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2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984 Ole Opry’s Jimmy Dickens performs novelty songs From crowing like a rooster on radio to open the broadcasting day, to singing at Hank Williams’s funeral, performing regularly on the Grand Ole Opry and being inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, Little Jimmy Dickens is undeniebly a major part of country music history.The “Little” tag comes from his height — four feet 11 inches — but throughout 47 of his 58 years he has made his short stature a part of his act.And no less a superstar than Willie Nelson has lauded Dickens’s impact as an entertainer.There are no hit records these days.He’s not signed to a record company, although there were recent discussions about a new album for Columbia.But almost every weekend Country Music jg* .'vm ' l \, m By DAVE MULHOLLAND Grand Ole Opry visitors can see and hear Dickens perform his numerous hits, including Hillbilly Fever, A-Sleeping at the Foot of the Bed, Country Boy, Bessie the Heifer, It May Be Silly, Out Behind the Barn and his 1965 No.1 smash, May the Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose.With songs like that, it’s no wonder Dickens is known as a novelty singer.Before he began recording, however, the West Virginian had established a solid reputation on live radio shows as a ballad and gospel singer.“When my first recording, Take an Old Tater and Wait, was a hit, we naturally had to follow it with the same type of material,” Dickens says.“So 1 more or less got branded as a novelty singer, but it’s been good for me and I’ve enjoyed it." It was that song that prompted his friend Hank Williams to start calling him “Tater,” and the nickname can still be heard backstage at the Opry when a fellow performer is looking for Dickens.OPRY BIG GOAL Although he describes his induction last fall into the Country Music Hall of Fame as “the greatest thing that can happen to an artist,’’ Dickens says the highlight of his long career “would have to be my first appearance on the Opry.“I had sung for about 10 years on radio, trying to make a living in country music, but my goal was to someday become a member of the Grand Ole Opry.” He reached that goal in 1948 when Roy Acuff invited him to perform on the Opry as his guest.Two weeks after that performance, Opry management asked Dickens to join country music’s most influential radio show as a regular.Dickens has seen a lot of changes in country music during his career, and he says that watching it grow “makes me very happy.“Some of the things that are called country today, I don’t consider country, but because of the new performers in country music, more young people are listening to it and that’s good.“I think there’s plenty of room for various styles of country and I think there always will be, and that includes hard country, which I love.” Dickens tours about 10 days a month and says he’ll continue to perform live concerts as long as people want him to.“I still work on making the act better,” he says.“I’m never completely satisfied with anything I do; I always think I could have done that a little better.” Statler Brothers pick up four country music awards NASHVILLE, Tenn.(AP) — The veteran country music quartet The Statler Brothers won four awards Monday night, beating rival Alabama for top honors at the 18th annual Music City News country awards.The Statlers were honored for comedy act, top vocal group, single of the year for Elizabeth, and No.1 television special for Another Evening With The Statler Brothers — Heroes, Legends and Friends.Alabama, a four-piece band which has dominated country music awards for three years, won two awards — band of the year, and album of the year for The Closer You Get.Janie Fricke was voted top female vocalist and Lee Greenwood was honored as male voca list of the year.Ernest Tubb, 70, the Texas Troubadour, won the Living Legend Award for his contributions to country music.Tubb is credited with popularizing the honky- tonk style of country music.The comball show Hee Haw, which has been on the air 15 years, won awards as top country music TV show and No.1 gospel act for its quartet of Roy Clark, Buck Owens, Grandpa Jones and Kenny Price.Other winners were Ricky Skaggs, top bluegrass act; Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton, top duet; and Ronny Robbins, star of tomorrow.Robbins is the son of the late country music star Marty Robbins, who died in December 1982.The winners were announced on a syndicated television show from the Grand Ole Opry House hosted by the Statlers, Larry Gatlin and Sylvia.Winners in the 14 categories were picked by subscribers to The Music City News, a monthly publication about country music based in Nashville.They are the only country music awards voted by fans.The Music City News Show was the second of three annual country music awards shows.The Academy of Country Music show was in May from Los Angeles and the Country Music Association awards are announced in Nashville every October.The show launches Nashville’s annual Fan Fair — a week of special country music concerts, exhibits and related activities.About 20,000 country music fans are expected to register for Fan Fair by week’s end.Music Chart LAST WEEKS NO.TITLE ARTIST WEEK ON 1.Hello Lionel Ritchie 1 12 2.Hold Me Now Thompson Twins 4 12 3.Time After Time Cyndi Lauper 5 6 4.Against All Odds Phil Collins 2 12 5.Relax Frankie Goes to Hollywood 10 6 6.You Might Think The Cars 3 10 7.Love Somebody Rick Springfield 6 11 8.Dancing in the Sheets Shalamar 9 9 9.They Don’t Know Tracy Ullman 7 9 10.I’ll Wait Van Halen 15 7 11.The Reflex Duran Duran 16 6 12.Oh Sherrie Steve Perry 17 7 13.Let’s Hear It For the Boy Deniece Williams 19 5 14.Don’t Answer Me Alan Parsons Project 8 10 15.Break Dance Irene Cara 18 8 16.Holding Out for a Hero Bonnie Tyler 12 10 17.The Heart of Rock ’n Roll Huey Lewis 21 5 18.Self Control Laura Branigan 22 5 19.The Longest Time Billy Joel 14 8 20.Who’s That Girl?Eurythmies 26 4 21.Footloose Kenny Loggins 13 15 22.It’s a Miracle Culture Club 30 4 23.The Authority Song John C.Mellencamp 11 9 24.You Can’t Get What You Want Joe Jackson 29 5 25.Black Stallions/White Stallions M & M 25 6 26.Listen to the Radio Pukky Orchestra 28 6 27.It’s My Life Talk Talk 24 6 28.Jump (For My Love) Pointer Sisters 35 3 29.It Ain’t Enough Corey Hart 34 4 30.Stay the Night Chicago 36 3 31.Starting at the End Doris D.& the Pins 33 4 32.I’m Only Shooting Love Time Bandits 37 2 33.My Ever Changing Moods Style Council 38 2 34.White Horse Laid Back 32 4 35.Tell Me I’m Not Dreamin’ Jermaine Jackson 39 2 36.Dancing in the Dark Bruce Springsteen 40 2 37.Magic The Cars PL 1 38.Music Time Styx PL 1 39.Dance Hall Days Wong Chung PL 1 40.High on Emotion Chris de Burgh PL 1 ?MM MO Pink Floyd bassist Roger Waters goes solo and sees no chance of reunion HARTFORD, Conn.(AP) — For almost 19 years, bassist Roger Waters played with the same band — Pink Floyd, one of the most progressive groups in rock ’n’ roll history.Today, Waters, the former hit group’s chief songwriter and producer, has gone solo and sees no chance of Pink Floyd reuniting.“Bands only function as long as the people within them are happy with the roles they are performing, and the people in Pink Floyd ceased to be happy with the roles they were performing,” Waters said in a recent telephone.Waters, whose theatrical writing and productions of Pink Floyd’s Animals and The Wall have been among the most ambitious and expensive ever in rock music, is about to launch his first solo tour.Featuring a multimedia presentation of his new LP, The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking, it opens June 16 at Stockholm’s Ice Stadium.His new band, with Eric Clapton on guitar, will play nine other European dates and three in the United States in mid-July at the Meadowlands complex in northern New Jersey.Tickets for the first two American shows sold out within hours and Waters is trying to arrange other stops in Philadelphia, Detroit, Chicago and Montreal.Hitch Hiking promises to be as elaborate as any of the earlier Pink Floyd shows.It will feature a huge stage backed by a full screen on which scenes from the story will be pro- iected HAPPENS IN BED "Pros and Cons, all takes place in a bedroom,” Waters said.“There’s a man and his wife there and it’s about the man’s dream over a period of 40 minutes.” Much of the dream was based on one Waters actually had.“There’s a bid at the beginning about travelling in Europe that’s supposed to evoke a sense of unease,” he said of a scene in which he, as the man, is threatened by knife-toting Arabs.“There’s a kind of a sense of danger in it that I recalled out of a dream that I once had myself.” One segment of the story toward the end, he said, emerged from the subconscious of his drummer, Andy Newmark.“In the title track, there’s a third verse about standing on the wing of an airplane approaching the eastern seaboard of the United States and looking down at Yoko Ono being there and saying, ‘Jump,’” Waters said.“That dream belongs to Andy Newmark.He told me that dream at lunch one day in a pub.” Despite the horror that comprises much of the nightmare, the story isn’t as sad as it seems.Pink Floyd disbanded in 1983, shortly after the release of their last album, The Final Cut.Their immensely successful Dark Side of the Moon recently celebrated its 10th anniversary on Billboard Magazine’s music charts as the most long-lived LP in rock history. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984—3 Local author paints picture of first Township settlers Dorothy Dutton.author o/Hunter’s Landing.J By Timothy Belford LENNOXVILLE — Giving up is not in Dorothy Dutton’s nature.Nor is it in the nature of Johnathan Hunter, the main character in Dutton’s recently published novel Hunter’s Landing.Dutton has spent a good deal of her adult life either writing or attempting to get what she has written published Born in the Gaspé, she and her family moved to the Eastern Townships when she was just a child.Child or not, Dutton was already putting pen to paper.“I’ve always written,” she says, pointing out it was her grandmother who taught her to read at the age of four.“I made up stories from the beginning and they often got me into serious trouble.” Growing up the daughter of an Anglican “parson”, Dutton was exposed to a variety of people and events including an education at Bishop’s University where she graduated in History as part of the class of 1920.According to Dutton, attending Bishop’s during the first world war was an experience in itself since the student body numbered no more than 50 and the teaching staff had been reduced to a mere six because of the European conflict.After graduation, Dutton proceeded, somewhat dubiously into the working world.“My father said I must teach,” says Dutton, her face taking on a look of distaste.“I taught for three years then I quit.If you’re not a teacher it’s no good.” During the next several years, Dutton was employed as a tutor, “I thoroughly enjoyed that” ; in an insurance office, “I trained three men to do what I was doing then I quit’’ ; and finally as an employee for the Indian Head Tourist Resort in the White Mountains of Vermont.Throughout this time however, she kept up as much as possible with her writing.“Sometimes I got a compliment (from publishers) : sometimes the manuscript was just returned.” Hunter’s Landing — a work Dutton says she has been “.peddling around for years” — was originally a thousand-page opus dealing with the fortunes of Luke Hunter, his son Jonathan and their many-membered family.The final edition has been pared down to slightly over 170 pages and covers the period roughly from 1789 to 1793.Luke Hunter is a “gentleman’s tutor” who is forced to flee the state of Massachusettes during the political upheaval surrounding the aftermath of the Ameri-can revolution.His son, Johnathan, is forced, at the age of 14, to lead the family northward in his father’s footsteps.Ultimately, the family arrives in the St.Francis district where they attempt to build a new life — with little or no help from the government of Lower Canada.Although Dutton’s style is somewhat dry at times and the use of dialect in her dialogue dubious, Hunter’s Landing does give an interesting perspective on the lives and struggles of the some of the Townships' first settlers.And when the author deals with the mundane, everyday issue of survival, the book takes on a genuine fascination.Dutton feels that the appeal of the book will probably be fairly local.“It has to be someone,” she says, “who is interested in the area.” Copies for anyone falling into this category can be obtained at the Bishop’s Book store, the Len-noxville-Ascot Historical Mu- seum, or from Double Hook books in Montreal or North Hatley.Hunter’s Landing, by Dorothy Dutton, Initiative Publishing House Inc., 1983, $12.50.Mulroney book leaves something to be desired Political junkies will be dissappointed OTTAWA (CP) — With a federal election perhaps only a few months away, Canadians could use a thoughtful, in-depth look at Progressive Conservative leader Brian Mulroney, the politician and the man, and where he will take the country if he becomes prime minister.But the book Brian Mulroney, the Boy from Baie-Comeau, isn’t it.There is a colorful section on Baie-Comeau and Mulroney’s days as a youth, but authors Rae Murphy, Robert Chodos and Nick Auf der Maur offer little new overall.Political junkies anxious for a revealing insider’s look at Mulroney’s 1976 or 1983 leadership campaigns will be especially disappointed.Where the book does go into some detail, frequently one is left wondering why.Who cares, for example, that Chicago newspaper baron Joseph Medill served as that city’s mayor or had two socially ambitious daughters?Yet the Medill saga forms a key partof the chapter on Baie-Comeau.RECOUNT CLOSURE The book also suffers from the authors’ generally uncritical approach to their subject, especially as they recount Iron Ore Co.of Canada’s closure of the Quebec mining town of Schefferville in 1982 — while Mulro- ney was president — after profits of $282 million the previous three years.We are told in another chapter, for example, that Mulroney rebuffed Joe Clark’s suggestion that he run for Parliament in 1979 and sit in Clark's cabinet because Mulroney had to be leader or nothing.What does that say about the man?The authors don’t seem to have any opinion.It is all the more surprising because all three authors won their spurs at the Last Post, a now-defunct magazine many will remember for its unrelenting attack on the establishment, capitalism and all things conservative.Absent, too, is serious consideration of policy, with the exception of the principles of bilingualism and hard work.Mulroney must share a major portion of the blame for that because, as he freely admits, most Conservative policy won’t be unveiled until the election campaign.The authors, however, could have gone further than they have.Brian Mulroney, the Boy from Baie-Comeau, by Rae Murphy, Robert Chodos and Nick Auf der Maur.Published by James Lorimer and Co., 226 pages, $24.95.Biro from die Heart.Canadian Heart Fund.isp-' mfffti mm WtthOwmcr&Ubte Mew York City Breakers aod Rock Steatty Crew aodthesematmal Grandmaster Matte met aod ne Furious Fne, AtokaBambaataai na Seal Sotric Force Mm# mm?K -nf- JttM •HW’ Cinéma CAPITOL 59 King est SSS-OTTI FRl.& SAT.: 7:30 p.m.& 9:30 p.m.SUN.: 2:00-7:30 & 9:30 p.m.MON.TO THURS.: 7:30 & 9:30 p.m.5928 4—TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984 Ed McBain’s new detective saga hard to put down Kaleidoscope ?w Dir'u a on I By RICHARD LONEY Ice by Ed McBain (AVON): $2.95, 317 pp.When it comes to writing the kind of insider police sagas that Hill Street Blues has made television gravy out of, readers generally think of Joseph Wam-baugh's cop chronicles.There is another author, however, whose recent paperback release is an excellent introduction to what have been called the finest police procedurals written today.Wam-baugh may follow the cops on their hours off when they carouse and play, but Ed McBain takes you along with the detectives of the Eighty-Seven Precinct, as they are baffled by a series of brutal shootings that seems to have no connecting thread.Ice is set an imaginary American city (that shares many of New York’s physical characteristics) as officers at the 87 are confronted with the late night shooting of a leggy, blonde showgirl, the blasting away of a Puerto Rican cocaine runner, and the slaughter of a gem expert in the basement garage of his apartment building.Two pairs of detective investigators jump into these cases from their now famous precinct, and McBain’s prose has a ring of authenticity to it as the crimes begin to reveal clever clues that link these seemingly unrelated incidents.Playing on a few of the common connotations of “ice’’-as in jewels, weather conditions, and the euphemism for cocaine, “snow”-McBain also introduces us to a glamorous show business scam that uses tickets reserved for Broadway-type theatre productions as scalped seats that bring in four times the forty dollar ticket price for unscrupulous members of the production company-the common practice is known as theatre ice Ed McBain (a pseudonym of American author Evan Hunter) has been writing his 87 Precinct novels for many years, and latecomers to his brand of sparkling shoot-em-up stories will definitely be looking for earlier titles once the absorbing, can’t-put-it- down example of Ice gets a grip on them.RECORD REVIEWS The Thompson Twins INTO THE GAP (ARISTA-POLYGRAM) This group began, oddly enough, as a quartet in 1977, with only the current trio’s Tom Bailey as a survivor, and he has been joined by Alannah Currie, a New Zealander who handles percussion, vocals and video production, plus Joe Leeway, who is half-Irish and half-Nigerian.Leeway handles synthesizers and background vocals, while Bailey is lead vocalist and plays a gamut of instruments from piano to drum programmers.Their sound has an amalgamated eclectic quality to it, in that they utilize anything going down today and anything that worked for rock acts in the past.Their big single, “Hold Me Now”, has moments when it sounds like some of the late-Fifties love ballads in the “Tell Laura I Love Her” mode.Uninterested in merely parading a lot of special effects like many synth merchants that the Thompson Twins follow in this current Brit invasion, the Trio’s forte is the writing of very strong, very memorable songs, with the trick stuff layered on for tinsely effects.This album has had a meteoric success in the United Kingdom-already three singles released off the record have shot into the top 3, including “Hold Me Now,” “Doctor Doctor”, and the very recently released “You Take Me Up.” The latter track is a folky tune that is closer to the harmonies of sixties singers like Peter Paul & Mary than it is to the pun-kish acts that the Thompson Twins might resemble with their flambuoyant, raffish dress styles.There is no question that the Thompson Twins are a pleasant, tuneful divergence from much of the laboured, mannered irritatingly unmelodic synthesizer fiddling that had characterized the last decade of pop from the British shores.The Villains GO CRAZY ATTIC) What’s an English band from East Ham doing using a Canadian province as a home base, even if it is British Columbia?Well, the Villains seem to have been using Canada as a testing ground for a series of concert and pub appearances in the manner of the old Beatles’ barnstorming tours of England when they were honing their chops.Villains are strongly identified with the Ska and Reggae music that white bands in the U.K.have espoused, but there is also a strong strain of Lennon & McCartney hooks that can’t be disguised even by the twin saxophones that permeate much of the music.Billed as a dance band, primarily, the Villains have a predictably spritely approach to the ten bubbly,infectious tracks on GO CRAZY.No morbidity here-the Villains pump out a spontaneous, happy feeling music that moves with easy grace from the island-feel of “Wendy’s Melody” to the Sha Na Na Na zip of “I Don’t Care”.The Villains appear to have conquered the pub scene across Canada ; it now remains to be seen if they can pull off an expatriot’s delight and make an impact on their over ’ome countrymen.Cohen publishes book of prayer Gilles Vigneault writes poetry TORONTO (CP) — Leonard Cohen, poet, novelist, songwriter and something of a lady’s man was a pop star in the 1960s.Now, at 50, he is quite comfortable in the 1980s, and has written a new book — a book of prayer.Book of Mercy is a slim, meditative volume that seems light-years away from his public image as a black-clad gadabout who has had an enormous international following for his songs, his records and his cabaret appearances.He’s also dabbling in experimental video work.He was surprised by his fame in the '60s, and still is, and he was surprised he found publishers for his unusual book which, he says, will probably not have a wide appeal.McClelland and Stewart, his Canadian publisher, liked it.But at Viking press, his U.S.publisher for 20 years, it was put before a three-man editorial board.An Orthodox Jew on the board said it was not authentically Jewish, Cohen recalls with a smile, and a Reform Jew said it was too Jewish.The Episcopalian like it, but his was a minority opinion.So Cohen took it to Random House, who published it.He’s religious “only in the sense of knowing that I’m a sinner,” but says the book of prayer “came from a deep place.” He prays, but “I don’t think of myself as a prayerful man.” “I’m not a kind of religious vulture, but when I needed comfort or solace, I looked at different kinds of religious expression.The Lord’s Prayer is incomparable — very beautiful and colorful.“I pray when I feel the need and most people with even a modest degree of honesty recognizes that they are in a mess most of the time.I feel that need and that is what this book is about.” Part of the mess — and the joy — of his life has been the constant admiration of female fans and a number of often longterm relationships.Although he never was officially married, in the piece-of-paper sense, Suzanne Elrod is the mother of his two children who now live in New York.“In some lights, when a woman has your children, there is always that connection,” he says.Book of Mercy is not a page-turner, but a book he hopes people will pick up from time to time “and find some nourishment.” The pages aren’t numbered but there are 50 chapters — that it matches his age is just “a happy coincidence” — and some chapters run only eight or so lines.Book of Mercy by Leonard Cohen.Published by McClelland and Stewart, $14.95 \ !' 2166 KING OUEST SHERBROOKE TEL 564 322é jlliASHVILLE^f^ .Saloon.GIBSON CREEK FRIDAY & SATURDAY DURING JUNE 1984 MONTREAL (CP) — Veteran chansonnier Gilles Vigneault is not only a singer and songwriter, he also writes childrens’ stories and poetry and compares the latter to fishing for trout.“The catch is modest compared to the effort it takes,” said the internationally-known Vigneault in a recent interview.“Writing the words to songs, on the other hand, is like fishing from a deep-sea trawler,” he adds."You cover a larger area and you catch more people.” Vigneault, who has recorded more than a dozen albums of his songs and written many books of poetry, short stories and childrens’ tales, says that to increase their audience poets must make their poems more accessible and more transparent, but without making concessions on form and substance.Vigneault says poetry can either be clear and easy to grasp or more difficult or “shadowy.” With poems where the “clear and the shadowy are neighbors, people would sooner buy in the clearer areas but in time they will also get used to the zones of shadow.” THEATRE Summer 84 Annual Country Dinner Dance Saturday, June 16, 1984 Country-style Buffet served 7:00-8:30 p.m.Entertainment provided by ‘KEBEC’ All proceeds to benefit the Pieeerv Theatre.*15°° per person For reservations please call Send for our season brochure: Box 390 North Hatley, P.Q.JOB 2C0 Subscriptions still available 819-842-2191 TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984-5 Wines and cheeses match up for summer parties Okay, once more with feeling.For those of you planning a wine and cheese party this summer — pre-theatre, after-work cocktails etc.— here is a quick rule of thumb for matching these two ideal companions.I say ‘rule of thumb’ because, as you well know, taste differs from individual to individual and what is Brie to the goose is not always Gorgonzola to the gander.First let’s dispose of goat’s cheese.This includes Chèvre, Bondon, Saint-Maure and Crotte Diable among others.Because of its distinctive taste and texture, it is generally felt that goat’s cheese goes best with white wine Wine Bits By TIMOTHY BELFORD and Burgundies at that.Thus Chablis, Pouilly Fuisse and the Italian Orvieto all come to mind.There are individuals who also claim the wines of Alsace also combine well, particularly the Rieslings.I myself, like some of the semidry whites of Spain including the Vina Sol and the Yago.The best bet is to find out where your cheese comes from and check to see what the natives drink.The next category are the hard and semi-hard cheeses If you once again prefer white wines — it is after all summer and supposedly warm — then the following is more or less in order.With Emmental, Edam, Colby, Brick soft Provolone,Tilsit or Danish Blue why not try a lovely glass of German Rhine wine à la Niersteiner or perhaps something from the Mosel.If these are a little too sweet’ for your taste, the Italian Est!Est!Est! is a good match or even a Frascati from the area around Rome.Another combination I find interesting, is any of the above with one of the many white wines of the Loire — Muscadet de Sèvre et Maine, Saumur, Sancerre or Pouilly-Fumé If red wine is your thing — Damn the weather! full speed ahead — why not try a Chianti or Barbera del Monferrato with your Fontina or a nice Pommard with your Saint-Paulin.Anice touch is a slightly chilled bottle of Valpolcella with a slice or two of Oka.For soft cheeses such as Brie, Camembert, Bonne Mère, Gorgonzola, Stilton Blue or Anfleur, I suggest an equally soft wine.One with lingering taste and distinctive bouquet.A good growth from Burgundy, white or red, is nice or a well-aged Chatêau wine from Bordeaux.These are likely more expensive, but as a substitute pull out the 1961 Barolo I told you to buy in 1977 and instead of using it for a special meal linger over the nuances of taste and texture in the shade of the stately maple in the backyard.And, as a last resort, there’s always Champagne with anything.Cheers! Massawippi Festival begins This Sunday, June 10, at 11:00 a m., the “Sons et Brioches” concert series presents in St.James Church, East Hatley, three young musicians from Bishop’s University: Lucie Beaudet — pianist, Jacinthe Dion — mezzo-soprano, and Maryse Roux — clarinettist.Lucie Beaudet was born in Montreal and started to study music at the age of four with Agatha Trifiro.At present, she is studying piano with Mary O’Keeffe at Bishop’s University.Lucie also teaches piano, plays in an orchestra and parti cipated in the Bishop’s University music festival last year.Sne has composed many songs, including the theme-song for the Village Culturel of Lennox-ville.Born in Sherbrooke, Jacinthe Dion started her musical training at a very early age.Since September 1980, she has studied voice at the College de Sherbrooke and is presently studying with Therese Lu-pien at Bishop’s.Ja-cinthe participated in many musique échanges at the College de Sherbrooke and in studio recitals at Bishop’s.She now teaches voice at Plein Soleil school and participates in many music groups.Maryse Roux is from Richmond, Quebec.She has obtained a B.A.in music and now teaches piano.In addition Maryse has a very good command of the clarinet having studied for several years under the guidance of Paul Dansereau.After the conbcerts, delicious country buffet lunches are offered by the St.James Church, at the reasonable price of $5.00 a person.For more information, please call the following numbers: 842-2583 or 842-4260.University students launch flea market SHERBROOKE (RP) — If you’re thinking of heading out to the Bromont flea market again this Sunday, think again.Sherbrooke is a lot closer.Organized by three local enterprising university students, a new Sherbrooke flea market opens June 10 and runs every Sunday until October.Over 50 vendors have said they’ll come but Brad Vancour, 20, says he’s got virtually unlimited space in the huge parking lot on the comer of Parc and Terrill streets.Vancour, going into his second year of a Bachelor of Business Administration program at Bishop’s University in September, says he hopes to attract flower, vegetable, clothing, handicrafts and woodworking vendors.The price for vendors is $15 per day, $150 for the season (minus the Expo days) and $250 including the fair.Farmers get a special invitation, according to Vancour, to come and seU their com — always a major attraction at flea markets.Although Vancour admits he and his friends had a little trouble at the beginning getting the ball rolling, the idea has taken off and he's optimistic about Sunday’s turnout.After all, he says, “if Bromont can do it, why can't Sherbrooke?" «/cr 'C.IQHRS .» “BIG, you’ve done it again!” Now, BIC makes shaving even easier by dividing the world into two kinds of people.For those with 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 of * people.Those who love John McEnroe and those who.welt.\(aic) 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984 Bolton Valley resort offers a wide variety of activities By Robert Palmer BOLTON, Vt.— Edward Bryant never lived to fulfill his plans to make Bolton Mountain one of Vermont’s greatest ski areas.Thirteen years after his death in 1951 however, a young entrepreneur out of the University of Vermont picked up where Bryant left off.The result, 20 years later, is a G,000-acre year-round resort with a heart just about the same size.Bolton Valley Ski/Summer Resort, located 19 miles east of Burlington in central Vermont, has combined the best of sports, conference and recreation facilities, as well as fine accomodation — in the most natural of settings.The philosophy of the resort is simple: a vacation is a vacation.Ralph Deslauriers, president of the Bolton Valley Corporation and the man responsible for developing the mountain, thinks people on holiday deserve a choice.Whether it be playing tennis, golf, swimming or just plain relaxing, he’s made certain vacationers at his resort can do whatever they like and best of all, for a price they like.Vacation packaging, Deslauriers says, offers the greatest holiday value today.“People want to know what their vacation is going to cost them.” At Bolton Valley, $150 (U.S., double occupancy) gives you a weekend to choose from any of the resort’s long list of activities.It’s a good thing too, because you’ll probably need it.The resort is completely self-contained with facilities for tennis, golf, swimming (indoor and outdoor), hiking, fishing, as well as conferences, audio-visual displays and even grocery shopping.The spanking new sports/conference centre offers a jacuzzi, sauna and sports bar.The Ian Fletcher Tennis School is the resort’s largest summer attraction.Both the weekend and week rates (under $300 U.S., double occupancy) include several hours of lessons each day and court time, as well as access to the new sports/conference centre facilities free of charge.Unlike many sports schools bearing the names of professionals, Ian, his wife Brooke and their two assistant instructors are with you throughout your stay.Their philosophy is a reflection of the overall atmosphere at the resort — relax, have fun and learn at your own pace.“People have enough pressure on them as it is without getting it from us when they come on vacation,” says Brooke.FAMILY ATMOSPHERE This combination of a pressure-free tennis program and a friendly staff, says Marketing Coordinator Sara Widness, is all part of the feeling of closeness the resort works to create.“There is a real family atmosphere here,” she says.“Ralph (Deslauriers) has eight children and he believes in creating a very wholesome environment.” Widness, the editor of the Barrie Times-Argus’s lifestyle section and mother of two teenage daughters, says one of the ways Bolton Valley tries to maintain this environment is to avoid the ‘bus tour crowd’, the ‘pick up anyone on a street comer’ type of one-day ski excursion.With a combined lift capacity of 3,800 skiers per hour, the resort can certainly handle it, but Widness says people staying at the hotel don’t want to have to fight their way around the facilities.In short, intimacy is something Bolton Valley has worked to achieve and will continue to work just as hard to maintain.The resort nursery and Camp Bear Paw are proof of both that kind of atmosphere and environment.Deslauriers believes parents who bring along children on their vacation should have time to themselves if they so choose.Bolton Valley has a qualified staff in the nursery and camp programs who will take the children during the day and evening.In the case of Camp Bear Paw, counsellors will take older children hiking up the mountain where they can fish for trout, see nature first-hand and even learn how to build a lean-to.And, they’ll be back before dinner.For vacationers looking for a permanent place to ‘get away from it all’, Bolton Valley’s attractive condominiums range from approximately $70,000 to $150,000 for one, two, three or four Sara Widness.A real family atmosphere, a wholesome environment.f*' ' Bolton Valley's new sports!conference centre in- pool and dining deck should be completed by next eludes an indoor swimming pool, patio and jacuzzi year.(background).A new adjacent outdoor swimming WL_J Following a highly successful professional career, Ian Fletcher has been training Davis Cup teams for New Zealand, Japan and Israel since 1976.He and his wife Brooke bring a wealth of professional and teaching experience to Bolton Valley.bedroom units.Whether for rent or purchase, all are furnished and have a full compliment of appliances.With a summer average occupancy rate of 80 to 90 per cent, it’s a good idea to call ahead to confirm availability.The wee- kend tennis program, for example, has a limited capacity in order to maintain an instructor-player ratio of 4:1.For more information on Bolton Valley or any of its programs and packages, caU (802) 434-2131.Tennis, anyone?«* «X —~ Bolton Valley SkilSummer Resort is located halfway between Montpelier and Burlington, and features a choice of activities designed to suit virtually every kind of holiday-goer.LIVE MUSIC Your ‘ _ & listening pleasure Weddings, Parties, Anniversaries, etc.Call "MIKE" Good sell 876-2090 B0C TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, JUNE 8.1884—7 “I’ve seen the future and it is Toronto Record staffer and resident Oenologist — that’s a big word for wino—Timothy Belford had himself a garage sale last week along with long-time local resident and aging hockey star, George Garard.The boys were reportedly assisted by two lovely ‘ salespersons’ but since it is unlikely that anyone apart from their respective mothers would help them, I’ll have to put the latter down as merely unsubstantiated ‘hearsay’.A garage sale for all you uninitiated out there, occurs when somebody cleans out an attic, basement and/or garage and sells the junk at rock-bottom prices.Keen shoppers can pick up such unforgettable items as broken TVs, unmatched dishware, paintings of bullfighters on black velvet or great-grandma’s moth-eaten fur coat.Each to his own.One interesting sidelight to the Garard-Belford version of Au Bon Marché, was mayor of all the Lennoxvillains Cecil T could have been an MP’ Dougherty who made the purchase of the day picking up a chesterfield and chair set at a bargain basement price.If only the sofa could talk.A word of warning from the Centre Local pour la Service Communitaire.Nobody from the CLSC has been authorized to conduct a telephone survey on Sexually Transmitted Diseases .I repeat NOBODY ! It appears some murky-minded individual has been phoning up ladies across the province inquiring into their private lives.The conversation starts out on the up and up but gradually takes on a slightly more obscene note.And if you’re reading this you pervert, stop bothering the ladies.Should you wish to discuss it further you can reach me by phoning, toll free, (819) 565-8111.The Buckingham Post — that’s Buckingham, Quebec not Palace — is going down hill fast.Not only have they featured one of my columns in their weekly journal but now they’ve really scraped the bottom of the barrel.In the last issue, under Editorials Opinions Letters, they re-printed something by our own mis-guided editor and chef, the award-winning Charles Bury.Now, everyone who knows him realizes that Chuck has no Opinions, never writes Letters and cribs his Editorials from the Christian Science Who’s who By TADEUSZ LETARTE Monitor, so what’s the catch?Informed sources say it’s all a put-on.Since Bury apparently spent the entire article criticising Jacques Parizeau, Minister in Charge of the Fat of the Land, — something I know he would never do — I have to agree.At this rate, The Post will be publishing one of Boy George MacLaren’s travelogues next.You know the sort of thing, “Armritsar, the Commonwealth and My Part in Its Downfall”.This may be my last kick at the cat since the Liberal Party of Ontario, Quebec, parts of the Maritimes and Downtown Winnipeg will be crowning a new ruler next weekend in Ottawa.Since I will, as usual, be attending the event, my column won’t appear until the following week and thus I feel compelled to make at least one last cutting remark.The choice as I see it, boils down to this.First, one can join the Liberal lemmings and hurl oneself off the political cliff with national saviour John Turner and insure once and for all that the concept of regionalism disappears — “I have seen the future and it is Toronto ”.Secondly, delegates can break precident and elect a francophone to succeed a francophone (failing that you could vote for Jen Chrétien).Third, the party could pick well-known Conservative Donald ‘Cry me a river’ Johnston.And fourth, the convention could elect John Whelan, Mark Mun-ro, Eugene Roberts, John MacGuigan or any other combination of the last four interchangeables.The only other hope is a draft Herb Gray movement which is about as likely as the Russians showing up at the Los Angeles Olympics.Don't worry.The first thing we’re going to do is enlarge the Senate.‘Zapping’ now recognized as television industry term In the olden days, if an irritating commercial came on television — let’s say Mr.Whipple on the lookout for shoppers squeezin’ the Charmin — a viewer would have two choices: stay put and endure or get up, walk across the room and change the channel.But that’s no longer true in at least a quarter of all Canadian homes with TV.In these households, Mr.Whipple can be “zap- ped” off the screen as quickly as Mr.Pacman can gobble up an opponent in a video game.In most cases, this is possible thanks to a little black box known as a cable converter, a remote-control device found in increasing numbers of Canadian and American homes.These simple contraptions are giving viewers more control over their TV sets — and their effects are starting to be noticed by advertisers.(The boxes have also been known to drive the parents of small children — who have trigger-happy fingers — mad.But it’s not just youngsters who use the machines to bounce from program to program : observe for example, an avid football fan on a fall Sunday afternoon when three games are being telecast at the same time.) RECOGNIZE TERM In the United States, "zapping” has become a recognized industry term,especially in recent years with the boom in subscribers to cable and pay TV.‘ ‘The biggest trend in TV today is zapping,” says Don Ohlmeyer, a New York producer of TV commercials.Ohlmeyer says 40 per cent of U.S.homes with cable TV have “admitted to changing the channels during the commercials.” According to a recent story in The Asso-ciated Press, some U.S.experts believe zapping is having a di-rect effect on TV commercials.The phenomenon is forcing advertisers to rn^ke more entertaining commercials to hold viewers, some say.Says David Pol-track, head of research at CBS-TV, “With all the options available, 'advertisers know they have to work harder visually to keep viewers’ attention.” This may be at least partially responsible for the number of glossy and entertaining U.S.commercials this season.Examples: Michael Jackson’s million-dollar commercials for Pepsi-Cola; Ridley Scott, the director of Alien, created a futuristic mini-movie for Apple’s Macintosh computer; Wendy’s says its hamburger sales are up since launching its “Where’s the beef?” slogan.Burt Manning, chair-man of J.Walter Thompson USA, agrees advertisers need to make commercials “that people welcome.“The abrasive stuff worked during the period when people would sit and watch anything that appeared on TV.But that day is long gone.The slices of unlife with Mr Whipple are over.” Canadians, too, are starting to notice zapping and its effects.“The zapping phenomenon is for real,” says Mike Hanson, vice-president of member services at the Bureau of Broadcast Measurement (BBM) a Canadian audience ratings service.“There is no precise mechanism to measure it but we’re looking at it.” The Canadian Cable Television Association says about 2.2 million of Canada’s 8.3 million TV households are equipped with cable converters.That number is expected to increase about seven per cent this year.John Tomlinson of Toronto’s Hayhurst Advertising, says, “There is an acknowledgement that the little black boxes are causing problems.” But, he says, little is known about zapping and “no one knows what to do about it.” However, Ron Ko-vas, the Toronto-based president of J.Walter Thompson Co.Ltd., says, “There is not as much zapping as some people want to believe.” And Kovas says people don’t change channels because of a negative reaction to commercials but because they want to see another program Artist shorn surrealistic view of Quebec SHERBROOKE — The Sherbrooke Trust’s Collection en Art opened the last in its series of art exhibitions Monday with a display of the work’s of Chartierville artist André Philibert.Philibert gained some degree of local fame a year ago when he won the overall prize at Sher-brooke’sSa/on Intemationalde la Peinture The dozen or so acrylics presently on display at the Carrefour de l’estrie branch of the Sherbrooke Trust are representative of Philibert s unique style _ an almost surrealistic view of Quebec rural life.Combining a heavy use of blue and grey with a stylized representation of Quebec country architecture, Philibert seduces the viewer into accepting a view of reality that doesn’t quite exist.This sense of artistic ‘distortion’ carries over into the artist’s portraits which again present a view, this time of the human being, where shape and color take precedence over faithful reproduction.Philibert’s works can be seen during business hours from now until the end of the month.The Collection en Art program will be continued in September. 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984 WHAT’S ON Music I’m going to start off this week with the Festival Lac Massawippi Sons et Brioches concert, which takes place at St.James Church in East Hatley this Sunday at 11 a.m.Featured artists this weekend are Lucie Beaudet, piano; Maryse Roux, flute; and Jacinthe Dion, mezzo-soprano (that means she’s gonna sing, dummy).All three of these ladies are highly talented and experienced musicians and teachers and they should provide a very pleasant morning’s entertainment.For those of you who haven’t been out to East Hatley, this series of concerts provides an excellent excuse to visit one of the Eastern Townships prettiest and most charming villages as well as to mingle with some of the equally pleasant people in the community.Coffee is served from 10 a.m.before the concert in the Church Hall.At the Manoir Waterville, apparently in keeping with a new tendency towards fewer decibels, a pop group called The Versatiles are going to take the stage.I do not know these people at all, so I had better not comment.Down at The FL Hideaway, Calvin’s got Idle Hands this weekend, featuring the addition of Bob Boisclair.Ducky ’s a free agent these days since the demise of Crossroads which was, I thought, one of the best three-man outfits to emerge in quite some time.I should take this opportunity to extend my sympathies to Peter Singleton, who normally leads Idle Hands and to his family on the sudden and tragic death of his father Cliff last week.A well-known sportsman in the area, he will be sorely missed.The Del Monty down in Rock and Roll Island is featuring a hard-rock outfit that goes by the name Champlain this weekend until Saturday.These boys, I’m told, continue the Del bar’s tradition of solid rock entertainment.Next door in Stanstead, The Maples is featuring the well-honed country tunes of Lyndon Sheldon and The Plainsmen tonight and tomorrow, and each Friday and Saturday for the month of June.South Stukely’s Fridays and Saturdays this month are being livened up by the presence of the extremely and deservedly popular Big Foot who are playing over at John Bird’s famous Station 88.Big Foot are one of the area’s most consistant country outfits, as I am sure everybody already knows.The boys will be there for the rest of the month.The Motel Bretagne is still cooking with its house band The Caroussels Country Riders Fridays and Saturdays with country and western tunes.Bury’s Salle Jean-Paul has its usual Saturday night dance this weekend and the entertainment this time out is by Bourbon and Lace.This is another good show band that has recently emerged from the wealth of talent we seem to spawn in this area and they seem to be going over extremely well.The music starts at 9 p.m.and continues to the wee hours.Admission is $5 a couple, $3 if you’re going stag (doe?).The Cowansville Legion is having a dance too this Saturday night and this bash will be entertained by Jimmy and his Sunset Boys and their country and western music.Admission is only $2 a head and the music continues from 9 until 2.In Ayer’s Cliff at the Shady Crest, the country and western tunes of the Koncordes are on hand Friday and Saturday evenings.In Sawyerville out at the Salle Veilleux.The Midnight Men provide the entertainment for a dance to benefit the Cooks-hire Primary School Committee.For only $3 you get to contribute to an organization that does a lot of good work while boogying to the tunes of an excellent band.Another fine country outfit has moved into the city for the month of June to show the slickers what country music is.Gibson Creek a young, but enthusiastic, energetic and talented group of good old boys are honking over at P’tit Nashville this Friday and Saturday evening and each weekend for the rest of the month.Now, in order to get away from C and W for a while allow me to direct you to the Café Manhattan on the comer of King and Alexandre in Sherbrooke, where the five-man funk outfit Transparent Gold is performing this weekend until Sunday.These fellows are from Rhode Island, for God’s sake.Advance Notice Dep’t.Next Saturday is the date of The Piggery theatre’s Annual Country Dinner Dance This will be a fine do with a buffet being served from 7 until 8:30 p m.followed by a dance featuring the group Kébek Tickets are $15 and reservation (you’ll probably need them) can be made at (819) 842-2191.One final announcement.It seems that the Yamaska Valley Barbershppers' open house at the Stansbridge East Citizens Centre was a rip-roaring success last week and a whole bunch of new members were signed up.Now, being friendly and all.the Barbershoppers are still keen on having as many people join up as they can, so they are asking that any (and I quote) “sociable fellow between 16 and 91 and free on Monday evenings" (that covers everybody hut By MICHAEL McDEVITT old Desmond) who can’t even pretend to carry a tune) should drop on down and visit any Monday evening between 8 and 10:30 p.m.at the above-mentioned Citizens Centre.Now c’mon.Whaddya got to lose?Exhibitions/events Well, there’s no doubt about the fact that the exhibition of the very strange perspectives captured in acrylic by André Philibert and displayed for the month of June at the Sherbrooke Trust branch at the Carrefour de I’Estrie are a hell of a lot of fun.Philibert is one of those artists who refuses to see the world the way the rest of us do, and by insisting on presenting his own idea of how things are, he forces us to take a look at those concepts we take for granted.Mikey really enjoys Philibert’s work, but that may be because I'm a little bent too.Who knows?We must each judge for himself.At the Léon Marcotte Centre on Marquette Street, the Musée du Séminaire de Sherbrooke has prepared an exhibit entitled Un Regard sur le Mer (a look at the sea) which is basically just that — a look at the characteristics of our planet’s oceans and at the plants and creatures that inhabit them.It also examines sea travel, maritime history, and the unsteady relationship man has always seemed to have with the oceans and the seas.As usual, the exhibit is instructive as well as attractive.My old friends at the Caisse Populaire de Shebrooke-est are featuring the paintings of Chilean artist Carla Ebner for the month of June.Ebner came to Quebec in 1980, and her paintings are portraits of the people of the countryside in her native Chile.Colorful, tragic and yet still dignified, the Chilean peasant is represented as a noble figure, standing tall against great adversity and oppression.At l’Atelier Arpéle at 2400 Galt west in Sherbrooke, artists De Lourdes Dion-Marcoux and Pauline Loiselle-Vallières share the limelight in an exhibition lasting until June 30.Dion-Marcoux paints in acrylics and offers primarily colorful country scenes with a few interesting portraits thrown in for good measure.Loiselle-Vallières presents beautiful autumn and winter country scenes.Out in Knowlton at the Galerie Lac Brome the vernissage of watercolor artist Dr.Peter Gutmanis takes on a special flavour on J une 15 at 6 p.m.as 20 per cent of all sales on that day will go to support the efforts of the Brome-Missisquoi-Perkins Hospital.A noble and worthy cause.In Valcourt this month at the Centre Culturel Yvonne L.Bombardier the exciting Yvan M.R.Savoie is exhibiting 71 of his most recent works in a variety of media.Savoie is a very well-known and much-admired local artist whose use of color and design have earned him a wide and enthusiastic following.The exhibit is open from 9 until noon and from 1 until 5 each weekday, as well as from 7 to 9 on Thursdays and Fridays and from 2 to 4 on Sundays.Admission is free.There is just one more weekend to catch Arts Sutton’s presentation of Pop Fun, an interpretive look into the social life of the inner city featuring paintings by Deidre McKay and Elizabeth Whally These two ladies cruised through Montreal bars, pool halls, discos and other gathering places to try to capture the essence of that city’s flavour The show, which has been at Arts Sutton for the last two weeks completes its stay this weekend from 11 a m.until 5 p.m.Saturday and Sunday.Something a little different is taking place beginning Monday at Loubard at 286 Alexandre street in Sherbrooke.It’s a celebration of the bicycle, and besides a variety of activities there is an exhibit of photography surrounding that theme.The exhibit lasts from Monday to Wednesday.The charming community of Ayer’s CliffG have forgiven it for Bobby Fisher) is in the midst of celebrating its 75th anniversary this summer and has scheduled a multitude of activities and events throughout June and July.This weekend the good folks have organized a Tea and Food Sale in St.George Hall at 972 Main street at 2:30 in the p.m.My mouth is watering already.The Société d’Horticulture et d’Ecolgie de Sherbrooke is having a conference this Tuesday (in French) on the subject of Annual Plants at the Eugene Lalonde Arena up on Terrill street.The conference costs $3 and takes place at 7:30 with a get-together at 7.For more information on this event contact Diane Gagné at 569-0377.And don’t forget Saturday and Sunday (June 9, 10) are the days when the wonderful Cookshire Bread Festival takes place out in that great community.Activities include bread slicing contests and tasting and a whole slew of other fun things too.Go for it.Movies That impossible fad known to the world as break dancing is still tearing things up considerably in the world of show biz and continues to provide lucrative employment for throngs of hitherto deprived inner-city street kids in clubs, theatres and films.The latest — and most hyped — example of this phenomenon is the new Harry Belafonte — David Picker production Beat Street which opens this weekend at Sherbrooke’s Cinéma Capital.The break dance craze has Mikey feeling somewhat confused because despite his healthy aversion to anything even vaguely athletic, he remains completely fascinated by the impossible stunts these kids seem to be able to do with their bodies.It is a genuine street art, this break dancing, and in spite of all the attention its getting, I’m not sick of it yet.This movie is supposed to be the ultimate, and if it lives up to its claims it should be an incredible piece of visual entertainment.On va voir.The Cinémas Carrefour have two English films for us this week, both of which will probably attract their fair share of fans.Star Trek III — The Search for Spock finally makes it to the city and Sherbrookois can now trot over to the Carre-four’s lost and found to see if they can locate the slippery Vulcan.Also playing at the Carrefour is the new lunatic fringe film Ghostbusters starring Bill Murray, Dan Ackroyd and Sigurney Weaver in a comedy about a couple of clowns who make their living ’exterminating’ ghosts.This is a Bill Murray movie, and if you enjoyed Stripes then you will know what kind of humour to expect.Sounds very promising.Cowansville’s Cinéma Princesse gets the delightful Sixteen Candles this weekend accompanied by the somewhat maudlin Hard to Hold starring rock singer-soap opera sta r Rick Springfield.Sixteen Candles is one of those rare films that actually tells a story about kids that allows them to be kids.It’s told from the point of view of a sweet young thing going through all the chaos that normally accompanies the process of turning sweet sixteen and manages to convey this in a non-condescending way, there are some genuinely funny moments in this movie and the acting (by Molly Ringwald and Anthony Michael Hall particularly) is more than competent — it’s convincing.This is not a great movie, but it is fun.Unless you’re a hardcore Rick Springfield fan (if such an animal exists) you won’t get much of a thrill from Hard to Hold, but I suppose it beats watching all those Three’s Company re-runs on the tube.If you don’t mind a little drive every now and then and can handle the humiliation of watching your hard-earned dollars turn into pennies at the border, it seems that the Merrill’s Showplace Cinemas in Newport, Vermont are going to be providing the biggest attractions this summer, This collection of three modern theatres has three of the biggest blockbusters of the summer on the screen already, and I’m willing to bet they will continue to come across from hereon in.Now showing (until June 14): Star Trek III — The Search for Spock Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, and starting today Gremlins, the latest effort by Steven Spielberg to accumulate all of the known world's available currency.Now, I am quite sure I don’t have to tell anybody anything about the first two, but the last mentioned gives indications that it might be interesting.From what I can gather, Spielberg has created some adorable little creatures who can turn quite nasty when they are not treated exactly according to Hoyle.My sources tell me this adds up to a film that is both effective comedy and horror film.The movie has Mikey’s unqualified support simply because it gives him another chance to gape at the remarkably untalented, but really cute Phoebe Cates.As the man says: “It don’t matter if she can’t act as long as she can fake it.” The Derby-port Drive-in in Derby, for all you outdoors types, is featuring the horrible package Where The Boys Are and Spring Break tonight and tomorrow, and the only TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8.1984-9 WHAT’S ON thing these have to offer is glimpses of bare nubile skin and grade three-level bathroom humour.If you really want to be childish, I suggest waiting til Sunday, when you can catch Walt Disney’s The Rescuers and Mickey's Christmas Carol.I will restrain myself and make no snide remarks about the concept of watching a Christmas story in 90-degree heat.Monday and Tuesday brings with them one of the most enjoyable movies I’ve seen in a long time.The Big Chill starring practically every up-and-coming superstar on the horizon including Tom Berringer, Glenn Close, Jeff Goldbioom, William Hurt, Kevin Kline and Mary Kay Place.It tells the funny yet moving story of a group of aging 60s types (now, why does that sound fa miliar) who get together for the weekend following the suicide of one of their old college buddies.I loved this movie.My boss, the inimitable Charles Bury thought it was boring and dumb.On Wednesday and Thursday, the outdoors screen provides the aforementioned Sixteen Candles.The Norton Drive-in is featuring another fun film tonight and Saturday in the form of Risky Business.This is the story of a young fella (Tom Cruise) who gets caught up in the free-enterprise system marketing the obvious talents of the beautiful Rebecca de Mornay in an attempt to get his father’s $40,000 Porsche out of the garage where it has been ever since he foolishly introduced it to the inhospitable arms of Lake Michigan.Despite the fact that this film could easily have slipped into the realm of bad taste, it somehow manages to avoid doing so and ends up being an entertaining movie.On Sunday, there’s something called Angel about which all I can tell yopu is it’s rated ‘R’, and on Tuesday and Wednesday, outdoor pornography with Easy Alice and Miss September.Television Just to get things off to a good and cheerful start this week, I might as well mention Vermont ETV’s presentation of the chilling 1965 film The Collector starring Terrence Stamp as a man whose hobby consists of collecting butterflies — and other pretty things.Samantha Eggar co-stars and the film is being shown at 11:30 tonight.On Saturday at 1 p.m.Channel 12 presents Richard Harris and Charlotte Rampling in Orca, a well-filmed story of a rampaging killer whale out to avenge the death of his pregnant mate at the hands of a shark hunter.At 2 p.m.on Vermont ETV Gregory Peck is superb as the British navy’s Captain Horatio Hornblower, the fictional hero of the series of adventure stories written by C.S.Forester.This is a sea saga in the grand old style as our hero battles evil Spaniards, rescues ladies in distress and does all those other hero-type things.Virginia Mayo provides the fluff.On Sunday at 2 p.m.Vermont ETV brings back the excellent British series The Six Wives of Henry VIII.Poor old King Henry just didn’t seem to have any luck when it came to choosing the ladies who would share his bed and throne.Keith Mitchell portrays the fickle monarch superbly from his days as a young and creative prince to a disease-riddled old coot.In the first episode, Henry marries his elder brother’s widow, the Spanish princess Catherine of Aragon.At 9, Radio-Québec continues its fine documentary biography series with Staline.Born Josef Vissarionovich Dzhu-gashviliii (try and put that on a driver’s licence) in a small town in Georgia, the young revolutionary was known as Koba (the bear) during the long struggle against the Tsarist regime.While serving a sentence in Siberia (from which he escaped) he took the name Stalin (steel) and began to accumulate more and more influence in Bolshevik party circles.He heroically led the defence of Tsaritsyn during the Russian Civil War, and in recognition of this the city was renamed Stalingrad.While his more intelligent and ideological comrades argued and discussed, Stalin began amassing more power and became the Bolshevik party’s secretary shortly before the incapacitation of Lenin.Within 5 years of the latter’s death Stalin had eliminated all real opposition to his control over the party and had begun a reign of terror that was to last 24 years until his death in 1953.Also at 9, on Vermont ETV, Masterpiece Theatre presents a dramatization of Ford Maddox Ford’s classic story The Good Soldier.Robin Ellis.Jeremy Brett, Susan Fleetwood, and Elizabeth Garvie star as two wealthy Edwardian couples who meet annually in a fashionable German resort, and whose apparently placid lives are in reality a camouflage for a stormy secret existence.At midnight, Channel 12 offers the unlikely combination of Richard Burton.Raquel Welch and Joey Heatherton in Bluebeard, the story of a not-very-nice German flying ace who has the nasty habit of murdering and freezing his wives.On Monday at 7 p.m.CBC begins a series of programs celebrating the Gaspé with a Quebec Pops Concert featuring more than 30 musicians under the direction of Serge Lortie in a performance of light classical music from the Gaspé Cathedral.At 9, on Vermont ETV, The Shakespeare Plays presents the story of Pericles in which the young hero goes off in search of a wife in a story complicated by love, jealousy, incest, famine and a miraculous rebirth.At midnight, Channel 12 presents director Richard Lester’s The Three Musketeers, a hilarious and beautifully filmed version of the classic novel by Alexandre Dumas.The wonderful cast includes Oliver Reed, Richard Chamberlain, Michael York and Raquel Welch.The sequel, the equally enjoyable The Four Musketeers with the same cast plus a delightfully evil Faye Dunaway will be aired on Tuesday night at the same time.Both are well-worth the effort required to stay up past Mikey’s bedtime (2 p.m.).On Tuesday at 9 Vermont ETV’s American Playhouse continues with part 5 of Oppenheimer the biography of the father of the American nuclear bomb, Robert Oppenheimer.In this episode the scientists working at Los Alamos react to the dropping of the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki with an elation that soon turns to horror and shock as the extent of the destruction and loss of life are known.Oppenheimer continues to frighten and enrage officials with his open criticism of American foreign policy.What should really be good is Great Confrontations: The Oxford Debates on Vermont ETV at 10.In this one, U.S.Secretary of Aggression Caspar Weinberger takes on Bri tish historian E.P.Thompson over the proposition “there is no moral difference between the foreign policies of the U.S.A.and the USSR.” Chuckle.At 11:30, Charlie Chaplin directed Sophia Loren and Marlon Brando in the sophisticated romantic comedy A Countess from Hong Kong.Vermont ETV cleans up again on Wednesday with Swan Lake Minnesota at 9 p.m.featuring the Minnesota Dance Theatre in a spoof on the classic ballet by Pyotr Tchaikovsky.In this version, a young dairy farmer sets off in search of love and finds himself in the strangest places.At 10, Vermont ETV presents Let the Good Times Roll with B.B.King in a 1983 concert filmed at Tufts University.Channel 6 provides a version of history that has little to do with any facts but which has all the makings of a great adventure story with They Died with their Boots On, starring Errol Flynn as General George Custer whose wrong turn earned him a place in history and earned his soldiers the opportunity of being sliced to bits by just about every Indian in the world.On Thursday at 7, Radio-Québec presents a biography of one of the twentieth century’s most emulated women, the inimitable Coco Chanel, whose style and vigor dominated the Paris fashion world for decades.Radio CBC Radio has come up with a way to ruin your Friday evening meal with the wonderful combination of a profile of Liberal leadership candidate John Napier Turner and a look at the annual convention of the Parti Québécois.This pile of flotsam is presented at 6 p.m.on The World at Six.Also looked at is the Western Economic Summit in London, where the leaders of the seven major western nations are meeting to waste their time again.At 8:05 on CBC Stereo Friday Night Pops presents the music of The Chieftains, perhaps the world’s best-known Celtic music group.These guys are really very good and play an assortment of music that ranges from ancient tribal reels to Georgian wedding serenades.At 9:30 on CBC Stereo Leon Bibb's Blues presents a look at some of the Women of the Blues including Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday, and Salome Bey to name just a few.At 10:30, still on CBC Stereo, Nightfall presents Baby Doll by Larry LeClair.A young man presents his wife with an antique doll as an anniversary present, but is not prepared for the consequences involved.Just in case you haven’t had enough, CBC Radio presents more on John Turncoat the Liberal leadership candidate on Saturday morning at 9:10.This time the unpleasant fellow is interviewed and gives his opinion, if he’s found it yet.More to Mikey’s liking, is The Entertainers at 11:05 on CBC Stereo (1:30 Sunday on CBC Radio) which features an interview with one of the great actresses of our day, the inimitable Bette Davis.Davis even sings in this one, now whattya think of that.At 2:05, Saturday ARernoon at the Opera presents an En- ’ glish version of Orpheus and Euridice from the Guelph Spring Festival.This opera was composed by a man with the lovely monnicker Christoph Willibald von Gluck.Orpheus is devastated at the loss of his lovely young bride Euridice and his grief is so moving that the gods decide he can have her back if he’ll just quit whining.A condition for this rather generous deal, however is that he must go into Hades and get the sweet thing, and he may not look at her until he gets her out.Orpheus can’t quite hack it, though and succumbs to his lady’s pleading and turns to embrace her, thus losing her to death once more.He sets off another godawful racket however, and the poor gods give in again.Janet Stubbs plays Orpheus, while Heather Thomson stars as Euridice, accompanied by the Guelph Chamber Orches- P UpPfW»: Works like Ihis one by DeLourdes Dion Marcoux will be on display at L'atelier Arpèle on Galt West until June 30.tra and the Hamilton Philharmonic directed by Nicholas Goldschmidt.At 7:05 on CBC Radio The Ocean Limited presents a concert of progressive jazz by the St.Francis Xavier Faculty Jazz Quintet from Antigonish, Nova Scotia.Also at 7:05 is Through the Ears of George Martin.In this episode we relive The End of the Beatles with a look at the recording of the legendary band’s last two albums Let It Be and Abbey Road.After the foundation of the idealistically inspired Apple Corporation, the Beatles began to deteriorate as a band with interpersonal problems developing from all kinds of sources.Eventually the group broke up, but Abbey Road still became one of the band's best efforts despite the fact that very little co-operation existed between members.At 8:05 on CBC Radio Six Days on the Road takes a look at Canadian Fiddle Music and includes music by Graham Townsend, Ward Allen and Don Messer.On Sunday afternoon at 4:05, Sunday Matinée presents The Roncarelli Affair by Mavor Moore.Maurice Duplessis was a dictatorial man whose iron grip on the province of Quebec was based on a reactionary nationalism and an absolute control over the province’s police and bureaucracy.A tavern owner decided he’d gone to far however and began one of the most important constitutional debates in Canadian history.At 9:05, Ideas presents Poetic Passion and Creative Harmony, which is the second part of a series called The Marriage of Two Minds which looks at marriages between two creative individuals.Tonight, the couples Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin and Frederic Chopin and George Sand are looked at.Shelley was a brilliant but erratic poet whose left-wing idealism made him somewhat of an outcast in early 19th century England.Godwin was the daughter of a famous feminist and a radical revolutionary.Godwin (as Mary W.Shelley, the author of Frankenstein) soon became more famous than her husband.Frederick Chopin was the darling of the European music set in the early 19th century, while George Sand was considered by many to be the first female genius the world had ever produced.They met in 1836 and spent the next 13 years of their lives being the toast and talk of fashionable Paris.On Morningside this week at 9:40 on CBC Radio Allan Hughes’ five-part serial To the Colonies will be broadcast this week.It is the story of an English remittance man in the early Canadian west around Calgary who blends his hobby of polo playing with the settling of the vast prairies.On Ideas on Monday at 9:05, Bluestockings: Wicked Virgins and Hyenas in petticoats presents its second installment The Hussy and the Hyena which looks at the importance of the 18th century salons philosophiques hosted by ladies like Madame du Deffand and Madame Geoffrion.The program also discusses two very influential ladies of the day Germaine de Stàel and Mary Wollstonecraft a fiery early feminist.Finally, at 10:17, Booktime really lucks out and begins a 15-part reading by Quebec playwright Michel Tremblay of his play Thérèse and Pierrette and The Little Hanging Angel.Tremblay is a masterful playwright and his tales of life in Montreal’s East End portray a society that is cruel and unjust, but in which people manage to live out lives that can be filled with joy and tenderness despite the odds.This story concentrates on three 11 year-olds united against the world that is about to steai their innocence, and more particularly against the repressive rule of the nuns in their convent, who would kill their spirit. 10—TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY.JUNE 8, 1984 —____g«i record Travel St.Lucia: unspoiled beaches, intriguing culture Fishing is the main ‘industry’ for St.Lucians.y a CASTRIES, St.Lucia (CP) — Travellers seeking throbbing discos, flashy casinos and beachfront high-rises would do well to skip this small, mountainous island.But those satisfied merely with stunning volcanic peaks, isolated beaches and an intriguing local culture can discover at reduced rates during this off-season why St.Lucia claims to be the last unspoiled Caribbean vacation spot.The Pitons, the twin volcanic towers looming more than 750 metres over the fishing village of Soufrière, are the country’s biggest attraction.The hills also hold the island’s steaming Sulphur Springs, which King Louis XVI of France is said to have visited for their medicinal properties.Modern locals claim only that the pungent sulphuric aroma helps clear the sinuses.Further up the coast of the 40-kilometre-long island, sleek yachts bob at anchor in beautiful Marigot Bay, one of the finest natural harbors in the Caribbean and a key reason for St.Lucia’s popularity among sailors.SNAKING ROADS But sight-seeing really starts minutes after clearing Customs, when visitors set out on a hair-raising, 90-minute roller-coaster ride by van from the airport at the southern tip of the island to hotels scattered on beaches 30 ki- lometres away near the capital of Castries on the northwest shore.The route follows narrow, snaking roads over mountainous landscape, past villages built in coves and through lush banana plantations in the inland rain forest.In addition to hairpin bends, the journey is often slowed as untethered cattle and sheep saunter across roadways, barefoot boys play cricket or soccer, or workers stroll home from fields with baskets of fruit perched on their heads.Drivers obligingly point out places of interest or spectacular views, and by the time visitors have been on the island for two hours, they’ve had a crash course in local climate, flora and fauna, geography, architecture and agriculture.They’ll also note they haven’t seen a single hamburger joint, neon sign, building of more than a couple of storeys and precious few road signs or even vehicles on an island that has avoided many of the abuses of tourism.St.Lucia is one of the volcanic islands making up the Lesser Antilles.The mixed heritage of the country — which attained independence from Britain in 1979 — is evident in the speech and dress of local schoolchildren.SPEAK PATOIS Although clad in uniforms modelled after those of the British school system, they speak a Creole patois that has its roots in occasions during the past four centuries when France held the island.Spaniards were the first Europeans to visit the island — naming it after Santa Lucia.But after a visit by the English in the early 1600s, St.Lucia changed hands between England and France more than a dozen times in the next 150 years.It was finally ceded to the English in 1814.On Morne Fortune, “The Mountain of Luck” overlooking Castries harbor, overgrown ruins are all that’s left of barracks used during the battles between the French and English.The heritage of the old colonial powers now is blended with the West Indian culture and Spanish and American influences in music and cuisine.Nightlife is minimal outside Castries, a bustling market and harbor town of about 40,000 that has burned down twice in the last century.But unscheduled entertainment often occurs on beaches around the island.WkM % mm- mm3 m V' v *¦ 4$ * V v > 1 |H The market in Castries, St.Lucia’s largest town is a tourist's delight of sound and scents. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984—11 Travel_________________________________ Ancient tribal culture survives amid engineering BANAUE, Philippines (CP) — Visitors to Manila, with its modern office towers, throbbing nightlife and teenagers carrying ghetto-blasters, may despair of ever finding a native Philippine culture.But 250 kilometres north, in the cool Cordillera Mountains, you can discover the vestiges of an ancient tribal culture amid one of the engineering marvels of the world.For nearly four centuries, the mountain peoples of the northern Philippines, usually lumped together under the name “Igo-rots,” resisted the incursions of Spanish soldiers, missionaries and gold-hunters.It wasn’t until the arrival of the Americans and a series of intrepid missionaries in the late 19th century that whites and Igorots really got to know each other.Most of the missionaries and American administrators treated the tribes with respect, learning their language and customs and joining in their festivals.But one custom the early white visitors did not appreciate was head- hunting.APPEASE SPIRITS Gruesome raids were staged for revenge, to appease the spirit of a family member who died by accident or in childbirth, or simply for prestige.A successful raid was celebrated by several nights of feasting.Afterward, the heads were buried for several months, until the flesh rotted, then hung as an ornament in the home.Head-hunting has been extinct since the early 20th century, however, and aside from that practice, the Igorot tribes were capable of maintaining a peaceful, orderly coexistence.Their co-operative spirit is most obvious in their fantastic rice terraces, the largest and best-built in the world, spiralling the mountains.The slopes were too steep for traditional cultivation of rice, so 2,000 years before the birth of Christ the ancestors of the present-day Igorots began to build stone and clay terraces with complicated irrigation systems.Steps, each about a metre high, cover the slopes of the mountain provinces, climbing as high as 1,500 metres.It’s estimated that their combined length would be roughly 23,000 kilometres — more than half the circumference of the globe.MEET NATIVES The best place to see the terraces, and something of the tribal culture, is the small town of Banane.From Viewpoint, a short ride from the town, you can look over the emerald green steps down into the valley.More energetic tourists can hike into the mountains for other views and meet the natives, members of the Ifugao tribe, many of whom still live in the traditional thatched huts and wear their handwoven costumes — multicoloured g-strings for the men and wraparound skirts for the women.The people are not as outgoing as in the lowlands, but most are friendly and eager to answer questions.(Costumed Ifugaos will pose for you to take photos, but be sure to settle on a reasonable price first.) The town of Banaue has a number of attractive places to stay.The government-owned Banaue Hotel is a five-star hotel with (by Philippine standards) five-star prices — $26 a night for a twin room.Behind the hotel are a series of small villages where you can watch weavers at work or wander over some of the less intimidating terraces.SHOWS NIGHTLY The hotel also has a tribal dance show every night (outsiders are welcome).Though the setting is incongruous, the dances have a more authentic feel than in the usual tourist traps.In the town, you can find cheaper, homier places to stay that are attractive and clean.One of the best is the Cozy Nook, a guesthouse where for $2 a night you can chat with the elderly hostess about the history of the town.If you have the time, it’s worth taking a bus or jeep up the mountain road to Bontoc — which has an excellent tribal museum — and beyond to Sagada.The views are stunning, if occasionally terrifying, including more rice ter- races and the “hanging coffins” of Sagada, where the local Igorots buried their dead.Some visitors return year after year to the mountain provinces for love of the cool, fresh air and simple life.But they warn that the tribal culture is disappearing fast.Most of the younger people wear T-shirts and jeans, and the thatched roofs are quickly being replaced by corrugated tin.The ministry of agriculture reports that even the rice terraces are deteriorating because of soil erosion.Although the rice lands have always been precious to the Ifugao —- as recently as 1969 two families slaughtered each other over disputed territory a metre wide—many traditional farmers are deserting their fields for handicraft and construction work.It’s even been proposed that the rice terraces become wheat terraces.But for the moment, they remain — a beautiful reminder of the abilities of “primitive” people.Mexico’s Mazatlan: a place worth getting to know MAZATLAN, Mexico (CP) — Canadians looking for a relatively unspoiled vacation spot with lots of sunshine, low prices and good shopping should consider this port city on Mexico’s west coast.Although prices are higher than 1983 levels, the Mexicans are starting to get a handle on inflation.Also, there’s an excellent rate of exchange.Vacationers can buy U.S.travellers’ cheques in Canada and exchange them for pesos at Mexican banks instead of the money exchange counters that are a part of most hotel operations.In most cases, it means an extra four or five pesos for each dollar.Mazatlan’s 152 hotels with more than 7,000 rooms range from super deluxe — with prices to match — down to budget where decent accommodation for two is available for about $30 a night.Meal costs can be kept to $30 a day for two — less if one frequents the smaller cafes that offer breakfasts for as little as 140 pesos (about $1).Individual dinners range from 800 to 1,200 pesos to which a 15-per-cent state tax is added.A 10- to 15-per-cent tip is recommended, a custom Mexican waiters take seriously.ADVISES TOURISTS Many Canadians buying package tours to Mazatlan will deal with the Fiesta Wayfarer travel firm and will be introduced to the fishing port by Teresa She-ward, a 24-year-old Canadian.Fluent in Spanish and English, Sheward advises Canadians on how to make the best use of their average two-week stay.She can also act as a buffer between Canadians and Mexican officialdom and can deal on the visitor’s behalf with inevitable problems.Born in Williams Lake, B.C., Sheward moved as an infant with her family to Mexico.By the time the family moved again, this time to Calgary, she was six years old and spoke only Spanish.One of Sheward’s moneysaving tips is to use public transit, which in Mazatlan includes excellent bus service from the hotel area to the end of the line at the Mazatlan Cathedral.For 20 pesos (15 cents), the traveller can cover a lot of ground and get to know Mexico and the Mexicans in a way not possible by taxi.But there are still plenty of taxis and the cost is reasonable with a base price of 200 pesos ($1.50).There’s also the open-air “pulmonia,” costing half as much but with a limit of three passengers.COOL AT NIGHT Named after the Spanish word for pneumonia, a pulmonia is a vehicle that resembles a golf cart.Its only protection from the elements is a windshield for the driver.During the day, it is a pleasant and exhilarating mode of transport but it gets cool at night.As always in Mexico, determine from the driver how much the ride will cost before climbing in.If you think it’s too much, tell him and it may be open for negotiation.The city bus tour is a good value at less than 1,000 pesos ($7).But again, it’s easy to see the same attractions on your own by bus, rented car, or with a party of four or five by taxi.In Mazatlan, most visitors make a point of seeing the cathedral, the nearby indoor public market, and, within easy walking distance, a high diver who leaps off a platform into the churning Pacific far below.This young man times his performances with the arrival of the tour bus — when he can pass the hat for contributions.In between, however, he can be persuaded with perhaps a 1,000-peso donation to put on a special show.Streamliner changed pace of rail traffic CHICAGO (Reuter) — Fifty years ago this spring, a sleek silver passenger train slipped into Chicago at dusk, forever changing the pace of the world’s rail traffic.The Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad’s Zephyr, the first streamlined diesel train, had completed a 13-hour dash from Denver 1,600 kilometres to the west at the doorstep of the Rockies.The dawn-to-dusk run beat the old steam- powered record for the trip by nearly five hours.More importan-th it opened the switch on main-line use of Rudolf Diesel’s compression-ignition engine concept, eventually replacing the steam locomotive.‘‘Like so many things in history, it wasn’t widely recognized at the time, but what the Zephyr did was to sow the seeds for a tremendous diesel power development which would, in 20 years, see the end of steam power in the United States,” said James Gill, spokesman for General Motors Electro-Motive Division.The Zephyr was not the first train hauled by a diesel engine, he said.But it was the first successful application of the diesel on main line service.STAINLESS STEEL The train’s exterior streamlining was made possible by thin strips of stainless steel produced by the Edward G.Budd Ma- nufacturing Co.of Philadelphia.Gill said the freight locomotive credited with driving steam power from the American scene was General Motors’ Demonstrator 103.The Zephyr’s pioneer charge across the high plains and prairies of middle America on May 26,1934, with 72 people on board was timed with the opening of the second year of the Century of Progress, the world's fair being held in Chicago.It was during the first year of that exhibition that Burlington officials became intrigued with a diesel on display — an eight-cylinder, 600-horsepower, two-cycle engine that supplied power to the Chevrolet exhibit.Earlier diesels had not met the heavy horsepower demands of railroading because their designers were more interested in automobile engine applications.uoyog^D Plaza Rock Forost — 4157 Baurqua Blvd 564-1055 - JM 2J0 Call or Drop In & Visit Us /™\ ’ ACTA " % c* * 4SSOC'* Let us help you in all your Travel Needs 12-TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984 Travel #1____ftc-i itccura Micmac stone carvings a picture of the past preserved Buried under water for 40 years these Micmac petroglyphs are perfectly preserved.r / .* /d / I } No one ever told Nova Scotia’s Micmacs of old that things weren't meant to be written in stone.Tempted by a natural drawing board they discovered in smooth, fine-grained Cambrian slate slanting to the water’s edge along the shores of Kejimkujik Lake and the Medway River in Queens County, early Micmac artists etched the story of their lives, customs and beliefs for posterity.On into the early 20th century, they carved their pictures and images into the stone, often working their drawings on top of drawings, cutting into the rocks the images of what they saw around them, the symbols of their heritage and their beliefs.And decades after the last of these Micmac artists and historians laid down their sharp-tipped stone arrow-heads, sharp-edged pieces of quartz, and sharpened tips of bone or antler, fate stepped in to bury and preserve much of their work beneath 15 feet of water.About 200 petroglyphs disappeared under water in the 1940’s when man-made Lake McGowan was created as a reservoir for a dam on the Medway River in south-central Nova Scotia.During the next four decades they remained hidden from human eyes, surfacing briefly last year when the reservoir was drained so the dam could be repaired.Almost perfectly preserved from the erosion that had at- tacked the exposed petroglyphs along Kejimkujik Lake, the McGowan rock drawings were photographed, traced, mapped, examined and record - a precise inventory for scholars’ future reference and study.Federal and provincial officials, and archaeologists from St.Mary’s University in Halifax and the Royal Ontario Museum in Ontario, worked against the clock to complete their task between the draining and reflooding of the McGowan.On paper and on film, they captured for posterity the Micmac rock drawings of moose and caribou, hunting scenes, hunting weapons, figures of Micmacs in traditional dress, canoes and highly-detailed sailing ships, some fully rigged.As they wrapped up their job of precisely recording a slice of Micmac history in stone, workmen completed repairs to the dam, the reservoir was refilled, and the McGowan Lake petroglyphs disappeared once again, perhaps for another century, under three meters of water.While their record on paper is in care of the Nova Scotia Museum for examination and study by future generations, the actual McGowan petroglyphs are back in liquid cold storage for preservation and safekeeping.They remain hidden from human scrutiny, but the Micmac stone etchings of Kejimkujik Lake, though fading and eroding through time, the elements and vandals, remain accessible to interested visitors on guided walking tours in the Kejimkujik National Park.They open a window on the ways of the Micmac two centu- ries and more ago, as seen through the eyes of the Micmac, himself, a rare look at how he saw himself in his changing world.Turkish tensions have no effect on Greek shoppers KOMOTINl, Greece (AP) — Greek families in this border area are shopping for meat and vegetables these days in Turkey, ignoring the tensions between their government and the Turks over territorial claims.Greek-Turkish relations have been strained since Premier Andreas Papandreou’s socialist government came to power 2% years ago expressing the belief that Turkey poses a bigger military threat to Greece than Be a LMè-savtt .& a Kldtaey Volunteer At two years oM, Bnan knows a lot about waiting.Right now.Brwn is waiting for a kidney transplant.He needs a new kidney—soon.can be a life-saver.Your help to raise money for kidney research and patient support programs can make the difference for a child like Brian.Call now to volunteet your time for the door-to-door Brian Appeal m March.Brian is waiting for yoo to make the difference Call 1-8W-268-6364 B.C.112-800-268-6364) Op.#553 Theiüdnïy foundation Of Canada I want to be a lifesaver.Please call me about volunteer opportunities.Name ,_________ ._______ Address________________________________________ City .Postal Code .Prov ._ Telephone ( )_ The Kidney Foundation of Canada Box 2670, Station “D" 340 Laurier Street West, Ottawa, Ontario KIP 5W7 ^Charitable Rcgistraiion #0224080-1 .V-OH Soviet-bloc countries to the north.But almost two months age, Premier Turgut Ozal of Turkey abolished the visa requirement for Greeks who want to visit Turkey.He called it a goodwill gesture “intended to increase contacts with Greeks.” Last year about 130,000 Greeks were granted visas to visit Turkey.“People living near the border find that lo-cally grown food is much cheaper on the Turkish side of the border,” said a Greek official in Komotini who asked not to be named.“They’ve started taking advantage of the visa move and cross back and forth regularly.” CALLED A RELIEF’ Greek officials described the abolition of the visa requirement as “a relief” but suggested that Turkey should take “specific actions to remove the underlying causes of tension.” Turkish officials say Ozal's civilian administration in Ankara wants to set aside the rival claims on military control of undersea mineral rights in the Aegean Sea and instead boost economic and tourism cooperation."We’re trying to tell the Greek side we’ve no animosity toward them,” said Nazmi Akiman, Turkey’s ambassador to Greece.“We need to rebuild an atmosphere of confidence and start talking again.” But for the Greek go-vernment, which claims Turkey has expansionist designs on Greek territory, there is nothing to talk about.“It’s as if we were to ask the U S.government to negotiate with us for Astoria in New York,” a high-ranking Greek official said in Athens.Astoria is part of New York City’s Borough of Queens and many Greek-Americans live there.RESPECT STATUS Greece seeks assurances Turkey will respect the present status in the Aegean Sea region.Greek-Turkish tensions inevitably are reflected in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.Greece refused to take part in al- liance exercises in the Aegean because it thinks NATO favors Turkey in a dispute over the military status of the Greek island of Lemnos.At a recent NATO meeting, Greece objected to Turkey’s plans to install U S.-made Harpoon missiles at naval bases along the Aegean coast, saying they could be a threat to the eastern Greek islands.In March, Greece recalled its ambassador to Turkey, claiming Turkish destroyers on manoeuvres in the Aegean had deliberately fired on a Greek destroyer and several Greek fishing vessels.But the incident fizzled out later when Greek officials an nounced Turkey had apologized, saying a Turkish warship had been practising antiaircraft fire.OPENED DIALOGUE “It’s ironic, but in fact we have smoother relations with the Soviet Union than with our alliance partner and neighbor,” a Turkish diplomat said.A Greek-Turkish dialogue on economic issues opened last sum- mer but died after Turkey recognized the breakaway Turkish-Cypriot republic on Cyprus in November.The Mediterranean island is divided along Greek and Turkish ethnic lines.The Cyprus issue has plagued relations between the two countries since Turkish troops invaded the island in July 1974 after a Greek-led coup toppled Archbishop Maka- rios as the Cypriot president.“The Turks tell us they want good relations, but some of their actions, like recognizing the Turkish-Cypriot pseudo-state, seem designed to provoke us,” a Greek diplomat said.Despite the sour relations between Athens and Ankara, however, Greeks lured by bargain prices still go shopping in Turkey.TRANS-OCEAN TRAVEL INC 66 King St.W.Sherbrooke, P.Q., Canada Tel,: (819) 563-4515 sum snem offer mi ALL ENGLAND DUBLIN PLUS IRISH COUNTRY BRITISH ISLES LONDON 2 weeks 1 week 1 week 2 weeks 1 week All complete vacation prices: included air transportation, hotels + transfers.Plus 15% tax & service.from from trom from trom 59900 u.s.399°“ u.s.399“ u.s.59900 u.s.499“’ u.s. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8.1984—13 Travel Seconl No ‘sales’ in China but still lots of good bargains There are no end-of-season sales, no Boxing Day specials or winter clearances.And there is never a closing down sale.But shopping in China can still be a bargain.There is no need to slash prices in the Peoples’ Republic.The government does not care which store people spend their money as long as they spend it.Since 1979, tourists on package tours — followed in 1981 by individual travellers — have raced through opened doors to do just that.They come in search of the exotic and unique, from Ming vases and Chinese carpets to snake bile wine and ginseng cigarettes.One tends to experience déjà vu when shopping in China’s department stores because most goods are the same from store to store, city to city.With only one or two brands or styles of most products, there are not enough goods to fill available space.Thus, the same item may be displayed several times in different locations of the store — and fabric can be found next to washboards and boxes of rice cake ; green tea stuck between Mao Tse-tung posters and Chinese paintbrushes.SEE ONLY ONCE Some items, however, are unique to one region and many tourists regret not buying the straw sandals, wooden flutes, tribal dresses or hand-painted silk ties seen in one city but never again during the trip.Shopping is definitely not a leisure activity in China.Browsing is almost impossible: everything from soap to cashmere sweaters is in a display case or behind a counter, and there are layers of aggressive shoppers between you and the merchandise.If any item is within arm’s reach, it is either tied down or empty.There are no receipts given and, since it is a rationed item, no bags either.The brightest colors in a Chinese wardrobe are found in long-johns and T-shirts.But the cheery red, yellow and purples are hidden among greys and browns or the dark blue or army green “Mao” trousers and jackets worn by the majority of Chinese.In southern cities like Canton, western styles have crept in from Hong Kong; blue jeans, leather bomber jackets and childrens dresses hang in the market stalls.DRESSES ALIKE Except for wedding dresses and uniforms, ladies' dresses can rarely be found.In this regard, there is no sex discrimination in China: everyone is a “worker” and workers dress alike.Wearing cosmetics is discouraged but there is a staggering selection of personal hygiene pro-ducts like soap, shampoo, toothpaste, face and hand creams and talcum powder.Hair elastics and clips are not only for children here.Wearing hair loose on the shoulders is considered bourgeois; it should be braided and worn in pigtails.Some women, though, are going for the short and curly look with the latest fashion trend — perms.Chinese pharmacies can be interesting and helpful when you suffer from constipation, old age.“weak sperm” or a host of other maladies.Healthy Brain Pills claim to cure blurred vision, poor memory, headaches and senility, while Longlife Wine improves circulation, strengthens tired bones, aids digestion and, consequently, prolongs life.With mind and body functioning soundly, you require just a small dose of deer antler velvet— a popular aphrodisiac among Chinese — to round out your good health.The bakery department emits a chorus of clacking as clerks frantically calculate on wooden abacuses.Many Chinese baked goods have a bland or sour taste to western palates.This is probably due to pork fat being used ins tead of butter.Fresh milk and eggs are also in short supply.WORTH THE GAMBLE But sometimes you strike it lucky and find something delicious.It is worth the gamble, if only for the comical performance at the weigh counter.Baked goods are sold by weight, not number.And the weight is made exact, by breaking biscuits in halves, quarters, and even crumbling bits into the tray until the scales balance.DALI, China (Reuter) — There’s a mosque in a sleepy back street and Arabic signs on butchers’ and bakers’ storefronts in a remote corner of China near the Burmese border.But there is nothing to show that Dali was briefly the capital of an Islamic state crushed in a monstrous blood-bath more than a century ago.Today some 8,000 ethnic Chinese preserving their Moslem heritage are all that remain of the sultanate of Dali.Yet in this ancient city in Yunnan province tens of thousands of Moslem Chinese rose in rebellion in 1856 against the Manchu emperor in Peking.Seventeen years later, after the movement’s leader Du Wenxiu committed suicide, the imperial troops swept down to exact revenge.Ma Chaoyong, 73, remembers the tales his father told him.DAYS OF TERROR “The soldiers started in Baos-han, southwest of here, which was Du’s home town,” he said.“When they got here, there were two days and three nights of terror which left 130,000 dead." Virtually the whole Moslem po- A flip of the weighing tray on to a newspaper, a bit of stacking and jostling as it is tied, and the customer is handed a purchase that often looks as if it has been sat on.Ordering by slice is easier, as cake, icing, and appetite remain intact.There are two types of money in China : Foreign Exchange Certificates (or tourist money) and renminbi, literally "peoples’ money.” Tourist money is required in most hotels, better restaurants and in Friendship Stores — stores that cater to the tourist, selling handicraft items, silk, jewelry.pulation of Dali was wiped out.Historians believe the total number slaughtered throughout western Yunnan was more than one million.Du and his followers were Hui people, ethnic Chinese whose an-cestors had probably been converted to Islam by Arab merchants plying the silk route between China and the Mediterranean.The uprising followed pleas for support from Hong Xiuquan, eccentric leader of the vaguely Christian-inspired Taiping revolt against the Manchus that swept southern China in the mid-19th century, establishing a rival capital in Nanjing.At first the rebellion went well, with the help of arms brought in from Burma.Du took the title of “sultan of Dali.” ARMED BY FRENCH But later there were defections, and imperial troops, given arms by the French in Indochina, gained the upper hand.In December 1872, after unsuccessful attempts to win British support, Du conceded defeat.He contacted the Manchu commander, Gen.Chen Yuying, and offe- antiques, and imported and luxu ry items.In most cities, ordinary Chinese are not permitted to shop in a Friendship Store.Yet, this is where you will find the best quali ty bicycles, televisions, electronic equipment and clothing.Most of these items are rationed and workers might have to wait years to buy one.But with tourist money and a middleman, they become accessible.Thus, tourists may be approached to change money — tourist money for renmimbi — on the black market.red to commit suicide on condition his followers be spared.Chen gave his word and Du swallowed a lethal dose of peacock gall.“But Chen betrayed him and ordered the murder of all the Hui in the region,” Ma Chaoyong said.The blood-bath in Dali itself took place early m January 1873.Ma Guanyao, 60, explains how remnants of Dali’s Moslems survived.“It was said over 200 young men escaped to the Burmese border, climbing over snow-covered mountains in bitter mid-winter weather to evade pursuit.“Meanwhile local Bai tribesmen took in several hundred children, hiding them until the troops were gone and often bringing them up as their own,” Ma Guanyao said.Today the Hui people number just 8,000 in Dali county out of a population of about 380,000.After persecution during the Maoist Great Leap Forward and later during the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution when mosques were turned into factories or warehouses, Dali’s moslems say they now have freedom of worship.History tells woe of China Moslems It pays to be fit shopping along the Nanjing road SHANGHAI, China (CP) -Walk down Shanghai’s famous shopping street, Nanjing Road, is a bit like playing hockey — elbowing, charging, and hip-checking are part of the game.There are more than 400 stores along Nanjing, from tiny noodle shops to five-storey department stores.Shoppers can snap up purple and yellow longjohns, hand-embroidered silk gowns, down jackets, Chinese calendars, “Mao” caps, children’s knitted pants with open-air seats and hand-glued packages of Flying Horse cigarettes.It’s survival of the fittest on this busy thoroughfare, probably the most crowded in China.But since the country opened its doors to foreigners, many have willingly subjected themselves to bruises, headaches and shattered nerves, all in the name of bargainhunting.One important rule applies here before crossing the street — look both ways, and up and down.Bicycles and feet are the main forms of transportation.Sidewalks and bicycle lanes have been widened to accommodate the overflow of bodies, leaving only a narrow passage for the occasional automobile or trolley bus.IGNORE BELLS Pedestrians must ignore the chorus of horns and bells if they expect to cross Nanjing safely.Bicyclists are skillful people-dodgers and being a courteous (or frightened) tourist only causes confusion.It is not uncommon to see a bicycle with chickens or fish dangling from the handle bars, a child around the crossbar, and mom behind dad, holding another child or vegetables purchased in the market.The next major health hazard is knitting needles.Time is money and even when inching along crowded streets women’s fingers are flying.Store-bought clothes are too costly for many Chinese.To save money, woollen garments are ta- ken apart and recycled several times.The wool is usually of a low quality.Better quality wool is both expensive and often in short supply and therefore, a rationed item.In bus and meal ticket lines, those with the strongest, sharpest elbows often come first.But ration lines are orderly —-tight-knit barricades of bodies stretch through doorways and along sidewalks.Rationed items vary from town to town but among the most common are sugar, salt, laundry soap, plastic bags and China’s beloved beer.FILL UP ON SOUP For 50 cents, one can fill up on dumplings, rice or noodle soup, staples of the Chinese diet But for a few cents more, many gorge themselves in one of the popular western-style cafes on Nanjing that offer such fare as tomato soup, cream pies, schnitzel and hot chocolate.Beauty salons, hospital-white establishments, are springing up everywhere in China, and Nan- jing is no exception.Chinese women with shoulder-length hair are supposed to wear it braided or in pigtails, since wearing it on the shoulders is considered decadent and hampers efficient work.But hair permanents are becoming popular and many woman study the short and curly look in 1950s photographs displayed in salon windows.Wearing makeup is discouraged but getting their photo taken in one of the many studios is their one chance to be “glamorous.” Men, women, and children pose heavily laden with rouge, lipstick and eye makeup.It is also one of the few occasions when they can cast aside their blue or green outfits in favor of rented western garb.DISPLAYS TEACH Bulletin boards and glassed display cases line most city streets, exhibiting material intended to educate and discipline.Displays teach such things as the advantages of brushing teeth or prolonged nursing of infants, technological advances or the benefits of the state’s one-couple-one-child policy.Gruesome photographs of traffic victims encourage safe driving, while law and order is promoted with photographs of crimi nais, their crimes and punishment grimly detailed.Those carrying placards splashed with a large red X have been executed.Spitting is a way of life for everyone, from impressionable young children to chain-smoking old men.Spittoons are placed inside doorways, under restaurant tables and at regular intervals along the street, but there never seems to be enough.The government is trying to curb spitting by imposing a 10-cent fine.One cannot plan to window-shop after hours here.Late in the evening, doors are boarded and bolted and windows are covered with heavy metal shutters.The crowds disperse and for a few hours the street is quiet I 14—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984 This week's TV STATIONS LISTED 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.0 CBFT - Montreal (Radio Canada) O WCAX ¦ Burlington, Vt.(CBS) e WTTZ - Plattsburgh, N.Y.(NBC) O CBM1 - Montreal O CULT - Sherbrooke (TVA) O VVMTVV- Poland Spring.Me.(ABC) O CKSII - Sherbrooke ( Radio Canada) @ CPTM - Montreal (TVA) SB CFCF - Montreal ( CTY) (B WVNY - Burlington (ABC) 00 Radio-Québec ® Vermont ETV - Burlington Saturda MORNING 0.00 O NEW YOU © UNIVERSITY OF THE AIR 6:30 © CIRCLE SQUARE 7:00 O BATMAN Q CARTOONS Q CHILDREN'S THEATRE © HUCKLEBERRY FINN AND FRIENDS SPACE Movit Ratings Outstanding.?*** Excellent.Very Good.?Good.?** Not Bad.** Fair.Poor.?© GREAT COASTER 7:16 0 MIRE ET MUSIQUE 7:30 O O CALIMERO O JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH O JACKSON FIVE © 100 HUNTLEY STREET © GREAT SPACE COASTER 7:46 Q Q MERCI MONSIEUR NOE 8:00 G O NILS HOLDERS-SON O CHARLIE BROWN AND Qkirtnpv G the flintstone FUNNIES O 0B THE MON-CHHICHIS / LITTLE RASCALS / RICHIE RICH / SCHOOL HOUSE ROCK © SESAME STREET (R) 8:30 G O DESSINS ANIMES o SATURDAY SUPER-CADE G SHIRT TALES © STORYTIME 9:00 G Q REMI G THE SMURFS O €B SCOOBY DOO AND SCRAPPY D00 SHOW © LET'S GO © BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT 9:16 O GOOD MORNING 9:30 G Q CANDY O DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS Q QUIZ KIDS O 0B PAC-MAN / RUBIK CUBE ! MENUDO © SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON 10:00 G Q ALBATOR O TARZAN: LORD OF THE JUNGLE O DAVEY AND GOLIATH O QD L'ANIMATHEQUE ©HILARIOUS HOUSE OF FRIGHTENSTEIN © MOVIE *?"The Big Noise" (1944, Comedy) Laurel and Hardy, Arthur Space.Two scatterbrained guards must deliver an experimental explosive to Washington, D.C.10:30 G O SALUT LA VIEILLE O BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER G ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS Q SKIPPER AND COMPANY O 03 GOLDORAK O © THE LITTLES 11:00 0 HEROS DU SAMEDI Sports SUNDAY SATURDAY (CBS) NBA BASKETBALL Game live if necessary of Ihe NBA Championship senes.(CBS) GOLF Pat Summerall, Ken Venturi.Sieve Melnyk, Frank Glieber, Ben Wright, Verne Lundquist and Tom Weiskopf host live final-round coverage of the $500,000 Westchester Golt Classic from the Westchester Country Club in Rye, N.Y.(NBC) TENNIS Dick Enberg and Bud Collins host live coverage ot the men's finals in the 1984 French Open Tennis Championship from Roland Garros Stadium in Paris.France.(NBC) SPORTSWORLD Highlights'.Live boxing plus taped coverage of the European Cup soccer championship game between Roma and Liverpool from Rome, Italy.Charlie Jones and Paul Gardner will host.(ABC) AMERICAN SPORTSMAN (ABC)USFLFOOTBALL (ABC) U.S.OLYMPIC TEAM TRIALS MONDAY (ABC) MONDAY NIGHT BASEBALL TUESDAY (CBS)NBA BASKETBALL Game six if necessary ot the NBA Championship senes THURSDAY (CBS) NBA BASKETBALL Game seven if necessary ot the NBA championship series (NBC) BASEBALL DOUBLEHEADER Game one: Pittsburgh Pirates at Montreal Expos or Philadelphia Phillies at Chicago Cubs: Game two: Chicago White Sox at Oakland A s or Baltimore Orioles at New York Yankees.(ABC) SPORTSBEAT (ABC) U.S.OPEN (CBS) RACING (PREMIERE) The live premiere of the 1984 International Race Champions series from Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn.Mich.Twelve selected drivers from different racing circuits compete in identically prepared race cars in the first of four races to be broadcast this summer THE RUSSIANS AREN’T COMING — The Russians aren't coming, but it doesn't seem to bother ABC.The network is going ahead as planned with its 186 hours of Olympic coverage, and there is no truth to the rumor that it will fill Olympic-reserved air time with reruns of “Battle of the Network Stars" instead.In fact, the network has announced an Olympic-size list of sportscasters, led by 10-time Emmy winner Jim McKay, to describe the Soviet-less Games.McKay's broadcasting team will include Al Michaels, who was elected Sportscaster of the Year in 1980 after his handling of the Winter Games at Lake Placid.Michaels will cover the track and field events, as well as the road cycling And, as always, there's Howard Cosell.Cosell will describe the boxing matches — as long as they’re amateur it's OK with him.Helping Cosell will be veteran announcer Chris Schenkle.who's also slated to cover the equestrian events.Keith Jackson, the football voice, will cover the basketball games, and Emmy winner Jack Whitaker will comment on gymnastics and diving.Bill Flemming of "ABC's Wide World of Sports” will watch the track cyclists go round and round in the Velodrome, and reliable Curt Gowdy, another Emmy winner, will describe the wild action of free-¦ style wrestling and rowing The Olympic coverage will be broken down into three segments: daytime, primetime and late night.Daytime coverage will be handled by Frank Gifford and Kathleen Sullivan, the pert sportscaster who co-hosted the late-night shows of the Winter Games in Saraievo with Jim Lampley Primetime coverage belongs to McKay, and the late night watch once again tails to Lampley, but this time his partner will be two-time Olymlpic medal winner in swimming Donna de Varona.©Compulofl "Baseball Moustique" Au parc Constantin, a St-Eua-tache G MR.T Q SESAME STREET O JOGGING O ffl PUPPY / SCOOBY DOO / MENUDO g O TOUCHE ATOUT © SKIPPY LE KANGOUROU © HALF-A HANDY HOUR 11:30 G AMAZING SPIDER-MAN / INCREDIBLE HULK O VIDEO STAR © JUSTICE POUR TOUS © MONTREAL INSIDE OUT Featured: formula auto racing; Montreal's Repetories © VERMONT FOLK ARTISTS AFTERNOON 12:00 Q Q SEMAINE PARLEMENTAIRE A OTTAWA Q THE BISKITTS G MAJA, THE BEE Q © SAMEOIE MAGAZINE Avec Loulse-Josee Mondoux.O THAT TEEN SHOW © ENCOUNTERS WITH DISASTER © ABC WEEKEND "The Big Hex Ol Little Lulu" A fortune teller, pickle ice cream and Lulu's imagination are all part of a scheme lo make Tubby work.(R) g © DO IT YOURSELF SHOW “Interior Paint & Wallpaper" A look at the baaics of redecoration.12:30 0 BENJI.ZAX AND THE ALIEN PRINCE G JACKSON FIVE O GOING GREAT Q © AMERICAN BANDSTAND Featured: Laura Branigan ("Sell Control," "Satisfaction"); Deniece Williams' video "Left Hear It For The Boy"; the second of five shows featuring the annual dance contest.© YOUNG PERFORM ERS © SQUARE FOOT GAR DENING 1:000 O SOMMET ECONOMIQUE DE LONDRES O FAT ALBERT 0 Q TENNIS •‘French Open” Women’s singles final (from Roland Garros Stadium in Paria).© MOVIE ?Orca" (1977, Adventure) Richard Harris, Charlotte Rampling.After ignoring the warnings of a female oceanologist, a fisherman becomes the target of a killer whale whose offspring he had harpooned.©ACROSS THE FENCE 1:30 0 CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL O WILD KINGDOM © LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS © VICTORY GARDEN Jim Wilson seeds perennial and biennial flowers at the Victory Garden South.2:00 0 O CINE FAMILLE “Krabat” Au fond des bois de la foret de Boheme se trouve un vieux moulin hante; le meunier, qui est un méchant sorcier, y tue chaque annee l’un de ses apprentis apres un duel sans merci.O STAR TREK O (D COSMOS 1999 "En désarroi" Q LORNE GREENES NEW WILDERNESS © MOVIE "Cap- tain Horatio Hornblower" Compiled by the staff of the World Almanac Sccris I.H.1.Name the Pittsburgh Pirate who was chosen the 1979 World Series MVP.2.Name the former Dallas Cowboy receiver who was an Olympic gold medalist in the 100-meter run in 1964.Name the only National League home run leader currently playing in the American League.Name the only American League home run leader currently playing In the National League.In which state was ths 1984 Super Bowl played?Name the U.S.swimmer who won Olympic gold medals in both the 10O-meter and 200-meter backstroke in 1976.Who was the National League rookle-of-the-year In 1983?Name the last American to win an Olympic gold medal in the 110-meter hurdles.Name the only NHL defenseman to score two hat tricks in the Stanley Cup playoffs.3.4.5.7.8.9.AjbBibo |0 pjBquiey inej 6 amgiiH pou g Ajjmimbjis iAjjbq L jeqBN uqor '9 bpijoij g SBIHBN 6|*JO P ubuiBudi babo C BBABHdOa Z HBftjBis biihm t SJ3/WSUV (1951, Adventure) Grego ry Peck, Virginia Mayo A British sea captain sails the oceans during the Napoleonic Wars 2:30 0 © PBA BOWLING ”$115,000 Southern Cali fornia Open" (live frorr Town Square Lanes in Riv erside).3:00 O PQA GOLF "West Chester Classic" Third round (live from Westchester Country Club in Rye, N.Y.) 6 BASEBALL Regional coverage of Detroit Tigers at Baltimore Orioles or Atlanta Braves at Los Angeles Dodgers.Q SPORTSWEEKEND Scheduled: The Belmont Slakes (live from Elmont, N.Y.); The Epsom Derby and The Oaks (from Eng land); NHL Amateur Draft (from Montreal), o © BASEBALL Dodgers vs.Braves ou Orioles vs.Tigers (D WRESTLING 4:00 O Q HISTOIRES D’HfER ET D'AUJOURD'HUI "Les Fugitifs" Une adolescente de seize ans, se sauve de la maison parce que sa mere va se remarier, et dans une ville étrangère, elle a affronter des difficultés qu'elle ne soupçonnait pas O 0 U.S.OLYMPIC TEAM /RIALS Boxing (live from Fort V.'orth, Texas).© WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: Wil-fredo Gomez vs.Juan LaPorte in a WBC welterweight bout scheduled for 12 rounds; Canadian Senior Synchro Swimming Championships (from Montreal, Que ); Carling O’Keefe Five-Pin Bowling Championships.© SNEAK PREVIEWS ''Comedy Superstars” Neal Gabier and Jeffrey Lyons look at "Stripes,” “The Blues Brothers” and "Trading Places.” (R) 4:30 0 BELMONT STAKES The 116th running of the third jewel in horse racing’s Triple Crown (live from Elmont.N.Y.).© LAST CHANCE GARAGE Brad Sears and Bob McClurg adjust the Cobra's hood scoop; a 1941 Ford Club Coupe is featured, g 5:00 0 O MONDE MERVEILLEUX DE DISNEY Un cosmonaute chez le roi Arthur" Thomas Trimble réussit a convaincre le roi Arthur que Sire Mordred est traitre a l’Angleterre, et puis avec son robot Hermes, il monte a bord du vaisseau spatial pour retourner dans son pays (2e de 2) O © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled Grand Prix of Monaco auto race (from Monte Carlo); U.S.Outdoor Track and Field Championships (from San Jose, Calif ).© GERMAN PROFESSIONAL SOCCER EVENING 6:00 0 IMPACTS Magazine de reflexion sur ( actualité 0 © NEWS G STAR SEARCH O CBC NEWS Q INCROYABLE HULK © SOAPBOX 6:16 O © LOTTO 6/49 / DIX VOUS INFORME 6:30 0 CBS NEWS TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY.JUNE 8.1W4 1> Saturday O this week in par-liament a Œ) au royaume des ANIMAUX "Le Caribou des bois" (3 NEWS (B STEREOVISION NETWORK Featured: Blue Oyster Cult, the Tenants, Thomas Dolby.CB BENNY HILL Œ L'ENFANCE DE L'ART Nous taisons connaissance avec Soon, un jeune champion malais de kung-tu.Q) SAY IT WITH SIGN 7:00 O O GENIES EN HERBE Sérié nationale.O HEEHAW O SOLID GOLD O BARNEY MILLER Q 03 ROUTE OLYMPIQUE "L'Athlete africain" Q STAR SEARCH (B MUSIC VISION @ HOW THE WEST WAS WON © A COEUR BATTANT Arrives en Afghanistan, quelques mois avant l'intervention soviétique, Helene et Jean-Pierre quittent précipitamment le pays © GREAT RAILWAY JOURNEYS OF THE WORLD 7:30 O O BASEBALL Les Expos de Montreal reçoivent les Meta de New York Q BASEBALL New York Mets at Montreal Expos © JUST KIDOINQ Topics children discuss include burglars decorating their homes, and the experiences of a cheerleading audition.(R) © JUSTICE POUR TOUS Chaque episode de cette sérié est assorti d'une courte dramatique qui illustre le propos de l'émission.8:00 O MAMA MALONE A dispute between Marna and her new neighbor escalates into a raging feud when Mama's recipe is sabotaged 0 DIFF’RENT STROKES Arnold and Dudley submit to peer pressure and Movies SUNDAY (NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “JOE DANCER” (1981) Starring Robert Blake.Eileen Heckarl and Veronica Cartwright A private investigator (Blake) uncovers a trail of bodies and corruption when he sels out lo investigate a murder.(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE “THE BAD NEWS BEARS GO TO JAPAN" (1978) Starring Tony Curtis.Jackie Earle Haley, Lonny Chapman and Erin Blunt Another chapter of the little-league team with lots of enthusiasm, but little skill.This story finds the Bears in Japan.MONDAY (NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE “ANGEL OUSTED” (1981) Starring Jean Stapleton and John Putch A family is faced with crisis when the son (played by Stapleton's real-life son, John Putch) becomes unbalanced from smoking marijuana laced with angel dust.WEDNESDAY (ABC) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE “TOMORROW'S CHILD" Starring Stephanie Zimbalist.Arthur Hill, Ed Flanders, Susan Oliver and Bruce Davidson.This film involves genetic tinkering and the development of a baby outside of its mother’s womb (CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE "A TALE OF TWO CITIES” 11980) Starring Chris Sarandon, Remake of the classic Charles Dickens novel set during the French Revolution, This "must see" movie closely follows the book.FRIDAY (NBC) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE “DRACULA" (1981) Starring Frank Langella, Laurence Olivier and Kate Nelligan.Langella stars as the inlamous Count Dracula in this remake of Bram Stoker's classic chilling tale of a vampire's descent on Victorian English society.Jean Stapleton (r.) and John Putch star in "Angel Dusted." on "NBC Monday Night at the Movies," airing June 11.'il Arthritis can be controlled.FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT YOUR ARTHRITIS SOCIETY smoke cigarettes.(R) o (D IKE En 1942, Ike commande le debarque ment en Afrique du Nord; il vit des mois de fortes tensions pour convaincre Churchill, DeGaulle et Montgomery de l’importance de son plan d'invasion en Europe.Avec Robert Duvall, Lee Remick et Dana Andrews.(2e de 3) o Œ T.J.HOOKER Hooker gets a suspension for going too far in helping an old flame stake out a nightclub that is a major drug distribution point.(R) E MOVIE "When Angels Fly” (1983, Drama) Jennifer Dale, Robin Ward.A girl takes a nursing position at a psychiatric hospital where she investigates the cause of her sister's suspicious death.© GRANDS ORCHESTRES A l'occasion de repetitions et de concerts, nous rencontrons les membres de l’orchestre symphonique d'U.R R.S.dirige par Yevgeni Svet-lanov.© ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL II 8:30 O MOVE ?"The Jazz Singer" (1980, Musical) Neil Diamond.Laurence Olivier.A New York cantor breaks with family tradition and sets out to find success as a pop music star.(R) 0 SILVER SPOONS Ricky realizes what his father means to him when Edward suddenly becomes ill and undergoes surgery.(R) 9:00 0 MAMA’S FAMILY Mama's chronic back problem disrupts Naomi's party.(R) o © LOVE BOAT An internationally famous inspector makes suspects of all the crew members, an old schoolmate of Julie's meets her father, and a passenger contends with his former girlfriend.(R)g © JACOUOU LE CROQUANT L'enfance et l'adolescence d'un petit garçon face a l'injustice d'une noblesse abusive.© MOVE The Fighting 69th” (1940, Drama) James Cagney, Pat O'Brien.The 69th Regiment of World War I is helped by Father Duffy who inspires courage in a particularly sensitive recruit.9:30 0 PEOPLE ARE FUNNY Featured: Flip Wilson must locate 100 show business personalities; an attractive model must persuade male passers-by to retrieve a checkbook from the back seat of her car.(R) 0 CTV NATIONAL NEWS ^ ABC NEWS ffi AMERICAN PLAY-HOUSE "Oppenheimer" A site is selected for the first atomic bomb test explosion, and President Truman is faced with the decision as to when and how the bomb will be used (Part 4 of 7) (R) g 11:16 0 CINEMA "Aéroport charter 20 / 20” (1979, Drame) Georges Marchai, Tsilla Chelton.Apres 40 ans d'absence, un avion nolise revient en France.Q ABC NEWS 0 CINEMA "Treizième caprice” (1967, Drame) Pierre Brice, Marie Laforet.Un instituteur marie et pere d'une fillette fait la connaissance d'une jeune femme au cours d'une reception ou il a l'occasion de raccompagner chez elle.©SWITCH 11:20 0 NEWS ("Provincial Affairs" will precede the news.) ©NEWS 11:30 0 MOVE ?Rooster Cogburn" (1975, Western) John Wayne, Katharine Hepburn When a federal marshal sets out to track down a gang of desperadoes.a spinster with a grudge against the gang insists on joining him in the hunt.0 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Host: Edwin Newman.Guests: Kool & The Gang ("Joanna,” "Tonight").(R) 0 BENNY HILL 11:350 MOVE ?* The President's Plane Is Missing" (1971, Drama) Buddy Ebsen, Peter Graves.The vice president takes over when Air Force One disappears with the president on board.12:00 Q SOLID GOLD 0 MOVIE Death Rides A Horse" (1969, Western) Lee Van Cleef, John Phillip Law.When a young man sets out to avenge the ruthless murders of his family, he encounters one of the killers, but finds he can’t go through with his plan.© GREAT PERFORMANCES "Dance In Amer ica: Balanchine Tribute, II" George Balanchine tells most of his own story in taped interviews from 1939 to 1979; footage of his major ballets is featured.(Part 2 of 2) HACKERS Clockwise from top left: Todd Porter, Jeffrey Jacquet and Matthew Laborteaux star In "Whiz Kids," a mystery adventure about kids and their computers airing SATURDAY, JUNE 9 on CBS.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME 1:00® NEW YORK HOT TRACKS O ROCK PALACE (D MANNIX "Jeu de tan tome" © MERTON: A FILM BIOGRAPHY OF THOMAS MERTON A documentary on the life and ideas of the writer, monk, mystic and social critic, including interviews with Joan Baez, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and the Dalai Lama.1:10 0 CINEMA "Mélodie en sous-sol" (1962, Policier) Jean Gabin, Alain Delon.Durant un séjour de cinq ans derrière les barreaux, un homme a mûri un nouveau coup qui doit assurer ses vieux jours un vol sensational au Casino de Cannes.O CINEMA 'Trois heures pour tuer” (1954.West ern) Dana Andrews, Donna Reed.Apres qu'il a failli etre lynche pour un crime qu'il n'avait pas commis, un homme revient dans l’espoir de démasquer le veritable meurtrier 2:00 Q AMERICA’S TOP TEN 2:16© MOVE "My Name Is Nobody" (1974, Western) Henry Fonda, Terence Hill.An aging gun-fighter hoping to retire into anonymity is thwarted by an arrogant young drifter who has other plans.2:30 O NEWS 4:06 (B THE WALTONS TV I.Q.By Katy Koontz 1.In what state was the town of Mayberry located In “The Andy Griffith Show"?2.How old was Ronny Howard when he began playing Ople on the same show?3.What was the name of Mayberry's town drunk?4.Who played Aunt Bea?5.What was the name ot sheriff Andy Taylor's girlfriend?6.Who became the main character when Griffith left the series and the show was renamed "Mayberry R.F.D.''?7.Who did he play?8.Don Knotts won how many Emmys for his portrayal of deputy Barney Fife?•A|J '8 je|Aeg seouejj > seuop iues •L lieqduieo suo e >» 1 c • * '9 xiS Z diuruo uo|SH S BUII0JB3 l«JON l SJ3/WSUV 10:000 Q FESTIVAL INTER NATIONAL DE JAZZ DE MONTREAL 0 THE ROOSTERS A convict working at the Sladetown carnival plans his escape, but Wyatt Earp III outwits him.Q TO BE ANNOUNCED O © VRAI VISAGE Avec Raymond Grenier et son invite.o © FANTASY ISLAND A terminally "I billionaire see.vS someone to dispense his fortune, and a divorced mother wants a carefree life.(R) Ç © PIERRE LALONDE 10:30 0 Q LE TELEJOURNAL 0 0 NOUVELLES TVA > QPOQTÇ Œ A SENSE OF DISCOV- ERY The inner workings of the National Museum of American Art in Washington are seen in this awardwinning film.10:60 0 SPORTS / POLITIQUE FEDERALE 11:00 O 0 O NEWS ©THE NATIONAL g o CD CINEMA Shaft: cop killer" (1974, Policier) Richard Roundtree, Ed Barth.En venant en aide a un policier faussement accuse de malversations par uncabaret vereux.Shaft est pris entre deux clans et passe près d’y laisser sa peau.v oooooooo oooooo ACROSS 1 Linker and Irving 5 Lange and Shackelford 9 Debt 10 River: Sp.12 He's Chachi 15 Patrick Duffy role 18 Cat sound 20 Comedian Ben 21 Biography abbr 22 Prophet 24 Napoleon Solo organization: abbr.25 Nickname for Checker 28 Royal Scottish Academy abbr 3 I Twist 32 Beth Howland role 34 Distressed 36 The — Boys 37 Sam on "Cheers 39 National Security Council: abbr 41 Fish 42 He’s Jeff Colby DOWN 2 Armstrong on "St Elsewhere 3 Here1 Present1 4 Agree 5 Lou Grant s newspaper 6 East Indies: abbr.7 Duplicate (clue to puzzle answer) 8 Marketplace 1 1 Commentator Bill 13 Baby bear 14 Misfortune (clue to puzzle answer) 16 Witness 17 Airport code.Buenos Aires 19 Clear 23 Jose Ferrer classic "\ 26 Corporal's doll call 27 Beth on "We Got It Made 29 for Tomorrow" 30 Curved line 33 Sailor s cry 35 Willis on Diff 'rent Strokes 36 Benjamin: abbr 38 He was Lou Grant: imt 40 Therefore Answer to puzzle on page 19 j 16—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1984 Sunda 5:06 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 7:60 8:00 MORNING QB RHOOA O COMMUNITY 8 © UNIVERSITY OF THE MR O HEALTH FIELD © ROCKET ROBIN HOOD © DUDLEY DORKXT © FOCUS 84 O THIS IS THE LIFE © THE WORLD TOMORROW © BULL WINKLE O IT IS WRITTEN O JIMMY SWAGGART © DAY OF DISCOVERY © VALLEY OF THE DINOSAURS Q GOOD MORNING ©BATMAN © DAY OF DISCOVERY © STAR TREK © JIMMY SWAGGART © GLORY OF GOO © SESAME STREET (R) 8:30 JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH © ORAL ROBERTS © SUNDAY MASS © JIMMY SWAGGART 9:00 © © ETE A L'lLE MIRABELLE © SUNDAY MORNING 8 © TENNIS "French Open" Men’s singles final (live from Roland Garros Stadium in Paris).O AU CENTUPLE Q THE WORLD TOMORROW © ORAL ROBERTS © MISTER ROGERS (R) 9:30 Q Q TOM ET JERRY © ITIS WRITTEN © REX HUMBARD © PETER POPOFF ©ROD AND REEL 10:00© Q JOUR DU SEIGNEUR O © VISITE DU PAPE: LES PREPARATIFS © DAY OF DISCOVERY © HELLENIC PROGRAM © THE WORLD TOMORROW © ACROSS THE FENCE 10:30 © FACE THE NATION © IL EST ECRIT © JERRY F AL WELL © C'ETAIT L'BON TEMPS © TELEDOMENICA © CELEBRATING CHRIST © CROSSROADS: VERMONT'S PUBLIC TELEVISION MAGAZINE 11:00© © SEMAINE A L’ASSEMBLEE NATIONALE ©YOU CAN QUOTE ME © ETOILES DE LA LUTTE © MATINEE AT THE BIJOU 11:30 © TAKING ADVANTAGE © © THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY AFTERNOON 12:00 © © SEMAINE VERTE O LORNE GREENE'S NEW WILDERNESS © © BON DIMANCHE Avec Reine Male et sea invites.12:30 © TO BE ANNOUNCED ©COMMUNITY 8 © FORUM 22 © THE LAWMAKERS Correspondenta Linda Wertheimer and Cokie Roberts join Paul Duke for an up-to-the-minute summary of Congressional activities.1:00 O O CINEMA * "On danae, on roule" (1979, Comedie) Linda Blair, Jim Bray.En quete de distrac-.lions, une fille d’un riche avocat de Los Angeles s’enfuit de chez elle et rejoint un groupe de jeunes qui pratiquent le patin a roulettes au son de la musique disco.O PQA GOLF West Chester Classic" Final round (live from Westchester Country Club in Rye, NY).O MOVIE ?*+ "The ThriH Of tt AU" (1963.Comedy) Doris Day, James Gamer A couple’s marriage is disrupted when the wHe becomes s commercial star.s > OUR TOWN 9 WA8HMGTON WEEK MREVCW 1:30G MOV* +* + » "The Champion" (1949, Drame) Kir* Douglas, Ruth Roman.boxer heartlessly pushes loved ones aside to get to the top 3) NASHVILLE MUSIC © L'E.N.A.P.PRESENTE L’administration publique.CE) WALL STREET WEEK "Germany’s Volcker" Guest: Karl Otto Poehl, president, Deutsche Bundesbank.2:00 Q FRANK SINATRA: CONCERT FOR THE AMERICAS Frank Sinatra performs at the opening of the 5,000-seat amphitheatre at Altos de Chavon, Dominican Republic.O REARVIEW MIRROR "The Road To Chaldea" Quentin Durgens MR (Gordon Pinsent) is confronted with the conflicts and pressures of a Federal Party Leadership convention; "D-Day: The Canadians" Allied and German footage with scenes of Normandy and the cemeteries as they appeared in 1944; "Country Hoedown" Tommy Commons, Gordie Tripp, Tommy Hunter, the Haymes Sisters.O CD SPORT MAG Avec Pierre Trudel.ED AMERICAN SPORTSMAN Mountain climber Beverly Johnson is among the four American adventurers who explore the continent of Antarctica 3) SCIENCE EN QUESTION "La Mémoire des choses" 0D SIX WIVES OF HENRY VU! "Catherine Of Aragon" Spanish princess Catherine marries Henry, bears him a daughter and lives happily with him for 18 years, until he leaves her for Anne Boleyn.2:30 © © FOOTBALL USFL © USFL FOOTBALL © SCIENCE EN QUESTION "A cause d'un détroit” 3:00© O UNIVERS DES OpOpTC ED EVOLUTION DE L’HOMME ‘Le Long enfantement" 3:30 O NBA CHAMPIONSHIP Boston Celtics at Los Angeles Lakers (If Necessary) o SOLID GOLD (B SPORTS HOT SEAT ® A SENSE OF DISCOVERY The inner workings of the National Museum of American Art in Washington are seen in this award-winning film.4:00 O SPORTSWORLD Scheduled.Roma vs.Liverpool in the European Cup Soccer Championship (from Rome); John Collins vs.Alex Ramos in a middleweight bout scheduled for 10 rounds (live from Chicago) © TRAVEL '84 "St Male Jacques Cartier" 3) DENTS D’AUJOURD’HUI "Les Corrections majeures" Œ GREAT PERFORMANCES "Dance In Amer ica: Balanchine Tribute, 11" George Balanchine tells most of his own story in taped interviews from 1939 to 1979; footage of his major ballets is featured.(Part 2 of 2) 4:30 0 AT THE MOVIES ® QUESTION PERIOD 3) CORPS HUMAIN Les Organes des sens" 6:00 O Q PROPOS ET CON-FDENCES Invite: Pierre Daninos.(3e de 3) O CSC NEWS O HOW THE WEST WAS WON (B OLYMPIAD "They Didn’t Have A Ghance" Eric Liddal and Joa Frazier are highlighted aa two athletes who won Olympic gold medals after overcoming what seemed to be Insurmountable odds 9 EVOLUTION DE L’HOMME "Au nom de la science" «VERMONT IMS WEEK O COUP D'OEIL Magazine culturel.Cl AMATEUR NATURALIST CI AQRON8KY AND COMPANY 6:00 • Q DIX VOUS EVENING 6:00 Q SCIENCE-REALITE Magazine scientifique.O CBS NEWS OFOCUS O WALT DISNEY "Winnie The Pooh And Friends" The honey-loving bear and cohorts band together to teach Tigger a lesson (R) Q LE CASCADEUR O CD NEWS O MEDECIN D’AUJOURD’HUI (D ANTENNE 10 3) ABC NEWS g 3) A COMMUNIQUER 3) FIRING LINE "Looking Back On The Election Laws" Guests: former senator Eugene McCarthy and sociologist Amitai Etzioni.6:30 Q USA "De ( université a l’entreprise" Les universités américaines n'ont jamais ete des temples fermes de haut-savoir; leur poids s'est toujours fait sentir aussi bien en politique que dans les grandes institutions financières, en recherche militaire ou au sein de très grandes entreprises.© THE MUPPETS ©AT THE MOVIES © ABCNEWSÇ © THS WEEK IN BASE-BALL © WILD KINGDOM © HOMME BOTANIQUE "L'Essentiel de la vie” Un regard sur les événements qui ont preside a la naissance de la Terre.7:00 O O COURT-CIRCUIT Chansons et mini-come-dies avec Andre Cartier, Denyse Chartier, Michele Deslauriers, Ghyslain Tremblay, Denis Bouchard, Michelle Leger, Josee Cuson et Normand Brathwaite.O 60 MINUTES O FATHER MURPHY The kids at the orphanage send away for a mail-order bride to provide some romance in Moses' life.Q FRAGGLE ROCK Boober dreams that he is two people, and the other Fraggles try to determine just how many Boobers there are.(R)g O Œ) A SIX JOURS DU CHOIX Congres du Parti liberal du Canada.Q 3) MOVIE “The Bad News Bears Go To Japan’’ (1978, Comedy) Tony Curtis, Jackie Earle Haley.A greedy agent decides to grab all of the profits he can from a little league baseball team's trip to a baseball tournament in Japan.(R) g © HARDCASTLE AND MCCORMICK Mark returns to driving a race car, but his pleas to Hard-castle to leave the suspicious owner alone go unheeded.(R) g 3) RECOURS Au programme, les recours d'un voyageur, qui parvenu a l'etranger, ae rend compte que le voyage paye a Montreal ne correspond pas a ce qu'on lui avait promis.© VANDALISM: BREAKING THROUGH The caus es and effects of vandal ism as well as ways to prevent it are examined.7:30 0 O BEAUX DIMANCHES "Si on chantait" Q THE BEACHCOMBERS Hughie attempts to save a German shepherd from starvation as gunmen search for other wild dogs (R)g O © CINEMA "Les Givres" (1979, Comedie) Sophie Daumier.Charles Gerard Chronique bur lesque de la vie d’une station de sports d'hiver entre Noel et le Jour de l'An, ou les skieurs et apres-skieurs se croisent, se rencontrent a l’occasion de glissades, de chutes de remonte pentes, de bronzette, sans oublier le sauna ou les dragueurs se trompent évidemment de porte.3) IL ETAIT UN MUSICIEN Au soir de sa vie, Robert Shumann est assailli de crises nerveuses qui le précipitent vers la folie; ni l'amour de son épousé ni la presence de ses amis n’arriveront a l’apaiser S) OPEN STUDIO Fea tured: the organization VT SEAT talks about the new child car seat law; Burlington Way Station explains its programs for the homeless.8:00 0 AFTERMASH Klinger, Colonel Potter and Father Mulcahy celebrate their first stateside Christmas since the Korean War.(R) O © KNIGHT RIDER Michael investigates the activities of motorcycle racers who have entered a Foundation-sponsored event and suspects that a favorite may have committed manslaughter.(R) O SEEING TT4NQS A couple discovers that the old house they've purchased is possessed by evil spirits.(R) g 3) ROBERT GARRY RACONTE: L'UNIVERSAL-ITE DE L’HOMME Robert Garry, globe-trotter emer-ite, nous parle de la fraternité humaine, et des similitudes qui rapprochent les hommes sous toutes les latitudes.3) LIVING WILD The lives of two golden jackals observed by Dr.Patricia Moehlman for more than a decade on the Serengeti Plain of Tanzania, g 8:30 0 Q LE TELEJOURNAL i> THE FOUR SEASONS Danny and Ted agree to run the bicycle shop while Boris and Lorraine take a few days off.(R) 3) PASSION DE LA VOILE Au programme, les Clippers ces navires rapides qui sillonnaient les mers au siecle dernier.):60Q Q BEAUX DIMANCHES "Cap au nord" (tere de 2) Documentaire sur J E.Bernier II, de Lachine a la Baie de Melville, ou les glaces lui PUNCH LINE Alex "The Bronx Bomber” Ramos will do his best to knock out his opponent in his 160-pound bout on ‘‘SportsWorld,’' airing SUNDAY, JUNE 10 on NBC CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME refuseront l’accès au passage du Nord-Ouest en compagnie d'un autre bateau effectuant la meme aventure.9:00© THE JEFFERSONS Florence cons George into managing the career of her singing soul sisters (Sister Sledge), but George is less than successful.(R) 0 MOVIE ?"Joe Dancer" (1981, Drama) Robert Btake, Eileen Heckart.A private detective’s investigation into a murder uncovers a trail of corruption and homicide leading to a wealthy and influential family.(R) O ERNEST THOMPSON SETON: KEEPER OF THE WILDS The life and times of the famous 19th century Canadian environmentalist-author is dramatized through his tales "Lobo, King of Currumpaw” and "Krag, The Kootenay Ram." O VIDEO STAR © © HARDCASTLE AND MCCORMICK Mark returns to driving a race car, but hia pleas to Hard-castle to leave the suspicious owner alone go unheeded (R)g © PLACE DE L'OPERA © SCARECROW AND MRS.KING A mixup of bookstore packages leaves Dotty with top-secret military designs that several people would kill to possess.(R) 3) STALINE Un documentaire sur l’un des hommes les plus contestes de notre siecle, Joseph Staline.3) MASTERPIECE THEATRE "The Good Soldier-" Robin Ellis and Jeremy Brett star in an adaptation of Ford Madox Ford's novel tracing the relationship between two wealthy Edwardian couples who SHORT ORDER Linda Lavin plays a young widow who simultaneously must raise her, son and hold down a job as a waitress in a Phoenix diner on "Alice,” airing SUNDAY, JUNE 10 on CBS CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME meet yearly in a fashionable German spa town.
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