds It was obvious from the outset that Charest — whose organizers carefully sat him under a spotlight in the stands — had the advantage.Not only was his band better, supporters louder and poster spiffier, but he managed to attract several of the leading lights of Sherbrooke's politically conscious.Former Record publisher and owner Ivan Saunders was seen slidding around the periphery of the mob, although he wasn’t sporting any candidate’s but ton.While Lennoxville town councilman Duncan Bruce was spotted watching the proceedings from just above the bleachers.Speaking of councilpersons, newly-elected Frances Noble's husband was also there.This Mutiny on the Bounty based on the real thing HOLLYWOOD (AP) — When Roger Donaldson started the $25-million sea saga, he came with a clear mind.He had never seen the two other movie versions of Fletcher Christian's mutiny on Capt.Bligh’s Bounty.The 38-year-old Australian director also had never made a film outside New Zealand.But producer Dino De Laurentiis had been impressed with Donaldson’s second film, the $l-million Smash Palace, and wanted him to direct the Conan sequel.Donaldson was reluctant.“Then one morning at 5 a.m.I got a call from Dino.‘Come to the Beverly Hills Hotel for an emergency meeting,”’ Donaldson recalled.“Dino was leaving for Mexico, and he told me, ‘I want you to do The Bounty.’” Donaldson, 38, a tall, strongly-built Australian, moved to New Zealand at 19.He went from still photography to documentary filming, and then made his first feature, Sleeping Dogs.It earned more in New Zealand than Star Wars and is credited with helping to start the government’s film commission.When De Laurentiis asked him to do the Bounty remake, he had seen neither the 1935 Charles Laughton-Clark Gable version, nor the 1962 Trevor Ho-ward-Marlon Brando film.“To me, The Bounty is not a remake,” Donaldson said in an interview with The Associated Press.“The Robert Bolt script was based on the real truth — or as much as can possibly be determined at this late date.He went back to the original documents to find out what really happened.“William Bligh was not a pathological maniac or crazy sadist,” Donaldson said.“The mutiny did not happen because of a single happening, but a series of events.The conflict was not between Bligh and Christian, but between Bligh and the crew.Christian was the go-between who reluctantly joined the mutiny.” OPENS MAY 4 The Orion release is called The Bounty.Capt.Bligh and Fletcher Christian return in the guise of Anthony Hopkins and Mel Gibson.The movie opens May 4.According to Donaldson’s version, Bligh and Christian were actually good friends who had sailed together before.“Another difference from the previous films was to cast the actors in the actual ages.Many of the sailors were 15,16 and 17.(Christian was in his 20s, Gibson was 27 during filming).Only Tony (Hopkins) was older: Bligh was 33.” Donaldson said he approached The Bounty with confidence.“My strength is to get inside the characters, and I liked the idea of playing an intimate story against a large canvas,” he said.“The enormous risk of such a production also appealed to me.Despite having sets wiped out twice by hurricanes, we finished on schedule and on budget.“The only time I was intimidated during the filming was when I had to direct Laurence Olivier (who conducts the court martial).” “BIG, you’ve done it againr Now, BIC makes shaving even easier by dividing the world into two kinds of people.For those wdh sensitive skin, BIC introduces the BIC ORANGE, made to shave sensitive skin gently and closely.Those with normal skin can keep on using the comfortable, reliable BIC white.Of course, there are also 2 other kinds o* people.Those who love John McEnroe and those who., well. 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984 WHAT’S ON sentation of Artestry which features lesser-known works by some of the best painters the Townships have produced in the last 150 years up to and including many of the marvelously talented people still producing today.It’s a fantastic show for the casual art lover as a wide variety of styles, interests and techniques are represented.This show continues until the end of May.The Sherbrooke Museum of Fine Art still features the unusual photography of Arlette Vittecoq in its Wellington street gallery.Vittecoq uses her camera and her imagination in a wildly avante-garde fashion that is as eyecatching as it is thought-provoking.The show continues until May 25 and the gallery is open from Sunday through Friday from 1 to 5 p.m.L’Atelier Arpelle on Galt west continues to feature Lucille Huot-Demers and Pierrette Lebrun-Côté in a dual exhibition until May 19.1 still haven’t had a chance to visit this show so it looks like you’ll either have to go yourself or miss it entirely.Sorry about that.Music Whenever Mikey takes a break I get stuck with this crumby job.Canadians are wondering where their next government is going to come from, millions of people all over the world are starving, billions live under the guns of the Americans and Soviets and I get to report what bands are playing in the Eastern Townships this weekend.Who needs it?You — all 73 of you, that’s who.But if I don’t do it someone else will, and if I go by their usual standards, they’ll boot it So here goes, and I’ll give you a couple of phrases you’ve never seen in print before.First, a couple of announcements .Bathtub baritones, grab your hats ! The Yamaska Valley chapter of the Aotirlp (or ttir ()rr«rotation ant Cnrouragrmrnt o( üartrr fthop ©uartrt Ringing m ammta Jm.(SPEBSQSA, which even I shall not attempt to translate) is looking for new members.There will be an open house at the Stanbridge East Senior Citizens’ Centre May 28 at 8 p.m.The chapter wants “men of all ages and interests, to join in some fellowship,” says membershipp vice-president Bruce Kidd.“You don’t have to be an expert singer or even know how to read music,” Kidd says.“But you must enjoy the fun and fellowship that comes from singing.” And that’s no Kidding! In the Lennox ville area there is a shortage of “musicians and performers of all ages and types,” says Tom Gordon of the Village Culturel organization.The Village folks want people to play and sing etc.on either of their two stages during the big Cultural Village Week, July 5 to 8.Call Tom at 569-4603 or Ray Tyler at 567-0469 for more info.We’re going to move from west to east along the music trail this week so if you're lookin’ for Lennoxvillage it’s down at the bottom — where many folks says it belongs.Classical fans take note: The Old Brick Church in West Brome starts off its Mozart-Weber-Brahms Festival Saturday night at 8 with a concert by the famed Quatuor Moren-cy.The same program will be repeated Sunday afternoon at 3.Knowlton Pub has nothing to report for this weekend but the smooth-talking day-shift barmaid.Uh, I mean the smooth-talking day-shift barmaid says to watch for the music to start up June 10.John Bird was interrupted while he was mowing the lawn this week to report that Crossroads will be singing and playing its fine brand of country music at Station 88 in South Stukely Friday and Saturday.Keep the grass short, JB.Three Villages rock-and-roll fans can gets their musical rocks off Friday and Saturday to the tunes of Ranter, down at the Del Monty, that is.Up the street at the Maples (anciennement Les Erables), border country fans will enjoy Big Foot.1 know I do.Meanwhile in Ayer’s Cliff (have you ever read that before), the Shady Crest features Country Fever (the band, not the sickness), Friday and Saturday evenings and Sunday afternoon.Guess what kind of music that band plays.Manoir Waterville brings you the chansonnier sounds of Richard and Michel, Friday and Saturday.About as far away as you can get from the Manoir and still be in Waterville.John Macdonald brings back Carous-sels Country Riders for another weekend at Motel Brétagne.In Sherbrooke this weekend the main activities (apart from dépanneur holdups) seem to be at the Salle Maurice O’Bready at the University of Sherbrooke.Saturday evening watch for La Turlutaine, featuring Québécois, Irish and Scottish music.Sounds like home to me.Sunday in the very same room Les 4-Temps takes over.This thriving young group performs its own brand of “contemporary and traditional music and dance.” Now for the Lennoxlubbers.Faithful readers (both of them) may recall a mention here some months ago of the Lennoxville live-music battle being fought between Calvin Picken of the FL Hideaway and Costa of the Georgian.The battle is on the verge of going atomic as the two entrepreneurs try to out-nuke each other for the diminishing summer Sex-Drugs-and-Rock-and-Roll market.Now that the students are disappearing for the season, the crunch is now, and I mean NOW.Somebody’s going to get blown right off the map and you can tell your grandchildren you read it here first.(Actually, if you have grandchildren you probably aren’t reading this, so ignore that last remark, and if you don’t have any, stay away from the music-war fallout or you’ll go sterile, solving that problem for good ! ).My old friend Costa What’s-his-name is putting on a hell of a show again this weekend — and the whole month of May, says lovely Sue, with the rock-etcetera band Gibson Creek.Starring Denis Lajoie, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays.Further down the wrong side of the tracks at the FL HIDEAWAY watch for KGB — Kevin Groves’ Band These boys can rock with the best and they don’t roll too bad either.Friday and Saturday.Oh yeah, speaking of the FL, here’s something even that boorish loudmouth Fatazz LeFarte doesn't even have in his scum-report on the previous page (don’t look if you have a weak heart) : Seems Tiny Tory John James Charest wasn’t By Peter Scowen, Robert Palmer, Tim Belford and Charles Bury taking any chances about running out of space at his victory-loss (whichever came first) party Tuesday night.At first Charest’s gang reserved the FL Hideaway for the celebration.Then some bright Conservative got the idea that 900 supporters into a 150-capacity hall won’t go.So a second reservation was made — keeping up the alphabet motif), for the Flamingo Lounge (FL) on Wellington Street in Sherbrooke.Trouble is, no one told Cal Picken about the change of plan until 9 p.m.the night of the party.Boy was he FLAMING (FL) mad.Charest said he’ll make it up by bringing in Pope John Paul Hthis fall.Now eat it and beat it, all you creeps out there.That’s all you get from here until Mikey pulls another holiday! Exhibitions The Galerie d’Art La Falaise, one of the city's finest, will be holding an exhibit of the works of painter Marcel Fa-vreau from now until May 24.Favreau is a well-known Quebec artist who started his successful career at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts at the age of 16.His landscapes — in oil — of various Quebec and Townships scenes have a muted and delicate touch reminiscent of the French impressionist school of the late 19th century.At his best, Favreau has an eye for detail and a sense of color that lend to his paintings a sense of familiarity to anyone who has travelled throughout the province.The exhibit is the first for Favreau in approximately six years and is well worth seeing.Another exhibition probably worth the trip is out at the Homestead this weekend running until May 29.Lennox-ville’s own Eileen Littlejohn Drew will be displaying a series of oil paintings of Townships scenes as various as the Huntingville Dam, View from Moulton Hill and Milby Covered Bridge.Eileen will be at the Homestead to answer questions and meet with art lovers.Viewing will be possible Saturday between 9 a.m.and5p.m.and Sunday from 1 p.m.to 5 p.m.The folks over in Knowlton have asked me to remind everyone that the Galerie Lac Brome is open for the season at its Lakeside Street home.The shop is open everyday except Tuesdays from 10 a.m.until 5 p.m.and features Canadian, American and European artists.There is also an Arts Festival this weekend at the Beebe town hall on Main Street.The festival will feature sculpture, stained glass, wall hangings, wood carving and a variety f other crafts.The festival doors open at 10 a m.Saturday and Sunday and close at 7 p.m.on Saturday and 6 p.m.on Sunday.The Beaulne Museum wishes to notify the public of its new summer hours.From -May 15 to September 15 the Coaticook-based museum will be open everyday from 11 a.m.until 5 p.m.with flexible hours for groups by reservation only.At present there is a photographic exhibition entitled Protestant Churches of the Coaticook Region which closes tomorrow.Back in Sherbrooke at Alexandre street’s Galerie Canard de Bois, Matapedia painter and sculptor Marcel Gagné continues his exhibit until May 19.Gagnon is a captures country scenes in a very pleasant style, but more interesting are his sculptures, with which he seems a little more willing to experiment and to take chances.His statuettes in wood represent futuristic figures and reflect as well a dry but unmistakable sense of humour.Denis Palmer’s fine exhibit for the Sherbrooke Trust Collection en Art continues up at the Carrefour de l’Estrie, and I must say he’s got some fine and interesting stuff up there.As usual, Palmer’s exceptional ability to capture the essence of his subject with his pen is wonderfully evidenced and the show is a delight.He’ll be up there until the end of the month, and the Trust branch is open during regular business hours.The Caisse Populaire de Sherbrooke-est continues its pre- Cookshire residents are gearing up for the eleventh annual Festival du Pain to be held June 9-10.The Festival du Pain has grown in size and popularity since it first began in 1974, and has become a tradition in Cookshire.The organizing committee, headed by Gérard Doyon, has planned many activities for all ages.Among other events, there will be a bread-slicing contest, a puppet show and a parade.Visitors will be given the opportunity to taste and to buy bread made by local bakers, and a presentation on bread-baking will be given.Many local potters, painters, glass-makers and other artisans will be displaying their work.Saturday, June 9 there will be a mascots’ parade lead by Mr.Crust” and an opening dance with a Bavarian orchestra.French toast, which has become an emblem for the festival, will be served Sunday morning, followed by an open air mass.The committee for the 1984 Festival du Pain cordially invites everyone to come out and enjoy the celebration with them in Cookshire.Movies At the Capitol this week, the folks behind the glass that take all your money have jumped on the bandwagon with Splash, starring the stunning Darryl Hanna as a mermaid who happens to pop up one day in the middle of New York City.She meets a man, falls in love but can only stay for “six fun-filled days”.A mad scientist, played by SCTV’s Eugene Levy, thinks something about Hanna is just a tad fishy and finally reveals her secret.How Levy and partner John Candy get out of this kettle of fish is worth more than just a few laughs.Just ask the Swedish-American guard.Well worth seeing, showtimes are Friday, Saturday, Sunday and weeknights at 7:30, with an additional Sunday show at 2.The Capitol’s second film, Winnie the Pooh and A Day for Eeyore, is for the kiddies but that’s not to say you ha ve to be one to go.A.A.Milne’s delightful characters are always fun so take a trip back a few years.You’ll like it—it’s kind of like working here.Out yonder at the Carrefour, Breakin’ is the treat this week.If you like dance films, this one’s a must.If you don’t, turn the next page of your copy of Everything You ve Always Wanted to Know About Being Boring and go back to sleep.Breakdancing is sweeping the streets (literally), much to the delight of sanitation department employees all over North America.The curtain goes up (and down and all around, spinning, twisting, flopping, diving.ahem, sorry) Friday and Saturday at 6:45, 8:20 and 9:55, Sunday at 1:10,2:15, 4:20,6:30,8:05,9:40, and on weeknights at 7:15 and 8:50.Down around Cowansville, where local Regressive Preservatives want Brian Mulroney so badly they’ve offered him John McCaghey’s chair at the Brasserie Le Sportif, the Princess Cinema is featuring Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan and Risky Business.The former is supposed to be one of the better, more complete portrayals of the life of the legendary jungle man but I’m told it does run a little on the lengthy side.Tom Cruise’s flick is funny to put it mildly, probably because we ’ ve all done something like that at one time or another.Some of us, of course, are still waiting.Down in the U.S of A., the Newport Cinema isn’t answering its telephone which doesn’t do a whole heck of a lot for business.Merrill’s Showcase on the other hand is and the voice on the other end thanks me for calling.It also reminds me that Merrill’s has not just one movie, but three.Gee whiz, what a wonderful world.Now playing on Screen One (pretty impressive, eh?) is the new Robert Redford flick, The Natural.There are no special prices for ladies but I'm told you get a free bib with every ticket.Redford is a baseball pitcher who is, obviously, heralded as a natural.The reviews are mixed but inasmuch as Redford is Redford, it’s probably worth a shot.It’s at 6:45 and 9:25.Screen Two features the great Robin Williams in Moscow ¦ TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, I88+ it WHAT’S ON on the Hudson, a love story about a Russian’s visit to the United States of Amer’ca.Rocket Ronnie Reagan is reportedly confused by the title, and says he still can’t find an island by that name in that big body of water in Northern Ontario.Showtime is 7 and 9:30.Screen Three features Hardbodies, movie about.well, you know.Ahem, it’s rated R.Umm, it’s also down at Merrill’s.Ah, it’s a movie about people in really good shape, and.and, ah.they’ll probably only let you see it once with your ticket.The title says it all, or most of it anyway.showtime is 7:20 and 9:20.Gulp.Television I suppose the biggest event of the spring season on CBC TV is the coming of the "blockbuster” mini-series The Mystic Warrior.This five-hour extravagana will be broadcast starting tomorrow at 8 p.m.and continue on Monday at p.m.The Warrior is essentially the romantic and often tragic tale of the Dakota Sioux who once roamed the lands of the great western plain.Led by Ahbleza, the Sioux struggle against traditional enemies, the onslaught of the white m an and the gradual erosion of their way of life.Producers David Wolper and Stan Margulies were also responsible for Roots and The Thorn Birds so it just may be a winner.Also on Monday night, The National Network presents Captains of the Clouds a 1942 propaganda flic about those wild but lovable American flyers who wre busy saving Britain, the good part about it is that it stars James Cagney and Alan Hale.Air time 1 a.m.F or those of you who still doubt the CIA was involved in a few mind-bending experiments in Montreal back in the 50s and 60s, catch Thornwell Tuesday night (Wednesday morning) at 1 a.m.Thornwell is the documented story of what appears to be the use of drugs by the American Army to control the mind of one of its soldiers.A lot of the information that the story is based upon came via the American freedom of information act that allows access to government documents.Tonight on PBS, at 11:30, movie buffs can catch Deception starring Bette Davis and Claude Raines in a 1946 murder melodrama.If you’re up in time Saturday, Alfred Hitchcock is back with Strangers on a Train.This one is a delightful little twist on your standard mystery as two men, Farley Granger and Robert Walker, “swap murders”.At 8 p.m.on Sunday, the public television boys and girls bring us an episode of Living Wild that is bound to be interesting if not slightly offputting.Ribbon of Life: the Great Barrier Reef takes you on a trip through the sea world that makes up Australia’s Great Barrier Reef taking a good look at the marvels and beauty of underwater life along the way.Since I’m one of those people who has a fear of sharks bordering on paranoia, it isn’t for me, but I’m sure there are a lot of you out there who will find it fascinating.Then again a lot of you ride horses for fun! Monday at 10:00 p.m.there is something that I will watch however.Ben Kingsley, one of the finest stage or screen actors alive today, plays Edmund Kean, one of the finest and certainly most interesting actors of his day.Kingsley’s Kean drinks, applauds and acts his way through a mini-biography illustrated with exerpts from his greatest performances.Wednesday night PBS presents Hitler's No.1 Enemy: Buried Alive, the story of Raoul Wallenberg.Wallenberg was a Swedish diplomat stationed in Budapest in 1944 who reportedly saved the lives of some 100,000 Hungarian Jews.The Swede was later captured by the Soviet army as it ‘liberated’ Hungary and was, according to the best accounts, sent to the infamous Gulag where he disappeared among the other million or so political prisoners of the Stalinist regime and later died.Reports from the Soviet Union however have repeatedly claimed that Wallenberg may in fact be still alive.The PBS late night movie on Thursday is The Millionaire starring George Arliss and Jimmy Cagney.This 1931 classic is the story of an extremely wealthy man who goes incognito to help poor people.I’ll probably watch this one just because it’s so nice to dream.CTV, the working man’s network, doesn’t have a lot going for it this week.The Stanley Cup is on CBC and the best movies are on PBS.One bright spot is the running of the Preakness which is broadcast for all you betting freaks — the only sensible thing to do with a horse — at 5 p.m.on Saturday Also on CTV this week is a two-part series starting Sunday and ending Monday entitled The First Olympics.Since the 1984 games may be the last Olympics, you may want to tune in at 8.One other note : Thursday at midnight, Genevieve Bujold and Michael Douglas star in Coma a pretty decent film about a lovely young resident surgeon who finds out her hospital has a lucrative business going in used body parts.Radio Boy I hate it when Mikey takes the week off.I don't even have a radio.But I like country music.On Saturday morning CBC Radio’s Six Days on the Road takes a look at the lives of three Canadian male country singers who have become Nashville superstars.The late Orval Prophet, Hank Snow and Wilf Carter are profiled in words and music.Snow still makes his home in Nashville.It may surprise you but B.J.Thomas, another Nashviller (he became the 60th member of the Grand 01’ Opry in 1980! wrote more than just the song Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head.He sold millions of records in the late 1960s and early ’70s with hits like I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry, Hooked on a Feeling, Somebody Done Somebody Wrong and Most of All.Then came drugs.Then came religion.The born-again Christian switched to gospel music and won four Grammy Awards.CBC Stereo is featuring him on The Entertainers Saturday morning at 11:05.At 7:05 on the same day, same band, the man who produced the Beatles to fame is profiled.This is the second part of a two part series, and it shows what else George Martin did besides work with George, John, Paul and Ringo.On Sunday CBC Stereo the second part in a trilogy called United Artists is on at 7:05 p.m.United Artist film studios was started by Charlie Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks and Canada’s own Mary Pickford.“The inmates taking over the asylum,” producers called it.This episode focuses on Fairbanks and his love of making home movies.On Victoria Day, which is a holiday and a Monday, which makes Tuesday Monday but compensates by making Friday one day closer to Monday, CBC Stereo presents a special look at music critics through the ages on The Critic’s Turn at 8 p.m.Music by Bach, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Brahms and other big names on the classical circuit will be featured.) .—.Tuesday on Ideas on CBC Radio the third part of a series called Hearts of Men is being presented.It’s called The New Man of the 80s and its about how life has changed in the last counle of decades.Men are now less likely to marry early, stay married, or reliably pay child-support to ex-wives.The number of single men living alone doubled from 1970 to 1980.And in styles men are less macho and more adrogynous.(Look at Boy George.) Feminists are divided on the merits of this new man — he has been feminized but he isn’t feminist, they say.1 wish I could think of something funny to say and lighten this up a little.Wednesday on both CBC bands will be a good day for classical music.R.S.V.P., Mostly Music.Mid Morning.Montreal Apres-midi and Arts National are all featuring the music of dead people.On Thursday at 10:32p.m.on CBC Radio you can hear the best up-and-coming pianists in the world in competition from Montreux, France.Yukino Fujiwara of Japan will be playing Schumann’s Concerto in A minor.Op.54, Sandro de Palma will be playing Mozart's Concerto No.19 in F major, K.459, and Nathalie Bera-Tagrine of France will be playing — you guessed it — Beethoven's Concerto No.1 in C major.Op.15.Which brings us to Friday, and more music.In fact, unless you turn on your radio to either CBC station on this day to some particular show, chances are very good you'll get Mozart, Haydn, Casanovas, William C.Handy or Scriabin coming out of the speakers.Mid Morning on CBC Stereo is featuring musical poems by Chausson, Scott and Scriabin at 10:05 a m.(How come they never give the guy's, oris it a woman’s, last name?).F'riday Night, which starts at 6:35, is presenting the works of John Armstrong (he must still be alive), Casanovas, Galles, Ibert, Marjan Mozetich and William Beauvais.At 9:30 on the same show is the final installment of Ottawa columnist Charles Lynch’s tribute to Duke Ellington, followed by Nightfall mystery theatre.Tonight’s play is Windchild she finds a place where toys have a life of their own Marcel Favreau will be the featured artist at the Galerie d'Arts 1m Falaise until May 24.M ¦ ^ % ., - 10_T0WNSHIFS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984 Travel #¦__ HGCOTU Brass rubbing—a unique way of collecting souvenirs BRISTOL, England (CP) — Doing be recast into cannons and bullets, rubbings of memorial brasses has Over succeeding centuries, vanda-long been a gentle pastime in Britain, lism and theft further reduced the Until the 1950s, making crayon-on- number of surviving brasses, paper transfers, or rubbings, of life- After the Second World War, with sized representations of medieval the spectacular growth of tourism, kings, and other nobility added inte- rubbing brasses became a popular rest to visits to great cathedrals and means of personally producing an ar-out-of the-way country churches.tistic souvenir of a visit to a historical Memorial brasses were introduced site, in Britain in the late 13th century.The To the horror of vicars and church incised plaques, showing the decea- vergers, some of the eager rubbers sed in ornate garb or even full armor left litter, used prayer cushions as of the period, were placed over the kneeling pads while working on tomb or sometimes attached to the brasses set in floors, or scratched the walls of churches.surfaces by walking on them.The me- The departed usually was depicted morial plaques that had survived for in burial position — recumbent, arms centuries were being defaced, crossed on chest, eyes closed — and So brass rubbing centres were set identified with an inscription in Latin, up in larger cities and there are now SHOWED SOCIETY more than 20 scattered around Bri- Nobility, monks, prioresses, lan- tain.Located in cathedrals, churches downers and later such prosperous and guildhalls, the centres have col-middle class tradesmen as brewers, lections of full-sized brass reproduc-ironmongers and wool merchants tions made from the original memo-were honored with brasses, offering a rials in their areas, fascinating glimpse of medieval so- For a fee of about $4, the centre ciety.usually has an instructor and the ma- Perhaps most surprising is their terials — fat, waxy crayons called a small stature.Most were about five heel and strong rag-based paper — to feet, the brasses indicate, although enable a person to make a good rub-one of a knight in full armor is over six bing from the reproduction brasses, feet tall.The basic technique is the same as About the mid-16th century, the use placing a piece of paper over a penny of memorial brasses faded.and rubbing vigorously with a soft But in great and small churches pencil to get an impression of the coin, throughout Britain thousands of the But as a caustic verger once re-memorials existed.Then King Henry marked: “The idea is not simply to VIII, during his confrontation with rub.Any fool can do that.The idea is the Roman Catholic Church, ordered to bring out the details of the many of the brasses in abbeys melted brasses.” down.In London, there are two brass rub- Later, during the Puritan period of bing centres — St.James’s Church in Oliver Cromwell when the brasses Piccadilly and Westminster Abbey were regarded as graven images, where a visitor can rub images of Cathedrals are often good sites for would be brass rubbers.thousands more were melted down to kings and queens.It’s a seadog’s summer for visitors to balmy Bermuda HAMILTON, Ber jibs and genoas, rigs difference between a of nautical types busy summer of ocean soon after mid-May of from San Juan, Puerto muda — In the weeks and spars, royals and bark and a barkentine, around these shores to sailing activity this two fleets of pictures- Rico, will join the fleet ahead, there’ll be lots spankers.Should you or a brig and a brigan- set you straight.year gets into high que tall ships.After a from Europe at Ber- of chatter here about be curious to know the tine, there’ll be plenty Bermuda’s normally gear with the arrival stopover during which muda, as will other these storybook ves- ships from western he-sels will grace the har- misphere countries, in-bors of Hamilton and eluding the U.S.Coas-St.George’s, they’ll de- tguard’s 294 ft.(89.6 m) part June 2 in a combi- training bark Eagle, ned race to Halifax, The grand assembly at Nova Scotia.Bermuda will include Often a pivotal point such time-honored ves-of world tall ships sels as Ciudad de Inca, races in past years, a British-owned bri-Bermuda will set the fi- gantine built in 1858 in nish line for the 1984 In- Spain; and Carola, a ternational Sail Trai- ketch of galeasse rig ning Race organized from West Germany, by the Sail Training As- built originally in Den-sociation of Great Bri- mark in 1900.On June tain, starting at St.Ma- 2, the tall ships and a lo, France, and calling host of traditional sai-at Las Palmas, Canary ling vessels will set off Islands, on the way.for Halifax.Nova Sco-Participating ships tia, in a race organized will be crewed by naval by the American Sail cadets and their ins- Training Association, tructors.Considerable This fleet will later interest is being shown move on to Quebec for by Iron Curtain coun- an extended celebra-tries whose ships tion commemorating comprise about half the arrival of France’s the fleet sailing from Jacques Cartier in the Europe.Poland’s Dar New World 450 years Mlodziezy, a 369-ft.ago.(112.5 m) square- The tall ships won’s rigger, will be one of be a week out of Berthe giants.Ships in a feeder race $ee Pa8e ! I A* iàwIfesSiSS « ïJ} .¦ nmwwi i y < r.ii Bermuda's harbors boast flags from around the world in the summer. Travel TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984-11 the* #1__™L1 Mseam Taiwan offers tourists the best of both east and west TAIPEI (CP) — Long regarded as an ugly duckling among the more exotic tourist cities of the Orient, Taiwan’s capital has grown into a graceful sophisticated metropolis.Taipei now combines all the bustling attractions of the East with some of the world’s finest restaurants, first-class hotels, cheap shopping and a boisterous nightlife.In recent years, the flourishing economy has resulted in a rush of new development projects, including luxury hotels, shopping malls and night clubs.But unlike cities such as Tokyo and Seoul, which have also undergone intense redevelopment, Taipei has managed to retain much of the old.Tiny markets sell everything from modern electronics to tropical fruit and snake’s blood.Some of Asia’s cheapest jewelry stores — jade, coral and opals are the best buys — nestle among warehouses filled with porcelain, custom tailors and bookshops.Prices are still reasonable, because Taiwan has not been hit as hard by inflation as places such as Hong Kong.Also, the spate of hotel building has led to a surplus of rooms and the canny traveller can often negotiate big discounts.Yu Wei, director general of the Taiwan’s Tourism Bureau, says “we are the only place maintaining all the old Chinese culture and traditions.“This is the only place left where you can see the real China.Singapore and Hong Kong are both nice places, but they are very small and limited.” He noted that the average length of stay of visitors to Taiwan is double that of either Hong Kong or Singapore, though he agreed Taiwan has more stringent visa requirements.Hopefully the government would ease the visa restrictions, he said, especially in view of the large number of tourists expected in Asia for the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul.Despite all the redevelopment, one of Taipei’s major attractions remains the National Palace Museum.Located in the foothills on the outskirts of the city, this fabulous collection of Chinese art was begun 1,000 years ago by the emperors of the Sung dynasty.It was shipped to Taiwan before the fall of mainland China to the Communists in 1949.Among the museum’s collection are 13,000 paintings — including many masterpieces of traditional Chinese art — 24,000 pieces of porcelain, 4,000 bronzes, 4,500 pieces of jade and 153,000 books.Exhibitions rotate every three months or so, and a visitor should allow at least half a day to the museum’s treasures.Snake Alley is the name given to a narrow lane in the downtown Wanhua district where vendors display cages of hissing snakes.For a small fee, they will cut one open and serve you a glass of blood and bile, said to be great for waning virility.At other tiny stalls in the area, you can have your fortune told, receive an exotic tattoo or drink fresh tropical fruit juices.A short distance away is the Lung-Shan (Dragon Mountain) temple, one of the most beautiful in the city, with carved dragons on the sloping roofs seeming to spit into the smoky air.In the same downtown area is Haggler’s Alley, also known as the China Bazaar, with w'alkways leading to two and sometimes three levels of tiny shops.SEE THE OPERA Next to the bazaar is the Armed Forces Cultural Activities Centre, where Peking Opera is performed every evening.Western visitors to the opera often are startled at the shrill sounds of the performers, and at the noise from the audience who chatter continuously during the action, and occasionally even listen to baseball on transistor radios.For those who prefer something less exotic, Taipei offers several excellent theatre-restaurants, where you can eat Chinese cuisine while watching singers, dancers, acrooats and magicians perform dazzling Western and Oriental acts.The Hoover, in the heart of the city, is one of the best known.Even more Western are the popular discos in the Hilton and Lai-Lai Sheraton hotels.Every style of Chinese cooking is available in Taipei, usually at prices cheaper than in other countries.A few hotel restaurants are superb, including, the Leofoo Hotel’s top-floor dim sum restaurant.The Hilton’s Golden China restaurant features excellent Hunan cuisine and the Celestial Kitchen in Nanking West Road offers mouth-watering Peking specialties.Perhaps typifying the new Taipei is the Asiaworld centre, opened last year.It boasts 500 shops in modern air-conditioned malls, one of the city’s biggest luxury hotels, a theatre-restaurant and dozens of smaller specialty restaurants, including many devoted to the cuisines of Asia.Fiji—islands at the crossroads of Asia and the Pacific SIGATOKA, Fiji (AP) — Standing at the crossroads of Asia and the South Pacific, Fiji is a swirl of contrasting scenes and cultures.The necklace of glittering tropical isles is a meeting place of the old and the new.Half the population is made up of the offspring of indentured laborers from India in the days of British colonial rule.Melanesians make up 44 per cent and Europeans, Chinese and others the rest.Fijian is the name reserved for the Melanesians, the island’s original inhabitants.Fiji’s stark and beautiful landscape ranges from Indian farms evoking Asia along the coast to the wild and jagged volcanic peaks that lunge up into the clouds hanging over the mountainous interior.The hot, wet climate covers the countryside with a wild array of yellow, pink, purple and green.The human landscape runs from noisy Indian bazaars to the reverberating beat of drums in the highland villages and fond reminders of ties with Britain.DAYS GO BY Life, says a policeman in a tiny village near Sigatoka is simple.The days go by, one much like the other and the sun shines and the waves pound on to the beach.“It’s an all right place,” he says.The local taxi driver, wearing only the skirt called a sula that is favored by the majority of Fijian males, agrees.In the hamlet’s solitary shop, pictures of snowy English countryside stare out at the 38 C heat.The market in Suva, the capital, is a labyrinth of stalls with a mob of browsers winding through the narrow aisles.The poorest traders spread a few vegetables for sale on the floor while more prosperous merchants offer cans of Canadian salmon, New Zealand vegetables and English cho- colate.Indian and Chinese shops offering everything from homespun clothing to the latest Hollywood movies on videotape line the hill behind the harbor.Brassy music pounds from loudspeakers over shop doors as merchants try to cajole passers-by inside.“Why not buy something?” a shopkeeper calls above the sidewalk babble of Fijian, English, Hindustani and Chinese.“It’s a good day.” Between the Indian quarter and the market is the emerging modem world.Fast food outlets nestle alongside sleek boutiques.There’s even an imitation English pub with plastic ornaments and piped country and western music.Reminders of past culinary customs abound at the national museum.The Fijians were once cannibals and there are displays of ornate wooden forks that were used only with human dishes.“The whole body was generally consumed, but in times of plenty following massacres, the trunk, head and hands were thrown away,” reads an exhibit sign.A display case full of massive wooden clubs offers another insight into traditional domestic life.One club, the gadi, was used in battle or “to maintain order in the polygamous chiefly household.” FOND OF QUEEN Many Fijians remain intensely fond of things British.Queen Elizabeth is queen of Fiji; pictures of the Royal Family abound ; Radio Fiji plays God Save the Queen before closing down for the night ; and the birthdays of the Queen and Prince Charles, heir to the throne, are public holidays.It should be easy to forget a bout the rest of the world But the superpower rivalry intrudes into the South Pacific tranquillity with daily broadcasts from Radio Moscow and the Voice of America.China maintains an embassy with about 20 officials.The mountainous interior with its jagged mountain ranges, surging rivers and jungle remains largely untouched.A solitary dirt road winds across the main island of Viti I^evu, linking the villages that eke out a living in the steep valleys.While people in other nations dream about escaping to the South Pacific, the highland villagers yearn for the simple distractions of Suva or the handful of other big towns.Moses Paleu said the people dream about getting a job or being able to go shopping or to the movies.“It’s very hard to find jobs in Fiji.Now they are bringing in computers that can do the work of lu men.” Yachtsmen’s arrival lends a festive air From page 10 muda before the Bermuda Ocean Race begins at Annapolis, Md.Yachts in this race cover a 753-mile rhumb line course through the Chesapeake and east-southeast into the Atlantic.After crossing their Bermuda finish line they’ll pack the mooring spaces at picturesque St.George’s, also rafting up en masse against the St.George’s Dinghy & Sports Club jetty.On June 22, the Newport-Bermuda Race, one of the world’s classic ocean yacht races, starts at Newport, R.I., with the leading maxis expected at the finish line off St.David’s Head, Bermuda, within three days.The rhumb line distance (direct compass course, with no deviation) of the Bermuda Race, is 635 miles.A festive mood is kindled by these races.It takes hold as yachtsmen’s relatives and friends, having flown ahead to the luxury of Bermuda’s terra fir-ma, are sparing some thoughts for yachts crews who are travelling in comparative discomfort on the ocean.At the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club in Hamilton, Bermuda Race winning yachts, plus many more flying all the flags they can muster, will squeeze sardine-style to the dock.Stepping ashore, crew members are liable to be swept into a crowd swaying to lively calypso music.At St.George’s Dinghy Club, the queue revolving ’round the outside barbecue will seem to be endless as dulcimer sounds of a steel band waft over the harbor.This is a time when landlubbers get to understand some of the language of the sea; that a sloop has one mast, that yawls, ketches and some schooners have two.It’s a picnic for camera buffs who can’t resist nautical scenes.While the tall ships are in port, there will be special harbor cruises at Hamilton, enabling close-ups to be taken of the large sailing vessels at anchor.Hamilton and St.George’s in their inti mate ways, ever show cases of fine merchandise from all over the world, make gift shopping easy for tourists and souvenir hunters.Before the big fleets arrive, local appetites for competitive sail ra cing will have been whetted at Bermuda’s International Race Week during the first week of May, when the focus is on inshore racing classes.On May 24, Bermuda’s unique fitted dinghies begin their racing season at St.George’s.7® TRANS-OCEAN TRAVEL INC 66 King St.W.Sherbrooke, P.Q., Canodo Tel.; (819) 563-4515 SUPER SPECIALS OFFER !!!! ALL ENGUND 2 weeks from 599® U S DUBLIN PLUS 1 week from 399® u s IRISH COUNTRY 1 week from 399® u.s BRITISH ISLES 2 weeks Irom 599“ u.s.LONDON 1 week from 499® u.s.All complete vacation prices: included air transportation, hotels + transfers.Plus 15% tax & service. 12—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.MAY 18, 1984 Travel Pictou lobster festival celebrates a very happy 50th PICTOU, N.S.— Canada’s oldest lobster festival at Pictou, Nova Scotia, may just be the best “free” entertainment around — and its 50th anniversary version this summer should be no exception.Scores of attractions from a blazing phantom ship to pipe bands and a King Neptune Pageant won't cost visitors a penny over the four days of celebrations that get underway July 5 with a performance by the Canadian Armed Forces Sky Hawks Parchute Team, and conclude with a spectacular fireworks display July 8.Over the four days of the golden anniversary celebrations there’ll be a jam-packed program of fun and entertainment that organizers hope will make the town’s 50th carnival the biggest and best annual salute they’ve ever given to the local lobster fishermen of the Northumberland Strait area.It’s part of Nova Scotia’s 1984 tourism bill-of-fare which will be highlighted by a spectacular Tall Ships Parade of Sail at Halifax June 13 and atSydney July 11, thefirstever in Eastern Canadian waters, and celebrations at Baddeck marking the 75th anniversary of the first powered flight in Canada and the first by a British subject anywhere in the British Empire.An estimated 60,000 or more visitors to the Pictou Lobster Carnival will join former festival queens at parades, games, races, dancing - and succulent lobster dinners.There’ll also be tables full of mouthwatering strawberry shortcake at the Pictou Strawberry Festival which runs in conjunction with the carnival.A special red carpet will be rolled out for youngsters who will be invited to join a children’s parade, a paper airplane contest and scavenger hunt, then gather their families for a fishing contest off the end of a harbor pier.Thousands will line the waterfront of yacht races, harbor swim, bathtub races, canoe and kayak races - and the ever-popular lobster boat races which attracts lobstermen from across Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island Then they’ll head back for centre-town and bed races, road races, a mini-Louis Riel Race, softball, tennis and golf tournaments, open to all competitors, Many of the thousands of visitors, who swell the normal population of Pictou tenfold, will take time from the festivities to enjoy the area’s beautiful scenery and the warmest waters north of Florida in the adjoining Northumberland Strait.Some will enjoy delving into the history of the town that received its name from the Micmac Indians who originally inhabited the county.Local residents also celebrate the arrival in 1773 of the ship Hector with Highland settlers from Scotland - the vanguard of Scottish immigration to the Maritime Provinces.The home of a large shipbuilding industry, Pictou’s ties with the sea have permeated the life of her people who set aside these few days each year to honor her lobstermen and promote their tasty catch.A special theme song has been written for the 50th Carnival, focusing on the “Fire Ship of the Northumberland Straight,” a blazing ghost ship which many have claimed to have seen down through the years.She’s expected to sail into Pictou Harbour during this year’s Lobster Carnival, and in view of thousands, bum to the waterline - her place of origin, identity and intended destination a mystery.Thousands of visitors will drop in on this year’s Pictou lobster festival.-g : > California’s scenic Pacific coastline road open again BIG SUR, Calif.(Reuter) — One of the world’s great scenic journeys has become possible again.In May 1983, rains- torms triggered a huge landslide which engulfed a section of Highway 1, a narrow road which winds along the often breathtakingly scenic California coast between Los Angeles and San Francisco.As well as the natural scenery, preserved in a series of government controlled parks, there are manmade attractions such as the mixture of architectural styles at San Simeon castle, built in the 1920s by newspaper publisher William Randolph Hears!.It is now open to the public.There is also the town of Monterey, whose sardine-canning district was the setting for two novels by John Steinbeck, Cannery Row and Sweet Thursday.CLOSED HIGHWAY The landslide, one of the biggest ever to cover a California highway, made part of the coastal journey impossible and travellers were forced to use the straighter, faster but tedious inland roads for the 650-kilometre drive between Los An- geles and San Francisco.For people living in Big Sur, a village of 150 people about 210 kilometres south of San Francisco, and other picturesque communities on either side of the slide, the highway closure meant they were living at a dead end.Initially at least, many residents relished the tranquillity and serenity resulting from the halt in the flow of tourists.Wildlife also benefited, and people reported seeing such rarities as mountain lion, wild boar and elk which ventured down from the nearby Santa Lucia mountains.CUT BUSINESS But the isolation also meant hardship for those who depended on the tourists for a living, particularly owners of restaurants, hotels, gas stations and the many artists who sell their work to travellers.The landslide had a dramatic impact on the local economy, says David Ackerman of the California State Business, Transportation and Housing Agency.He estimated that losses totalled $18 million in the Big Sur area and a further $16 million in the Monterey Peninsula, which lies between Big Sur and San Francisco to the north.About 400 people lost their jobs.“Everyone around here got scared and started selling their homes,” said local artist Emil White.“None of my old friends are around anymore.” ROAD REOPENED Eventually the landslide was cleared and Highway 1 reopened in April, amid much local celebration.An estimated one million tourists stayed away from Big Sur during the 11 months that the road was closed.Now it is open and the sound of cash registers is competing with that of the surf.Even those residents who savored the solitude appear to have no regrets.“For a while it was fun being cut off, but there were too many hardships,” said Greg Hawthorne, a painter who arrived in Big Sur shortly before the landslide hit.“We have a little chunk of Big Sur here, but it should be shared with the whole world.It’s too magnificent to have just to ourselves.” Arthritis n Who says its only a disease of the old?* SUPPORT! HI ARTHRITIS SOCIETY PIT AM-RE Ot STROP'S voyagea Plaza Rack Farasl — «87 Baurqui Bbd.564-1055-JOB 2J0 Call or Drop In & Visit Us ’ ACTA1 \ ASSOC'*' Let us help you in all your Travel Needs TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18.1984-13 Travel____________________________________________fieconl Nature lovers delight in New Brunswick flora, fauna Over 275 species of bird can be spotted on Grand Mahan island.* Vacation time is learning time in today’s world and the pleasure and fun double when the classroom setting is as captivating as New Brunswick, Canada’s Picture Province.Grand Manan, the largest of the Fundy Isles, is a relaxing, secluded spot where there seems to be endless time to enjoy the beauty and bounty of the sea.Yet this summer, visitors will find an exciting range of activities to enlarge their vision in the world of nature and their skills in portraying its wonders.Over 275 species of birds have been sighted on Grand Manan so it is a marvellous place for birdwatching tours, particularly when the walks are led by experienced bird expert Mary Majka.The Marathon Inn has arranged two weekend packages in July which include the tours, meals and accommodations.In August and early September, “thar they blow,” and whales, minke, pothead, humpback, finback and the very rare right whale, appear in the waters off the Fundy Isles to conduct their frolicsome courtships.Expert David Gaskin conducts lectures and expeditions by boat to areas where a helicopter has sighted the huge creatures.The Marathon makes it easy to learn more about these fascinating, huge mammals in seven-day packages which include transportation to and from Saint John and the island along with all other expenses.One-day whale watching trips are also available.Photography is another field where expert instruction is included in a Marathon package.Award-winning photographer Freeman Patterson is giving two one-week courses.May 26-June 2 and July 7-14, and his associates Doris Mowry and Gary Black conduct two further programs July 18-25 and July 30-August 6.Printmaker workshops in etching, collagraph and woodcut or linocut techniques are also being held on Grand Manan this summer, July 2 to August 31.The studio time with instruction is purchased in half-day units so that you can play hooky for a seaside picnic on a particularly sun-warmed day and then return to your project when the quiet fog rolls in.St.Andrews-by-the-Sea was settled partially by Loyalists who moved their homes by barge from Castine, Maine, when they chose to remain loyal to the Crown during the American Revolution.Several buildings from the 1700s and over 250 from the 1800s still grace its streets and add to the old-fashioned charm of this resort.The setting inspires interest in the arts and Sunbury Shores Arts and Nature Centre offers a series of courses designed to enhance artistic expression.They have two two-week courses, one on the essentials, of painting in oils by Molly Bobak and Brigid Grant and one on watercolors by Chin-kok Tan.Introductory Drawing and A Printer’s Aproach to Working from Nature are five-day courses and a weekend workshop on Seeing with a Camera are available along with several craft courses.The nature side of the Centre is represented in historical explorations of the resources of the sea and the land and in courses in natural science on various subjects including whales and whale and birdwatching trips.There are also programs for children designed to encourage interest in the relationships of nature and the arts.Another art course for adults is given in the idyllic setting at Mount Allison University in Sack ville, a town on the edge of the Tantramar Marshes.The course lasts for 10 days and instructors combine classes and field trips.Room and board on the campus are available for workshop participants.In Fredericton, the gracious capital, City of Stately Elms, the University of New Brunswick is again holding the Maritime Writers Workshop, the week of July 8 this year.Two week-long Elder-hostel programs on genealogy, the Loyalists and the Literature of Atlantic Canada are also being presented with accommodations and meals available on campus for all these courses.La Fine Grobe is an unusual combination of gourmet restaurant and craft school set on the beautiful shoreline of Nepisiquit Bay in Nigadoo near Bathurst.Their program this year offers three subjects, calligraphy, design and communication and silk screening, each in a separate five-day program but all focused toward poster or logo creation.The courses are for people 16 or over and are held each morning from 9 a m.until noon Fundy isles maybe New Brunswick’s best kept secret An island, to quote an old saying, can be simply a dot on a map surrounded by water, or it can be a way of life.The famous Isles of Fundy, located in the Bay of Fundy off the southwest coast of New Brunswick, are a way of life in which visitors still find old world grace among people who show an in-born sense of friendlines and hospitality.Passamaquoddy Bay, lying between the Canadian province of New Brunswick and the state of Maine, is almost shut off from its turbulent source, the Bay of Fundy, by an array of numerous gray-green islands ranging in size from mere tusks of rock, to the long, irregular profiles of the three largest islands: Deer, Cam-pobello and Grand Manan.Deer Island, the smallest of the trio, is about two and a half km (one and a half miles) from the Maine coast and five km (three miles) from the New Brunswick mainland and stretches directly across the centre of Passamaquoddy Bay.Campobello, to the south across a few' miles of water, practically touches the Maine shoreline at Lubec, while Grand Manan, “the last of the Passama-quoddies” 12 miles farther out at sea, lies uneasily in the restless jaws of Fundy.“If only we belonged to the States, how things would hum here,” sighs many a Fundy island housewife, hankering, no doubt, for access to the variety of pretty clothes and fancy household gadgets available in the big shopping malls on the mainland.But it is precisely because of this fact that the Fundy Isles do not change, and life goes placidly along in the same age-old groove, that endears them to visitors from the big, bustling cities.Deer Island can be reached by toll-free ferry from the New Brunswick mainland at Letete.Campobello is linked to Maine by the Roosevelt International Bridge at Lubec and can also be reached by a toll ferry from Deer Island but only during the sum mer months.Grand Manan is serviced by steamer ferry based at Black’s Harbour just off Route 1 between St.Stephen and Saint John.Deer Island had few human inhabitants in the 1770s when Colonel Joseph Gorham was given title to it.Those who were there had come from Massachusetts to fish the abundant waters surrounding the island.Legal difficulties forced Gor ham to later sell his holdings for 47 British pounds to a Captain Thomas Farrell who remained master of the small island through a new grant issued by the Governor of Nova Scotia in 1810.The American Revolution instigated the influx of the United Empire Loyalists, many of whom chose to make Deer Island their new home.Other emigrants, hopeful of finding a brighter future, came from as far away as England, Scotland and Ireland.Fishing and related industries remain primary to the economy of this small island, giving its population of about 1,000, a good standard of living complete with amenities and conveniences of a much larger community.The world’s largest lobster pound holding tons of this crusta-ceous delicacy may be seen at Northern Harbour.Thousands of cases of sardines of superior quality are packed at a cannery in Fairhaven and shipped to many parts of the world.A highlight of a visit to Campo bello Island is a tour of Roosevelt cottage located in Roosevelt-Campobello International Park, administered by a joint United States-Canadian Commission.The Park is open from May to October, seven days a week, and there is no admission charge.A monument to the late U.S.president Franklin Delano Roosevelt stands on the lawn in front of the library at Welshpool.A member of the committee said the monument was erected, not because Mr.Roosevelt had been president of tne United States but because he was an American who spent many years of his life fostering friendship between the two countries.To him Campobello was always the “beloved isle”.This year the island is observing the centennial of Eleanor Roosevelt who spent many holidays there.The Isles of Fundy provide all the peace anyone could want.*••• 14—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984 This week's TV -r-J Listings for this week's television programs as supplied by Compulog Corp.While we make every effort to ensure their accuracy, they are subject to change without notice.I STATIONS LISTED " O CBFT - Montreal (Radio Canada) O W'CAX - Burlington, Vt.(CBS) O WITZ - Plattsburgh, N.Y.(NBC) O CB.MT - Montreal (CBC) O CULT - Sherbrooke (TVA) O WMTW - Poland Spring, Me.(ABC) Q (KSM - Sherbrooke ( Radio Canada) CD CFTM - Montreal (TVA) (9 CFCF - Montreal (CTV) 0B WVNY - Burlington (ABC) W Radio-Québec © Vermont ETV - Burlington Saturda MORNING 8 00 O NEW YOU © UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR 8 30 © CIRCLE SQUARE 7 00f) BATMAN Q CARTOONS Q ODD COUPLE © CISCO KID © GREAT SPACE COASTER 7:15 0 MIRE ET MUSIQUE 7:30 0 O CALIMERO O JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH O CHILDREN'S THEATRE © 100 HUNTLEY STREET ffi GREAT SPACE COASTER 7:45 Q O MERCI MONSIEUR NOE 8:00 Q O NILS HOLGERS-SON Q CHARLIE BROWN AND SNOOPY Movie Retinae Outstanding .Excellant Vary Good .?Good Not Bad ** Fair Poor A Q THE FLINTSTONE FUNNIES O Œ) THE MON-CHHICHIS / LITTLE RASCALS / RICHIE RICH / SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK © SESAME STREET (R) 8.30 a DESSINS ANIMES O SATURDAY SUPER-CADE 0 SHIRT TALES © STORYTIME 9:00 Q Q REMI Q THE SMURFS Q © L'ANIMATHEQUE 0 ffi SCOOBY 000 AND SCRAPPY D00 SHOW © LET'S GO © FOR THE LOVE OF DANCE Les Ballets Cana dians.the National Ballet 01 Canada, the Toronto Dance Ballet Theatre.Le Groupe de la Place Royale, the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, lhe Winnipeg Contemporary Dance Company and the Anna Wyman Dance Theatre are profiled 9:15 0 GOOD MORNING 9:30 O O CANDY O DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS O QUIZ KIDS O © PETIT PRINCE ORPHELIN O © PAC-MAN / RUBIK CUBE / MENUDO © SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON 10:00 0 O ALBATOR O TARZAN: LORD OF THE JUNGLE O DAVEY AND GOLIATH O © SKIPPY LE KANGOUROU © SMURFS Œ) MOVIE 'A Haunting We Will Go" (1942, Come dy) Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy 10:30 O O ZIG ZAGS O BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER 0 ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS O SKIPPER AND COMPANY O P'TITS BONSHOMMES O © THE LITTLES © CHEVAUX DU SOLEIL 11:00 0 HEROS DU SAMEDI "Hockey sur gazon inferieur" O MR.T O SESAME STREET 0 JOGGING O © PUPPY / SCOOBY D00 ! MENUDO g O TOUCHE A TOUT © MADAME ET SON FANTOME © WRESTLING 11:30 0 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN / INCREDIBLE HULK O VIDEO STAR © JUSTICE POUR TOUS © TO BE ANNOUNCED AFTERNOON 12:00 0 O SEMAINE PARLEMENTAIRE A OTTAWA 0 THE BISKITTS a MAJA.THE BEE a © MIDI A QUATORZE Avec Louise-Josee Mon-doux.Q THAT TEEN SHOW © ORIGINAL SIX HOCKEY HEROES Detroit at New York © ABC WEEKEND "II I'm Lost.How Come I Found You?" A runaway orphan, an elderly lady and two foreign missionaries complicate the hideout plans 01 amateur burglars (Part 1 of 2) (R) g © DO IT YOURSELF SHOW "Hardwood Floors" A look at retinish-mg, refurbishing and new Door installation.12:30 O BENJI, ZAX AND THE ALIEN PRINCE O THUNDARR O GOING GREAT Sports SUNDAY (CBS)NBA BASKETBALL Eastern and Western Conterence Championship Series, game tour ot seven.(CBS) GOLF Final-round coverage ot the $400,000 Colonial National Invitation Golf event from Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.(NBC) BOXING « (NBC) SPOftTSWOftLD Boxing: Live coverage of a scheduled 10-round lightweight bout between Hector "Macho" Camacho and Ftafael Williams with Marv Albert and Dr.Ferdie Pacheco hosting.NASCAR: Taped coverage of the Alabama 500 from the Alabama International Motor Speedway in Talladega, Ala.with Paul Page, Gary Geroukf.Bobby Unser and Bruce Jenner delivering the commentary.Baseball: "SportsWorld J Americana," offering a look al Little League base- ball.t (ABC) AMERICAN SPORTSMAN (ABC)USFL FOOTBALL (ABC) RACING Indianapolis 500: "The Last of the Fastest" SATURDAY (NBC) BASEBALL DOUBLEHEADER Game One: The Los Angeles Dodgers at New York Mets or St.Louis Cardinals at Atlanta Braves Game Two: Baltimore Orioles at California Angels or Kansas City Royals at Boston Red Sox, (ABC) U.S.OLYMPIC TRIALS (ABC) AMERICAN SPOHTSBEAT (ABC) BOWLING Pro Bowlers Spring Tour (ABC) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (CBS) NCAA SPECIAL Men's volleyball championship from Los Angeles, Calif.(CBS) GOLF .Third-round coverage ol the $500,000 Memorial Golf classic from Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio.AROUND AND AROUND - ABC presents the last time-trials for this year's Indianapolis 500 from the Indianapolis Speedway ("the old brickyard") on May 20.Alter "Bumping Day," 33 ol the original 117 entrants will be eligible to participate in the 68th running of the racing spectacular.This is the chance for racers to bump the slowest of the previous qualifiers from a starting position.The race itself will be shown on tape delay Sunday.May 27 on ABC.It's like "The Dukes of Hazard" on Sunday night! Jim McKay, the network's top sportscaster, will head a panel of commentators that includes Jackie Stewart, Sam Posey, Bill Fleming, Jim Lampley and Jack Arute.Stewart, a three-time World Driving Champion, and Posey are past Indy competitors.A record-lying seven former Indy champions will enter this year's race, including A.J.Foyt, Al Unser Sr., Johnny Rutherford, Gordon Johncock, Tom Sneva, Mario Andretti and Rick Mears.Foyt, the only four-time Indianapolis winner, will make his "drive for five" in his 27th consecutive 500 Both Rutherford and Unser have been in the winner's circle three times, and Johncock took the checkered flag twice.The 1983 500 went to Tom Sneva, but only after having to battle the Unser family.Late in the race, Al Sr.was leading, Sneva was second, and Al Jr.was driving between the two after being lapped.When Sneva made a move on AI Sr., Al Jr.blocked him, but Sneva eventually passed both Unsers with 10 laps to go — and the race was over.DRAFT PICK Arnold (Gary Coleman) gets a letter ordering him to register for the draft and it causes him to have a nightmare on "Diff’rent Strokes,” airing SATURDAY, MAY 19 on NBC.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME O S3 AMERICAN BAND-STAND Guests: Wang Chung ("Don't Let Go," "Dance Hall Days"), Kim Fields ("Dear Michael").Œ SQUARE FOOT GARDENING 1:00 O O D'HIER A DEMAIN Aujourd'hui, un documentaire sur les expeditions dans diverses grottes et cavernes européennes, véritables musees de beautés naturelles, sanctuaires d'une vie animale et minérale d'un style particulier O FAT ALBERT 0 CHILDREN'S THEATRE "The Talking Parcel" Animated.Author and naturalist Gerald Durrell sets this lantasy lale in the fabulous land of Mythologia O STEPPIN' OUT © MAJOR JUNIOR HOCKEY "Memorial Cup " (live from Kitchener.Ont ).© ACROSS THE FENCE 1:30 0 CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL 0 THIS WEEK M BASEBALL O WESTERN GARDENER O © HOCKEY "Coupe memorial 1984" O LORNE GREENE’S NEW WILDERNESS © LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS © VICTORY GARDEN Bob Thomson plants his deck garden, and a special lour ol the White House gardens is featured 2:00 Q O CINE-FAMILLE "Brioche" L’histoire d'une petite orpheline de huit ans aux cheveux couleur carotte et surnommée Brioche, qui va vivre chez son oncle, son tuteur.O PGA GOLF "Colonial National Invitation" Third round (live from Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas).O BASEBALL Regional coverage of Angels at Yankees or Astros at Cubs O O WILD KINODOM 03 ACTUALITE ECONOMIQUE Un tour d’horizon sur les événements qui animent la vie economique tant sur la scene provinciale nationale qu'interna tionale.(R) Œ MOVIE **?* "Sfrangera On A Train" (1951, Suspense) Farley Granger.Robert Walker A pro tennis player is offered a murderous proposition by a wealthy psychopath while traveling from Washington to New York.2:30 O FROM NOW ON O © PBA BOWLING "$115,000 Seattle Open" (live from Seattle, Wash.) ffl DOSSIER SANTE Un documentaire consacre aux problèmes que pose l'obesite a plusieurs milliers de Québécois.(R) 3:00 O SPORTSWEEKEND Scheduled: European Cup Winners' Soccer Final (from Basel, Switzerland); National Marathon (from Ottawa).3:30© NBA BASKETBALL Eastern Conference Final" © GRANDS PAS CLASSIQUES Francesca Zum-bo et Patrick Bart de l'Opera de Paris interpre tent quelques extraits du ballet "Le Corsaire" de Drigo (R) 4:00 O O BAGATELLE O ® WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled Olympic figure skating champions Scott Hamilton and Torvill and Dean in larewell performances (from Bowling Green.Ohio); a preview of Saturda TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984—15 today's Preakness Stakes © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled National Physical Activity Week Quiz, designed to test and measure viewers' knowledge about physical activity and the benefits of such activity.© NOURRIR LE QUEBEC Un tour d’horizon sur les ressources alimentaires et les produits agricoles du Quebec grace a des dossiers et des repor tages sur les milieux de l'agriculture, de l'elevage et de la peche chez-nous.(R) ® SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons review "The Natural" and "Firestarter." 4:15 0 CD RACONTE-MOI LA MER Avec Gilles Pelletier 4:30© HISTOIRES DE ZOO Ce soir, une visite a la maison Grzimek ou nous pouvons observer la vie et les moeurs de 100 species d'animaux noctambules.(R) © LAST CHANCE GARAGE Brad Sears explains brake systems and demonstrates the lubrication of hinges; a 1984 Mercedes 190E is featured Q 4:45 0 (D ROUTE OLYMPIQUE "L'Athlete soviétique" 5:00 0 O HISTOIRES D’HIER ET D'AUJOURD'HUI 0 YAZ O © ® THE PREAKNESS STAKES The 109th running of the second jewel of horse racing's Triple Crown (live from Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md ) © MARCHE AUX IMAGES © GERMAN PROFESSIONAL SOCCER 5:45 O LE MONDE / LOTTO 6/49 Œ) DIX VOUS INFORME / LOTTO 6/49 EVENING 6:00 © IMPACTS Magazine de reflexion sur l'actualité.O © NEWS 0 STAR SEARCH O CBC NEWS O © POP EXPRESS Avec Manuel Tadros et ses invites.O © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS O INCROYABLE HULK © FABLES DE LA FONTAINE Ce soir, "Le Lion et le rat" et "Le Chene et le roseau." © SOAPBOX 6:30 O CBS NEWS O THIS WEEK IN PARLIAMENT O NEWS © STEREOVISION NETWORK Featured Girlschool, Sylum, Steve Blinke, True Myth © BENNY HILL 6D AMIS DE MES AMIS L'amitie presque impossible entre une jeune chypriote d'origine turque et un autre d'origine grecque © ALL NEW THIS OLD HOUSE Finishing touches are put on the solar home in Brookline, Massachusetts Ç 7:00 0 Q MONDE MERVEILLEUX DE DISNEY "Un candidat au poil’ Un avocat decide de briguer la poste de maire pour mettre de l’ordre a la munici- Movies SUNDAY (ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE MYSTIC WARRIOR" (1984) Part I.Starring Robert Beltran and Nick Ramus.The fictional saga about a proud band of Sioux Indians whose rugged, yet deeply spiritual traditions are under constant threat from both man and nature (NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE FIRST OLYMPICS - ATHENS 1896” (1984) Part I Star ring Louis Jourdan, David Ogden Stiers and Gayle Hunnicutt.The story of how America's first Olympic athletes stunned the world with a series of sweeping victories.MONDAY (NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE FIRST OLYMPICS - ATHENS 1896” (1984) (ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE MYSTIC WARRIOR” (1984) Partit.TUESDAY Part I (CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE ZANY ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD" (1984) Star ring George Segal.Morgan Fairchild and Roddy McDowall A humorous version of the Robin Hood legend, including Segal's entrance where he is disguised as a woman, WEDNESDAY (CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “EVERY WHICH WAY BUT LOOSE” (1978) Starring Clint East-wood, Sondra Locke, Geoffrey Lewis, Beverly D'Angelo and Ruth Gordon.An easygoing truck driver regularly defends his reputation as the best barroom brawler in Southern California.C.J.the orangutan, adds his own moments.(ABC) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “LOVE THY NEIGHBOR” (1984) Starring John Ritter and Penny Marshall.Suburban neighbors with clashing personalities are drawn into an unlikely affair when their spouses run oft together.THURSDAY (ABC) THURSDAY NIGHT MOVIE “INVITATION TO HELL" (1984) Starring Susan Lucci and Robert Urich.Miss Lucci makes her movie debut as a seductress with unearthly powers.FRIDAY (CBS) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE “SEPTEMBER GUN” Starring Robert Preston and Patty Duke Astin.Repeat broadcast of this award-winning western drama about an aging gunfighter who grudgingly helps a determined Catholic nun care for a group of unwanted Apache children.(NBC) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE SATURDAY (CB8) SATURDAY NIGHT MOVIE “XANADU" Starring Gene Kelly, Michael Beck and Olivia Newton-John.A musical fantasy about a muse who steps out of a mural to inspire two men to fulfill their dreams.palite O HEE HAW Q SOLID GOLD O GERALDINE Guest Samuel Gesser, one of Montreal's finest impresarios O Œ) PETITE MAISON DANS LA PRAIRIE La Reincarnation de Nellie" (lere de 2) O STAR SEARCH © MUSIC VISION Fea tured Kiss.Lee Aaron, Culture Club.Sherry Kean, Hughie Lewis and the News © HOW THE WEST WAS WON © PLANETE UKRAINIENNE William Kurelek.grand peintre canadien d'origine ukrainienne, nous est raconte par le biais de diverses entrevues de sa femme et de ses amis qui nous parlent de l’homme et de l'oeuvre colossale qu'il a laissée aux Canadiens.© AUSTIN CUV LIMITS "Stevie Ray Vaughan The Fabulous Thunder-birds" Vaughan and his band.Double Trouble, play selections from "Texas Flood." and The Fabu lous Thunderbirds perform "One's Too Many" and She's Tough " 7:30 O FRONT PAGE CHALLENGE © JUST KIDDING Children discuss finding a rich wife, and define the term "shock treatment." © JUSTICE POUR TOUS Chaque episode de cette sérié est assorti d'une courte dramatique qui illustre le propos de l’émission.(R) 8:00 0 O LES FINALES DE STANLEY CUP Cinquième Match" Les Islan ders de New York visitent les Oilers d'Edmonton (Si necessaire) O CLASSIC CREATURES: RETURN OF THE JEDI Carrie Fisher and Bil ly Dee Williams look at the creation of movie monsters from the initial inspiration of the filmmaker to the actual filming of classics including "Return Of The Jedi" and "The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms " (R) 0 DIFF’RENT STROKES Arnold has a nightmare after the Selective Ser vice orders him to register for the draft.(R) O STANLEY CUP FINALS "Game Five" New York Islanders at Edmonton Oilers (If necessary) O © GRANDS SPECTACLES AAA "Les Proies" (1971 Drame) Clint East wood, Geraldine Page Un soldat nordiste blesse trouve refuge dans une pension sudiste pour jeunes filles.O © TJ.HOOKER Hooker defends a police officer after her cowardice causes a gunman to wound Romano's friend (R)g © PIERRE LALONDE Guests; Andre Gagnon.Les Sortileges, Margie Gillis.© SAMEDI SOIR: L’HISTOIRE EN JUGEMENT S'il fut associe a la victoire alliee d 1918, le general Maxime Weygrand fut egalement mele de 1res près a la défaite de la France et a l'armistice qui suspendait les combats contre l'Allemagne le 22 juin 1940 © ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL II 8:30 0 SILVER SPOONS Ricky and Derek convince two older girls to be their dates at a rock concert.(R) 9:00 O © MOVIE AAA "Outland" (1981, Science-Fiction) Sean Connery.Peter Boyle.A space marshal investigates a rash of mysterious deaths within a mining colony on one of Jupiter's moons (Viewer Discretion Advised) 0 PEOPLE ARE FUNNY Scheduled: passers-by at a farmer's market are tested to see if they recognize actor Bruce Weitz; a man attempts to return a boa constrictor he claims he purchased at a flea market O © LOVE BOAT Julie falls for a famous crooner, Doc and Gopher compete for the affections of a nurse, and a businessman surprises two of his employees (R) Q © MOVIE AAA "The Awful Truth' (1937, Comedy) Cary Grant, Irene Dunne An estranged cou pie rediscovers their love for each other.9:30 0 MAMA'S FAMILY After her husband leaves her, Ellen shocks the family by dating a much younger man (R) 10:00 O GEORGE BURNS CELEBRATES 80 YEARS IN SHOW BUSINESS John Forsythe, Kenny Rogers, Ann-Margret, Bernadette Peters.Rev Billy Graham, Bob Hope and Johnny Car-son are among those to reminisce about the entertainer's eight decades in show business (R) O © SUR LA SELLETTE Avec Simon Noel O © FANTASY ISLAND A young woman agrees to be a surrogate mother, and a man wanting to marry his girlfriend must decide which of two other women is the most beautiful.Q 10:10© GRANDS ORCHESTRES Ce soir, l'histoire de l’orchestre de Philadel phie, son present et une entrevue avec son chef, Eugene Ormandy 10:30 0 O LE TELEJOURNAL O © NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS © MICHAEL SMITH: COMPOSER A profile of the composer-pianist, an American artist who lives in Sweden SUPERSTAR PROFILESI ON STAGE AMERICAI 10:50 0 O SPORTS / POLITIQUE FEDERALE 11:00 0 O NEWS O THE NATIONAL g O © CINEMA AAA "Les Forces du mal" (1974, Suspense) Sandy Dennis, Ralph Bellamy Initiée a la pratique de la sorcellerie par un voisin, une femme devient depressive lorsqu'elle croit que les forces du mal tentent de prendre possession de son corps © ABC NEWS © AMERICAN PLAY- HOUSE "Oppenheimer" During the 1930s physicist J Robert Oppenheimer becomes involved in leftist politics while working at the University of California, Berkeley (Part 1 of 7) (R)g 11:05© CINEASTES A L'ECRAN Cetle semaine, quatre courts-metrages "De l'une a l'aube." "Moi pis mon chum," "Harmonie" et "Voisin, voisine " (R) 11:15 0 CINEMA "Une voix dans la nuit ' (1973.Drame) Luke Askew, Patti Oatman Un groupe de hippies découvre la retraite d'un animateur d'émission radiophonique dans une ferme isolee de l Alberta, et une jeune fille de la band s'offre a partager son existence O NEWS O ABC NEWS O CINEMA "Arrête ton char" (1978, Comedie) Stéphane Mille, Remi Lau rent.Quelques jeunes Français font leur service militaire dans une caserne situe en Allemagne sous les ordres d'un sergent Tatillon d'un Capitaine ahuri et d'un colonel indulgent © CTV NATIONAL NEWS §) MOVIE 4** Beau Brummel" (1954, Adventure) Elizabeth Taylor.Stewart Granger One of England's most dashing figures courts a multitude of women 11:200 NEWS ("Provincial Affairs" will precede the news ) 11:30© SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Host: Stevie Wonder Guests Wonderlove.comic juggler Michael Davis (R) O BENNY HILL 11:35 0 MOVIE A* A A "The Heartbreak Kid' (1972, Comedy) Charles Grodm, Cybill Shepherd The honeymoon plans of a couple of young Jewish newlyweds go awry when the groom decides he wants a replacement for his new bride ©NEWS 11:45 0 MOVIE A A '?"Victory At Entebbe" (1976, Adventure) Burt Lanças ter, Kirk Douglas A band of Israeli commandos stages a daring airfield raid to free 104 Jewish hostages being held in Uganda by Arab terrorists 12:00 0 SOLID GOLD © SMITHSONIAN WORLD Designs For Liv mg" A look at human accommodations to life on earth, in space under ground and under water, featuring the development of the skyscraper, an American phenomenon, and the evolution of the space suit g 12:15© MOVIE A A "WUSA" (1970, Drama) Paul Newman.Joanne Woodward An alcoholic disc jockey finds himself a pawn in a reactionary political plot and assassi nation 1:00 0 CINEMA "La Cecilia" (1975, Drame) Massimo Foschi.Maria Carta En 1897.un groupe d’anarchistes italiens s'y installe sous la direction de l'ecri-vain Giovanni Rossi dans Brésil 0 NEW YORK HOT TRACKS O ROCK PALACE © STROKES OF GENIUS Arshile Gorky" and Franz Kline Remem bered" Dustin Hoffman hosts an examination of the lives and works of two major modern American artists whose careers were cut off by early deaths 1:20 O CINEMA AAA Bon jour tristesse" (1957, Drame) Jean Seberg, David Niven Eprouvant de la tristesse, une adole scente revit ses dermeres vacances sur la Riviera 2:00 O AMERICA S TOP TEN 2:30 0 NEWS © MOVIE A A’ You Can’t Steal Love (1974, Adventure) Robert Con rad.Donna Mills Two light fingered beach bums and a female accomplice leave behind a trail of empty jewel boxes and broken dreams as they successfully snatch a for tune in gems 4:30 © THE WALTONS By Elizabeth Gordon 1.What was television's first soap opera?Z.What was the “fourth network," and when did it go out of business?3.When was the first World Series broadcast on television?4.What was ABC's first No.1-rated series?5.When did Johnny Carson and “The Tonight Show" permanently move from New York City to Burbank, Calif?6.Which announcer of "The David Letter-man Show" had announced for "The Tonight Show” as well?7.Who hosted the first of television's informal talk/variety shows, "Broadway Open House "?8.Dagmar was one of the regulars on that show — what was her real name?S|Me-| eiuuep g jejsei Auer •/ liepueMing g ZZ61 Abh S ,,AqieM snojeyy,, > 3BNU0 7*6i e 9S6t luouma Z .IMH Abmbjbj,, i SJ3/YYSU\?lio 12 13 14 o 15 16 17 o 18 p ¦ " 19 20 o 21 o o 22 o 23 24 o Ü.25 26 27 ,, 28 29 30 r 31 32 33 34 Q 35 36 o o o Ü f 37 38 39 40 41 o llS 42 o o 11 ACROSS 1 Consumes 5 Tennis great 9 " My Children" 10 Dead letter office: abbr.12 Sudden burst of energy 15 Farrell and Connors 18 Saucy 20 N Y baseball team 21 " Patrol" 22 Evangelist Roberts 24 Unpaid 25 Larry Manetti role 28 Vincent Price oldie 31 Hurt 32 Pianist Peter — 34 Stop 36 Spanish gentleman 37 Urge 39 And so forth: abbr.41 She's Mary Beth 42 Slightly open DOWN 2 "— to Adventure" 3 Monogram for Laneuville 4 Actor Pickens 5 — 12’’ 6 She's Diane: init.7 "The Happy — " (clue to puzzle answer) 8 Stinging insect 1 1 Argue 13 Kind of soup 14 "Diff'rent —" 16 Comedian Coca 1 7 Greek letter 19 Singer Frankie 23 George Burn s wife 26 "— Palace" 27 Lon — 29 Indian tribe 30 — Bowl 33 Philharmonic, e g.: abbr 35 "The — of Night" 36 Actor Farrell 38 Great Northern Railroad: abbr.40 Monogram for singer Jones (clue to puzzle answer) ooooooo ooooooo Answer to puzzle on page 19 16—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.MAY 18, 1984 Sunda MORNING 5:30 (B RHOOA 8:00 O COMMUNITY B © UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR 8:30 O HEALTH FIELD © ROCKET ROBIN HOOD © SPORT BILLY 7:00 Q FOCUS '84 O THIS IS THE LIFE Q JIMMY SWAGGART © THE WORLD TOMORROW © JONNY QUEST 7:30 0 IL ETAIT UNE FOIS .L HOMME g O IT IS WRITTEN O JIMMY SWAGGART © DAY OF DISCOVERY © THE JETSONS 8:00 O O WOODY LE PIC O BATMAN O DAY OF DISCOVERY © JIMMY SWAGGART © FATHER JOHN BERTOLUCCI © SESAME STREET (R) 8:30 ('} O PETIT CASTOR O JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH O ORAL ROBERTS O SUNDAY MASS © CHEMIN DU ROI © JIMMY SWAGGART 8:50 o GOOD MORNING 9:00 o O BOUT D’CHOU ET CASSE-COU O SUNDAY MORNING O ROBERT SCHULLER O THIS IS THE LIFE O AU CENTUPLE O THE WORLD TOMORROW © C'ETAIT L'BON TEMPS © ORAL ROBERTS © MISTER ROGERS (R) 9:30 Q O KLIMBO Q MUSIC AND THE SPOKEN WORD O IT IS WRITTEN © REX HUMBARD © PETER POPOFF © ROD AND REEL 9:45 0 O SI TOUS LES GENS DU MONDE 10:00 O O JOUR DU SEIG-NEUR O MOVIE Third Finger.Lell Hand " (1941, Comedy) Myrna Loy, Mel-vyn Douglas A magazine editor decides to invent a lake husband O STAR TREK O IL EST ECRIT O DAY OF DISCOVERY © HELLENIC PROGRAM © THE WORLD TOMOR ROW © ACROSS THE FENCE 10:30 O FACE THE NATION O © RUE ST-JACOUES O JERRY FALWELL © TELEDOMENICA © CELEBRATING CHRIST © CROSSROADS: VERMONT'S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE 11:00 O Q SEMAINE A L’ASSEMBLEE NATIONALE Ü YOU CAN QUOTE ME O REACH FOR THE TOP O ETOILES DE LA LUTTE © ACTUALITES PLUS © MATINEE AT THE BIJOU 11:30 O TAKING ADVANTAGE O PERFORMANCE O © THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY AFTERNOON 12:00 Q O SEMAINE VERTE O LORNE GREENE'S NEW WILDERNESS O JOY OF GARDENING O MEETING PLACE The Rev Canon Ian M Dingwell conducts ser vices from St Jude s Anglican Church in Oak ville.Ont a © BON DIMANCHE Avec Reine Malo et ses invites 12:30 O TO BE ANNOUNCED O MEET THE PRESS O COMMUNITY 8 © FORUM 22 © THE LAWMAKERS Correspondents Linda Wertheimer and Cokie Roberts join Paul Duke lor an up to the minute summary of Congressional activities 1:00 O O PROPOS ET CONFIDENCES Invite: Pierre Dinanos Q NBA BASKETBALL "Conference Final*' Q AMERICA COMES ALIVE: BEHIND THE SCENES O COUNTRY CANADA O MOVIE AAA -Beau Brummel" (1954, Adventure) Elizabeth Taylor.Stewart Granger.One of England’s most dashing figures courts a multitude of women © TERRY WINTER © OUR TOWN © WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 1:30 O Q RENCONTRES Invite Mgr Armand LeBourgeois, ose aborder le difficile problème des catholiques divorces et remaries O HYMN SING Selec-tions include "Down By The Riverside" and "Give Me That Old Time Religion " © BASEBALL Chicago White Sox at Toronto Blue Jays © NASHVILLE MUSIC © L'E.N.A.P.PRESENTE L'administration publique.QD WALL STREET WEEK "The Market And You" Guest: Elaine Garzarelli, managing director, econo-mist-strategist.A G Becker Paribas 2:00 O O UNIVERS DES SPORTS Q VOLUNTEER JAM The Charlie Daniels Band hosts the annual concert from Nashville, Tenn with guests Ronnie Milsap, Crystal Gayle, Dick Clark and Tammy Wynette O REARVIEW MIRROR Featured W O Mitchell's "The Black Bonspiel Of Wullie McCrimmon, starring Alexander Webster; Mia Anderson's one-per son show "Ten Women, Two Men And A Moose O © SPORT-MAG Avec Pierre Trudel (tere) © AMERICAN SPORTSMAN Stephanie Powers i V Give.journeys to Africa's Mount Kenya Game Ranch to continue the work that William Holden initiated to preserve endangered African game © SCIENCE EN QUESTION "La Mémoire des choses" © GREAT PERFORMANCES ' Innocents Abroad" Craig Wasson, David Ogden Stiers and Brooke Adams star in Mark Twain’s account of his trip to Europe with a group of pious pilgrims bound for the Holy Land (R) 2:30 0 © FOOTBALL Foot ball USFL (Premiere demie) © USFL FOOTBALL © CORPS HUMAIN "Les Organes des sens" 3:00 O RINGSIDE O MOVIE "The Chalk Garden" (1964.Drama) Deborah Kerr, Hayley Mills.A governess makes a desperate attempt to touch the heart of her lonely, disturbed teen-age charge © EVOLUTION DE L'HOMME "Au nom de la science" 3:30 f| PGA GOLF "Colonial National Invitation" Final round (live Irom Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas).O AUTO RACING "French Grand Prix" (from Dijon.France) 4:00 O BELLES FOLIES Un documentaire sur un de nos grands naturalistes québécois Jean-Louis Frund O SPORTSWORLD Scheduled: Hector Macho" Camacho vs.Ralael Williams in a lightweight bout scheduled for 10 rounds (live from Corpus Christi.Texas); NASCAR Alabama 500 auto race (from Talladega); "Americana" looks at Little League baseball in Atlanta.Ga.O © SPORT-MAG Avec Pierre Trudel.(2e) O HEURE DE LA BONNE NOUVELLE © DENTS D'AUJOURD'HUI "Les Dents parlent" © SMITHSONIAN WORLD "Designs For Liv mg” A look at human accommodations to life on earth, in space, under ground and under water, featuring the development of the skyscraper, an American phenomenon, and Ihe evolution ol the space suit.Q 4:30 Q Q COUP D’OEIL Magazine culturel O © FOOTBALL Football USFL (Deuxieme demie) © QUESTION PERIOD © CORPS HUMAIN "La Reproduction" 5:00 0 Q SECOND REGARD Les actualités religieuses.Q CBC NEWS SPECIAL Peter Mansebridge and David Halton host a campaign update on the race for leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada © OLYMPIAD The Persistent Ones" An examination of the lifetime com mitment to excellence that allows some athletes to overcome setbacks and illness.© DROITS ET LIBERTES DE LA PERSONNE Pour une philosophie d'intervention" © VERMONT THIS WEEK 5:30 O AMATEUR NATURALIST © AGRONSKY AND COMPANY 8:45 0 SPORTMAG Avec Pierre Trudel.(3e) (Suivi par Le Monde) © SPORTMAG Avec Pierre Trudel (3e) (Suivi par Dix vous informe) EVENING 6:00 O SCIENCE-REALITE Magazine scientifique O CBS NEWS OFOCUS O WALT DISNEY "Mick ey And Donald Present Sport Goolv” Mickev Mouse and Donald Duck star in a series of vignettes dealing with a variety of sports (R) O VIDEO STAR O © NEWS Q GRIZZLY ADAMS © AU ROYAUME DES ANIMAUX "La Foret du renard" © "THE LAST OF THE FASTEST" FOR THE INDIANAPOLIS 500; THE FINAL DAY OF TIME TRIALS Live from Indianapolis, Ind © FABLES DE LA FONTAINE Quelques fables tirées de l'oeuvre de Jean de La Fontaine, "L'Enfouisseur et son compere" et "La Gre nouille et le rat " © LIVING WITH NUCLEAR WEAPONS 6:30 0 USA "Le Pouvoir des hispanos-americains" Le nombre des hispanos-americains a augmente de 42ad en dix ans et contm ue toujours de croitre maigre les contrôles de plus en plus severes a la frontière du Mexique.O THE MUPPETS Q AT THE MOVIES O © HUIT, CA SUFFIT "Enfin, seul" O ABC NEWS g © AS IT IS ffi HISTOIRES DE ZOO Ce soir, le zoo de Stuttgart prete Charlie, un puissant orangoulan au zoo de Francfort © YOUR CHILDREN.OUR CHILDREN "Where Do We Go From Here?" A round-table discussion with three experts on the topics of child abuse, infant mortality and child care.g 7:00 0 O COURT-CIRCUIT Chansons et mim-come-dies avec Andre Cartier, Denyse Chartier.Michele Deslauners, Ghyslain Tremblay, Denis Bouchard, Michelle Leger, Josee Cuson et Normand Brathwaite O 60 MINUTES QFAME O FRAGGLE ROCK In his search for peace and quiet, Boober wanders into the Caves of Forgetfulness (R) g O © RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT Featured southern California's predicted future as an island, inside the FBI, manage ment training in Japan (R) © HARDCASTLE & MCCORMICK © VISAGE © BARBARA'S WORLD OF HORSES AND PONIES 7:300 O BEAUX DIMANCHES O THE BEACHCOMBERS A former world-class swimmer (Elaine Tanner) is determined to prove she can still measure up to her past achievements (R)g O © CENTRE MEDICAL © ENVERS DU DECOR Armand Brochard.joallier, nous parle de sa carrière et nous présente quelques-unes de ses oeuvres © OPEN STUDIO Featured Shaker Mountain School of Burlington and the Vt Department of Edu-calion's program to teach basic skills using famous paintings 8:00 O AFTERMASH Klinger's euphoric stateside life is threatened when he learns that he must pass a Civil Service examination to keep his job (R) © © THE FIRST OLYMPICS; ATHENS 1898 Based on a true story.Baron de Coubertm (Louis Jourdan) organizes the first modern Olympics with help from Princeton professor William Sloane (David Ogden Steirs), who recruits 13 American athletes; after rigorous training, the Americans and their foreign competitors depart for Athens, Greece (Part 1 of 2' g O O © THE MYSTIC WARRIOR Based on Ruth Beebe Hill's novel "Hanta Yo." During the early 1800s in South Dakota, a Sioux boy named Ahbleza * OLYMPIC HEROES Austrian Olympic champion Edwin Flack (Benedict Taylor, center) is surprised by a visit from his parents (Bill Travers, I., and Virginia McKenna) who show up to see him compete in “The First Olympics — Athens 1896’’ airing in two parts beginning SUNDAY, MAY 20 on CTV.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME (Robert Beltran) is pre pared for manhood by his father Olepi (Nick Ramus), chief of the tribe, and by Wanagi (Ron Soble), a wise healing man (Part 1 of 2) g © RISQUES DU METIER Un regard sur les dangers qui guettent les travail leurs de l'industrie du bois © LIVING WILD Ribbon Of Life The Great Barrier Reef" Marine biologist Alastair Birtles tours the Australian reef and explains its ecology, g 8:30 0 O LE TELEJOURNAL à THE FOUR SEASONS Danny and Ted agree to run the bicycle shop while Boris vacations with Lorraine for a lew days O © VEDETTES PLUS "Festival juste pour rire: Les Meilleurs moments" Avec la participation de Serge Grenier.Jean-Guy Moreau, Normand Brathwaite, Roland Mag-dane, Jacques Villeret, Daniel Lemire, Jean-Yves Bonno, Jean-Paul Farre et Pierre Verville.© FESTIVAL INTERNATIONAL DE JAZZ DE MONTREAL ’83 Virtuoses des instruments a corde, Didier Lockwood et Christian Escoude, nous offrent ce soir un spectacle qui réjouira les amateurs de guitare et de violon.8:500 O BEAUX DIMANCHES 9:00 O THE JEFFERSONS The plan to recover Tom's $ 15-thousand may cost George more than he expected (Part 2 of 3) (R) © MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Nancy Astor" As the first woman member of Parliament, Nancy opposes relaxing the divorce laws and is accused of hypocrisy.(Part 6 of 8) g 9:30 Q ALICE Vera and Elliot find an affordable house with an unexpected feature as a result of their reunion with Reverend Bragg.© CINEMA "Neuf mois" (1976, Drame) Lili Monori, Jan Nowicki.Une femme avec un enfant d'une precedente liaison, desire rester libre, et elle poursuit ses etudes qui lui assureront eventuellement l'independance.10:00 O TRAPPER JOHN, M.D.Riverside enters the Bay City Marathon, and Gonzo pursues Krista, another runner in the event.(R) G TV'S CENSORED BLOOPERS Dick Clark examines blunders featuring Ted Danson, Vicki Lawrence.Mike Connors and Gloria Loring (R) O © L'EVENEMENT Avec Giselle Gallichan.© W-5 0B UNKNOWN WAR 10:30 O © NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS 10:46 B O SPORT-DIMANCHE / POLITIQUE PROVINCIALE 11:00 Q CBS NEWS O SPORTSWATCH O THE NATIONAL g ("Nation's Business" follows "The Nalional.") O ENFANTS OUBLIES O NEWS © CINEMA A "Le Jar-din du Dr Cook" (1970, Drame) Bing Crosby, Frank Converse.Dans la petite ville ou le venerable docteur Cook exerce sa profession, un jeune médecin découvre que les bonnes personnes vivent longtemps et en santé, alors que les autres ont le trépas facile.© CTV NATIONAL NEWS ^ ABC NEWS ffi MASTERPIECE THE-ATRE "Nancy Astor" As the first woman member of Parliament.Nancy opposes relaxing the divorce laws and is accused of hypocrisy.(Part 6 of 8) g 11:150 O CINEMA "La Femme sur la lune" (1929, Science fiction) Gerda Maurus, Willy Fritsch En 1928, un groupe d'aventuriers fait un premier depart pour la lune ou ils découvrent d’enormes blocs d'or O STAR TREK O ABC NEWS © JIM BAKKER 11:20 0 © NEWS 11:30 0 THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY MUSIC O THIS IS YOUR LIFE 11:40 O CHINOOK COUNTRY 12:00 Q ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK Featured "The A Team" star Mr T.O MANNIX O MOVIE ?* "Storm Warning" (1951.Drama) Ginger Rogers, Ronald Reagan While visiting her sister, a woman witnesses a brutal killing by a group of Klansmen including her brother-in-law.© MOVIE The Barkleys Of Broadway" (1949, Musical) Fred Astaire.Ginger Rogers A thealrical couple split up over a disagreement con cerning their future only to find that their love for each other is revitalized © UNKNOWN WAR 12:05 O CENTRE STAGE 1:00© LIVING WILD "Ribbon Of Life.The Great Barrier Reef" Marine biologist Alastair Birtles tours the Australian reef and explains its ecology, g 1:30Q NEWS 2:10© THE WALTONS 3:10 © EYESAT HJouip Nostalgia By Marie landiorio Pal Joey," Ihe story of a slick nightclub owner in San Francisco, brought fame to singer-dancer Cene Kelly when it enjoyed a long, prosperous Broadway run in the late 1930s.The Rodgers and Hart score featured three songs since recognized as pop classics — "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered," "My Funny Valentine" and "The lady is a Tramp." In 1957, MGM made "Pa! Joey" into a movie musical with a blockbuster cast, including screen sirens Rita Hayworth and Kim Novak, who battled over Joey's affections with interesting complications.Question: Who starred as Joey in the movie f ejitu/s yjuejj tjawsuy TOWNSHIPS WEEK FRIDAY, MAY 18.1984 17 5:30 Q S) JIM BAKKER 6 00 o CBS EARLY MORNING NEWS O MORNING STRETCH © ROMPER ROOM 6:30 O CBS EARLY MORNING NEWS Q NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING © CANADA A M 03 JIMMY SWAGGART 7:00 t) CBS MORNING NEWS Q TODAY O ffl GOOD MORNING AMERICA 7:30 O (D PREMIERE HEURE 7:45 €B A M.WEATHER 8:00 ffi SESAME STREET (R) 8:15 MIRE ET MUSIQUE 8:25 O AVIS DE RECHERCHE 8:55 0 L'ARAIGNEE (MON, THU) O SUPER HEROS (TUE) O ROBIN FUSEE (WED) O SUPER HEROS (FRI) 9:00 O HOUR MAGAZINE O DONAHUE O GOOD MORNING (TUE FRI) O (D FORUM O MOVIE © MORNING EXERCISES © I LOVE LUCY 6B EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING 9:15 0 FRIENDLY GIANT (TUE-FRI) 9:20 0 O FARIBOLES 9:30 O GOOD MORNING (MON) O QUEBEC SCHOOLS (TUE-FRI) © WHAT'S COOKING ® THE HONEYMOON-EPS 9:45 O O EN MOUVEMENT O FRIENDLY GIANT (MON) 10:00 O O PETIT CASTOR (MON) 0 Q FIFI BRINDACIER (TUE-FRI) O THE NEW *25,000 PYRAMID O THE FACTS OF LIFE (R) O CHILDREN'S CINEMA (MON) Q CANADIAN SCHOOLS (TUE-FRI) O © ENTRE NOUS © GUESS WHAT © BEVERLY HILLBILLIES © MARCHE AUX IMAGES 10:30 Q Q ANIMAGERIE Q PRESS YOUR LUCK O SALE OF THE CENTURY O MR.DRESSUP O EDGE OF NIGHT © DEFINITION © BEWITCHED 10:45 O O TAPE-TAMBOUR 11:00 0 O RIEN QUE POUR VOUS (MON) O O DE BIEN BELLES CHOSES (TUE) O O ZIG ZAG (WED) O O DROIT AU FEMININE (THU) O O AU NORD DU 60E (FRI) O THE PRICE IS RIGHT O WHEEL OF FORTUNE O SESAME STREET 0 BONJOUR LA NUIT O S3 BENSON (R) © L'ANIMATHEQUE E TATTLETALES 11:30 O O P’TITS PIERRAFEU (MON) O PACHA (TUE) O MODELES REDUITS (WED) O QUATRE AMIS FANTASTIQUES (THU) Q AMIS DE MES AMIS (FRI) O DREAM HOUSE O © CAPITAINE COSMOS Q © LOVING Q BONJOUR L'ESTRIE (TUE-FRI) © DON HARRON (MON) © RALPH LOCKWOOD (TUE-FRI) © TELESERVICE (R) © WHY IN THE WORLD (MON) © SILK SCREEN (TUE, THU) © STROKES OF GENIUS (WED) © LIVING WILD (FRI) AFTERNOON «2:00 0 PREMIERE EDITION O NEWS O MORE REAL PEOPLE O NEWS / MIDDAY O P'TITS BONSHOMMES O HERE'S LUCY O PREMIERE EDITION 7 FARIBOLES (MON) © DIX VOUS INFORME B THE FLINTSTONES (TUE FRI) © FAMILY FEUD © ANYTIME ART (MON) © SOUNDINGS (TUE) © ON ASSIGNMENT (THU) 12:10 0 ACROSS THE FENCE 12:15 0 LE MONDE 12:20 0 TELEX ARTS O A LA FERME (TUE-FRI) 12:30 O O ALLO BOU BOU O THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW O ALL IN THE FAMILY O © CINEMA O © RYAN'S HOPE © ANOTHER WORLD (MON) © NEWS (TUE-FRI) © EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING 1:00 O DAYS OF OUR LIVES O O © ALL MY CHILDREN © DON HARRON (TUE-FRI) 1:30 O O AU JOUR LE JOUR Q AS THE WORLD TURNS © BASEBALL (MON) © MARCHE AUX IMAGES (R) 2:00 G ANOTHER WORLD O WOK WITH YAN O © ONE LIFE TO LIVE © ANOTHER WORLD (TUE-FRI) 2:30 0 O CINEMA (MON, TUE, THU) 0 o TEMPS DE VIVRE (WED) O O TELE FEUILLE TON: RUBENS, PEINTRE ET DIPLOMATE (FRI) O CAPITOL O CORONATION STREET O © PETITE MAISON DANS LA PRAIRIE (A SES DEBUTS) © QUEBEC AU PLURIEL (MON, TUE, THU) © PLAY BRIDGE (MON) © MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING (TUE) © MICHAEL SMITH: COMPOSER (WED) © NOVA (THU) © ENTERPRISE (FRI) 3:00 G GUIDING LIGHT G SUPERFRIENDS O TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED (MON) O TALES OF THE KLONDIKE (TUE) O MINDER (WED) O ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL (THU) O A TOWN LIKE ALICE (FRI) O © GENERAL HOSPITAL © GENERAL HOSPITAL (TUE-FRI) © QUEBEC AU PLURIEL (MON-WED) © OPEN STUDIO (MON) © KATHY'S KITCHEN (TUE) © BARBARA'S WORLD OF HORSES AND PONIES (WED) © VICTORY GARDEN (FRI) 3:30 8 o DU NEUF AU ZOO (FRI) G CARTOONS O ARS NOVA (MON) O L'ANIMATHEQUE © GRONIGO ET CIE © HISTOIRE EN JUGE MENT: LE GENERAL WEY GAND (MON) © TELE-DOCUMENTS (TUE) © L E N.A P PRESENTE (WED) © DROIT DE PAROLE (THU) © OPTIONS (FRI) © 3-2 1 CONTACT (R) g 4:00 O O BOBINO G ALICE O SCOOBY DOO O DO IT FOR YOURSELF O © L'ANIMATHEQUE O CHARLIE'S ANGELS © GENERAL HOSPITAL (TUE) © WKRP IN CINCINNATI (WED-FRI) © THE FLINTSTONES © RETRAITE ACTION (R) (WED) © SESAME STREET (R) 4:308 O LES SCHTROUMPFS Q (MON) O O MICROPUCE (TUE) O O AU JEU (WED) 8 O TRABOULIDON (THU) O O MONSIEUR ROSEE (FRI) G the WALTONS G LOVE CONNECTION O JUST DOWN THE STREET (MON) O THE EDISON TWINS (TUE) O COING GREAT (WED) O WHAT'S NEW (THU) G AMATEUR NATURALIST (FRI) G © DANIEL BOONE © TAKE A BREAK FAMILY FEUD (MON.WED FRI) © GILLIGAN'S ISLAND © PLANETE UKRAINIENNE (TUE) © RISQUES DU METIER (WED) © LES APPRENTIS CUISTOTS (THU) © VIE DE PECHEURS LA PECHE COTIERE (FRI) 5 00 O GRAND FRERE (MON) O INCROYABLE HULK (TUE) O GRIZZLY ADAMS (WED) O EVASIONS CELEBRES (THU) 8 VIE SECRETE DES ANIMAUX (FRI) G PEOPLE S COURT G COMING ATTRACTIONS (MON.WED.FRI) G HAPPY DAYS AGAIN (TUE, THU) O ST ARSKY AND HUTCH O CINEMA © THE PRICE IS RIGHT (MON, WED-FRI) © TAKE A BREAK / THE PRICE IS RIGHT (TUE) © WKRP IN CINCINNATI © PERIODE DES QUESTIONS (TUE-THU) © LES BALLETS (FRI) © MISTER ROGERS (R) 5:30 8 HORIZONS 2000 g (FRI) G TAXI G ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT O © THREE S COMPA NY Monda INDIAN STORY Robert Beltran plays an American Indian warrior called by the spirits of his ancestors to lead his tribe in "The Mystic Warrior," airing in two parts.The conclusion airs MONDAY, MAY 21 on ABC CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME DAYTIME SPORTS 1:30© BASEBALL Minnesota Twins at Toronto Blue Jays DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 O "Lucky Me" (1954, Romance) Dons Day, Bob Cummings.A young woman with hopes of becoming a star finds romance while stranded in Florida.12:30 O Œ) "J avais sept filles" (1954, Musicale) Maurice Chevalier, Paolo Stoppa Ayant perdu leur emploi au cours d'une tournee sur la Cote d'Azur, sept jeunes danseuses imaginent un stratagème pour se tirer de leur mauvais pas.2:308 8 "Ce soir, ou jamais" (i960, Comedie) Anna Karma, Jacqueline Dano Des jeunes gens sont reunis pour monter une comedie musicale, mais leurs preoccupations artistiques n’empechent pas les intrigues sentimentales de se nouer.5:00 O "Divorce l'amencaine" (1967, Comedie) Dick Van Dyke, Deb- bie Reynolds En dépit de nombreuses visites chez un conseilleur en problèmes matrimoniaux, une femme et un homme doivent envisager le divorce EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR / SPORTS Q O O O CB Œ NEWS O LE MONDE (D 18 HEURES 0D FABLES DE LA FONTAINE Ce soir, "La Cigle et la fourmi" et "Les Deux coqs." Œl MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR 6:30 O AVIS DE RECHERCHE Presentation d'une personnalité bien connue dans differents milieux (politique, social, etc ), qui sera identifiée par un jury a l'aide d'une photo prise dans son jeune age O NBC NEWS O Q) ABC NEWS g Œ)TELESERVICE 7:00 O O DROLE DE VIE Emission fantaisiste constituée d'insertions de deux emissions améri- caines."Real People" et "Games People Play." O CBS NEWS G WHEEL OF FORTUNE G BARNEY MILLER O © GALAXIE O FAMILY FEUD ©M'A-S'H © LOVE BOAT © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE © BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 8 O TERRE HUMAINE Michel et Annick décident d'agrandir encore leur famille: la relation entre Martin et Corrine se complique apres la visite de la jeune femme chez le médecin g 8 FAMILY FEUD G M'A'S’H G GET TO THE POINT 8 ffi CHIPS "L'Anmver-saire" O BARNEY MILLER © THRILL OF A LIFETIME A musical imperso nator performs with Johnny Cash; a young ping-pong enthusiast challenges members of the Chinese table tennis team, g Œ NOVA Un chimpanzé, a qui on a appris le langage par gestes des sourds muets est l'objet d une etude poussée en ce sens.© VERMONT REPORT 8:00 O O POIVRE ET SEL g O SCARECROW AND MRS.KING Lee and Aman da are assigned to investigate how American-made guns are being supplied to a small Central American country.(R) O CD THE FIRST OLYMPICS: ATHENS 1096 The U S.Olympic leam overcomes great obstacles to achieve a series of stunning victories and win nine of t2 track and field events and two shooting contests, in the first modern Olympics Edward Wiley, Honor Blackman, Gayle Hunnicutt star.(Part 2 of 2) g O HERE COMES GARFIELD Animated The slovenly cat goads Odie into a fight with the dog next door and experiences guilt when his sidekick is sub sequently carried off to the pound.O 09 THE FUNNIEST JOKE I EVER HEARD © FRONTLINE "Warn ings From Gang Land" A look at the street gang problem in Los Angeles, featuring the plight of a grocer in Watts, g 8:301) O BONNE AVENTURE O RANGIN' IN Kate instructs teens on the responsibilities of marriage.(R) g O CD VEGAS Le detective prive, Dan Tana, doit protéger une princesse.© LES BALLETS Au programme, quatre chorégraphiés de Georges Balan chine d'apres des oeuvres de Faure, Stravinski et Tchaikovski 9:00 o O QUINCY Une ieune femme defiguree par une operation esthétique se suicide, et Dr Quincy s'acharne a prouver l'incompetence et la responsabilité criminelle du gynécologue qui l'a operee et qui pratique ille gaiement la chirurgie plastique.O ONE DAY AT A TIME Ann considers a business opportunity that would mean leaving her family, her friends and Indianapo lis O O © THE MYSTIC WARRIOR Based on Ruth Beebe Hill's novel "Hanta Yo.” As Ahbleza (Robert Beltran) matures, he experiences the love of a beautiful woman (Devon Ericson) and the sacred visions of a leader who must cope with deep hatred and tragedy.(Part 2 of 2) g © GREAT PERFORMANCES "The Regard Of Flight" Bill Irwin, Michael O'Connor and pianist-narrator Doug Skinner combine classical mime, vaudeville and clowning techniques in a satiric revue (R) 9:30 O NEWHART Joanna talks Dick into directing his own play and is surprised to discover that she is not chosen for the lead role.(R) O © MICHEL JASMIN © LE 60-80 A partir des années 60, les syndicats deviennent des institutions publiques dotees d'une visibilité et d'un pouvoir qui feront d'eux un intervenant majeur dans revolution de la situation des travailleurs québécois (R) 10:00 O O LE TELEJOURNAL ^ CAGNEY A LACEY Chris is determined to learn the identity of a murdered, derelict bag lady before she's buried in an unmarked grave.(R) © TELE Sur les rives de la riviere Manicouagan, quelques Montagnais noua expliquent les rituels qui mènent a ('elucidation des songes et au contact avec les esprits.(3e) © BEN KINGSLEY AS EDMUND KEAN In a show written by Raymund FitzSi mons, Kingsley dramatizes the turbulent life of a British actor who exhaust ed himself by the time he was 30 10:25 8 O LE POINT / LA METEO 10:30 O NOUVELLES TVA © NOUVELLES TVA / DIX VOUS INFORME 10:50 O MONDE REGIONAL 11:00 8 O NOUVELLES DU SPORT / TELEX ARTS 8 G G © NEWS O THE NATIONAL / JOURNAL g © LES SPORTS / SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE © CTV NATIONAL NEWS PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE © BUSINESS REPORT «1:06 0 LES SPORTS / LA METEO / SOUVENIR OLYMPfOHF 11:20 0 COUP D'OEIL Magazine culturel (R) O BONJOUR LA NUIT O CINEMA **S "La Femme de paille" (1964.Policier) Gina Lollobrigida.>ean Connery.Le neveu d’un multimillionnaire par alytique qui tyrannise tout son entourage, cherche un moyen d'heriter de sa fortune.© COULEUR DU TEMPS © NEWS 11:30 0 SOAP G BEST OF CARSON Host Johnny Carson Guests Jimmy Connors, Placido Domingo.Sharon Gless (R) O © ABC NEWS NIGHT-LINE CD CA PREND UN VOLEUR Faites chanter Caruso" © MOVIE *** "My Sis ter Eileen" (1942 Come dy) Rosalind Russell, Brian Aherne Two sisters, one an aspiring actress and the other a writer, struggle for a break in Greenwich Village 11:500 ENVERS DES MEDAILLES La qualité esthétique, la discipline rigoureuse et l’aspect compétitif de la gymnas tique, surtout dans un milieu de jeunes filles, un sport que le grand public connaît encore fort peu (R) QKOJACK 12:00 O HAWAII FIVE-0 O EYE ON HOLLYWOOD © MOVE ***'y "Corn mand Decision" (1949, Drama) Clark Gable.John Hodiak Lives are sacrificed in a strategie move to bomb the airplane factories of Germany © 700 CLUB "America At The Crossroads' Fee tured political issues affecting America's soul 12:05 0 NEWS 12:26 O CE DIABLE D'HOMME L'absence d'Emilie, l'mdif ference du roi et les per secutions de la Censure pousse Voltaire a accepter les invitations pressantes de Frederic II de Prusse O BARNEY MILLER 12:30 0 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN O THICKE OF THE NIGHT Scheduled Cynthia Sikes ("St Elsewhere"), con servalive Wally George and feminist Gloria Allred.Playboy Playmate Olym pics, comedian Jan Mur ray.The Pointer Sisters (video) 12:66 0 MOVIE AAA "Cap tains Of The Clouds' (1942, Drama) James Cagney.Dennis Mo/gan Several American civilian pilots join the Royal Cana dian Air Force, but the friendship of two of them is jeopardized by a female 1:00© GREAT PERFOR MANGES The Regard Of Flight" Bill Irwin, Michael O'Connor and piamst-nar rator Doug Skinner com bine clasaical mime vaudeville end clowning techniques in a satiric revue (R) 2:00 O NEWS 2: «0© SOLID GOLD 3:10 © RHOOA Tele ^ Canada Baseball battle on CTV Canada’s two major league baseball teams will once more vie for the Pearson Cup (named in honor of the late Prime Minister and Nobel Peace Prize winner Lester 8 Pearson) in the annual exhibition game benefiting amateur baseball in Canada.When the Montreal Expos and the Toronto Blue Jays square oft on the diamond May 24, the contest will be telecast live from Toronto on CTV.Although the Expos lead the series 3-1, the Blue Jays won last year's trophy with a 7-5 victory, taking the cup home for the first time.Encourage our advertisers 18—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1984 Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 O AAA' Young Man With A Horn" (Part 1 of 2) (1950, Drama) Kirk Doug las, Lauren Bacall The love lile of a promising young trumpet player nearly costs him his musi cal career 12:30 6 (D A A A "En quaran tame' (1970, Drame) John Dehner, Gary Collins Les conflits personnels, dans une illustre famille de médecins, cedent le pas au professionnalisme lorsqu'une maladie epi demique se declare dans la clinique familiale 2:30 O O A nous quatre, Cardinal" (1974, Corne die) Gerard Filipelli Jean-Guy Fechner Apres avoir fait evader d'Artagnan et les trois mousquetaires de la Bastille, leurs valets les accompagnent dans la randonnée entreprise pour récupérer un biiou impru demment donne par la Reine de France au duc de Buckingham 5:00 O Le Rendez vous" ( 1969.Drame) Omar Shar if.Anouk Aimee Un avocat romain, est frappe par la beaute d'une jeune femme et il veut l’epouser, mais il apprends qu'elle avait accepte des rendez-vous comme call-girl EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR f SPORTS o q o o © æ NEWS O LE MONDE (D 18 HEURES Œ FABLES DE LA FONTAINE Ce soir, La Grenouille et le boeuf" et Le Rat et l'huître " Œ MACNEIL ! LEHRER NEWSHOUR 6:30 O AVIS DE RECHERCHE Presentation d'une personnalité bien connue dans differents milieux (politique, social, etc ), qui sera identifiée par un jury a I aide d'une photo prise dans son jeune age O NBC NEWS O 09 ABC NEWS g © TELESERVICE 6 40 O 9 VOUS INFORME / SPORT 7 00 O O ETOILES DU MAU- RIER Ce soir, demi-finales avec le groupe Coradi.musique pop; Sam Mancu so, chanteur et comédien, Wendy Peters, comedienne.et Devonian Duo, duettistes classiques (2e de 6) O CBS NEWS O WHEEL OF FORTUNE O REMINGTON STEELE Fictional detectives of the past join Laura and Remington to save a singer's life O (D GALAXIE O FAMILY FEUD © M'A'S'H ® LOVE BOAT © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE Œ) BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 0 O MONSIEUR LE MINISTRE Helene est mutee a un autre ministre, son pere ne veut pas que sa fille soit démolie a cause du pouvoir politique g O FAMILY FEUD O M’A’S’H O (D CROISIERE S’AMUSE "Un peu de coeur que diable" O BARNEY MILLER © LORNE GREENE’S NEW WILDERNESS © NOURRIR LE QUEBEC Un tour d'horizon sur les ressources alimentaires et les produits agricoles du Quebec grace a des dossiers et des reportages sur les milieux de l'agriculture, de l'elevage et de la peche chez-nous Q) CROSSROADS: VERMONT’S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE Fea tured part two of a tall and eerie tale about ghosts, a visit to one of New England’s finest commercial pewter makers; sights and sounds of the Northeast Fiddler s Contest 7:59 Q Q O © PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY COVERAGE Regularly scheduled programming may be delayed or pre-empted for network coverage of the Idaho primary 8:00 Q O LES FINALES DE STANLEY CUP Sixième Match" Les Oilers visitent les Islanders (Si neces saire) o the AMERICAN PARADE O © THE A-TEAM Han mbal and B A lead the team in stopping a moonshine operation by converting some of the distillary's parts into weapons.(R) O STANLEY CUP FINALS "Game six" Edmonton Oilers at New York Islanders (If necessary) O © AMERICA’S FUNNIEST FOUL UPS Alan King hosts a tribute to great ideas that didn't quite make it.featuring appearances by Don Rickies, Martha Raye and Mickey Rooney g © CINEMA Collision" (1979, Drame) Anthony Sheer.David de Keyser Une reconstitution d une catastrophe aerienne qui eut lieu le 10 septembre 1976 en Yougoslavie alors qu'un appareil de la British Airways et un avion yougoslave entraient en collision © NOVA "Antarctica Earth's Last Frontier" A look at the history and environment of an area larger than the U S and Mexico combined (R) g 8:300 © UNE VIE Comédiens Danielle Roy, Monique Chabot, Leo llial, Yvan Canuel, Patrick Peu-vion, Johanne Tremblay.Francois Trottier, Pier Paquette.Philip Pretten, Angele Coutu, Raymond Bouchard et Michel Mon-die 9:00 O MOVIE The Zany Adventures Of Robin Hood" (Premiere.Comedy) George Segal.Morgan Fairchild Robin Hood is summoned by Lady Marian and Eleanor of Aquitaine to collect the ransom money for the safe return of King Richard, who is being held hostage by Duke Leopold O RIPTIDE Cody and Nick try to protect Boz and his friend from the threats of drug dealers who use dolphins for smuggling O © BELLE RIVE O ® LIFE’S MOST EMBARRASSING MOMENTS II Steve Allen hosts celebrity outtakes from "Happy Days.' "General Hospital, "Battle Of The Network Stars" and "Magnum PI' (R)g © MATT HOUSTON Matt assists famed trial lawyer F.Lee Bailey when he takes on the unpleasant task of defending a confessed killer.(R) g © AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE "Oppenheimer" In 1942 Oppenheimer selects Los Alamos.New Mexico as the site where he and other scientists will carry out research on what later became known as the Manhattan Project.(Part 2 of 7)(R)g 9:30 O © MICHEL JASMIN © PAROLES ALLANT DROIT Ecrivain enseignant et peintre de la Cote-Nord.Viateur Beaupre nous vante les mentes de l'ecriture 10:00 O REMINGTON STEELE Fictional detectives of the past join Laura and Rem mgton to save a singer s life O © HART TO HART The Harts participate in the theft of $20- million in jewels to save Max's life.g © HART TO HART The Harts participate in the theft of $20 million in jewels to save Max's life g © CLAQUE-SON Ce soir, une emission musicale avec le groupe rock "No Man's Land " © STROKES OF GENIUS de Kooning On de Kooning" Dustin Hoffman hosts a look at the 80-year-old artist at work in his studio.10:30 O O LE TELEJOURNAL lÜl NOUVELLES TVA © NOUVELLES TVA / DIX VOUS INFORME HOWLING MAD Howling Mad Murdock (Dwight Schultz) announces the plan he has for busting a moonshine operation that's selling polluted whiskey on “The A Team,” airing TUESDAY, MAY 22 on NBC.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME 10:50 O MONDE REGIONAL 10:55 0 O LE POINT / LA METEO 11:000 QO €£ NEWS O THE NATIONAL / JOURNAL g © LES SPORTS / SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE © CTV NATIONAL NEWS PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE © BUSINESS REPORT 11:05 0 LES SPORTS / LA METEO / SOUVENIR OLYMPIQUE 11:20 o BONJOUR LA NUIT © COULEUR DU TEMPS © NEWS 11:300 NOUVELLES DU SPORT / TELEX ARTS O SOAP Q TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson Scheduled: Don Rickies, actress Kate Capshaw.O © ABC NEWS NIGHT-LINE O NOUVELLES DU SPORT 7 9 VOUS INFORME © KOJAK "Une fille a l'eau" © MOVIE **?San Antonio” (1945, Western) Errol Flynn, Alexis Smith A nightclub singer on a Western tour falls in love with a rancher while working for his nemesis.11:50© RENCONTRES Invite: Andre Frossard, journaliste et auteur O CA PREND UN VOLEUR ©CINEMA ?"Venus au vision" (1961, Drame) Elizabeth Taylor.Laurence Harvey La vie d'une jeune, déséquilibré hantee par le sexe et l’alcool, n'est qu'une suite d aven tures amoureuses dont-elle se gloirifie parce quelle n'accepte pas d'argent 12:00 ©HAWAII FIVE-0 O EYE ON HOLLYWOOD ©MOVIE **** "Gigi" (1958, Musical) Maurice Chevalier.Leslie Caron A tomboy being groomed by her aunt and grandmother sets out on her own to catch a man.©700 CLUB "America At The Crossroads' Fea tured drugs, suicide and violence among today’s youth 12:05 O NEWS 12:20© CINEMA A A ' Fantas tica" (1980.Comedie) Carole Laure, Lewis Furey Une troupe ambulante arrive dans une petite ville pour y donner un spectacle musical.12:25 0 BARNEY MILLER 12:30 0 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN Scheduled: slupid pet tricks O THICKE OF THE NIGHT Scheduled actress Lisa Hartman.R Court Hay 12:55 0 MOVIE * + "Thornwell" (1981, Drama) Glynn Turman.Vincent Gardenia An Army private taces illegal and intensive questioning when he is suspected of espionage in the early '60s 1:30 Œ CROSSROADS: VERMONT'S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE 2:20 © THE WALTONS 3:20 © RHODA Wednesday DAYTIME SPECIAL 2:30© MICHAEL SMITH COMPOSER A profile of the composer pianist, an American artist who lives in Sweden DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 O * A A "Young Man With A Horn" (Part 2 of 2) (1950, Drama) Kirk Douglas, Lauren Bacall The love life of a promising young trumpet player nearly costs him his musical career 12:30 O © "Le Pays d'ou je viens" (1956.Fantaisie) Gilbert Becaud, Françoise Arnoul Recherche par un oncle très riche dont il dilapide la fortune, un homme se réfugié dans un village 5:00 O "Un corps perdu" (1964, Drame) Suzanne Pleshette, Bradford Dill-man La fille d'une riche famille de la Nouvelle Angleterre s'engage avec facilite dans diverses aventures amoureuses, mais son mariage semble ( assagir pour un temps EVENING 8:00 © CE SOtR / SPORTS o o o o © æ NEWS OLE MONDE © 18 HEURES © FABLES DE LA FONTAINE Ce Soir."Le Lievre et les grenouilles" et "La Poule aux oeufs d or © MACNEIL 7 LEHRER NEWSHOUR 6 30© AVIS DE RECHERCHE Presentation d’une per sonnaille bien connue dans differents milieux (politique, social, etc), qui sera identifiée par un jury a l'aide d'une photo prise dans son jeune age O NBC NEWS O Œ ABC NEWS g © TELESERVICE 6:40© 9 VOUS INFORME 7 SPORT 7:00© O BASEBALL "Les Expos de Montreal reçoivent les Padres de San Diego" O CBS NEWS O WHEEL OF FORTUNE O HAPPY DAYS AGAIN O © GALAXIE O FAMILY FEUD CD M*A'S'H © LOVE BOAT © PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE © BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 O FAMILY FEUD O ROSE PETAL PLACE Animated A rose brings life and happiness to her flower friends through song despite the threats of an evil spider O STEPPIN' OUT O CD BUCK ROGERS AU 25E SIECLE "La Legion noire" O BARNEY MILLER (D MCGOWAN’S WORLD Featured a trip across Canada, Sherisse Lr »-rence summer baseball camp © JUSTICE POUR TOUS Chaque episode de cette sene est assorti d'une courte dramatique qui illustre le propos de remission (R) © ANYTIME ART 8:00 © DOMESTIC LIFE Mar tin attends the 20th reunion of his high school class to face the bully who harassed him for six years O COLLEGE BOWL NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS Teams from 15 universities compete for scholarship money for their respective institutions Pat Sajak hosts from Ohio State University in Columbus.O THE FIFTH ESTATE Eric Mailing, Bob McKeown and Hana Gartner update stories they have reported on during the course of the year.O œ THE FALL GUY A stranger resorts to desperate tactics when Colt and his friend (Pat Patterson) refuse to sell him their grand national race car (R) © THE FALL GUY © DROIT DE PAROLE Un debat sur des questions d'actualité sociale et politique © HITLER'S NUMBER ONE ENEMY: BURIED ALIVE The true story of Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat who saved more than 100,000 Hungarian Jews from Nazi extermination, and who later disappeared and is still believed to be alive.8V lit 71 DAYTIME SPECIAL 12:00 Q) ON ASSIGNMENT A look at the range and diversity of photojournalism.featuring profiles of Alfred Eisenstaedt and Jodi Cobb.DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 O The How- ards Of Virginia" (Part 1 of 2) (1940, Drama) Cary Grant.Martha Scott A married couple from contrasting backgrounds find that their political attitudes toward the Revolutionary War exemplify the differences between them.12:30 O CD "La Mon tagne rouge" (1951, Aventures) Alan Ladd.Lizabeth Scott.En 1865.dans le Colorado, un ancien soldat a la recherche d'un riche filon d'or, est arrête par méprisé et accuse d'un meurtre qu’il n’a pas commis.2:30 O O AAVi "L’Assas sin" (1961, Drame) Marcello Mastroianni, Micheline Presle.Un antiquaire de Rome est convoque par la police pour etre interroge sur le meurtre d'une ancienne maitresse 5:00 O A ?A l2 "Mogambo'" (1953.Aventures) Clark Gable.Ava Gardner.Dans son campement au coeur de l'Afrique, un chasseur de fauves reçoit successivement la visite d'une veuve new-yorkaise et d'un jeune savant, accompagne de sa femme.EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR / SPORTS o e o o cd æ NEWS DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 O AAA1^ "The Howards Of Virginia" (Part 2 of 2) (1940, Drama) Cary Grant.Martha Scott.A married couple from contrasting backgrounds find that their political attitudes toward the Revolutionary War exemplify the differences between them.12:30 0 (D "L'Esclave de l’Orient” (1958.Drame) Isabelle Corey, Antonio de Teffe.Ayant reçu l’ordre de creuser le canal de Corinthe, l’archonte de cette ville opprime le peuple pour se procurer l'argent necessaire et, afin, d'apaiser le mécontentement general, persecute les chrétiens.5:00 O A A A "Rien ne sert de courir" (1966, Comédie) Cary Grant, Samantha Eggar Venu pour affaires a Tokyo, au moment des Jeux Olympiques de 1964, un industriel anglais se voit contraint de louer une chambre dans l’appartement d’une jeune secretaire.EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR/SPORTS O B O Q S) CB NEWS O LE MONDE (D 18 HEURES S) PAPOTIN ET COMPAGNIE CE) MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR 8:300 AVIS DE RECHERCHE Presentation d’une personnalité bien connue dans differents milieux (politique, social, etc.), qui sera identifiée par un jury a l'aide d'une photo prise dans son jeune age.O NBC NEWS O CS ABC NEWS g CD TELESERVICE 6:40 0 8 VOUS INFORME / SPORT 7:00 B ENVERS DES MEDAILLES A travers l'histoire de Ken Hamilton, des entraîneurs et des membre] juveniles du Cabbatjetown Boxing O LE MONDE (E) 18 HEURES CD PAPOTIN ET COMPAGNIE Q) MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR 8:30 B AVIS DE RECHERCHE Presentation d'une personnalité bien connue dans differents milieux (politique, social, etc), qui sera identifiée par un jury a l'aide d'une photo prise dans son jeune age O NBC NEWS O CB ABC NEWS g SD TELESERVICE 6:40 Q B VOUS INFORME ! SPORT 7:00 B GENIES EN HERBE Dans la sérié nationale, le demi-finale B CBS NEWS B WHEEL OF FORTUNE QFAME B 03 GALAXIE O FAMILY FEUD O GRAND-PAPA (D BASEBALL "Pearson Cup" Montreal Expos at Toronto Blue Jays CB LOVE BOAT S3 PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE CB BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 B O VIE PROMISE Res cape en pleine nuit par Willie, Francis se remet quelque peu du chagrin profond que lui a cause Melanie, g 8 FAMILY FEUD O M*A*S*H O CD CINEMA A A -A ' Les Parachutistes arrivent” (1969, Drame) Burt Lancaster, Deborah Kerr Spécialistes de la chute libre, trois parachutistes se rendent dans une petite ville du Kansas pour y donner un spectacle O BARNEY MILLER 03 LES GRANDS ORCHESTRES Ce soir, l’histoire de l’orchestre de Club, on veut démontrer que la brutalité fait place a la maitrise et le besoin de se defouler fait place au besoin de s'affirmer.O CBS NEWS O WHEEL OF FORTUNE O THE FACTS OF LIFE Blair and Jo plan a birthday bash for Mrs Garrett at a nightspot featuring male dancers, cp O CD GALAXIE O FAMILY FEUD O GRAND FRERE ©M’A’S’H © LOVE BOAT 03 PIERRE NADEAU RENCONTRE © BUSINESS REPORT 7:30 0 GRAND-PAPA Henri demande conseil a ses amis concernant le mariage de Marcel et de Mme Sauve.O FAMILY FEUD d M*A*^*M O REACH FOR THE TOP Bialik vs.Wagar O CD CINEMA “Alliga tors" (1979, Horreur) Claudio Cassinelli, Barbara Bach.Un promoteur construit un hotel touristique dans une region sauvage d'Afrique, mais la venue des Blancs inquiété les indigenes de la region qui rendent un culte a Cuma.le dieu crocodile.0 BARNEY MILLER © CIRCUS Featured Marhal's camels and Hamas; aenalist Erna and Henry Bertini; trapeze artistry of The Flying For-nasaris.(R) 03 RETRAITE-ACTION Magazine d'information destine aux personnes agees.QD VERMONT THIS WEEK 8:00 0 O DEUX FOIS VICTIME Dossier sur le recours, la justice et l'aide aux personnes victimes de violence.O THE DUKES OF HAZ- ZARD Boss Hogg teams up with an unscrupulous speculator to buy all the land in Hazzard County.(R) G BIGGER AND BETTER TELEVISION’S GREATEST COMMERCIALS III Ed McMahon and Mariette Hartley salute several of Philadelphie, son present et une entrevue avec son chef.Eugene Ormandy (R) ÊB GREAT OUTDOORS Jim Tabor demonstrates the gourmet camper's portable field bar and surveys Florida's Pennekamp Park.America's first underwater garden.Q 8:00 Q O LES FINALES DE STANLEY CUP "Septième Match" Les Oilers visitent les Islanders (Si necessaire) O MAGNUM, P.l.Rick comes to regret helping a childhood friend who causes big trouble for both him and Magnum.(R) G GIMME A BREAK Nell runs into an old flame, celebrating his divorce, soon after she learns that her ex-husband has remarried.(R) O STANLEY CUP FINALS "Game seven" Edmonton Oilers at New York Islanders (If necessary) O 09 MOVIE "Invitation To Hell" (Premiere, Drama) Robert Urich, Susan Lucci A devilish and guiseable woman serves as the director of a country club where she seduces men physically and women materially.Q QD VERMONT HOTLINE "Gardening" Viewers may call in with vegetable gardening questions.8:30 O FAMILY TIES Alex s attempt to impress a feminist during a debate on the ERA leads to an unexpected jail visit.(R) © CINEASTES A L’ECRAN Au programme, un documentaire de Robert Martel ".au Parc Lafontaine" et egalement " Vielles et cornemuses ' 9:00 O SIMON & SIMON A J.the most memorable commercials.featuring appearances by John Belushi, Rodney Danger field, Linda Gray and Far-rah Fawcett (R) O OLYMPIC JOURNEY The emergence of East Germany as one of the premiere world athletic powers is chronicled; close-ups include their training facilities and scientists.O 00 BENSON Benson gets the unwelcome task of convincing a shiek to alter his personal blueprints for a multi million-dollar headquarter complex and his passionate advances toward Kraus.
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