The record, 1 mars 1985, Supplément 1
Friday, March 1,1985 : s.5, à' i- mm • - ' PH smim '.feM': 'ÿ«l#Sî * * 1:1 : 1 «i IUP* 2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985 Aquarium built step-by-step A 'A” glass is sufficient for an aquarium not exceeding 15 gallons.Depending on the size of aquarium you choose, the more elaborate your choice, the thickness of the glass must be proportionate to the dimensions of your tank.MATERIAL: — Vi” thick glass — 2 sides of 23'A" x 12” — 2 ends of 12Vi” x 12” — 1 base of 24” x 12'/2” — metal or glass sandpaper — a razor blade — paper towels — a tube of silicone glue *NOTE: It is very important to sand all the edges of your pieces of glass to eliminate any injuries during the assembly process.Now that your pieces have been cut to the right sizes and have been sanded, you may proceed to Step 1 at the end of this article.Lay out your pieces as shown, starting by the base, which will be the centre of your construction.Take each piece one at a time, and attach your masking tape as indicated.Each time you finish one section, re-assemble your design by placing the masking taped pieces on the table, adhesive side up.After completing Step 1, go on to Step 2, and continue taping your pieces, but on the inside.The distance from the outside edge must be accurate when applying your tape so as to ensure a neatly finished product.To do this, your calculate the thickness of the glass — !4” + Vi”.Do the same for each section.Now your pieces are ready for the silicone application.Step 2 Fishkeeping By Richard Potvin shows you how to proceed with the application.Before applying the glue, pre-assemble to ensure the correct position of each piece.Once the silicone has been applied, place the sides and ends on the base.Once a side and end have been assembled, re-attach the pieces of masking tape you applied in Step 1.Do the same for the other side, and once the aquarium has been completed, add as much masking tape as you need for strength.You have just completed Step 3 as shown in the diagram.For Step 4, cut the end of your tube of silicone glue at a 45° angle and apply the glue to the inside of your assembly as shown.You will notice that the silicone makes a joint between the 2 pieces of masking tape, which you attacked in Step 2.Once the silicone has been entirely applied, begin removing the tape from the inside of the aquarium.Allow to dry for 24 hours, then proceed with the test for leaks.If you followed each step exactly, there should be no problem with leaks.* NOTE.It is essential to use only the silicone glue specified by the manufacturer “FOR AQUARIUMS” as any other kind is toxic to fish.My next article will entail the cleaning, setting up and choice of equipment for your new aquarium.For further diagrams see page 3.it Restaurant Scampies $095 Sirloin Steak with salad $995 309 Wellington South, Sherbrooke For reservations: 562-8846 NEW Sunday noon Table d'HMe *8* .-mack ^orttc- icistry Jargon is used in an effort to accurately assess wine quality Wine Bits Earlier this week, I received an invitation to a wine seminar and tasting to be held in Montreal.The guest of honor at the tasting will be an emminent wine scholar and author, an acknowledged expert on Italian wines.As usual, the event will be attended by a variety of wine tasters, writers and general ‘afficia-nados’ who will listen, taste and undoubtedly make suitably cryptic comments — all in that language peculiar to wine ‘experts’ around the world.There will, of course, be much talk of “body” and a certain concern for “balance” not to mention considerable attention to the wine’s “legs”.The word “foxy” will unlikely be mentioned since the tasting concerns itself with European grapes and not the North American vitis labrusca, but at least once someone is bound to bring up “complexity”.Now, as much as all this may seem pretentious to the man in the street — whose tastes, by the way, are far more important to the general wine trade — these terms and phrases are employed solely in an effort to more accurately assess and describe the wine being tasted.As in all businesses, a set of commonly-shared descriptive adjectives is necessary to a proper evaluation of the product.Thus “balance” describes the relationship between the various characteristics of the wine and ideally indicates a state wherein acidity, sweetness, fruitiness etc.are in perfect harmony.So too, the word “finish” concerns itself with the final impression the wine makes as it goes down.The terms commonly used are too numerous to dwell upon here.However, most books produced for the novice have a glossary of words and phrases to guide you on your way.One note of caution.There is a By TIMOTHY BELFORD tendancy among those to whom wine tasting is nothing more than a step up the social ladder to be- come carried away with their own prose.The extent to which | this becomes a problem is nowhere better illustrated than in The Illustrated Wine Speak, by Ronald Searle, published by Souvenir Press.Searle’s wickedly wonderful pen graphically displays the pit-falls of over-description and is a must for every serious wine drinker’s library.As the drawing from The Illustrated Wine Speak shown above aptly demonstrates, never let your imagination outrun the wine.Cheers! t U Lacks subtlety THEY'RE HERE! Mazda B2000 1986 Dominick Auto Sport Ltee Route 143 • Bromptonville 567-4008 — 846-2751 Dominick Dallaire owner TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY,.MARCH 1.1985—3 Queen Elizabeth stamps belong to a unique issue The 1967 -1973 Queen Elizabeth II definative issue is certainly not the most attractive series of Canadian stamps ever issued but, next to the Admiral issue, I do think it is the most interesting.What is so unique about this issue, is that it came out at a time when the postal authorities were experimenting with different papers and tags.The Canadian Book Note Company, CBNC was the exclusive producer of the issue from February 8th, 1967 to October 31st, 1968.With the rate increase from five cents to six cents on November 1st, 1968, the British American Bank Note Company, BABNC was awarded the contract to print the first class Stamp corner By Peter McCarthy rate stamps.With this change, the new perforation 10 x 10 was introduced, subsequently changing to 12'/2 x 12, as compared to CBNC’s perf of 12 x 12.CBNC continued to print the non first class denominations.The following is a listing of the continued from page 2.O.vrH OF CLHSS- srep 2 srcieo^E y*f + w OF C-lFISS [£ L.'COfJF KTtP 3 sntfs-g.'nc - ,'Nsrvc niftSK:«S - owrs-.-ùe Step 4 Finish interior joints by applying silicone on all the angles and immediately after removing tape attached in Step 2.low values from sheets of hundreds.Also their dates of issue.The one cent through to and including the five cent were issued on plain paper and Winnipeg tagged on plain paper.Date of issue, February 8th, 1967.Printer, CBNC, Perf, 12 x 12.The exception is the four cent carmine, which was tagged Wpg.side bar.(1 bar on either edge) The gum used was dextrine, (dex.) In addition, the above were issued in the following manner.1 cent Dog Team Tagged Wpg.1 bar issued — Dec.1968 H.B.Paper Dex.gum issued — July 1971 Tagged Wpg 1 bar on H.B.paper — Sept 1971 Fluorescent paper P.V.A.gum Tagged Wpg.1 bar — Mar.1972 General tagged — Dec.1972 2 cent green Totem Pole Tagged Wpg.1 bar — Dec.1968 Fluorescent paper P.V.A.gum — Mar.1972 Fluorescent paper P.V.A.gum tagged Wpg 1 bar — Mar.1972 General tagged P.V.A.gum — Dec.1972 4 cent carmine Seaway Lock tagged Wpg.1 bar — Mar.1969 Fluorescent paper P.V.A.gum — May 1972 Fluorescent paper P.V.A.gum tugged Wpg.1 bar — May 1972 General tagged — April 1973 5 cent blue Fishing Village tagged Wpg.1 bar — Dec.1968 H.B.paper dex.gum — Dec.1971 H.B.paper dex.gum tagged Wpg.1 bar — Dec.1971 Fluorescent paper P.V.A.gum — Dec.1971 Fluorescent paper P.V.A.gum tagged Wpg.1 bar — April 1972 The one cent, three cent, four cent and five cent values, perforated 10 or 12'/2 x 12 were from booklet panes.The two and three cent values on white fluorescent paper are also from booklet panes.I want to continue outlining this issue in future columns.We have yet to go through the balance of the first class rate stamps plus, the high values.There is also the coils, booklet panes, varieties and tagged errors.What is listed merely scratches the surface of this issue.An in depth study reveals a startling hqVI BAR-BISTRO $ .The Great Truffle Award for “The Best Bar 1984” .BAR MENU Hot Roast Beef in a Crusty Roll Steaming Chili Con Carne Emma’s Italian Lasagna Beer, Wine or Schnapps House Dessert Tea or Coffee l^90 Continuous service 11 a m.to 11 p.m.Reservation: 819-567-6339 100 Webster St., Sherbrooke, Que.number of plates used to produce each denomination.You would be wise to procure this issue in mint condition.It makes for easier identification of tags and papers.Abbreviations used: flrsc.Fluorescent (paper) CBNC .Canadian Bank Note Co.BABNC British American Bank Note Co.perf.perforation, perforated.imperf.imperfotate gen general tagged Wpg.Winnipeg tagged dex Dextrine (gum) P.V.A.Polyvinyl Alcohol (gum) H.B Hi brite (paper) CANADA 4 YEARS SERVICE GUARANTEE ON LABOR AND PARTS BY: SERVICE DE L’ESTRIE INC.ON MOFFAT PRODUCTS DELUX EASY CLEAN RANGE • Automatic clock timer and minute minder • Timed appliance outlet • Variable broil control • Oven window and light • Full size storage drawer • 208/240 Volt.60 Hz • Two 8’ - two 6' elements • Height.47Vi!’ (120 cm) • Width: 30' (76 cm) • Depth: 283/4’ (74 cm) • Attached cord set on all models • Shipping weight 180 lbs (82 kg) • Energuide 64 KWH \j____® i MOFFAT WASHER * Model MWG1140 • 4 wash/rinse temperature selections ¦ 3 wash/spin combinations • 3 water level positions • Bleach dispenser • Fabric softener dispenser • Sell-cleaning lint tiller • 4 cycles MOFFAT DRYER Model MDG1140 • Automatic dry — Normal • Automatic dry — Permanent Press • Optional timed drying • 3 heat selections • Drying rack MOFFAT 13 CU.FT.REFRIGERATOR Model VRF1314 • 13.2 cu.It.total 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Illustrated microwave cookbook GERALD BOUCHARD AND CLAUDE VILLE-MAIRE, CO-OWNERS, INVITE THEIR CLIENTELE AND NEW CUSTOMERS TO COME AND COMPARE PRICES, QUALITY AND SERVICE AT: SERVICE DE L’ESTRIE INC.225 Wellington South, Sherbrooke 563-0563 The only specialists In major household appliances 4—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985 ‘Other Women’ explores doctor-patient relations BOOK REVIEWS: Other Women by Lisa Alther (RANDOM HOUSE): $21.95, 336 PP In her two previous novels.Kin-flicks and Original Sins, Tennes-see-bom Lisa Alther has written about women and the turmoil of their passing from adolescence into adulthood in the social crucible of the past two decades.With Other Women the focus is on two particular women, a 35-year-old nurse, and her psychiatrist, who is middle-aged, and the relationship that grows out of their therapy sessions.Readers of Judith Rossner’s last book, August, will feel that this territory has just been passed over, recalling that a therapist and a teenager provided the plot in that novel.Other Women traces the same type of therapy that an emotionally battered patient must follow, but for Alther the principal characters have lives that extend far beyond the couch in the psychiatrist’s sanctum.Hannah Burke is a graying, powerful figure whose profession as psychotherapist coincides with her own traumatic life.Abandoned by her parents, a survivor of a loveless first marriage, Hannah has somehow rebounded from the devastating accidental deaths of two of her children who were asphyxiated by a faulty furnace.Although Hannah has herself made it through therapy and adjusted, she is shocked by the emotional state of Caroline Kelly, whose tattered life she sets out to mend.Caroline is Alther’s most Kaleidoscope a.* Dis*LiABr> i r\Kic\Æ By RICHARD LONEY complex and interesting characterization.She is a confessed lesbian, who has arrived at her instability in life due to a great deal of “help” from her family and her lovers, both male and female.Caroline’s parents were semievangelist do-gooders in Boston who threw themselves into community aid projects such as inviting indigent paupers into their home for Christmas dinner and who had little time for their devoted daughter.A marriage to a busy medical doctor soured for Caroline, and a subsequent affair with a hippie M.D.working with the urban poor in Boston completely convinced her of her hatred for men.Working in a busy emergency room as a nurse convinces Caroline that: “It was her primordial heritage as a female to create and sustain life.In contrast to males, who dealt in death and darkness, creating disasters and cooperating in extraordinary feats of heroism to extract people from the destruction.” With two almost teenaged boys, Jason and Jackie, living in a cabin with her lover Diana and her two children, Caroline embarks on her therapy with Hannah in a quaint lakeside town in New Hampshire.While engaged A novel by the author of KIN FLICKS in the psychic probing of analysis, Caroline’s real world starts to disintegrate.Diana takes a younger mate named Suzanne, Caroline contemplates taking a large bottle of pills from her medecine cabinet, and a dashing young doctor, recently separated, begins to court her with no idea of her predilection in companions.Alther moves the novel along with alternating points of view that shift from Hannah’s mellow relationship with her husband Arthur, and the problems that her surviving two children lay at her doorstep, to the increasing chaos of Caroline’s troubled mind.There is plenty of the minutiae of daily living in the novel, lending a realism to the story, and except for the rather strident feminist diatribes that sometimes intrude, Other Women is a fairly accurate glimpse into the lives of contemporary women.RECORD REVIEWS George Thorogood & The Des-troyers MAVERICK (EMI-AMERICA) Hardly the kind of act that generates a great deal of corporate intensity in the rock trade, George Thorogood & his Des-troyers just outdo themselves i with each new album outing.The relative obscurity of Thorogood’s gang hasn’t dimmed their hard-edged intensity one iota, and MAVERICK is a raucous, brash testament to unadulterated rock.From the Bo Diddley rolling rhythms of the classic Johnny Otis song “Willie and the Hand Jive”, to the Chuck Berry standard “Memphis, Tennessee”, George Thorogood delivers with his gravelly, white bluesman’s voice and the Destroyers play their signature style of tight back-beat behind George’s guitar and vocals.This is a rock and roll style from the Mitch Ryder mold, with just a taste of Delta blues punctuating the non-stop, driving tem-poes of tunes such as “Long Gone” and a Carl Perkins song that the Beatles missed, called “Dixie Fried”.“Crawling King Snake” reveals the down south picking styles that George favours, as the group does a sultry cover of this John Lee Hooker string-bender, which is sung in a close imitation of the blues singer’s style.For a four piece band-George on lead guitar and vocals, Hank Carter on saxes and harmonies Billy Blough on bass, and Jeff Simon drumming-the Destoryers pump out an incredibly full sound that has a “live studio” feel to it that implies that these tracks are probably done with very little overdubbing on the basic rhythm bed-tracks.In other words, George Thorogood & The Des- FRICTION troyers sound as good on record as they must in person-when they start chugging on an obscure Berry song “(Let’s) Go Go Go”, or the album’s opener “Gear Jammer”, they are untouchable.Which brings up the puzzling title track of MAVERICK-there have been few TV series soundtrack songs that have had much to recommend them, but the duster series that starred James Garner had one of the most inane of themes.George must be throwing this one in as a tongue-in-cheek touch of nostalgia.On this album of heavy-truckin’ tracks “Maverick” stands out like a bad mistake in repertoire choice.Coney Hatch FRICTION (ANTHEM-CAPITOL) Poised to take on the giants of American rock that live on power chords and what Phil Spector probably calls “walls of noise”, Coney Hatch is a Canadian entry into the Kiss, Iron Maiden, REO Speedwagon brethren.The band, fronted by vocalist Carl Dixon, has taken a close listen to the Steve Perry vocal stance and the guitar styles of the above-mentioned bands, with a resulting close copy of the American band sound.The tunes, all written by Carl Dixon, Andy Curran (bassist), and Steve Shelski lead guitar & keyboards), adhere to the genre specs okay, but there is really nothing here to make a listener burn his Led Zep records.As musicianship goes, the guys in Coney Hatch could blow Canada’s ex-champ in this field out of the water, but then again B.T.O.were never recognized as making significant contributions to the metallic madness.Coney Hatch have just enough bite in their medium ballads to keep the listener alert, but not quite enough to sustain that out-of-your-seats infectiousness that grips adherents to his hand-clapping, powerful music.There could be something on FRICTION to hang a video from, but a big hit from this album would be a surprize.GeOrGe Th TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985-5 Local artist warms Toronto gallery with paintings By Dennis Michael Sapinski Some Record readers and art lovers may recall local artist David Sorensen’s show, “The Corner Series” which was well received at the Horace Gallery, in February and March of 1984.Last week in Toronto in the brightly lit spaces of the Bau - Xi Gallery (Chinese for good fortune) Sorensen opened his fourth show in that city, where his latest work, twenty-eight oils and three sculptures went on display.On that particular Saturday, the snow from Toronto’s worst storm in twenty years, had been cleared away and the spring-like weather seemed just right for an afternoon outing.Several art shows had been coordinated to open simultaneously and a good crowd of art enthusiasts were doing the rounds.The gallery’s main hall, a bright and pleasant room, was filled with Sorensen’s new work on paper, as well as his cast and constructed sculptures.Above, on the gallery’s upper level, seven large canvases for an earlier series, pervaded the space with warmth and color.A centrally located piece downstairs that drew interesting comments — ranging from “elegant” to “gutsy” — was a bronze sculpture entitled Haka.This piece with its deep black-green patina and interplay of full curves with stark planes clearly reflects the artists interest in African and West coast Indian art.Sorensen recalls a trip to the Queen Charlotte Islands in British Columbia “.sketching with my son for an extended period last summer, investigating the Haida artifacts and life style, then a trip to New York and the momentus exhibition Primiti-vism/Modernism which profoundly affected my sense of image.” The paintings on paper employ the totem and mask motifs: the central hierarchical image made up of angular and curved components floats on a field of color applied in painterly manner with a palette knife.Though some of the works still lean strongly toward the abstract geometries of the earlier series, themes that cross the boundaries between symbolic and abstract can be read in the titles “Lightning Flash Mask”, David Sorenson.Influenced by recent trip.This sculpture, called ‘Xairi’, is eight feet in height and is made of wood covered in canvas and painted.“Reflected Totem”, and “BoBo Geometries”.Mystery power, magic — the qualities emanating from tribal art are echoed here.One is reminded of Henry Moore’s statement that if an art is not anchored in the primitive or universal it is bound to degenerate.His deep conviction that man and what he makes must be rooted in nature reaffirm the mythical forces underlying our existence.The early modernists themselves found in the masks a stylization of man which was at once individual and universal.Color as well can be a key to those forces.In the large paintings upstairs this is the case whereas in the new Mask and Totem series an icon-like image predominates.The new colors were observed by a viewer to be more tropical than Indian and this Sorensen attributes to this extended visits to Mexico.Nature, the environment, the land will always provide nourishment and inspiration.Locally the hills, trees, and fields have played a large part in shaping Sorensen’s aesthetic.It all started eight years ago when he settled in the townships with his wife Bella, and their young family.The trial of building his own studio-home, establishing himself in the community.and acclimatizing to our particular brand of winter (Sorensen is Vancouver born) provided roots that he now sees as permanent.Since moving here he has exhibited regularily in Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver, taught at Champlain College and Bishop’s University, been active on juries in Ottawa and locally, and participated in group and solo shows with the group R.A.C.E.For anyone planning a trip to Toronto the exhibition runs until March 7th and is located at 340 Dundas St.west, directly across the street from the Art Gallery of Ontario.Dennis Michael Sapinski is a free-lance writer and photographer and farms cattle outside of Bury.nEu nEU fiEii nEEi .riEu nEu.heu WE RE NOW EQUIPED IN rDOLBYB SOUND.FOR ALL THE MAN ^ THE MUSIC '9- THE MADNESS THE MURDER.THE MOTION PICTURE W AmadeuS .EVERY THING YOU’VE HEARD LS I RLE ClNIMA CAPITOL 59 KING est 565 011! UIQEQ clu MEMBERSHIP f9.95? 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985 Artists show different view of man in nature By Louise Léger SHERBROOKE — Galerie d’Art la Falaise expanded its collection of artwork last week when a vernissage was held presenting the works of artists Michel Du-guay and André Philibert.La Falaise usually shows the work of artists whose paintings reflect different regions of Quebec, and this exhibition is no exception.Although both artists concentrate on rural scenes each approaches the subject with dramatic differences.According to a publication available at the gallery, André Philibert was bom in Montreal in 1944, and spent a great deal of time in the city, studying and painting.In the early ’70s, Philibert left the city to live in the country in order to expand his artistic scope.His works at La Falaise reflect his association with nature: his paintings concentrate on the peaceful, solitude side of nature.Common images are rundown houses or barns with angled, snow-covered roofs.The only sign of man besides the depreciated buildings in many of his works is a light on in a window, as if inside someone has just awoken.VIEWER IS STRUCK Besides a few works which feature the head and shoulders of women, his paintings all fit into this category.At first look at the wall of paintings, the viewer is struck by the predominace of the color blue — too much blue.Ho- wever when each painting is looked at individually, the color scheme is really essential to the painting.The use of blue casts a before-dawn hue over the painting.It effectively conveys the atmosphere of the peaceful time before a new day, before man has intruded into the silence of the landscape.In one picture, a man has intruded : he looks like a farmer who has risen to begin his day of work.The sense of stillness and and silence is conveyed beautifully.Michel Duguay, who was born in Abitibi, spent most of his youth in Ontario.He then studied in Montreal and later in Ottawa.He became a plastic art and music instructor, and moved to Charlevoix in 1980 to teach violin.According to the gallery information, Duguay was inspired by the beauty of this region, and quickly gave up music for pain- ting.He was instantly successful.His works at La Falaise are of the Charlevoix region and of Eas-tern Townships scenes.His works include ‘A Farm in Sherbrooke near Portland Boulevard’, ‘Covered Bridge near Fitch Bay’, and ‘Katevale Church’.There is a prédominent sense of light and brightness in Duguay’s works.Unlike those of Philibert, the season is summer and the This acrylic on canvas painting, called ‘Winter Garden’, is an example of André Philibert’s presentation ¦ v« This acrylic on canvas painting, called ‘Winter Garden’, is an example of André Philibert’s presentation of nature and its effects on the environment.RECORD/PERRY BEATON J] Michel Duguay presents rural settings where man and nature are harmonious.AUTO CARREFOUR SHERBROOKE INC.1000 KING EST For service in perfect English, come and see us J.P.Plante • Robert Milot Sherbrooke.QC JIG 1E4 (SIB) 5*3-3757 riAMCIJeep!RENAimUr^o| 1000 Kino East Auto Carrefour Fl AMCI Jeep.I RENAULT Oi AUTO CARREFOUR EXTRA GUARANTEE 3 years or 80,000 k.m.on 1984 models (motor, transmission, differential) WHY AUTO CARREFOUR.?Great choice on display NOW • Quality of cars • Part Service • Service after sale • Long term rental Mr.Donald Lafrance Hubert Cloutier Owner Our Salesmen Richard Carrier Jean Pierre Plante Robert Milot Gilles Dionne A "warm welcome" from the new sales manager Donald Lafrance Sales Manager U Chameau RENAULT 5 5995°°* Transport and preparation extra time is mid-day.The country scenes have small figures in them; for example, someone on their way to church or just taking a walk in nature.The brightness, beauty and sense of calm in the scenes seem to suggest an idealistic country lifestyle.Winding roads, church steeples and figures in the distance seem to suggest man’s harmony with nature.The exposition is on until Monday, March 4, which means after that date any paintings that have been sold will be taken down.However, any that remain unsold will stay at the gallery.La Falaise is a new gallery, having opened just over a year ago.There are usually about 20 artists in its permanent collection, along with a selection of art posters which range in price from $20 to $50.The gallery is located at 56 Wel-lington St.North.WHBRB FAMOUS FIOUAKS.SKATS.PAUL MARTINI & BARBARA UNDERHILL ooio MCOAiers 18*4 WORLD AND SU* ONMMN OMMRON8 RON SHAVER osar TERRY HEAD ANOGiSELA OCOFMNfWtXOTwa ^WOOuCTlOwtl PALAIS DES SPORTS Wednesday through Sunday March 20th To 24th/85 7 BIG SHOWS Wed March 20 7:30pm Thurs March 21 7:30pm Fri March 22 8:00pm Sot March 23 2:00pm & 8:00pm Sun March 24 1:00pm 5:00pm $7.00 $8.00 $9.00 All seats reserved Save $1.00 on Youths (16 and under) and Senior Citizens Thurs 7:30p.m., Sat 2:00pm, and Sun 5:00pm OPENING NIGHT Youths (16 and under) Vt price Adults $1.00 off with coupon from: Pizzeria Rock Forest Sports Claude Adam Tickets on sale: Palais des Sports Place Belvedere - week-end Ticketron outlets Information for groups 819-565* 5850 CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH I, 1985-7 Careful! Green plants can come back to haunt you When the heavens cover the ground with snow, it’s Sister Snowplow who cleans it up at Notre Dame Academy in Park Hills, Kentucky.Sister Mary Virgila, dubbed Sister Snowplow by the pupils, uses a Jeep with a blade to clean off the lot and the winding road back to the academy and convent in that community just south of Cincinnati, Ohio.“This is my contribution to Catholic education — to the girls at Notre Dame Academy,” she says.Sister Mary, a nun for 42 of her 58 years, said she hadn’t heard about her nickname but is not offended by it.“I can imagine the girls would do something like that, especially knowing some of the girls around here,” she said, smiling.“She’s real good with a snowplow; she knows the blade and knows what she’s doing,” said Ralph Bailey, one of her maintenance crew.“It takes me about five hours to clear the lot and it takes her about three hours.” Next thing you know the holy sister will be fixing the truck herself too.Then we’ll be able to see what she has under her hoo-d.(ugh!) No jokes about bad habits, please.Well I guess they even thought the first piano was weird, at the time, but.Music teacher Brenda Brooks and her fidgety second graders from Lynchburg, Va., have won the First Hartwick College Velcro Competition with an entry called the Electric Velcro Band.The Bedford Hills School entry stuck it to seven other finalists from 100 entries ranging from useful to artistic to ridiculous to snag the $50 first prize.The judges deliberated for more than an hour.Brooks sent a videotape of her students as they sat on the floor and made rhythmic music with the Velcro strips on their sneakers.The project taught the children that even the raspy sound of Velcro — the reusable sticking fabric strips used on everything from collars to shoes — could make music.Next we’ll have the Arthritic Bone-Poppers Rythm Band on the nightclub circuit, I supp-hose.• Canadian lovers of that fern delight known as fiddleheads — the green curly things your grandmother serves you along with pickled beets and cow tongues — are up in pens over what they consider another Yankee attempt to steal our property.It seems two representatives of the Vermont State House want to have the fiddlehead declared the state vegetable.(Funny, in our country the state vegetables are the politicians.) Anyway.Peter Youngbaer and William Mares tabled a bill proposing the move.They didn’t want anyone to think they were being too serious about an issue of less-than-vital interest Who’s who By TADEUSZ LETARTE to state security, however, so they presented the bill in the form of a poem.Well, New Brunswickers take their ferns very seriously.They didn’t find the poem funny at all.Losing the fiddlehead — which figures in the provincial coat of arms — would be the same thing as losing salmon, trees, etc.to “the grasping Yankees”.So CBC radio announcer Paddy Gregg, a New Brunswicker through and through and proud of his province’s vegetal heritage, wrote a poem in response, and it wasn’t a funny poem.It’s very serious — the “grasping Yankees” line comes from it.The media is now reporting a War of Poems between the province and the state, and Gregg has promise to bombard the upstart Vermonters with protest poetry from the pens of his listeners.Not being one who likes to get left behind, and having an in-depth knowledge of New Brunswick plant life (I am considered an expert on the N.B.Tory party), I am contributing the following to the war of verse now waging out there.Please, no jokes about me being underarmed for such battle.Two lawmakers from the state of Vermont Said ‘The fiddlehead, that’s what we want.’ The premier of N.B., Said with irony, ‘Careful! Green plants can come back to haunt.’ Only in Australia you say?The boys from down under have finally gone a little too far.Those uncouth louts whose national characteristics are beer swilling and the calculated murder of the Queen’s English, have invented a new sport.In the past, Aussie males have been content with Australian Rules Football — a no-holds-barred wrestling match with the supposed object of moving an overly fat football the length of something quaintly called “the pitch”.In actuality, the ‘game’ is nothing more than an excuse to work up a thirst for endless cans of Foster’s Lager.Now these intellectual titans have come up with a new diversion — Dwarf Throwing.That’s right, the object is for a hefty two hundred pound professional pub bouncer to see how far he can toss a dwarf known as Wee Robbie.Don’t worry.Organizers say its all right since they have a nice soft pile of foam rubber for Robbie to land on.It reminds of a joke concerning a camel and a pair of bricks.• I couldn’t help but notice the article on spoonerisms on page four of Tuesday’s paper.For those of you who don’t know what a spoonerism is, let me illucidate.One Rev.William Archibald Spooner of New College, Oxford, had the distinctly unpleasant habit of transposing letters and sounds causing his sentences to often resemble nothing more than nonsense.Some of his classics were “one swell foop” instead of “one fell swoop” and “You are occupewing my pie” rather than “You are occupying my pew.” So often did the good Reverend scramble his sentences that he won the dubious distinction of having the problem named after him.Probably the most famous Canadian spoonerism is attributed to Donald Jamieson former Liberal cabinet member and Canadian High Commissioner to London.When Jamieson was just a youngster working fo a St.John’s radio station, he was given the task of co-vering the opening of the Newfoundland legislature.During the opening parade, while he was describing the parade of various dignitaries, Jamieson happily announced the arrival of Premier Joey Smallwood and “His Arse the Gracebishop”.I guess you had to be there.• Gee, its nice to see democracy in action.Sherbrooke area Liberals have postponed a scheduled nominating convention to see who will face off with PQ MNA Raynald ‘I’m with René’ Frechette because the possible candidates don’t have enough “prestige” for the boys in Montreal.The Liberal head office apparently doesn’t think those of us in the boonies should be allowed to pick who we think is best suited to represent us.Ah, shades of times gone by.The revival of Boo Boo Bunker Bou-rassa.• The recent announcement that the Federal government will not honor an agreement made by its predecessors to supply Domtar with 100 million big ones to rebuild its Windsor Mills plant shouldn’t surprise anyone.After all, following the new Regressive Preservative guidlines concerning ‘merit’, Sinclair Stevens weighed all the factors and decided spending money to save 700 jobs in a one-industry town was just not as important as other government projects — like pretty new uniforms for our fighting men, more cabinet assitants for ministers, and a multi-million dollar advertising contract for political friends.And despite what you may think, the decision had absolutely nothing to do with the fact that the folk in Windsor were stupid enough to fight the Tory tide and re-elect a Liberal.Canadian monarchists, that diehard breed who dedicate their lives to the preservation of the middle ages, are all in a tizzy over the latest revelation that the late Lord Louis Mountbatten, the Queen’s Uncle and Prince Chuck’s favorite relative, may just have played a little fast and loose with his marriage vows.Lord Louis — who, by the way, was Louis Bat-tenberg until the Kaiser made it unseemly for a British subject to bear a German name — is quoted in a recent biography as saying that he and his wife, Edwina, “.spent all our married lives getting into other people’s beds.” Now, disregarding the possibility that he might have been referring to some strange sort of game the upper classes played at the time, Louis was probably referring to marital infidelity.And as shocking as this may seem to our monarchist friends, this isn’t the first time that a member of the royal family has admitted to being guilty of a little extracurricular activity.As a matter of fact, with the exception of George V and George VI who were reportedly both too dull to ima gine having an affair, every king of England since Ethelred The Unready has been only too happy to indulge in a merry romp.(Letters can be sent to this column care of The Record, but please, no more nasty phone calls.) Forget about Star Search there are quicker ways to the top.You all remember cute little Samantha Smith, the 12-year-old all-American girl who wrote to Yuri Andropov concerning her fears about nuclear war?Well, after Samantha returned from the Soviet Union where she had been Andropov’s guest, she went on a speaking tour, appeared on talk shows and wrote a book about the experience.All this has led to a crack at the big time and a part in a television adventure series opposite Robert Wagner.Isn’t it amazing how fate can change the course of human existence.First Ken Taylor’s dizzying leap from Iran to Nabisco and now Samantha taps her way from the hearts of Russians and Americans everywhere onto the silver screen.Speaking of the Russians, I’m glad to see they finally put a stop to all those silly rumors concerning the death of Constantin Chernenko.As anyone could plainly see on the news earlier this week, Chernenko was alive and well enough to vote for himself in the recent Soviet elections.And contrary to suggestions by the western media, the man standing at Chernenko’s back with his arms out, was not holding his boss up but was there for security purposes only.Nor should the fact that Chernenko’s comments to the press were made without moving his lips be of major concern to anyone.Afterall, Rocket Ronnie has been president for more than four years now and moving his lips hasn’t helped at all.HUGE SAVINGS! 4.8 1/100 km.NEW FROM ITALY Aseeo0>>< e ^ Immediate delivery *r with the Japanese well known reliability It’s quite a small car Volvo.Innocent I Dealer SHtrrtBtroOHe rrvt: [ IMNOCCMTI1 15 Fraser Si.(2059 King West), Sherbrooke 563-6622 8-TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985 WHAT’S ON Music Well, I’m back.Yeah, I know how thrilled you all are about that, me too, but there you have it.Anyway, down to businness.The Sherbrooke branch of Jeunesses Musicales is sponsoring yet another of their Sons et Brioches concerts this weekend and they have something a little unusual this time around in The Gents a six-man a capella group with a repertoire that covers the whole spectrum of musical tastes — serious and tongue-in-cheek (ever try to sing with your tongue in your cheek?).The show begins at the usual sprightly hour of 11 a.m.Sunday morning, and also as usual coffee, juice and doughnuts will be served before the concert.Tickets are $2, $1.50 for students and 50c for children (interesting differentiation).On the local nightspot scene, the fabulous Bolton Brothers Band is back again this weekend at Cal Picken’s glamourous FL Hideaway and these guys are entertainment pure and simple.Neither country and western nor rock music seems to present much of a problem for this talented trio, and a good time is pretty well assured if you’re into it.Music tonight and tomorrow.The boys will be back again next weekend too.The Bar Ouest, back up at the Place Dunant shopping complex in Sherbrooke is back into the swing of things again, although this time around the emphasis is apparently going to be rock and roll.They have a good act lined up this week and for the entire month of March, actually, with Idle Hands, who’ll be providing some solid country-rock sounds each week from Thursdays through Sunday evenings.The band is made up of Shawn Renaud, Danny Renaud, Peter Jenks and Bob Boisclair, normally, but I’m told they’ve also added the services of a lightening-fast guitar player by the name of Alain Simard, a local fellow with a powerful reputation.Sounds like a pretty formidable combination, there.Still in Sherbrooke, it looks like l’Évidence (in the Hotel LaSalle) is re-entering the live music scene and they've got the traditional blues sounds of True Blue lined up for this weekend until Saturday.This is an unpretentious blues band with a lot of talent consisting of Windsor’s Tony Galeazzi on guitar, Danny Marche-terre on the bass, Steve Hoyt on the drum kit, and Ray Tyler on harmonica and vocals.The Évidence is a pleasant, well-thought-out bar with a lot of potential, whih with a little luck could become a real force in the local music scene.We can only wait and see.On the light jazz scene, Jacques Jobin and Marc Bolduc will be entertaining out at the fabulous Le Vieux Clocher in Magog Friday and Saturday nights for the month of March.Excellent musicians both, they split the duties on keyboards, guitar and saxophone, whipping up what I am told is good solid, fun and lively music.Best of all, admission is free.Rod Bray and the Countrymen provide the entertainment this Saturday evening at Chez Ben’s out in Kate-vale.This event is designed to provide a little encouragement to the Stanstead County Fairgrounds so that it can provide the activities it has become so justly known for during thew summer months.There’s doorprizes too.Admission is only $2 and the music starts at 9 and continues until 1.Gord McDonald is back from the sun and fun of Florida and is just itching to get things going again at the Motel Bretagne in Waterville.Perennial favourites the Caroussels Country Riders are back in the saddle each and every Friday and Saturday this month.Down in Stanstead, The Maples has the talents and charm of Weekend Express this month, with some mainline modern country tunes each and every Friday and Saturday evening.TheCookshire Hotel has a band called Ninja this week, a five-man (actually three-man, two-woman) rock and roll outfit.They’ll be playing through Sunday.Normand Bouchard a musician of considerable talent heads up a regular program callled Jazz on Jazz every weekday from 5p.m.until 7, which also just happens to be ‘Happy Hour’ — a coincidence Mikey finds just delightful.Teamed up with pianist Jean-Jacques Beauchamp, stand-up bassman Bouchard provides really wonderful music.Coupled with the ambiance of the Palais which is without a doubt one of the friendliest watering holes in Sherbrooke, this is a real genuine bargain-treat that I hope people will take advantage of.For some cabaret-style entertainment of the first-rank, organist François Jasmin takes to the keyboard every weekfrom Monday through Saturday atTp.m.at Le Cachet in the Hotel le Président.While this is definitely not a place for chugging contests, it is a very comfortable and agreeable bar, whose prices are extremely reasonable.A good place for that quiet, romantic seduction scene you’ve been planning.On a different note entirely, the Rock Palace in Sherbrooke plays host to a horde known as Angel Dust this weekend until Sunday, and once again — the name says it.Finally, at the Del Monty in Rock Island, the funk-rock sounds of Rollex are back in the area, until Saturday.Movies Amadeus is back at the Cinéma Capitol this week, which pleases me no end, because it means lots of folks are seeing what I consider one the top movies of the last few years.There’s nothing wrong with this movie.It’s funny — with an underlying tragic theme — beautifully acted, intelligently written and enjoys the benefit of a brilliantly produced score and excellent cinematography.If you haven’t seen it yet, don’t miss it.It will be remebered as a truly classic film.In Cowansville, the comedic talents of Gilda Radner and boyfriend Gene Wilder team up to produce The Woman in Red, which while not great, is a pretty good film.Wilder is better when he lets somebody else do the directing, but the good stuff does outweigh the bad.This is a tale of a middle-aged man’s obsession with a beautiful lady he caught a rather enthralling glimpse of in an underground parking lot.Also on the bill, Class.Down in Newport, the Merrill’s Showplace Cinema has Beverly Hills Cop, which I must presume everybody who wants to has already seen.It’s an excellent comedy though, and well worth seeing twice.Also on the bill down at Merrill’s is Missing in Action 2 - The Beginning, another Chuck Norris adventure film featuring Norris as a heroic American dedicated to rescuing some fellow MIA’s from the evil inscrutable clutches of their Southeast Asian captors.Those of you who like that kind of thing already know who you are, so there it is if you want it.Also on the bill, Mischief, yet one more example of a Hollywood director reliving his memories of sexual initiation.Personally, I’ve seen enough teenagers bumbling over each other trying to get it on to last me a lifetime, but, as is usual in this kind of movie, there are some genuinely touching scenes and a few good laughs.Witness is showing at the Cinemas Carrefour, starring that marvelous hunk of man (according to LL), Harrison Ford.Also at the Carrefour is 2010 Exhibitions This is the last weekend for a couple of very good shows, so those of you with artistic proclivités might want to take this chance to catch some things you may have missed.Out qt, Arts Sutton, a wonderful exhibit of Polaroid, Cibachrome, Silver and Handpainted Silverprints by Five Women Photographers is on display for the last time here Saturday, March 2 and Sunday.Mikey never hasn’t ceased to be amazed by what can be accomplished with a camera ever since someone explained to him the possibilities of an airbrush way back when, and this show is an excellent demonstration of the technical and artistic potential now available to visual artists.The show features work by Ann Bloom, Joyce Rappaport, and Arleen Rotchin from Montreal, Sylvia Klein from Ottawa, asnd Sutton’s own talented Kitty Nunnellley.The Arts Sutton gallery is located at 8 Main Street in Sutton, and is open from 11 a.m.until 5 in the post meridian tomorrow and Sunday.Another show that winds up this Sunday is that of Odette Théberge and Pierre Bruneau at the HORACE gallery at 906 King west in Sherbrooke.Théberge’s work rather defies any thematic description, and in fact the artist herself does not pretend to be portraying any earth-shattering messages.Rather, the lady is interested in creating appealing visual images whose major connecting aspect seems to be a tendency to frame each piece within itself.Decidedly abstract, her work is eyepleasing, and would look good hanging in the living room, provided one’s colour scheme tends towards the pastel.Pierre Bruneau on the other hand, while coming up with some rather striking and well executed pieces, would be more appropriate to a punk rock recording studio.Best-known for his powerful cartoon character Nora Loner, Bruneau creates stark, nihilistic images that are definitely well-executed but a little unsettling.All in all however, the combined show is well worth seeing.The gallery is open today from noon until 5, and on the weekend from 1 p.m.until 5.At La Falaise at 56 Wellington north in Sherbrooke, the recent paintings of André Philibert and Michel Du-guay continues through the weekend until Monday, and this is a must-see for those whose tastes run toward the more traditional approach to landscape and scenic paintings.Both these fine artists employ considerable attention to detail in their renderings of classic country scenery.Fine craftsmanship is the key to these pictures.At the Point de Vue at the Sherbrooke CEGEP, Sherbrooke native Michel Poliquin is exhibiting 20 of his most recent oil paintings until March 15.Poliquin describes himself as a non-conformist painter and his work demonstrates the kind of youthful exhuberance one can expect from the young artist.While apparently lacking in discipline, Poliquin’s stylistic anarchy indicates an awareness and sensitivity that brings an underlying order to the chaos.The Point de Vue is one of the most accessible of local galleries, and is open from 8:15 a.m until 9 p.m.from Mondays through Thursdays and from 8:15 until 5 on Fridays.Although this next item is beyond Mikey’s normal jurisdictional limits, it bears a direct relationship to the Eastern Townships so I’m going to give it some mention.The Marsil Museum in St.Lambert has assembled the first-ever Restrospective of the Works of Aaron Allen Edson, 1846-88 until March 17.Edson is one of Canada’s most renowned painters and despite his relatively short lifespan he managed to produce a considerable volume of work, much of which is represented in this show, which was gathered with the collaboration of the National Gallery.The artist lived for some time in the good old E.T.and his work includes a impressions from the Sutton, Mount Orford and Lake Memphremagog areas.The exhibit also includes samples by other noted Canadian landscape artists-including Thomas Mower Martin, G.Horne Russel, Lucius O’Brien, and Otto Jacobi.All in all, this sounds like a very formidable exhibit and should be of considerable interest to those involved with Canadian art history.The Marsil Museum is located at 349 Riverside (comer of Notre-Dame) in St.Lambert, and is open from 1 p.m.to 4 Tuesdays through Fridays, and on Sundays from 2 p.m.to 5.Back in Sherbrooke, at the University of Sherbrooke's Galerie d’Art, an exhibit on the life and times of Hungarian composer Zoltàn Kodàly is on dispaly until the middle of March.The Musée Laurier up in Arthabaska begins an exhibition of the works of Michel Boutet and the Artists of the Galerie d’Art (’Étrange on Sunday.Boutet is a pop artist of considerable skill and notoriety, and the Galerie l’É-trange has a reputation for the originality, skill and international recognition of its members.This show will continue until March 17 atid the Laurier is open from Monday through Friday from 9 a.m.to noon and from 1 until 5, and on weekends from 1 p.m.until 5.The Sherbrooke Museum of Fine Art at 86 Wellington north will be host this coming Monday evening to Bernard Schaller, director of the Musée de Joiliette, who will be giving a lecture on the history and priorities of this institution.The talk will begin at 7:30 p.m.and the public is cordially invited to attend.Finally, for all you starving artists out there, the Quebec Cerebral Palsy Association, in collaboration with the Quebec Graphic Artists Society is sponsoring a Telethon ’86 Poster Contest in recognition of the Salon International de la Jeunesse.Contestants must be between 15 and 30 years old, and residents of Quebec.Contestants will be competing for prizes totlalling $4,000.Entries must conform to characteristics described in a presentation document which can be obtained by contacting: Téléthon de la Paralyse Cérébrale Concours d’Affiche 2120 rue Sherbrooke est Suite 300 Montréal, Québec H2K 1C3 The deadline for entries is April 19 at 5 p.m.and not a second later.Television Well, I’ve got to admit they’ve got me curious about this one.Tonight at 9 on Vermont ETV Great Performances presents a 1983 film called Koyaaniskatsi — yup, that’s right Koyaaniskatsi which is, I’m informed a “breathtaking journey across America that produces an unusual view of the mechanics of our daily life.” Now, that’s sounds intriguing enough, but the film uses no dialogue or narration and relies on its magnificent cinematography and unusual perspective to get its message across.Oh, by the way, Koyaaniskatsi is Hopi Indian for ‘life in turmoil’.Fair enough.At 11, Vermont ETV presents a clasic film, The Days of Wine and Roses, starring Jack Lemmon and Lee Re-mick in a riveting drama about two people living under the shadow of their alcoholism.Channel 12 has a program combination tomorrow afternoon beginning at 1, that should be watched by anyone with small kids and it starts with an airing of the film Adam which tells the true story of six-year-old Adam Walsh, kidnapped from a department store while his mother shopped only a few yards away.This horrible experience led his parentrs (played by Daniel Tra-vanti and JoBeth Williams) to start a nationwide information campaign to help parents protect their children from the wide assortment of sickos out there who view children as fair game for their depraved activities.The movie is followed at 3 by Don’t Talk to Strangers, a half-hour program devoted to helping parents make sure their children are streetwise and ‘streetsafe’.The little ones are awful vulnerable out there; they need all the protection we can give them.Almost as an extension of that theme, at 8 p.m.CTV is presenting Kids Don’t Tell starring Michael Ontkean and (again) JoBeth Williams.This is a made-for-t.v.story of a freelance filmaker producing a documentarey on the sexual abuse of children, who in the course of his work discovers that the vast majority of child sexual abuse occurs in unreported incidents right in the home.As he continues his work, he finds his traditional views of normal adult-child love relationships challenged by this new and unexpected perspective.It would appear that we are not a very healthy society.Back on Vermont ETV, at 9 Front Row Feature offers an exceptionally original and imaginative film Diva, a 1981 French thriller about an opera fan who manages to pirate a recording of a legendary singer whose voice has never before been recorded.He soon finds himself being persued by a variety of interesting characters including a punk rock killer and record company hit men.Frederic Andrei and opera star Wilhelmina Wiggins Fernandez head a wonderful cast.If you’re a Bogart fan, be prepared to forsake any late-night plans you might have lined up this week because Channel 12 is starting a weeklong Bogart Festival tonight at midnight with a Bogart Documentary tracing the cult legend’s film career from his beginnings as a typecast killer to the (reluctantly) sensitive romantic star.Following the documentary, the films The African Queen, in which Bogey teams up with a feisty spinster in Worjd.War.1 44riea to destroy airman gunbbat, and • Sirocco, where he plays an adventurer supplying weapons to Syran rebels fighting the french in 1925 will be shown.On Sunday at 9 p.m.CBC’s topical For the Record series presents The Front Line, the story of an activist priest, recently returned from missionary work in Central America, who begins to preach his involvement theology to a conservative Ontario (redundancy?) parish.His enthusiasm and commitment rekindle the fading faith of a local woman and starts her on a campaign to convince the parish’s leading employer to stop manufacturing missile systems components.As usual, the movement’s members are eventually faced with the choice of giving up their idealistic campaign or breaking the law — a situation which involves them in all kinds of wrenching personal problems.Brent Carver and Monique Mercure star.At 10, on CTV’s W5, the crew investigates the intriguing theory that some crew members of an oil rig lost in the South China Sea and presumed dead, may actually have survived and are now living in Vietnam.At midnight, CTV offers a real film classic — The Caine Mutiny.Humphrey Bogart stars as American sea captain whose mental imbalance causes his crew to rebel, resulting in a military trial.Bogart shines in this memorable picture based on the Herman Wauk novel.In an attempt to avoid any ‘tasteless remarks’ for which I am frequently being lambasted, I will mention without comment that on Monday at 8:30 p.m.CTV will be presenting the 1985 Miss Teen Canada Pageant in which 40 of Canada’s most attractive young ladies aspire to a title awarded for beauty, charm and talent.Peter Pringle and model Tonya Williams host.At 11:30 on Channel 6, Spencer Tracey stars in 20,000 Years in Sing Sing.A small-time hood, sentenced to the upstate New York prison is released on the honor system only to find himself accused of murder.Bette Davis co-stars.On Tuesday at 7, CBC ’s Cityscapes features American born actor Louis Del Grande trying to peddle the wonders of his adopted home — Toronto the good.At 8, on Vermont ETV’s Nova, the wonders of mathematics are looked into in A Mathematical Mystery Tour.Pure mathematics is a field that provides the adventurer with some pretty exciting problems and this lighthearted but informative show endeavors to demonstrate such concepts as a number bigger than infinity, a bottle with no insides and parallel linés that meet.Some of the people who figure these things out go on to work in the finance department of the federal government.At 9, still on Vermont ETV, Pulitzer prize winning journalist Seymore Hersh presents his terrifying reoprt on Buying the Bomb, previously unreleased details of an investigation that follows the attempts of a third world nation (Pakistan, I betcha) to purchase in and smuggle out of the U.S.the necessary hardware for the construction of a nuclear detonation device.On Wednesday at 10, Vermont ETV presents Rockin’ and Rollin’ With Phil Spector — a portrait of one of rock music’s most prominant and enduring songwriters and record producers.Spector is a true giant of the industry, was considered a ‘boy wonder’ in the industry’s heyday and was a millionaire before he was 21.Finally, for all of you people out there who just can’t get enough pain and punishment in the real world, Vermont ETV is providing some more on Thursday at 11 with a screening of HeUcats of the Navy a film that has the dubious distinction of being the only movie in which Ronald Reagan and his wife Nancy (Davis) ever appeared together.The monkey must have already retired by then.Townships Magazine is now not only the name of a radio show but also a new television program.Hosted by Walter Trudeau, the show can be seen on Cable 11 Tuesday at 9:00 p.m., Thursday at 7:00 p.m.and Friday at 8:00.Designed to keep the English-speaking population in the area informed, the show will feature a variety of guests.Next week’s program will feature Bishop’s football coach Bruce Coulter, and the university’s women’s basketball coach, Andrea Blackwell.Radio As the CBC continues its almost religious celebration of the tercentenary of the great composers Johan Sebastien Bach and Frederic Handel, tonight’s A Celebration of Genius — Bach offers one of the best insight?into Bach tAeiwari-j-'whoséindlistribfiSfteSs âfid jriefy Wduld hâve TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985-9 given him little chance at superstardom in today’s glitzy market.Beginning at 7 on CBC Stereo, the three hour segment features an in depth look at Bach the Man and Bach the Music over the next seven nights at this time.If you’re interested in joining the universal celebration of this man 300th birthday, you can do no better than to park yerself next to the old wireless for a fascinating and beautiful tribute to one of music’s true geniuses.At 11:30, Vanishing Point offers another in its mindtwisting mystery tales, this week featuring Zeppi’s Machine by Trinidadian author Samuel Selvon.Zeppi is the medecine man in a small sugarcane village whose livelihood is threatenbed when a mobile X-ray machine visits his turf.Not easily intimidated, Zeppi responds by getting his hands on an even more impressive machine, an electronic computer, which kicks off a whole series of colorful troubles.On Saturday morning at 11:30, CBC Stereo’s Simply Folk offers some of the best of the folk-rock genre with a concert by Chris Hillman and Bernie Leadon.Hillman was an original member of The Byrds, a group that was instrumental (no pun) in fusing the worlds of folk and rock music in the sixties and which paved the way for later, more progressive outfits like The Eagles, of whom Leadon was a member before embarking on a solo career.At 1, still on CBC Stereo, Metropolitan Opera offers Puccini’s Manon Lescaut, the story of a beautiful woman torn between her passion for an impoverished young aristocrat and her desire for the wealth and luxury promised by a wealthy old coot.ON CBC Radio at 7:05, The Ocean Limited offers the music of Tailor’s Twist, a four-man Celtic combo whose music reflects the culture and traditions of their Nova Scotia and Pricce Edward Island roots.At 10:10 on CBC Radio, Anthology offers a reading of Piccadilly Circus, a story by actress-writer Pauline Carey who has made a name for herself touring the country with her highly acclaimed one-woman shows.On Sunday at 3:05, CBC Stereo’s Command Performance features a concert from Vancouver of The Vienna Boys Choir featuring music by Haydn.Verdi, Schubert, Brahms and Johann Strauss among others.At 9, on CBC Radio’s Ideas, host Lester Sinclair presents the second of a four-part series on Catholics.Tonights episode is entitled The Sign of the Crozier, and looks at the style and quality of leadership offered by Pope John Paul II as the Church faces crises in the areas of birth control, revolutionary politics and unstable Poland.Comparisons with political initiatives undertaken by Paul VI are also presented.On Morningside this week beginning at 9, award winners from the CBC Literary Competition are presented throughout the week.On Monday’s Ideas, Part 2 of The Cold War in Canada looks at The Cold War in Ottawa following the revelations of bag-headed cipher clerk Igor Gouzenko whose defection in 1945 led to the exposure of a whole bunch of insidious activities by the godless red hordes resulting in a thorough purge of their sympathizers from the hitherto pure and noble forces of Her Majesty’s Loyal Civil Service.At 10:17, still on CBC Radio, Booktime begins a 15 part reading of Hugh MacLennan’s Each Man’s Son, a tale set in the author’s home town of Glace Bay, Nova Scotia.On Tuesday, Ideas presents the second in a series of programs on Feminism and Family: The Debate Among Women.In tonight’s show, the delightful Phyllis Schaf-fley is profiled.Schaffley is the lady who led the heroic efforts to preserve the purity of American womanhod by defeating the commie-inspired Equal Rights Am-mendment which would have undermined the fabric of American society by destroying the proper role of women in society, i.e.as happy homemakers, support systems and obedient subservient partners.Whew, thank God for the noble few.On Wednesday, Ideas looks at the The Hearts of Men: The Male Revolt.Typified by the emergence of the Playboy philosophy in the early 50s, this show examines the different factors which contributed to the withdrawal of modem western men from their traditional roles as family heads and breadwinners such as the rise of feminism and the decrease of traditional pressures to settle down.See, it ain’t my fault I’m irresponsible.Townships Magazine features an interview with Sherbrooke MP Jean Charest this week.So tune your dial to GFLX CEM- 95.5.or Cable 98.1) at l.p.m.Sunday after- < noon.' ' " . 10—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985 Canadian pianist Gowan releases a polished album Just over two years ago a young Canadian pianist billing himself only as Gowan released his first collection of rock, an album that was bigger on potential than on creativity.Unfortunately for Larry Gowan, consumers expect more than potential for their buck.It’s to the credit of CBS Canada that the artist’s obvious promise took precedence over early market returns.The label has high hopes for Gowan’s second effort, Strange Animal, and that faith should pay off royally.It’s a polished release: tuneful, sensibly written, nicely delivered and in marked contrast to the contrived, leather-jacket rock tone of Gowan’s debut.This time around he tempers his delivery, letting the occasional bits of aggression come more through the backup than the vocals.Occasionally recalling the work of Chris de Burgh, his new compositions are melodically keen, highlighted by the pop opener Cosmetics, the dreamy City of the Angels, the ballad Burning Torches of Hope and the dramatic Guerrilla Soldier, a potential classic.The closing number, A Criminal Mind, is a powerful offering building in intensity from a low-key beginning.Gowan draws able support from the tight production of David Tickle and a worthy group of backup musicians, three of whom are Peter Gabriel regulars.His own keyboard work borders on the rhapsodic at times, reflecting his background in classical piano.He holds a degree from the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto.CLOSER TO FORM Eric Carmen has never quite been able to match the success of his solo debut in 1976, an album Entertainment shorts NEW YORK ( AP) — Liberace, a master of glitzy showmanship, is bringing a $l-million car on stage with him when he opens at Radio City Music Hall on April 4.It’s a.1956 Rolls-Royce convertible designed by the late Mike Todd as a gift for his wife, Elizabeth Taylor.The actress never received the auto because Todd died.It now is owned by Michael Schudroff, who runs Carriage House where Rolls-Royces are sold.In exchange for using the 1956 car, Liberace is lending Schudroff his French Baroque Rolls-Royce and it will be on display at Carriage House for the duration of the show through April 21.NEW YORK (AP) — Film legend Olivia de Havilland shared a dressing room at Radio City Music Hall at the recent taping of Night of 100 Stars II with TV superstar Joan Collins and three other actresses.“I arrived first and then she came in, but she didn’t know who I was,” said de Havilland.“So I told her I was the den mother.” Both women thought the room would work better with a few alterations so they moved around the furniture.“Joan Collins is really good at rearranging furniture.She can come to my house and rearrange my furniture anytime,” de Hail-land laughed.NEW YORK (AP) — Diners at Les Tuileries on Central Park South got more than dessert one recent night: they were given a surprise concert by actor Dudley Moore.Moore did a Gershwin medley and a spoof on classical music for delighted patrons, who included actors Jim Nabors, Andrew Stevens and Lloyd Bridges and singer Vic Damone.NEW YORK (AP) — Disco diva Grace Jones, who just finished shooting the latest James Bond movie with Roger Moore, A View to Kill, says she will appear in the buff in the July issue of Playboy.Helmut Newton is scheduled to photograph the exotic Miss Jones, who posed nude four years ago for Italian Playboy and Stern, the German magazine.She keeps her clothes on, though, in the new Bond film in which she plays a villainess.LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hollywood’s love-hate relationship with Time magazine recently took a mellow turn with the opening of an exhibit of its movie covers at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.Time first started “covering” the film world on July 6,1925, with Charlie Chaplin.Over the years film figures have often smarted over devastating reviews of their on-screen efforts and off-screen pecadillos.Still, a Time cover can be the ultimate accolade, and several of those so honored appeared at the reception for the exhibit, including Peter Fonda (1970), Shirley MacLaine (1959, 1984), Alexis Smith (1971), Craig Stevens (1959), Greer Garson (1943) and Gregory Peck (1948).that yielded the sizable hits All by Myself and Never Gonna Fall in Love Again.And although his new one is no exception, Eric Carmen (Geffen Records) is at least closer to form than its three humdrum predecessors.It’s his first full-length work in five years, containing smatterings of his best moments as soloist and, before that, as hit-maker with the defunct Cleveland pop group The Raspberries.Generally, Carmen’s delivery is smooth and confident, and best represented on the cuts American as Apple Pie and Maybe My Baby.Too often, though, he threatens to overdose on sentimentality with such numbers as Come Back to My Love, Living Without Your Love and I’m Through With Love, a sort of Never Gonna Fall in Love Again: Part 2.FOGERTY RETURNS A familiar voice from the distant past, John Fogerty is in fine form throughout much of his new solo release, Centerfleld (Warner Brothers).Ultimately it’s his own stark arrangements and production, and occasionally some wea-ker-than-usual writing, that holds this back from being an unqualified successful return to recording.Fogerty, who put the distinctive tone in the late ’60s and early ’70s to such Creedence Clearwater Revival hits as Proud Mary, Down on the Corner, Bad Moon Rising and Have You Ever Seen the Rain, sounds as fresh as ever on the back-to-back opening cuts The Old Man Down the Road and Rock and Roll Girls.It soon becomes apparent, however, that Fogerty could have benefited from outside help behind the studio board.Although the production and charts are passable and the uncredited musicianship adequate, this recording has nowhere near the style of anything in the Creedence catalogue.From a writing standpoint, Fogerty is at his best on the cuts I Saw It on TV and Big Train From Memphis, and Rock and Roll Girls has a certain infectious charm despite its simplicity.But as he strikes out on the title tune, a bit of rah-rah nonsense about a would-be baseball hero.It’s totally out of step with the Fogerty norm.Videos should be restricted — poll TORONTO (CP) — English-speaking Canadians believe that home video cassettes should be under the same restrictions as movies in public theatres, a CBC-TV poll on pornography suggests.The survey, believed to be the most comprehensive of its kind conducted in Canada, found that nine of 10 people polled believed scenes of rape, torture, bondage and other forms of degradation were unacceptable.They neither wished to see them nor believed they should be shown on television.But 72 per cent said they would watch scenes of “simulated” sex, in which no genitalia were shown, and 67 per cent said they would allow such scenes to be shown on television.Such sex had to be portrayed as consenting and there could be no violent or degrading scenes, they said.Almost half of those polled said they would view sex scenes that were not violent but explicit — sex organs would be seen — but only one-quarter found such material acceptable for television.Meanwhile, only one in four said they could not tell the difference between erotica and pornographic films.The ability to tell the difference was higher among those who watched sexually explicit films at least once a month.The survey was conducted early this year by CBC ’s research branch and two York University professors, James Check and Nelson Heapy, following a Man Alive program last December.Pornography: The Double Message, produced by Katherine Smalley, attracted an audience of 1.3 million.The poll’s findings will be discussed tonight in a repeat broadcast of the program.The survey was conducted as part of a large English-language TV audience research project, and French-speaking regions of the country were not polled, CBC said.More than 1,000 were questioned.Surveys this size are considered accurate within four percentage points, 19 times of 20, CBC said.The support for uniform standards of restriction is perhaps the poll’s most startling finding.People were asked what type of restrictions should apply to home video cassettes and theatre films containing sexually violent and degrading scenes, explicit and consenting sex and simulated and consenting sex.RESULTS SIMILAR The results from the polls on home and theatre use were remarkably similar, “regardless of the degree of sexual explicitness or violence in a film,” CBC said.For films containing sexually violent or degrading scenes, 60 per cent favored a total ban, 32 per cent favored age restrictions and nine per cent favored a total ban.For theatre use, 63 per cent wanted a total ban, 33 per cent wanted age restrictions and six per cent wanted no restrictions.For films portraying explicit and non-violent sex, 25 per cent wanted a total ban, 64 per cent wanted age restrictions and 11 per cent favored no restrictions for home cassette use.For theatre use, 28 per cent wanted a total ban, 65 per cent favored age restrictions and eight per cent wanted no restrictions.When films have simulated and non-violent sex scenes, 13 per cent favored a total ban, 65 per cent want age restrictions and 22 per cent favor no restrictions for home use.For theatre use, 14 per cent favor a total ban, 70 per cent want age restrictions and 17 per cent want no restrictions.Check says his work as a psychology professor in conducting studies on pornography and the new CBC research “suggests quite clearly that, at least in this country, Canadians are concerned about the message of pornography, not the fact that it displays sex.” The poll found men and people under 50 to be more willing to watch explicit sex scenes and tolerant of others watching such scenes than were women and those older than 50.Results from different regions of the country didn’t vary in the study.Montreal to host festival of new dance in September MONTREAL (CP) — New York’s Merce Cunningham Dance Company, Germany’s Wuppertal Tantztheatr and Tokyo-based Muteki Sha Dance Company will be among some 20 performers featured at an international festival of new dance to be held here Sept.19-29.Organizers say Montreal was chosen for the event, which they hope will become annual, because the city is “the hot bed of new dance in Canada” and where “the most interesting things are happening.” Canadian participants will include Vancouver’s Karen Jamieson Dance Company, Toronto-based Desrosiers Dance Theatre and Montreal choreographers Edouard Lock and Jean-Pierre Perrault.Festival official Anne Valois said a number of related events are being organized, such as a critics roundtable, video screenings and classes co-sponsored with local university dance departments.Performances will take place in four venues ranging from the ritzy Place des arts to the more intimate Tangente dance space.Series tickets are expected to go on sale in May. Travel TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985-11 —______tel KBcara St.Andrew’s offers visitors a lot more than golf ST.ANDREWS, Scotland (CP) — While St.Andrews is best known for golf, visitors to the picturesque town on the east coast of Scotland soon discover it has some of the country’s best shopping, restaurants and ancient ruins.Consequently the town, perched on the edge of the chilly North Sea and surrounded by gentle hills, attracts floods of visitors.In the area are four golf courses — the Old, New, Jubilee and Eden — all open to the public.But the favorite with players and fans of the game from around the world is the Old Course, which sprawls along the northern edge of the town, 80 kilometres northeast of Edinburgh.Overlooking the 18 holes of the Old Course is the clubhouse of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club, founded in 1754 and long considered the oracle on the rules of the game.On the southeastern edge of the Old Course, almost across from the 18th hole, is the Woollen Mill, which may have Britain’s best selection of woollen clothing and goods at reasonable prices.SELLS TARTANS Not really a mill but rather an old wooden warehouse, the Woollen Mill has something for everyone — woollen ties, scarves, | blankets, racks of tweed jackets, 'reels of fine tartan fabrics and bins of cashmere sweaters.For the sightseer, St.Andrews has many attractions.There’s a fine beach and at a point where the coast turns south stand the ruins of a 13th-century cathedral and castle, open to the public at certain times of the day.A path between the two ruins leads through craggy rocks to the North Sea.The area between the golf course and the ruins is lined with the ancient stone buildings housing the faculties of the University of St.Andrews.Founded in 1412, it is Scotland’s oldest university but it still is very much alive with trendily dressed students.For an overnight stay, St.Andrews has a range of accommodation, from the grandeur of the Royal and Ancient clubhouse to inexpensive bed-and-breakfast spots.But remember, the town is popular, so book ahead.One good bed-and-breakfast establishment is Number Ten at 10 Hope St, a three-minute walk from downtown.It’s a grand old walk-up with several flights of stairs and no elevator.A clean, pleasant room without bathroom but with full breakfast is about $15 a night per person.A prime dining spot is Pepita’s Restaurant at 11 Grail’s Lane, a perb.ding soup, main course.urt narrow, cobblestoned alley The menu can include anything and wine — is about $2 ¦ between two of St.Andrews’ from lasagna to Mexican chicken But, again, make a e va-main downtown streets.It’s or roast venison, all reasonably tion.Many know about Pepita’s unassuming but the food is su- priced.Dinner for two — indu- and by meal time it is packed.¦wesr I After a day on the course a St.Andrews tourist can enjoy fine food.¦ Tourists disturb monks and nuns in Sinai Desert ST.CATHERINE’S MONAS-TE RY, Egypt (AP) — At the peak of one of the highest mountains in the biblical land of the Sinai, overlooking this 1,450-year-old monastery, a Greek Orthodox monk has lived in solitude for 20 years in a cave.The only evidence he is there, praying and meditating in the quiet beauty of the desert peninsula, is a white cross on the moun-taintop.His 17 Christian brothers at St.Catherine’s Monastery see him only when he descends the steep granite slope every few months for supplies.He is the only one of them not disturbed by the tourists coming here by the thousands since the Israelis built an airstrip nearby and the Egyptians laid down a road to the monastery’s door.When the monk first went up to live in his cave, the nearest paved road ran along the Red Sea coast about 100 kilometres away.The Israelis built the airstrip after they seized the Sinai in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.The Egyptians paved the road after the Israelis withdrew.So now St.Catherine’s is a tourist site.COME FROM ABROAD Tens of thousands from around the world annually roam through the monastery's sixth-century chapel and its surrounding compound.The tourists are attracted by a handful of historic monasteries and nunneries scattered around the Sinai’s craggy mountains and deep valleys, close to Mount Sinai where the Bible says God handed Moses the Ten Commandments.From the third century, Christian monks and nuns fleeing religious persecution came to the Sinai.St.Catherine’s Monastery was built in 532 by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian.To keep out marauding nomads, the only means of entry was in a basket lowered down its wall.It kept marauders out but it has not held back the 20th-century intruders, who opt for a more conventional entrance — a door beside the paved parking lot.During religious seasons, as many as 1,000 tourists throng to St.Catherine’s in a day.Generally, the number is in the low hundreds.INCOME NEEDED The monks put up with the interruption for a very worldly reason — money.Other than tourism, the monastery’s only income sources are an annual stipend from the Culture Ministry of Greece, contributions from pilgrims and revenue from its 150-bed hostel.Nevertheless, the brothers don’t like it.“If I wanted this, I would go to the Hilton and be a receptionist,” said one monk.Like others interviewed, he would talk to a reporter only on condition that his name not be used.Tourists are allowed to walk through the narrow winding paths of the monastery and compound.Inside the chapel, built in 1934 with stones of the original church, a marble sarcopho-gus holds the remains of St.Catherine.The monastery library — which the monks say is second in importance only to that of the Vatican — includes 3,000 items in Greek, Arabic, Syriac, Georgian, Armenian, Coptic, Ethiopian and Slavonic.Like the icons and mosaics, the library manuscripts have been collected from all over the world.“We are 17, but we need 17 for the library duties alone,” said another monk.“Nobody wants to come here.It’s hard to live in the desert.” SAINT BEHEADED St.Catherine lived in the early fourth century in the ancient Egyptian port of Alexandria, then under control of the Romans.The monastery’s guidebook says Emperor Maximinius ordered her executed because she had converted to Christianity.The method of execution was to be by wheel with sharp-edged iron spikes.But the guidebook, published by the Egyptian Information Service, adds that “she was snatched by an invisible hand before the wheel killed her and her torturers were killed in her place.” The book says she finally was beheaded.Legend has it that her body vanished after the execution, but three centuries later monks of the monastery, guided by a dream, found her remains on the highest mountain in the Sinai, now named after her.The monastery was dedicated in her name in the 11th century.Ca/i/wfau/i ^^ffyages 3050, Porllind.Cirrdour de i'Estrie Sherbrooke.503-7131 )07.rue Child Coallcook.849-6329 du Québec OUR DEPARTURES FROM SHERBROOKE EASTER IN NEW YORK 2 or 3 nights from $185.00 Con.including city tour — visits to Rockfeller Center and Statue of Liberty GOLF IN THE BAHAMAS 2 weeks, March 24 Atlantik Beach Hotel in Freeport -Europe in may- Grand Tour via KLM and First Class Hotels in Holland — Belgium — France — Italy — Austria and Germany.Departing: May 11.CHINA m Hie Trwn-Slhtri— Express Departing May 22 with Ghislaine Echave Price includes: return flights to Moscow/Hong Kong — Tokyo/Montreal, first class accommodations in hotels and train, three meals a day (except Hong Kong and Tokyo), visas, taxes and services.Brochures available at the agency. 12—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985 Travel 11___ iffgaim B.C.markets itself overseas in European countries VANCOUVER (CP) — From a congested boulevard in West Berlin, a young man walks into a travel agency and picks up a brochure written in his native German.On the cover are a man and a woman standing barefoot beside a fire on a deserted beach.It is dusk and a gentle surf rolls in behind them.Wine glasses are raised in a toast.Inside the brochure are more beaches, glass-calm lakes, sunlit ski slopes, anglers with hefty fish on the hook, kayakers, mountain climbers, horseback riders, golfers and ice boat sailors.“Kein anderer Art auf Erden kommt ihm gleich” (“There’s no place like it in the world”), declares the Tourism B.C.brochure called Unserland (Our Place), Super, Natural Britisch Kolumbien, Kanada.The snappy 20-page booklet, also printed in English and Japanese, makes its way into travel agencies, information bureaus and hotels around the world.The brochure is just one small portion of the B.C.imagery that’s being exported.And with Expo 86 — the world transportation and communication fair—just a year away, the province’s image is being publicized more than ever.BEING PROMOTED Some of the promotion is done by government agencies like Tourism B.C., Expo 86 and the provincial government’s Ministry of Industry and Small Business.Other advertisements are handled by travel writers, coffee-table books and the Beautiful B.C.magazine.David Henderson, marketing manager for the Ministry of Tourism, says some characteristics of British Columbia are not marketed uniformly.The Germans, he says, “want to hunt bear and stuff like that,” whereas the Japanese are primarily interested in skiing.Henderson says the province is viewed abroad as “safe, unsophisticated wide-open spaces.” In Europe at least, the concept of British Columbia as a frontier is promoted vigorously.A few years ago, Henderson says, the federal government tried to sell Canada and British Columbia partly on the basis of its urban attractiveness.The concept bombed.AVOID CITY “Europeans don’t want to come here for the city,” Henderson says.“They come to get away from the crowds.” Besides its Our Place brochure, Tourism B.C.produces ra- dio and TV commercials which, Henderson says, stress a lot of outdoor family activity “but not too much big city." Expo 86, busy promoting a high-tech image for itself, is also publicizing the province as a wilderness hideaway.A pamphlet for Expo includes a photo of smooth waters bathed in a golden, dusky light, where two fisherman sit in striking isolation.The text says: “In this evergreen wonderland earth, sea and sky are married in myriad sun-kissed fiords and islands, an endless tapestry of magnificent mountain peaks and valleys.” Cresta Run celebrates centenary of mad ice dash ST.MORITZ, Switzerland (Reuter) — Whatever their nationalities, they are all eccentric “Englishmen” when they ride the Cresta Run.For 100 years the members of the thoroughly British St.Moritz Tobogganing Club have been risking life and limb for the dubious pleasure of sliding down 3,968 feet (1,209.5 metres) of ice with only the vaguest semblance of control.They give themselves prizes for success and failure.They admit they are crazy and want no cure.And they politely resist all efforts to turn their lunacy into a real world sport.For two weeks in February they met in St.Moritz to celebrate the centenary of the Cresta Run.In the early days, the riders were the fastest men on earth.From the top, past the junction, through the bends and over the Cresta Leap to the finish, they reach speeds of up to 135 kilometres an hour.MEN HAVE DIED Their sleds, virtually unchan- CKTS/9Q • AM K LAST WEEKS NO.TITLE ARTIST WEEK ON 1.I Want To Know What Love Is Foreigner 1 8 2.Careless Whisper Wham! 5 7 3.Loverboy Billy Ocean 2 12 4.Neutron Dance Pointer Sisters 3 12 S.Easy Lover Bailey-CoUins 10 8 6.You’re The Inspiration Chicago 6 10 7.Lovelight in Flight Stevie Wonder 9 8 8.Method of Modern Love HaU & Oates 11 10 9.Solid Ashford & Simpson 4 12 10.I Would Die 4 U Prince 14 7 11.One Night In Bangkok Murray Head 7 10 12.Tenderness General Public 15 7 13.Storm Before The Calm Luba 16 7 14.Smalltown Boy Bronski Beat 8 13 IS.Money Changes Everything Cyndi Lauper 19 5 16.Boys of Summer Don Henley 12 12 17.Private Dancer > Tina Turner 20 8 18.California Girls D.L.Roth 21 6 19.The Old Man Down The Road J.C.Fogerty 22 6 20.Misled Kool & The Gang 24 5 21.AU I Need Jack Wagner 13 15 22.Mistake #3 Culture Club 18 7 23.The Heat Is On Glenn Frey 28 6 24.Like a Virgin Madonna 23 5 2S.The BeUe of St.Mark Sheila E.29 5 26.Hang On To Your Love Sade 30 4 27.Jamie Ray Parker Jr.31 4 28.Somebody Bryan Adams 17 11 29.Can’t Fight This Feeling R.E.O.Speedwagon 32 4 30.Rockin' at Midnight Honeydrippers 34 3 31.Sugar WaUs Sheena Easton 36 3 32.Save A Prayer Duran-Duran 38 2 33.Just Another Night Mick Jagger 28 5 34.Lamp at Midnight Corey Hart 37 3 35.Mr.Telephone Man New Edition 39 2 36.Madam Butterfly Malcolm MacLaren 40 2 37.Shout Tears for Fears PL 1 38.Material Girl Madonna PL 1 39.Too Late for Goodbyes JuUan Lennon PL 1 40.One More Night Phil Collins PL 1 ged in design since 1907, are simple sheets of steel with two runners and a sliding, padded seat.No mechanical steering or brakes are allowed.Seven men have died and countless others have been injured attempting the Cresta Run.Most who try it once leave aching and never return.Others, like English farmer Tony Emerson, get hooked.“It’s a drug,” he says.Emerson won the Bott’s Handicap Cup this year, his first victory in a major competition after 12 years of riding the Cresta.Julian Board, honorary treasurer of the club and a mild-mannered London accountant off the slope, says the membership rolls — some 950 names long, only half of them British — remain a closely guarded secret.“But it contains lots of princes, archdukes and knights.” WON THE RACE One commoner, Jack Glattfel-der, a St.Moritz merchant of tea and caviar and one of the club’s many Swiss members, was an active rider for 12 seasons before retiring from the slope eight years ago.He entered this year’s Centenary Race, and won.Sandy Gall, a television newscaster in Britain and a veteran member of the club, joined the Seniors’ Cup competition and didn’t win.But as his toboggan turned nearly sideways in the treacherous Shuttlecock bend, he proved himself among the top contenders for this year’s Drunken Crab award.The Cresta Run was opened in 1885, a development on the tobogganing that a group of English invalids undertook as part of their medical treatment in Swiss clinics.Twice the Cresta became an Olympic sport — in 1928 and 1948, when the Winter Games were held at St.Moritz.The medallists were, quite naturally, club members.Bids by other countries to build something similar have not been encouraged.A Canadian group once approached the St.Moritz Tobogganing Club for assistance and was politely ignored.“We don’t want to lose our exclusivity,” says Board.Emerson tells the story a different way: “Anyone rich enough to want to build a run would rather come to St.Moritz.” MELTS EACH YEAR Christian Brantschen, a 35-year-old house builder, took over the task of building the run each year from his father.At a cost of about $100,000, he moulds snow and water into the Cresta Run.Unlike bobsled runs, there’s no permanent support for the Cresta and it melts each spring.“He’s the only one who knows how to do it,” says Board.“I don’t know what we’d do if he got hurt.” Glattfelder wonders: “Has he got a son?” German millionaire Gunter Sachs is a 32-year veteran of the Cresta.Now 53, he started riding the Cresta when at school in nearby Zuoz.A former race car driver, Sachs says: “It’s not really as dangerous as motor-racing, but it takes more courage.It has something of the pioneer spirit.” Sachs, who finished seventh in o v-'up, opuiiaui a «a v^iidl- lenge Race of his own each year.The prize: a set of buttons for a blazer.“There’s nothing you can do with a cup.But buttons you can wear all year and be proud.” HORSE NAMED OPPO The losers, too, can be proud.Anyone who spins out at the long, sweeping Shuttlecock bend automatically becomes a member of the even more exclusive Shuttlecock Club, which holds a separate dinner each year.“They even had an honorary member once, a horse called Op-po,” says Board.“Someone saw him walking up alongside the course, where he slipped and fell by the Shuttlecock.Thez even brought him once to the Shuttlecock Club dinner.” Horses may be admitted, but not women.Since a ban imposed Jan.6, 1929, no woman has been allowed on the run.But at the clubhouse, a Swiss woman known to all as Delores has been “manning” the door for 21 years, keeping out strangers.Toward the end of the centenary fortnight, she had had her fill and was offering the job to every passer-by.Had she ever been tempted to sneak a ride on the Cresta?“No,” she replies.“I’m not that crazy.” I ACAPULCO Starting n^l SB?¦ on* ACAPULCO FEB.25 - MAR.«-11-H-25 COZUMEL (Mexico) s»* n* $ FEB.23 - mBCH 2-9-16-23-30^ 398?-*549 FREEPORT FEB.Z1-M - MAR.7-14-21-2» 368r.’459 JAMAICA ’258%‘399 FEB.23 - MAR.2-9-16-23-30 PUERTO VALLARTA FEB.24 - MAR.3-10-17-24 ^*348^*469 from only ’398r.’489 All seat* confirmed on complete payment STAN-BUY is our trade mark •xtra ondlpncM 123 Wellington South Sherbrooke (Quo.) W««Wy STÂNBUY#cr™^ RESERVATION ?665595 TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985—13 Travel a_____«sa ABBCOI11 Cruise ship cuisine provides an endless variety Cruise ships allow guests to sample different kinds of food on the deck or in spacious dining rooms.‘iœr- -'^riÉL Cruise ships allow guests to sample different kinds of food on the deck or in spacious dining rooms.NEW YORK - One of the highlights of a cruise vacation is the ever so seductive menu — caviar from Persia or a chilled papaya soup, roast pheasant with chestnut dressing or sauteed halibut steak amandine and iced fruit parfait.Today’s cruise passengers will find themselves faced with the delicious prospect of up to nine meals per day featuring a wide variety of excellent cuisine.The fact that the cost of all these meals is included in the cruise price encourages passengers to engage in their wildest culinary fantasies and to sample dishes they never before had dreamed of trying.While quality and quantity have always been the mainstay of shipboard dining, diversity allows cruisers to have culinary experiences rarely found on land.Cuisine on ships today is as varied as the 75 vessels of the 25-member Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA) which sail to all corners of the globe.Cuisine reflects various ports of call, that form the backdrop for special “theme” meals, as well as the nationalities represented by officers and crew.Today’s trend towards offering diverse cuisine incorporates myriad ethnic varieties as well as modifications in standard “continental” dining.And there are some trends to watch in shipboard dining: Light and Lively Whether it’s called “nouvelle” or “California” or “low-calorie” food, many cruise lines are now catering to passengers’ needs for lighter, more slimming fare.Holland America, for example, is launching “California Cuisine” aboard the Noordam and will be extending it to the other vessels in its fleet.Reflecting the abundance of fresh meats, fish, fruits and vegetables available in California, main courses will include seafood thermidor in a velvet lobster-brandy sauce; fresh red snapper menunier, and chicken breast Bombay, in a tangy curry sauce.Ocean Cruise Lines offers a special “Lean Line” menu for weight-watchers in its lunch and dinner menus.All menus onboard Cunard’s Queen Elizabeth 2, Sagafjord and Vistafjord feature low-calorie options recom- mended by the “Golden Door Spa at Sea” for weight conscious passengers.Selections include roast duckling, crayfish salad and pas-sionfruit sherbert.Cruise passengers sailing on Royal Cruise Line vessels will find the increased interest in fitness reflected in lighter appetizers and entrees such as cranberry ring pate with melon and filet of sole amandine.The line also caters to the trend of reduced sodium intake.Norwegian Caribbean Lines also reports a lighter, fresher ap- proach to cuisine, with leaner meats and meals being prepared with attention to fewer calories.Soups are lighter and sauces frequently include healthful ingredients such as cottage cheese and skim milk.Regional Fare While some passengers are sufficiently disciplined to restrict calories even on a cruise, most seek out the rich, elaborately-prepared food that is unlike anything they are likely to find at home.To ensure a diverse dining experience, cruise line chefs plan menus that are different every day and that permit passengers to sample cuisine from a variety of regions.Itineraries and ports of all often have influence on menus.As more and more cruise ships call at American ports, for example, regional cooking has emerged.American Hawaii Cruises features exotic specialties such as cream of fresh coconut soup, baked bananas and luau of island pork baked in taro leaves.Delta Queen Steamboat Company’s passengers will find southern food highlighted, such as shrimp rémoulade, roast brace of quail a 1’orange and shrimp creolo New Orleans style.American Cruise Lines offers regional specialties such as Maine lobster, Chesapeake Bay crab cakes and shrimp creole.In addition to its regular menu, Bahama cruise Line's Bermuda Star recreates a New York steak house atmosphere each night with the special “Delmonico’s at Sea” selection of grilled entrees such as sirloin or ribs of beef.Ships cruising in the Mediterranean will offer specialties from local ports.Sun Line, for example, hosts a “Greek Ta verna Dinner” during sailings, with avgolemono soup, souvlakia (brochette of meat), baklava and selections of Greek wines.Hellenic Mediterranean Lines’ menu includes many traditional Greek dishes such as mousaka, arni psi-to as well as red snapper and other local fish.Epirotiki’s cuisine reflects a variety of countries: Egyptian-style kebabs, roast loin of pork flamade and chicken galatine, among other dishes.While cruise ships all highlight continental fare in order to suit all passengers’ preferences, those of foreign registry will particularly feature their own cuisine.Paquet's French influence is evident in all menus with dishes such as filet mignon de Charolais, filet of turbot, sweetbreads and complimentary French wine with dinner.The Home Line fleet is known for its superb Italian cuisine and eight-course dinners when passengers will sample delicacies such as golden supreme of capon a la Val-dostana, plume de veau scalop-pine sauteed, semolina linguine in basil cream and Genoese fresh fish chowder.Costa Cruises’ menu also has numerous Italian specialties such as prosciutto and melon, spaghetti Sorrentina, chicken cacciatora and Neapolitan cake.Today’s trend towards offering diverse cuisine incorporates myriad ethnic varieties as well as modifications in standard “continental” dining.jnTT 14—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985 ” '' - N This week's TV Listings for this week's television programs as supplied by Compulog Corp.While we make every effort to ensure their accuracy, they are subject tp change without notice.I STATIONS LISTED O CBKT - Montreal (Radio Canada) ** WCAX - Burlington, Vt.(CBS) O WPTZ - Plattsburgh.N.Y.(NBC) O CBMT- Montreal (CBC) Q CH1.T - Sherbrooke (TVA) O WMTW - Poland Spring, Me.(ABC) O CKSH - Sherbrooke ( Radio Canada) © CFTM - Montreal (TVA) fD CFCK • Montreal (CTV) Œ WVNY - Burlington (ABC) SI Radio-Québec © Vermont ETV-Burlington Saturday MORNING 4:55 0 HART TO HART 6:00 O NEW YOU 0 HILARIOUS HOUSE OF FRIGHTENSTEIN 6:30 0 TOM AND JERRY AND FRIENDS 6:45 ?MIRE ET MUSIQUE 7:00 0 BATMAN 0 TOM AND JERRY AND FRIENDS O SAMEDI MAGAZINE O TRANSFORMERS O LEGENDE INDIENNE 0 SIZE SMALL © VOYAGERS 7:300 0 LES CONTES DE LA FORET VERTE 0 CARTOONS 0 Q JACKSON FIVE © 100 HUNTLEY STREET 8:00 0 Q BELLE ET SEBASTIEN 0 SHIRT TALES 0 SNORKS O SUPERFRIENDS: LEGENDARY SUPER POWERS SHOW © TRANSFORMERS © SESAME STREET (R) Q 8:30 0 Q PASSE-PARTOUT O GET ALONG GANG 0 PINK PANTHER AND SONS O © SUPERFRIENDS: LEGENDARY SUPER POWERS SHOW 0 STORYTIME 9:00 0 O ASTRO, LE PETIT ROBOT 0 MUPPET BABIES 0 SMURFS Movie Ratings Outstanding **?* Excellent Very Good ?** Good **» Not Bad Fair Poor * O LE PETIT PRINCE ORPHELIN O © MIGHTY ORBOTS 0 LET’S GO Œ FROM SOCRATES TO SARTRE 9:10 O GOOD MORNING 9:30 0 Q LUCKY LUKE Q DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS O WILD KINGDOM O ALI BABA ET LA LAMPE MAGIQUE O © TURBO TEEN 0 YOU CAN’T DO THAT ON TELEVISION © FROM SOCRATES TO SARTRE 10:00 0 Q LES MYSTERIEUSES CITES D’OR Q BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER Q DAVEY AND GOLIATH O© DRAGON'S LAIR 0 LE PETIT PRINCE ORPHELIN 0 ZIG ZAG © GENERAL BIOLOGY 10:30 O Q LUE DES RESCAPES O ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS Q COUNTRY CANADA O © SCOOBY-DOO MYSTERIES g © LES CHEVAUX DU SOLEIL 0 CARTOONS © BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT 11:00 0 O LES HEROS DU SAMEDI 0 KIDD VIDEO O SESAME STREET O VIDEO STAR (R) O Œ SCARY SCOOBY FUNNIES 0 AU ROYAUME DES ANIMAUX 0 SKI WEST © BUSINESS OF MANAGEMENT 11:30 O PRYOR'S PLACE 0 MR.T O ©LITTLES g 0 JUSTICE POUR TOUS Etienne est crible de dettes et ne voit pas le jour ou il pourra s'en sortir 0 SPORTS HOT SEAT © PROGRAMMING FOR THE GIFTED AFTERNOON 12:00 0 Q LA SEMAINE PARLEMEN- TAIRE A OTTAWA O COLLEGE BASKETBALL Louisville at Memphis State 0 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN O WHAT'S NEW?O CINEMA A-A-1;."Bagarres au King Creole" (1958, Comedie) Elvis Pres ley.Dolores Hart Un jeune chanteur bagarreur entreprend une carrière maigre l’opposition de son pere O © ABC WEEKEND "The Adven-tures Of A Two-Minute Werewolf" A boy who's a horror movie fan >^nds himself turning into a werewolf for two-minute periods.(Part 2 of 2) g 0 SAMEDI MAGAZINE Avec Louise Josee Mondoux.0 WRESTLING © MAGAZINE UNIVERSITAIRE © PROGRAMMING FOR THE GIFTED 12:30 0 INCREDIBLE HULK O MR.MICROCHIP O © AMERICAN BANDSTAND Guests: Germaine Stewart ("The Word Is Out," "I Like It"), the Blasters ("Colored Lights").© AU FIL DE L'UNIVERSITE LAVAL © THIS OLD HOUSE Remodling a Victorian kitchen.Q 1:00OD'HIER A DEMAIN 0 COLLEGE BASKETBALL North Carolina at Duke O SPORTSWEEKEND Scheduled: Women’s World Cup downhill skiing from Vail, Colorado; Canadian men’s downhill skiing from Whistler, B.C.O EUTHANASIE (B MOVIE ?'?"Adam” (1983.Drama) Daniel J.Travanti, JoBeth Williams.A missing child's distraught parents take steps to ensure passage of legislation that would help parents of other children who have vanished.Based on a true story.© HISTOIRE DE LA LITTERATURE Bl-BLIQUE “L'exil a Babylone" © ACROSS THE FENCE 1:30 O WILD KINGDOM © AMERICA'S TOP TEN © VICTORY GARDEN 2:00 0 Q OUVERTURE DES JEUX DE QUEBEC O COLLEGE BASKETBALL Regional coverage of Villanova at Pittsburgh or Arizona at UCLA O CINEMA "La Planete des singes" (1968, Science-fiction) Charlton Heston, Kim Hunter.Apres un long voyage dans l’espace, trois cosmonautes arrivent sur une planete ou les humains vivent a l’etat sauvage et ou la civilisation est le fait d'un peuple de singes intelligents.O LORNE GREENE'S NEW WILDERNESS 0 FORUM Avec Jean Cournoyer et Matthias Rioux © NASHVILLE MUSIC © ASTRONOMIE GENERALE Les étoiles" Œ MOVIE Cheers For Miss Bishop" (1941, Drama) Martha Scott, William Gargan.A Midwestern schoolteacher dedicates her entire life to her profession 2:30 OAT THE MOVIES NATIONAL MATCH BASS FISHING Final match.Champion receives $10,000 in prize money 3:00 O COLLEGE BASKETBALL Kentucky at Louisiana State O SPORTSWEEKEND Scheduled Scott Tournament of Hearts (Canadian women s curling), live from Winnipeg; men's and women's world sprint speedskating championships from Holland; men's World Cup downhill skiing from Japan Q © BOWLING $125.000 Lite Beer Open, live from Buckeye Lanes, North Olmstead, Ohio CD AU FEMININ Avec Suzanne Monange (B DON’T TALK TO STRANGERS Guest Ken Wooden talks to children about the kind of lures child molesters use to attract youngsters.© TELEDOCUMENTS Madame, vous avez rien" (R) 3:30 0 TWILIGHT ZONE 4:00 O O BAGATELLE O SPORTS SATURDAY Scheduled American Cup Gymnastics preliminary competitions, live from Indianapolis Q LES P’TITS BONSHOMMES Œ) DROLE DE MONDE 0 WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: Pacific Western Pro Ski Tour, from Panorama Resort, Inverm-ere, B C ; Aaron Pryor vs.Gary Hinton for the IBP world junior welterweight title, scheduled for 15 rounds, live from Atlantic City, N.J.; The Florida Derby, a major race for three-year old thoroughbreds leading up to the Kentucky Derby, live from Gulf Stream Park in Hallandale, Fla.© C'EST ARRIVE A HOLLYWOOD Marilyn Monroe, Brooke Shields, Bo Derek.Jacqueline Bisset et d'innombrables autres femmes appartiennent a l’aeropage des "Sex symbols" qu’a su creer Hollywood (R) © SNEAK PREVIEWS 4:30 0 Q LES SCHTROUMPFS DANS JOHAN ET PIRLOUITg O DROLE DE MONDE O © WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled Aaron Pryor vs Gary Hin-ton for the IBF world junior welterweight title, scheduled for 15 rounds, live from Atlantic City, N.J., The Florida Derby, a major race for three-year old thoroughbreds leading up to the Kentucky Derby, live from Gulf Stream Park in Hallandale, Fla (0 PLEXI-MAG Avec Doris Blanche! et Pierre Houle.© ENCYCLOPEDIE AUDIOVISUELLE DU CINEMA FRANÇAIS Poele q l'esprit extrêmement subtil.Jacques Prevert s’est egalement interesse au cinema (R) © NEW TECH TIMES 5:00 O RAID LE CAP - TERRE DE FEU 0 PGA GOLF Honda Classic, third round, I've from the Tournament Play- * m 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 : " ' .*¥:• 0: « P 9 10 11 jp o o 12 13 15 Te 0 17 18 19 0 20 ¦ Tl ?Ip 22 o [H 7\ 25 26 27 ! V L„ 28 30 31 Ü o !: 'j 32 33 34 r ¦ ¦ 36 o Q ¦ ÜU 37 i8 39 40 ?% 41 42 IJ o ooo oo oooo ACROSS DOWN 1 Prophetic sign 2 Gilbert and Sullivan 5 Actor Baldwin classic 9 He was Fujiyama 3 Outer space visitor 10 Outwit (clue to 4 PBS science series puzzle answer) 5 Family assistance 12 World War II beachhead program: abbr.15 Mad (clue to 6 Monogram for Olivier puzzle answer) 7 Breathe out 18 Praise 8 Nathan — 20 On the lee side 11 Belonging to Christopher 21 "Oh, —" 13 Cup 22 — do well 14 Commentator Carter 24 Michael on "Knight 16 He was Felix Unger Rider" 17 The Zuider — 25 Actress Copley 19 Actress Elsa — 28 Onassis, to friends 23 He was Kirk on 31 Level "Newhart” 32 Actress Turner 26 Actress Arden 34 Brink: threshold 27 Late movies 36 Linda Lavin role 29 Ford — 37 Born 30 "Murder —" 39 Ted McGinley role 33 Relating to aircraft 41 Monsignor: abbr.35 Pitcher 42 Belonging to Thinnes 36 Slightly open 38 Monogram for Gray 40 Monogram for O'Connor Answer to puzzle on page 19 BENSON 1 SI Missy Gold stars as Katie Gatling, the governor’s daughter, on “Benson" which airs SATURDAY, MARCH 2 on CTV.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME ers Club in Coral Springs, Fla Q VIDEO CLIP O BREAK DANCE © LE MARCHE AUX IMAGES © GERMAN PROFESSIONAL SOCCER 5:45 Q LE MONDE ! LOTTO 0 LE DIX VOUS INFORME / LOTTO EVENING 6:00 O IMPACTS Magazine de reflexion sur l'actualité O O O 0 NEWS O CBC NEWS O © POP EXPRESS Avec Roch Denis et ses invites.0 L’INCROYABLE HULK © ABC NEWS g © PASSE-PARTOUT © OPEN STUDIO Featured: members 01 the Macrobiotic Heallh Center discuss natural foods and eating for heallh; actors from the Vermont Repertory Theatre talk about their up-coming play.6:30 Q CBS NEWS 0 PUTTIN' ON THE HITS O THIS WEEK IN PARLIAMENT O ABC NEWS g 0 HOCKEY MAGAZINE © TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT © HEIDI La sanie de Clara s'elant deterioree a Francfort, le medecm des Seseman se rend en Suisse auprès de Heidi afin de determiner si le climat ambiant ne conviendrait pas aux poumons de Clara.© SAY IT WITH SIGN 7:00 O Q LE MONDE MERVEILLEUX DE DISNEY O STAR SEARCH 0 SOLID GOLD Host: Rick Dees Guests; Jack Wagner, Exile, Limahl.New Edition, Phil Collins, Al Jarreau.Pat Benatar (video) O WAYNE & SHUSTER INTERNATIONAL g O 0 SUPER GALAXIE Chanteuse-invitee; Marie-Michele Desrosiers et les panelistes Danielle Jourdan.Pere da la Sablonniere.Pierre Bouchard, Jean-Louis Millette et Douglas Leopold O STAR SEARCH Guests: Morgan Fairchild David Hasselhoff (R) (B CIRCUS Highlights include per formances by the African Lion Safari Elephants, trapeze artist Miss Pychm-ka, and sky cyclists the Magyars (R) © LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS Interviews with Lana Turner TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985-15 Saturday Chris Evert Uoyd, Hugh Downs, California wine king Robert Mondavi, beauty expert Beverly Sassoon and gossip columnist Maxine Mesinger (R> © PARLER POUR PARLER Les filles d'aujourd'hui" œ ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL II 7:30 O FRONT PAGE CHALLENGE S)BENSON g 8:00 O O HOCKEY Les Islanders de New York visitent les Maple Leals de To-ronto O OTHERWORLD Trace becomes a slave in a province where men are considered second class citizens Q DIFFERENT STROKES Arnold's pals convince him to break up with his girlfriend because of her looks 0 NHL HOCKEY New York Islanders at Toronto Maple Leafs O CINEMA "Comme au bon vieux temps” (1980, Comedie) Goldie Hawn.Chevy Chase.Un écrivain, forcée par deux bandits a commettre un vol de banque, se réfugié chez son ex-femme qui est maintenant mariee a un procurer.O © T.J.HOOKER Stacy is dis-armed by a criminal and nearly killed, then must overcome her fear of failure when she's called upon to save Hooker's life Q CD CINEMA "Quartet’’ (1980, Drame) Alan Bates.Isabelle Adjani.Emprisonne pour trafic d’oeuvres d'art, la jeune femme de celui-ci accepte l’hospitalité d’un couple fortune et elle se trouve dans une situation particulière © MOVIE Kids Don t Tell" (No Date) © VARIETES MICHEL JASMIN (R) © NATURE OF THINGS 8:30 O DOUBLE TROUBLE 9:00 O AIRWOLF Hawke and Santim in-vestigate when a country music star's life is threatened by her manager G GIMME A BREAK As a surprise birthday gift, Joey and the girls alter Nell's birth certificate so that it appears she s a year younger that she thought (R) B © LOVE BOAT On her 18th birth day, Vicki learns her father is a re-formed alcoholic; a widow hires a detective to locate her college flame; a man feigning amnesia boards with his ex fiancee (R) g © MOVIE ?*?'?“Diva" (1981, Drama) Wilhelmenia Wiggins Fernandez, Frederic Andrei.A French postman's recording of his favorite opera star's performance leads him on a wild and dangerous adventure.9:30 G GIMME A BREAK Nell's efforts to get her high school diploma hit a snag.(R) CINEMA "Le futur est femme" (1984) Ornella Muti, Hanna Schygulla Une publicitaire et un arboriculteur vivent une union passionnée.10:00 G COVER UP Dani and Jack help a cynical American comedian (Jack Carter) go behind the Iron Curtain to retrieve the daughter he never knew he had.G BERRENGER’S Krucek plots revenge against Simon; Laurel comes out of hiding; Cammie is concerned that Billy's gambling addiction may wreck their relationship.O JUSTICE POUR TOUS O © FINDER OF LOST LOVES A man asks Cary to locate what seems to be the ghost of his wife; a men’s magazine publisher wants to find the son he fathered with a former centerfold.g Œ) ETHNIES Avec Marie-Anne Poggi Theme L'Annee internationale des femmes immigrées.® COVER UP 10:30 G O LE TELEJOURNAL g O © SUR LA SELLETTE Avec Simon Noel.10:50 O O LES NOUVELLES DU SPORT / LA POLITIQUE FEDERALE ilooOBQnews O NATIONAL g SI NOUVELLES TVA 3 NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS © CTV NATIONAL NEWS g © ABC NEWS g © AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE "Char-lotte Forten's Mission" Melba Moore, Moses Gunn and Ned Beatty star in the true story of a black woman who sought to educate black children during and after the Civil War.g 11:15 0 CINEMA "Avec les compli- ments de Charlie” (1978, Drame) Charles Bronson, Jill Ireland.Le FBI profite du ressentiment d'un lieutenant pour un chef de la pegre afin de lui donner une mission spéciale O LES SPORTS ET METEO Q ABC NEWS ?O CINEMA ?"Comme un taureau sauvage (1980.Biographie) Robert DeNiro.Cathy Moriarty L'histoire de Jake LaMotta qui trouve dans la boxe professionnelle un exutoire a sa rage intérieure.© NEWS 11:20 Q ©NEWS 11:25 ©HEEHAW 11:30 0 MOVIE "Coffee, Tea Or Me" (1973.Comedy) Karen Valentine, John Davidson.A young stewardess jets between her artist-student husband in England and her medical-student husband in California.O SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Film crit ics Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert join host Billy Crystal for the first SNL Film Festival featuring a collection of film segments from the last five years of the series.Q CINEMA "L'Homme d'Hollywood" (1976, Drame) William Smith, Jennifer Billingsley.Devenu amnésique a la suite d'un accident, un homme apprend qu'il a une femme O BENNY HILL © CINEMA ?"La Balade demente” (1978, Drame) Michael Sullivan, Perry Lane.Deux amateurs de courses a motocyclettes décident d'entreprendre une randonnée a moto de la Californie au Canada 11:35 0 MOVIE "Death Drums Along The River" (1964, Adventure) Richard Todd, Marianne Koch.Upon arriving in a remote African village, a female physician discovers that her new male colleague is a jewel smuggler wanted by the law.12:00 O SOLID GOLD Host Rick Dees Guests: Jack Wagner, Exile.Limahl, New Edition, Phil Collins, Al Jarreau, Pat Benatar (video) © BOGART This tribute to Humphrey Bogart focuses on the career and personal side of filmdom's outstanding "tough guy" with dignity, realism and startling truths, with scenes from some of his most famous movies and comments from his peers 1:00 B NEW YORK HOT TRACKS Sched-uled: new videos by Madonna ("Mate-rial Girl") and Al Jarreau Also, a video featuring winners of the "New York Hot Tracks" dance contest.O AMERICA'S TOP TEN © MOVIE AAA A "The African Queen" (1951, Adventure) Humphrey Bogart.Katharine Hepburn.A captain operating in the Congo during World War I is persuaded by a lady mission ary to destroy a German gunboat © AUSTIN CITY LIMITS Featured Glen Campbell ("Gentle on My Mind, ' "Slow Nights"), Eddy Raven (“Thank God for Kids," Who Do You Know in California?") 1:15 © CINEMA A', "Divine" (1975.Comedie) Danielle Darrieux, Jean Le Poulain Un jeune romantique s’attache a une idole qu'il veut arracher a ceux qui l'exploitent, selon lui 1:30 O NEWS O CINEMA "Romeo et Juliette" (Pas de date) 3:05© MOVIE **'2 "Sirocco" (1951, Adventure) Humphrey Bogart, Marta Toren A soldier's love for a superior s wife proves to be his downfall BY MARY ANN COOPER In a fantasy scene from “Jane Eyre, ” Michael Tylo as Quentin comforts Nota as played by Usa Brown on Guiding Light.Do you ever wish you could relive some of your favorite soap's dramatic moments of the past?Are you hooked on romance novels?If your answer to either of those questions is yes, Pioneer Communications Network has a book series that may interest you.Combining elements of soap opera storylines with romance novel form, this company has developed a series of novels based on the soap Guiding Light.Did you ever wonder about the early life of the Bauer family in Springfield or how storylines of the past shaped storylines of today?It’s all in these books.Anyone interested in obtaining book 1—So Tender, So True—can send $3.25 (which includes postage and handling) to Pioneer Communications Network Box 203, Little Neck, N.Y.11363.By the way, if GL isn’t your favorite, you might want to write Pioneer anyway.I'm sure they’d be happy to send you information about future book series based on other soap operas.Recaps 2/25 - 3/1 Previews 3/4 - 3/8 AS THE WORLD TURNS- A figure dressed as a policeman with a bottle of chloroform and a hanker-chief waits at the roadside for Steve’s car.Betsy encourages Sierra not to lose hope that she will find the man that she loves again.Haskell angrily tells Mitch that Diana’s presence was missed in the gambling room.March has a waking nightmare that no one will believe her accusations.THIS WEEK: Steve is almost killed.Barbara is in for a surprise.ONE LIFE TO LIVE-Tina looks forward to telling Viki the truth about Victor, as revenge for Viki blocking Tina's search for her father.Jenny begins to feel, from David’s vagueness, that he’s guilty and agrees to help the N.S.B.Metcalf tells her David is headed for East Berlin.Later, Herb wants to tell Jenny the “whole story,” but I ' jtcalf fears she’d warn David.When Cassie won't break a date with Rob, Nicos asks Joy to dine with him and Aida.She acceptes.ALL MY CHILDREN-Olga calls Adam claiming that Althea is still alive but Adam is certain that Erica is behind this charade.While Stuart visits Adam, Mike slips a blue envelope —Althea's favorite color -under the door.Stuart raves that Althea is back, disturbing Adam.Zach plans a party for Sloane and Myra and visits June in New York City, who discloses that Cynthia never got over Ross.On their wedding night, Synthia while sleeping with Palmer, fantasizes about Ross and their former sexual appetites.GUIDING LIGHT-Roxie and Roustabout are involved in a serious accident.Rick admits he loves Roxie but he’s afraid that he may have lost her.Kyle outsmarts Billy and Bily has to give up his company to the cartel.Lujack’s trial begins and Beth takes the stand.Mindy realizes she’s been used by Kyle.Beth publicly accuses Phillip of setting the explosion that blinded her.THIS WEEK: Reva refuses to give up.Beth encourages Lujack.SEARCH FOR TOMOR- ROW-Chaos reigns at the police station.Chase stands firm on his secret about his affair with Adair.Lloyd begins indulgence of T.R., giving her gifts.The dinner party at the condo is on edge with T.R.’s question.Wendy’s determined to fulfill Warren's last plea.Cagney is painfully aware of Suzi’s emotional state at the psychiatric evaluation center.Wendy furies Warren and promises to fulfill his dream.THIS WEEK: Wendy lashes out at Suzi.T.R.feels uncomfortable.RITUALS-A deadly trap leads to murder in Wingfield.The aftermath of the killing leaves Haddon Hall and all of Wingfield shaken.The police arrive at the Robertsons and there is speculation about the murderer's identity.The murderer discovers that incriminating evidence still exists.The consent for emergency surgery comes at the last moment.GENERAL HOSPITAL-Ginny confesses her crime to Scorpio.Scorpio gives the good news to Bobbie, that she is exonerated, she is incredulous about Gin-ny, but overjoyed to be free! Donely is back, worried about what Felicia might have learned in Mexico.Bobbie is reinstated at the hospital.Rick will raise bail when it is set.Ginny believes Rick is doing everything to protect Mike.She still can’t really believe Rick is standing by her.Ginny asks Rick to divorce her, spare himself more humiliation.He refuses.He and Mike will stick by her, even if she goes to prison.The gang says they want to divide the treasure now, each man to sell his own share.But Donely asserts his authority and puts down this mutiny.THIS WEEK: Felicia feels uneasy.Ginny falls apart.SANTA BARBARA-Cruz and Eden finally get romantically involved.A note is found in Peter’s apartment indicating he Is the carnation killer, and the killer of Channing Capwell Jr.Lionel is released from prison as a suspect in the case.Lionel and Sophia have a confrontation.Lionel and Mason, the D.A.have a fist fight.LOVING-Cabot confronts Gwyn about her lies concerning Clay.Steve sneaks into Trisha's room, telling her about Gwyn's blackmail.They start to kiss and are shocked by a knock on the door.Rita Mae and Tony grow closer and decide to spend the entire night together.Lor-na and Link grown closer.THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS—Mr.Anthony tells Jazz to keep a close watch on his daughter.Kay is relieved to learn that Brent ran into Ashley’s at Gina's but couldn't tell her he is her father.He gives Kay a tender kiss.Lauren yells for her mother to go away and leave her alone.Joanna tells her she is not leaving until we have a talk.and asks Paul to leave them alone.When Traci suggests she give Danny a back rub, he knows it wil lead to sex, Danny hurts her by declining her invitation claiming he has work to do.Ashley is suspicious of Jack's mo- tives when he suggests Jabot use Nikki as their new lead model.Tyrone takes Alana home.She is having trouble figuring out just what it is with Tyrone but she’s sure he’s after something from her.Tyrone answers her questions by suddenly taking her in his arms and kissing her deeply.then turns and leaves.ANOTHER WORLD-Mac and Ada become alarmed when they discover Nancy is missing and when the police tell they they found the car and a bracelet belonging to Nancy at Perry’s place, they are afraid Carl has her too.Peter finds a witness to cooraborate Gatlin’s story and the charges are dropped.Gatlin rushes back to Bay City to be with Sally.Quinn tries to be supportive of Thomasina’s decision to marry Carter, she arranges their honeymoon.Thoma-sina and Carter marry.MJ reports that Carl’s fingerprints were found in Perry’s room the day Nancy was there.On the phone Rachel hears Ada ask about Nancy and realizes Carl must have done something to her sister.THIS WEEK: Mac tries to save Rachel.Dee questions her feelings for Cass.DAYS OF OUR LIVES-Shane tells Nickerson he destroyed the prism so the I.S.A.couldn’t have it, so no one could ever have it, for the potential for bad was too great.Shane is fired, and tells Kimberly they’re both free now.Melissa's hearing takes place and she is relieved when she gets in home probation.She goes to give Pete the good news, and wants to celebrate, but Pete has already made plans to go see Ivy.So far no special prosecutor will take the case against Marlena.Bo keeps his vigil over Hope.He asks her to marry him, and she accepts.Abe and Don realize that Hart Ben-net is going to do everything he can to convict Marlena, to rebuild his reputation.THIS WEEK: Kimberly and Shane grow closer.Bo and Hope plan their future. 16—TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985 MORNING 5:00 ©HART TO HART 6:00 O NATIONAL MATCH BASS FISHING Final match Champion receives $ 10,000 in prize money.(B ENCOUNTERS WITH DISASTER 6:15 0 MIRE ET MUSIQUE 6:30 O TOM AND JERRY AND FRIENDS O COMMUNITY 8 ILE PETIT CASTOR PETER POPOFF B DUDLEY DORIGHT SUNDAY MASS Q TOM AND JERRY AND FRIENDS O U S.FARM REPORT § JIMMY SWAGGART WORLD TOMORROW © BULLWINKLE 7:30 O LE PETIT CASTOR B IT IS WRITTEN O JIMMY SWAGGART © DAY OF DISCOVERY © VALLEY OF THE DINOSAURS 8:00 O O DEMETAN.LA PETITE GRENOUILLE O BATMAN O DAY OF DISCOVERY © JIMMY SWAGGART © GLORY OF GOD © SESAME STREET (R) g 8:20 o GOOD MORNING 8:30 Q O PASSE-PARTOUT Q CARTOONS Q ORAL ROBERTS O THIS IS THE LIFE O SUNDAY MASS © JIMMY SWAGGART 9:00 0 O MICH0U ET PILO Q SUNDAY MORNING 0 ROBERT SCHULLER Q MUSIC AND THE SPOKEN WORD O AU CENTUPLE O WORLD TOMORROW © ORAL ROBERTS © MISTER ROGERS (R) 9:30 Q O LES FABLES D'EUROPE O HOBBLEDEHOY O IT IS WRITTEN © REX HUMBARD © TO BE ANNOUNCED © ROD AND REEL 9:45 Q Q PARABOLES 10:00 O O LE JOUR DU SEIGNEUR © MOVIE ?“Huckleberry Finn" (1939, Adventure) Mickey Rooney, Lynne Carver.Based on the story by Mark Twain A young boy and a runaway slave become involved in a series of adventures while fleeing down the Mississippi River on a raft.O STAR TREK O IL EST ECRIT O THIS IS THE LIFE © EN TOUTE AMITIE © HELLENIC PROGRAM © WORLD TOMORROW © ACROSS THE FENCE 10:30 © FACE THE NATION O KICK BOXING O JERRY FALWELL © C'ETAIT L'BON TEMPS © TELEDOMENICA © CELEBRATING CHRIST © CROSSROADS 11:00 G LES GRANDES BATAILLES DU PASSE G YOU CAN QUOTE ME G REACH FOR THE TOP Malcolm Campbell vs West Hill.O LES ETOILES DE LA LUTTE O LA LUTTE INTERNATIONALE © MATINEE AT THE BIJOU 11:30 G TAKING ADVANTAGE G JOY OF GARDENING O CANADIANS "Portugese" G © THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEY © CHRISTIANISME ET RELIGIONS DU NOUVEL AGE (R) AFTERNOON 12:00 O O LA SEMAINE VERTE O COLLEGE BASKETBALL Washing-ton at Notre Dame O FOCUS Q MEETING PLACE From Edmonton.Alta the Rev Gary Harder, First Men-nonite Church O © BON DIMANCHE Avec Reine Malo 12:30 G MEET THE PRESS O COMMUNITY 8 © FORUM 22 © OCTO-PUCE © WORKING WOMEN 1:00 O PROPOS ET CONFIDENCES Au programme, Jean Guilda se raconte (4e de 4) G COLLEGE BASKETBALL Regional coverage of Syracuse at Georgetown or Indiana at Iowa O COUNTRY CANADA O MOVIE AAA “The Glenn Miller Story” (1954.Biography) James Stewart, June Allyson.The famous MOONLIGHTING Maddie Hayes (Cybill Shepherd, r.) teams up with hard-luck gumshoe David Addison (Bruce Willis) in "Moonlighting,” airing SUNDAY, MARCH 3 on ABC.The series will begins its regular series run Tuesday, March 5.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME big band leader revolutionizes the music world.Q REFLETS MASKOUTAINS © TERRY WINTER © OUR TOWN © OCTO-PUCE PLUS © WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 1:30 O Q RENCONTRES Invite Edmonde Morin.(R) Q HYMN SING © QUESTION PERIOD © CHRISTIAN CHILDREN’S FUND © L'ENAP PRESENTE © WALL STREET WEEK Guest: T Boone Pickens Jr , chairman and president.Mesa Petroleum Co 2:00 Q Q UNIVERS DES SPORTS G COLLEGE BASKETBALL Georgia Tech at Oklahoma Q REAR VIEW MIRROR Featured: Stan Daniels look at married life, “No Two People" starring Joseph Shaw and Mary Savidge.The Tape Recorder" episode from the series 'Program X"; a film record of a day in the life of former Prime Minister Lester Pearson, "From The Heart: Canadian Folk Artists," profiles of 15 self-taught Canadian folk artists.O ID CINEMA A A '?"Le Combat du Capitaine Newman" (1964, Comedie) Gregory Peck, Tony Curtis Psychiatre attache a un hôpital de l'aviation américaine, le capitaine Newman doit s’occuper, entre autres, d’un colonel hante par la mémoire des hommes qu'il a envoyés a la mort.© NHL HOCKEY Vancouver Canucks at Hartford Whalers © LE CORPS HUMAIN "La locomo-tion' © HOTLINE Do You Need A Law-yer?" A panel of lawyers will respond to viewer questions relating to legal matters 2:30© USFL FOOTBALL At press time, scheduled game was Houston Gamblers at Tampa Bay Bandits © LE CORPS HUMAIN "Le cerveau" 3:00 O PGA GOLF Honda Classic, final round, live from Tournament Players Club in Coral Springs, Fla.O MOVIE AAA "The Black Marble" (1980, Drama) Robert Foxworth, Paula Prentiss After working on an emotionally exhausting child-murder case, a heavy-drinking police detective is teamed with a policewoman to find a disturbed dognapper © L'EVOLUTION DE L'HOMME Au rythme des saisons" © MYSTERYI "Agatha Christie Mysteries II" A woman who suspects her husband of infidelity seeks help from a personal consultant C?4:00 O PAR LES CHEMINS D'AMBROISE G SPORTS SUNDAY Scheduled American Cup Gymnastics, men's and women's finals, live from Indianapolis O L’HEURE DE LA BONNE NOUVELLE © L'EVOLUTION DE L'HOMME Le long enfantement" €B PALLISERS After Glencora's death, Plantagenet allows their children to marry for love, as she would have liked Finally, he prepares to re- turn to Parliament.(Part 22 of 22) 4:30 G ENTRE LES LIGNES Entrevues portant sur des essais et des romans récemment parus au Quebec et a (etranger.O QD SPORT-MAG Avec Pierre Tru-del.O TELE SOLEIL 5:00 G O SECOND REGARD Sujet: Bible et informatique.G SPORTSWORLD Scheduled: Japanese Grand Sumo Wrestling Tournament from Tokyo; World Bobsled Championships Irom Cervinia.Italy.O CBC NEWS Q GREATEST AMERICAN HERO © TRAVEL '85 © INTRODUCTION A L'ARCHITECTURE DU QUEBEC (R) © VERMONT THIS WEEK 5:30 O LOST KINGDOMS O CHACUN CHEZ-SOI © RUE ST-JACOUES Avec Claude Beauchamp.(Suivi par le Dix vous informe).© WELCOME TO MY WORLD © AGRONSKY AND COMPANY EVENING 8:00 G SCIENCE-REALITE G CBS NEWS G FOCUS Q WALT DISNEY This episode Irom the "Swamp Fox" series finds Mary Videaux (Barbara Eiler) risking life and limb to help American Revolutionary War soldiers escape from a prison ship Also stars Leslie Nielsen O VIDEO STAR O © NEWS O QUINCY Des escrocs substituent une precieuse momie destinee a un musee.©ABC NEWS g © PASSE PARTOUT © FIRING LINE 6:05© POUR VOTRE INFORMATION Avec Jacques Morency.6:30 O DANS UN MONDE D’HOMMES Sérié qui trace le portrait de certains milieux et des femmes qui y évoluent (2e de 5) O MUPPETS G NBC NEWS O ABC NEWS g © AS IT IS © WILD KINGDOM © MAYA L'ABEILLE 7:00 G O TERRE HUMAINE Antoine lait comprendre a Martin qu'il peut bien aller s’installer ailleurs s'il le veut.Q O 60 MINUTES O FAME Coco (Erica Gimpel) returns to get her diploma and ends up being cast in a production by a famous retired director (Milton Berle).O FRAGGLE ROCK When Red discovers her favorite radish bars missing.she suspects her best friend Q O CD LUE FANTASTIQUE O © RIPLEY S BELIEVE IT OR NOTI MOVIE "Romance On The Orient Express" (Premiere, Drama) Cheryl Ladd, John Gielgud.An American magazine editor rekindles an old love affair with a dashing Englishman while traveling from Venice to Paris aboard the fabled train.Q QD NORD-SUD Magazine d'informations consacre aux problèmes que doivent présentement surmonter les pays en voie de développement (R) © THE LIVING PLANET: A PORTRAIT OF THE EARTH David Attenborough visits grasslands on three continents, examining the behavior of Brazilian anteaters.North American bison and African wildebeests.Q 7:30 O O LES BEAUX DIMANCHES Dixième Festival International du Cirque de Monte-Carlo" O BEACHCOMBERS Nick volunteers to babysit Constable John's dog, but the high-spirited Newfoundland quickly drives him crazy.(R) Q €D INGRID BERGMAN L'histoire de l'une des plus grandes actrices de cinema de notre temps qui sut bien mener sa carrière et sa vie personnelle en dépit des contraintes et des conflits que suscitait sa célébrité 8:00 G MURDER.SHE WROTE Jessica in-herds a key percentage of a profes sional football team and finds herself pursuing the owner's killer G KNIGHT RIDER Michael faces danger at a new construction site as he searches for evidence to clear the reputation of a murdered engineer O SEEING THINGS As a television reporter.Louie s investigation of a murder leads him into a dangerous case involving the disposal of nuclear waste.(Part 1 of 2) Q O CINEMA it Wit "Le crime de I’Orient-Express" (1974, Drame) Albert Finney.Lauren Bacall.En 1935, alors que l'Orient-Express parcourt son trajet d'lstambul a Paris, un indus triel américain est trouve assassine dans son compartiment.O © RODNEY DANGERFIELD EXPOSED Featured in zany skits are special guests including Morgan Fair-child, Harvey Korman, Dick Butkus and Bubba Smith.Q © CINEMA Wit "Banzai” (1983, Comedie) Michel Coluche, Valerie Mairesse.Un homme se trouve a Hong-Kong ou il rencontre inopinément sa fiancee, et ils seront meles tous deux a une affaire de trafic de drogues.© NATURE A survey of the vast kelp areas on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean that provide food for countless creatures.(R) q 8:30 G O LE TELE JOURNAL g © PLEIN SON De sa voix riche et frémissante, la chanteuse française "Barbara" interprétait les airs qui l'ont rendu célébré 8:50 G O LES BEAUX DIMANCHES En Cerf-volant le Quebec" Spectacle enregistre dans les plus beaux sites de la province, au gre des saisons.9:00 G CRAZY LIKE A FOX After Harry sees a fellow patient murdered in the hospital by a man with a limp, the killer targets him, Harrison and Cindy.G MOVIE "Secret Weapons” (Prem iere, Drama) Linda Hamilton, James Franciscus.A young Russian language student is transformed by the KGB into an all-American girl trained to seduce and blackmail U S officials and industrialists as a Soviet spy Q O FOR THE RECORD Father Ellis (Brent Carver) is released from prison in Central America, but when the Church reassigns him to a small country parish in Canada, he joins forces with a local woman to fight for nuclear disarmament.O © MOONLIGHTING (Premiere) A glamorous model and a private investigator team up for adventures and romance Stars Cybill Shepherd, Bruce Willis, g G SCARECROW AND MRS.KING Amanda is stunned when she sees a bitter ex-spy who's planning revenge against the Agency appear on a television talk show Guests: Arlene Francis, Steve Eastin.(R) © MASTERPIECE THEATRE "The Jewel In The Crown" Major Merrick returns to Delhi Irom Pankot; Perron discovers that Merrick has seen Susan's psychiatric records.(Part 12 of i4) g 9:30© CINEMA "Le grain de sable" (1983) Delphine Seyrig, Genevieve Fontanel Lors du deces de son ami.une femme se retrouve sans emploi et elle profite d'une liberté oisive.10:00 G TRAPPER JOHN, M.D.J T.brings in a bag lady who's been wandering in the rain with a serious case of bronchitis: Gloria suspects her 12-year-old daughter ot drug abuse.G LAWYERS A report on the hundreds of permanent boards and tribunals in Canada that make laws, al though they are not always staffed by lawyers r"^ (D SCIENCE ET TECHNOLOGIE Avec Charles Meunier.Sujet: Le diabete.© W-5 A Toronto bag lady is reunited with her family after an 11-year separation.© THE BOUNDER Tea dances, wine and cheese parties and motor rallies all play a part in Howard's plans to start a matchmaking service.10:05 G O LES BEAUX DIMANCHES "Til-Coq” Adaptation de la dramatique écrite par Gratien Gelinas Un jeune homme qui souffre d’etre un enfant naturel met tous ses espoirs dans son premier amour, amour bientôt ccm-promis par la guerre.10:30 0 © L'EVENEMENT Avec Claude Masson © SWEET SIXTEEN Now that he’s about to become a father.Peter proposes to Helen, who insists on marrying for nothing less than romantic love 11:00 O CBS NEWS G MOVIE W W "The Goldwyn Follies" (1938, Musical) Adolphe Men-jou, Ella Logan.A film producer tries to induce a young girl to act as a judge for his upcoming musical revue.O NATIONAL ("The Nation s Business" will follow.) g O CD NOUVELLES TVA / SPORTS O NCWS © Cl , NATIONAL NEWS © ABC NEWS g © MASTERPIECE THEATRE "The Jewel In The Crown" Major Merrick returns to Delhi from Pankot; Perron discovers that Merrick has seen Susan's psychiatric records (Part 12 of I4)g 11:15 G STAR TREK O ABC NEWS g ©NEWS 11:20 0 ©NEWS 11:25© JIM BAKKER 11:30 O RUE ST-JACQUES O SPORTSBEAT © CINEMA ?*'! ‘'Cine-Parc" (1976, Comedie) Lisa Lemole.Glenn Morshower.Un cine-parc du Texas sert de cadre a une diversité de mésaventures auxquelles sont meles certains spectateurs.11:40 O ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS 12:00O MOVIE "The Battle Of The Villa Fiorita" (1965.Comedy) Maureen O'Hara, Richard Todd.The children of an estranged couple connive to reunite their parents.© MOVIE WWW'/i "The Caine Muti ny" (1954.Drama) Humphrey Bogart, Jose Ferrer.Based on the novel by Herman Wouk.A group of officers mu tiny against their captain, claiming that he is mentally unstable.© THE BOUNDER Tea dances, wine and cheese parties and motor rallies all play a part in Howard’s plans to start a matchmaking service.12:15 © O LES NOUVELLES DU SPORT ! LA POLITIQUE PROVINCIALE ,12:30© SWEET SIXTEEN Now (hat he's about to become a father, Peter proposes to Helen, who insists on marrying for nothing less than romantic love.12:40 0 CINEMA WW\ "Top Hat" (1935, Comedie musicale) Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers.Un danseur tombe ep erdument amoureux de sa voisine du dessous O CINEMA ?’s "Rome violente" (1975, Drame) Maurizio Merli, Ray Lovelock.Le commissaire de la police romaine a perdu un frere adolescent dans une attaque criminelle.1:00 © NATURE A survey of the vast kelp areas oi the bottom of the Pacific Ocean that provide food for countless creatures.(R) g 1:30 Q NEWS 2:30 © THE PRISONER 3:30 © WALTONS 4:30 © SPECIAL SQUAD USFL FOOTBALL Lynn Swann enters his third year as ABC broadcaster for USFL Football.SUNDAY, MARCH 3 on ABC.CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME (L) 1905 Compulog Weekdays TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1985-17 5:30 6:00 6:30 6:45 7:00 7:30 7:45 7:55 8:00 8:20 8:30 9:00 9:05 9:10 MORNING Q GREAT SPACE COASTER O AG USA (MON) O OUR CHANGING WORLD (TUE, WED, FRI) O SPORTSMAN'S FRIEND (THU) €8 JIM BAKKER C) CBS EARLY MORNING NEWS Q MORNING STRETCH Q ABC NEWS THIS MORNING ?3 ROMPER ROOM Q CBS EARLY MORNING NEWS Q NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE (B CANADA A M.Œ JIMMY SWAGGART O MIRE ET MUSIQUE O CBS MORNING NEWS Q TODAY Q LES P'TITS BONSHOMMES O GOOD MORNING AMERICA ?Q L'ARAIGNEE (MON, THU) Q MERVEILLEUX SURHOMME (TUE, FRI) O ROBIN FUSEE (WED) O CAFE SHOW O FRAGGLE ROCK (MON) Q VIRULYSSE (TUE) O YOGI ET CIE (WED) Q PACHA (THU) O LES FANTOMES DU CHATEAU (FRI) Q) FARM DAY S) A.M.WEATHER Q LASSIE (MON, FRI) O FLIPPER (TUE) O FURIE (WED) O JOYEUX NAUFRAGES (THU) Œ SESAME STREET g O LE 9 VOUS INFORME O PHYSI-RYTHME O TELE PATROUILLE O HOUR MAGAZINE O DONAHUE O Œ) BONJOUR MATIN O MOVIE (B GOOD MORNING WORKOUT Œ HAPPY DAYS AGAIN §B EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING O FARIBOLES (FRI) O AVIS DE RECHERCHE Q GOOD MORNING DAYTIME MOVIES S:00O ?"The Great Impostor" (1961, Biography) Tony Curtis, Ed mond O'Brien.A man who never graduated from high school successfully impersonates a professor, a monk and a surgeon.2:150 Œ) ?V?"Demons du Midi" (1979, Drame) Pierre Mondy, Micheline Presle.Un homme de 45 ans, divorce avec deux enfants, decide de quitter la ville et prend la route.2:30O O "Mon ami le Lion" (1976, Documentaire) Virginia McKenna, George Adamson.L'histoire d’un lion ne en captivité qui a ete eleve par deux jeunes et rehabilite au Kenya grace aux bon soins de zoophiles avertis.5:00 O "El Weirdo" (1971, Comedie) Woody Allen, Louise Lasser EVENING 6:00 O CE SOIR / SPORTS IO Q Q fB £B news I le monde I LE 18 HEURES J PASSE-PARTOUT S) MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR 6:30 Q AVIS DE RECHERCHE O NBC NEWS O 60 ABC NEWS g O LE 9 VOUS INFORME Œ) ODYSSEE Avec Alain Monlpelit © TELESERVICE PLUS 7:00 O O TROUVEZ L'ERREUR Theme Armees et militaires.( 1 re de 2) O CBS NEWS O WHEEL OF FORTUNE O NOW O Œ) LES MOINEAU ET LES PINSON O TAXI
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