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The record, 1990-03-30, Collections de BAnQ.

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mer, Townships Week 2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990 Controversial catalogues still stir stamp collectors ire It's been absolutely amazing the amount of ink and newsprint that has gone into the debate of catalogues since the famous or infamous (depending on how one looks at things) Scott’s 1989 catalogue was released.The pity of it all is that the controversy stems exclusively from price.It seems that it is the only thing that means anything.It even got to the point where dealers were taking out full page ads condemning the catalogue over the pricing.Some of course thought it was quite good.It enabled them to buy based on 1989 prices and sell at 1988 prices.The collector on the other hand felt that he could no longer properly evaluate his collection.Up to now you will no doubt have noticed that I have talked of nothing but price.Well, this prompted me to run to my trusty assortment of dictionaries to see which would give me the best meaning of catalogue.They are all basically the same.However, the most complete seems to be this one from a Cassell’s dictionary and, I quote."Catalogue, a methodical list, arranged alphabetically or under class headings.Catalogue raisonné.A catalogue in which a des-ctiption of the items is given.V.T.to enter in a list: to make a complete list of." end of quote.As you can read, price is not mentioned although, other dictionaries have in addition to the above, “often with particulars added to the items".I suppose you could consider price as a particular added to the item.It seems the main culprit in this contorversy is volume I of the Scott catalogue.So.let’s look at it a little closer.Scott's has divided their catalogues so that the United States and her possessions have the place of honor in the first volume.It makes sense since it is an American publi- $t| A genius for contemporary music (Gazette) Programme: Evangelista, Debussy, Schmitt, Dutilleui Friday, March 30 8:30 pm 822-9692 Tickets also available at G.L.Beaulieu in Lennoxville »M*ATB€ CENTENNIAL ÎNtâtl» cation.Next follows the United Nations.Then comes Great Britain, head of the British Commonwealth followed by the countries of the Commonwealth in alphabetical order.Each country is then like a separate catalogue, listing the stamps in their order of issue with a number given to each separate stamp.In most cases, a small description accompanies each issue.Especially where there are multiple designs attached to the parti-cualr issue.If you are a student of U.S.stamps, Scott also publishes a specialized catalogue of U.S.stamps which gives a great deal more information and listings than does Volume I.Most catalogue publishers, including Scott's, list the mainstream of what is issued.Varieties are vey seldom included unless it is a real headliner.As this column deals with Canadian stamps only, let's take a look at a few issues and how catalogues deal with them.The 1958 Scott catalogue listed the Canadian Map issue of 1898 as follows: Imperial Penny Postage Issue, map of World on Mercator Projections, Engraved and Typo-graphed, 1898, 85 A33 2c black, lavender and carmine.a.imperf pair 86 A33 2c black, blue and carmine Despite the fact that since the publication of the 1958 catalogue, a book by Frederick Tomlinson entitled.The Canadian Map Stamp of 1898 detailing the issue in depth was published, the only changes to be found in the Scott 1988 catalogue are the wording in the description from.Map of the World to Map of British Empire.The addition of imperf pair to stamp number 86.Engraved and Typographed has been abbreviated to read, engr.& typo.No where does volume I mention that major re-entries exist or that there is a green ocean in addition to a blue and lavender ocean.The type is set and it is carried on from year to year.The only thing to Stamp corner By Peter McCarthy j change is the price.A classic example of cataloguing is seen in the 1967-1973 Definitive Issue.There’s no doubt that the meaning of the word catalogue is adhered to as the series is listed as per denomination and date of release.Some perforation varieties, booklet panes and tagged issues are also listed.However, the series goes a lot deeper than what is seen in volume I.Even some of our so-called Canadian specialized catalogues leave a lot to be desired.The best would have to be the Darnell catalogue.There are many books on various facets of Canadian stamp col- lecting that are in fact catalogues.The reason being that they “metho-, dically” list stamps of different va-' rieties in the sequence that they ap-^ pear.I It’s very difficult to expect the trade catalogues to include every single detail of a stamp.However, a little more care in the listings might help.One cannot say that Scott’s is not a good catalogue, for they are.They provide collectors with a great deal of information in the first pages.A specialist, however, can’t rely on Scott’s except for numbers and prices.Canadians were drawn into a further catalogue battle a few years ago — the controversy over the numbering system.It now seems to have died down with collectors using all of the so-called specialized catalogues.The rule of thumb in buying stamps is never paying higher than catalogue price.However, some unscrupulous Canadian dealers sell Canadian stamps to Canadians at twenty percent over the Scott price to cover exchange.Their claim is that Scott’s is the American price.That ’s about all the catalogue means to these people.It’s my opinion that if collectors are to voice their displeasure about a catalogue such as Scott’s volume I, it should be over content rather than price.* * * If you don’t have any plans for next week-end, may I suggest that you try and take in the Lakeshore Stamp Club’s annual stamp exhibition and bourse.This particular show has to rank among one of the best in the country.It is done with class.The exhibitors themselves enter material that you will have difficulty finding other than at major international shows.The dates are April 6 to 8 inclusive at the Dor-val civic centre on Lakeshore Drive in Dorval.The Lakeshore Stamp Club will be hosting the Royal Philatelic Society Convention in 1991.Anyone planning an exhibit for such a show should think about it now.TV star James Stacy makes it back VANCOUVER (CP) — Life has dealt some tough cards to actor James Stacy, one-time Hollywood heart-throb and star of the TV western Lancer.For two years, Stacy had women swooning, playing the handsome Johnny Madrid Lancer.But Stacy’s life was shattered in 1973 when his motorcycle was rammed by a drunk driver.His left arm and leg were sheared off and his passenger was killed.Although he won a $1.9 million US court settlement, no one could blame Stacy if he was bitter.During the last few years, he admits he’s “wasted myself’’ with booze while travelling to places such as Hong Kong and Thailand.ffantîer Loctae - ON LAKE WALLACE - -J Christian Youth Camp St.Hennenegilde, Qc.Good, clean fun and adventure in a Christian environment in the great outdoors EXPERIENCE.BRING Ap! Youth Conference, co-ed, ages 15 and up 1st May 18 • 21 2nd Aug 31 - Sept.3 Junior Camps, co-ed, ages 8 -11 1st July 1 - 14 2nd July 15 -28 Girls Camp - ages 12 ¦ 16 July 29 Aug 11 Boys Camp - ages 12 16 Aug 12 • 25 For information write; Box 358, Ayer's Cliff, Qc.JOB 1C0 Or phone Camp Director Allan "Jake Christian Camping International Chapel, campfires, boating, swimming, hiking, music, campcraft, friendship, canoeing, kayaking, archery, ball sports, drama, handicrafts Jackson at 819-838-4630 Today, the 53-year-old Stacy is in Vancouver making a comeback, as a regular in the TV show Wiseguy.He plays a crusty small town publisher.He doesn’t seem the kind of guy to sit around feeling sorry for himself.Despite his disability, he's surprisingly spry on a single crutch and enjoys tooling around in his motorized three-wheel chair.An avid skier before the accident.he was re-taught how to ski by Jean-Claude Killy.He also likes scuba diving, particularly around Catalina Island.In 1983, he started the California Handicapped Ski School at Bear Mountain and is now the hill's fundraiser.‘‘It’s a lot of fun to see people who have never got on skis before getting down the hill, falling a lot and really having a nice experience,” he says.FATHER WAS BOOKIE Stacy grew up in Burbank, the ">tC Member Canada Division son of a bookmaker.His dad had five phones in the house and regularly paid off the local chief of police, he says with a grin.Before the accident, Stacy had become part of Hollywood’s tabloid gossip scene.His marriage to Connie Stevens broke down.Then he was married to Kim Darby.While that didn’t last, he’s very proud of his 21-year-old daughter from his second marriage.She’s Heather Elias — Stacy’s real last name — and a budding actress.He says he’s not bitter about what happened to him.“I’m angry that I haven't done more with my life, such as giving speeches at colleges, or heading up some large kind of campaign.’’ He has done commercials against drunk driving, however, and the California ski school “has kept me from dwelling too much on myself and my loss.” Partage 'St-François Community Centra The Friend of the Poor 115 Galt West (corner Laurier) Sherbrooke, QC J1H 1X8 (819) 821-2233 A helping hand to the deprived.Dining Room open Thurs thru Sun 11 a.m.to 9 p.m.Seafood & Steaks NOON SPECIALS Table d'hote 5 p.m.to 9 p.m.Licence complete Hi Bar open daily 11 a.m.to closing Bar Menu Fully licensed Reservations 838-5466 997 rue Principal Ayer's Cliff Fairground entrance :K u TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990—3 Sir Brian sallies forth on a quest for the Holy Accord By Tadeusz Letarte And it came to pass that bold Sir Brian, seeing his kingdom sore beset, consulted with his wizards and sallied forth to save the Holy Accord.And with him rode his trusty knights yclept Sir Lowell and Sir Joe (who’d make a brave and splendid knight when he grew up) and, following behind astride a jennet, John of Newfoundland, his jester.This Holy Accord, as all ye should wit well, was found by Sir Brian long ago in the Lake of Meech.An arm and hand had risen from the waters in the midst thereof brandishing this Accord on high just as Sir Brian happened past upon his morning stroll (or so he said).He had then put forth in a small barge he'd found beside the verge (or so he said), rowed out and firmly grasped and holden that Accord which glowed and sparkled like a jewel.The arm and hand thereupon had waved thrice bye-bye and slowly desappeared beneath the waves.(Or so he said).GATHERED KNIGHTS But long years had passed and now Sir Brian quested to save his kingdom by saving that Accord and so he donned habergeon and gleaming armor, buckled on his sword, he took up his shield and spear, sat down upon his horse and sallied forth to gather all his loyal knights errant.He had not ridden far when his path was blocked by a knight dressed all in black.“Whither goest thou?” demanded this strange knight.“I am questing,” answered Sir Brian hotly, “to meet with my gallant knights errant to say the Holy Accord.” “Thou shall not pass!" “By my head, I shall,” replied Sir Brian who was wroth out of measure.“I wit ye well, Sir Clyde, and I shall go where’er I wist and meet whome’er 1 wist and thou shouldst mind of thine own affairs!” “Thou shalt not past,” repeated this Sir Clyde and straightway both knights did dress their shields and spears and come together in furious charge so that each shivered his spear and unhorsed the other.Then up they gat, drew swords and smote such blows one on the other until both quite exhausted and could smite no more.Then said Sir Clyde; “Mesee-meth we have assayed each other passing sore.” BETTER DAY “And we must leave the outcome,” gasped Sir Brian, “unto a better day.” Then each climbed wearily upon his horse and went their separate ways but yet Sir Brian secretly rejoiced this knight no longer barred his path and so believed he’d won a victory of sorts.Then he waxed merry as he rode and sang this little song; “I am Sir Brian — ha ha I am Sir Brian — ho ho 1 am Sir Brian, as bold as a lion.And everyone tells me so!” How Sir Brian and his knights errant slew dragons and rescued damsels in distress and met a wise man with a flower in his lapel.Sir Brian and his retinue rode on and met Sir Vander Zalm and Sir Ghiz, Sir John of New Scotland and e’en Sir Don and all these knights agreed to join to save the Holy Accord.Many and wonderful were the adventures that befell them on the way until they came upon a damsel seated neath a tree.Sir Brian, sensing her distress.Who’s who By TADEUSZ LETARTE saluted her.“Fair damsel, sensing her distress, saluted her.“Fair damsel,” he began but she jumped up and shied a clod which smote him on the helm and set his ears a-ringing with such bells that he could speak no more.NOBODY’S DAMSEL “I’m nobody’s damsel!” quqd she with fiery spirit.“And I’ll fight my own dragons!” Just then came John of Newfoundland quaffing cactus wine and singing a comic song astride his palfrey.The damsel heard his song, tore a limb from the tree in rage and knocked the pour court fool overthwart the cruppers of his horse.Sir Brian laughed right heartily to see poor John sitting dazedly upon the sward and they rode on, met many more adventures, slew dragons (or so they said), but could not persuade Sir Gary nor Sir Frank de Brunswick to join them on their quest.Then they came one day upon Dame Carstairs on the moor (who was under a strange spell which made her speak like Donald Duck) but she, too.refused to join their party and so they left her and rode on.Next they met a band of varlets led by John Christian who hooted and jeered as they passed and assailed them with fruit long past its prime.And last of all they came upon an ancient hermit with a flower in his lapel.He was very old and very wise (he could charm warts and everything) but when Sir Brian told Madonna at the Skydome May 27 TORONTO (CP) — Pop super-star Madonna will perform a concert at the Sky Dome on May 27, Concert Productions International has announced.Tickets for the event, to be held in the reduced SkyBowl format, are priced at $32.50 and $28.50 and go on sale Friday.Opening act for the show will be European newcomers Technotro-nic.a hot dance club and hit radio act.AUGUSTA.Ga.(AP) — Thomas Lee Bass, drummer for the rock band Motley Crue, was arrested for baring his bottom to the audience at the Augusta-Richmond County Civic Centre.Bass, whose professional name is Tommie Lee, was charged with indecent exposure and performing a sexually explicit act.Police said he dropped his pants with his back to an audience of 6,000.“There was about 30 more minutes left in the show and we allowed them to continue to perform," said Del.D.N.Bourbo.who made the arrest Sunday.Bass was booked, then freed on $1.680 cash bond.Bourbo said.The musician did not appear in court Monday, thus forfeiting the bond money, court officials said.The band left Augusta in a private jet after Bass’s release.BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — Actor and comedian Richard Pryor, who suffered a mild heart attack last week, has been readmitted to a Brisbane hospital and will remain there until he returns to the United States, officials said Tuesday.A spokesman at Wesley Hospital.where Pryor.49, was admitted early last week after complaining of chest pains, said the Los Angeles-based actor was discharged Sunday but was readmitted.She would not say whether Pryor had experienced additional chest pains or complications, adding that doctors remain happy with his progress and said his condition is “very satisfactory.” Pryor was on holiday on the Gold Coast area of northeastern Australia when he suffered the heart attack.In 1980.he was burned severely and almost died while free-basing cocaine, which involves heating the drug over an open flame.BURBANK.Calif.(AP-CP) — The Walt Disney Co.says moviegoers are applauding its refusal to show its films in theatres that run ads first.Richard Cook, president of Disney’s Buena Vista Pictures Distribution, said anyone who ever heard an audience hiss the ads knows how unpopular they are.He said the depth of that hatred came out in overwhelming praise after Disney announced its policy last month.”We had five boxloads of letters,” Cook said.Toronto-based Cineplex-Odeon, with about 580 screens across Canada, shows advertisements.Canada’s other major chain, Famous Players with 470 screens, does not.Disney’s policy has little effect in Canada, as Cineplex-Odeon shows “a very limited number of Disney films in Canada," said company spokeswoman Jo Mira Clodman in Toronto.BUENOS AIRES (Reuter) — About 200 Argentine film industry workers, protesting tax exemptions for foreign films, staged a noisy demonstration outside a theatre where winners of two Hollywood Oscars were announced early Tuesday.him of his quest, he gravely advised him to turn back.DESTROY KINGDOM “This Holy Accord,” he warned, “will destroy thy kingdom.” But Sir Brian stopped his ears and comforted himself as he rode on by singing his little song ; “I am Sir Brian, you see.I am Sir Brian.That’s me! I am Sir Brian, as gold as a lion So there! And fiddle-dee-dee!” How Sir Brian and his knights came to the castle of Sir Robert the Slippery and what befell them there.At long last Sir Brian and his gallant knights errant arrived at the castle of Sir Robert the Slippery where it stood upon a high cliff.They pitched their gay pavilions on the plain beneath, unfurled their banners and standards to the breeze, displayed their colored blazons while trappings, swords and shields and armor glittered brightly in the sun.Then trumpets rang and Sir Robert rode slowly down displaying his emblem of blue and white, accompanied only by Gil Rémillard, his squire.They drew to a halt some diostance from Sir Brian and Sir Robert spoke: “Well 1 know who thou art,” quod he, “but why hast thou come to press me so?” “I have come to save the Holy Accord,” Sir Brian answered, "and thus my kingdom.All my stout knights errant have come here too — excepting only Sir Gary and Sir Frank and the blackhearted Sir Clyde of Newfoundland." DON’T TOUCH “The Holy Accord." announced Sir Robert, “is in my safe keeping and thou shalt not touch it.” “But I come in peace to save it, not to harm it,” cried Sir Brian.But Sir Robert was as adamantine and would not be moved."Thou shalt not besmirtch this Holy Accord,” said he and he turned sedately away and rode slowly back to his castle, his faithful squire at his side.Then did Sir Brian know his quest had truly failed and that he had witnessed Le Morte d'Accord Sometime thereafter (or so ’tis said), a lone wanderer was of-ttimes see afoot about the land answering all queries with a little song; “/ am Sir Brian?Oh.no! 1 am Sir Brian?Who me?I am Sir Brian ?Why, you must lying! I’m Mr.Mulroney.(B>.” 1FAMOUS PLAYERS A PARAMOUNT PICTURE .Z [*' 'S Sat., Sun.: 1:00 - 3:50 - 6:40 - 9:30 p.m Week days: 6:40 - 9:30 p.m 3050 bout.PORTLAND 565 0366 Sat., Sun.: 12:40 - 2:50 - 5:00 - 7:10 -9:20 p.m Week days: 7:10 - 9:20 p.m.3050 boul PORTLAND 565 0366 4—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990 Godfather Part III is in the making but mum’s the word EDITOR’S NOTE — After 15 years, director Francis Ford Coppola and actor Al Pacino are together again to make a third Godfather movie, a super-secret production being filmed in Rome, Sicily and New York at a cost of $44 million.By Stephen R.Wilson ROME (API — When it comes to making The Godfather, Part HI, omerta is the word.Silence — the Mafia code of silence.“I just know to keep my mouth shut and my script in the safe,” says Franc D’Ambrosio, who plays Tony Corleone, son of Cosa Nostra chieftain Michael Corleone.When we last saw Michael in Godfather, Part II, he was having his older brother, Fredo, shot in the head on a fishing boat on Lake Tahoe.Now, 15 years later, director Francis Ford Coppola and most of the cast are back together to make the third chapter of one of the most successful movie sagas of all time.The $44 million production, set in 1979, is being shot in Rome, Sicily and New York for release in the United States around Thanksgiving.The basic storyline has leaked out: Michael, played again by Al Pacino, tries to legitimize the Corleone family by teaming up with a Vatican archbishop who helps him acquire a stake in a European multinational corporation.But the script and the stars, especially Pacino, Diane Keaton and Andy Garcia, are being kept under wraps.The final 12 pages of the script are so secret they were reportedly printed on special paper that can’t be photocopied.D’Ambrosio says Pacino, made up to look 60 years old, and Keaton, who plays the don’s estranged wife, Kay.are so adamant about not being photographed that extras are checked to make sure they’re not sneaking cameras onto the set.MUCH AT STAKE Coppola, at 50, has more than his artistic reputation on the line.His financial survival is at stake.A string of box-office flops such as One From the Heart, Rumble Fish and The Outsiders left him and his Zoetrope studios in economic shambles.In late January, Coppola and Zoetrope Productions filed for bankruptcy protection from creditors, listing assets of $22.2 million and debts of $28.9 million.The move followed protracted litigation over debts owed to Jack Singer, a Canadian real estate developer who lent Coppola $3 million to help him complete One From the Heart.Coppola hopes to duplicate the success of the first two Godfather movies, which won the Academy Award for best picture in 1972 and 1974 and together have grossed some $800 million worldwide.Coppola was voted best director, producer and writer for Godfather II, hailed as one of the best film sequels ever made.With Marlon Brando portraying aging boss Vito Corleone, the first Godfather described the ascendan-cy of the Italian-American Corleone crime family in New York and Las Vegas.Part II jumps back and forth between the early years of Vito Corleone, played by Robert De Niro, and the late 1950s when Vito’s son Michael consolidates his power.It took Paramount Pictures 15 years to get the cameras rolling on Godfather III.Untold numbers of directors, producers, writers and screenplays were considered and rejected.Last year Coppola finally agreed to join forces again with Mario Pu- zo, whose best-selling novel gave rise to the Godfather movies, to develop the story for part III.COULDN’T REFUSE According to the Hollywood trade publication Variety, Coppola’s decision probably stemmed largely from financial incentives.Paramount made him — what else?— an offer he couldn’t refuse : some $6 million, plus a share of the gross.(His signing fee for the first Godfather was $125,000.) Coppola reassembled much of the cast and crew of the earlier Godfather pictures.For three months, they’ve been at Rome’s Cinecitta studios, a 148-acre complex where most of the interior scenes are being filmed.Behind the camera again are producers Fred Roos and Gray Frederickson.production designer Dean Tavoularis, photography director Gordon Willis and music composer Carmine Coppola, the director's father.On screen, besides Pacino and Keaton, Coppola’s sister, Talia Shire, is back as Connie Corleone and Al Martino returns as Johnny Fontane, the crooner in the first Godfather.The key figure is Garcia, who plays Vincent Mancini, Michael’s illegitimate nephew, born of the tryst between Sonny Corleone and a bridesmaid during the wedding party in the first film.The story stems from the real-life scandal involving the Vatican bank's alleged role in the 1982 collapse of Banco Ambrosiano, Italy ’s largest private bank.D’Ambrosio, a 27-year-old tenor from New York, was a surprise choice for the role of Tony Corleone.He was appearing in Broadway’s Sweeney Todd when he was signed, beating out more than 1,000 others who auditioned for the part.It’s his first movie.“I call it the Godfather University,” D’Ambrosio says.’’It’s a crash course.I’m learning from the best.” EVERYTHING CLAUDE IT’S GOOD SELLS: i TsrTfc,.;,! Tanaka SH?" fru'iTF TOPS IN PORTABILITY, POWER & SAFETY -P » Re9 2B5-95 SPECIAL: BUSH CUTTER 205®* Model TBC 200 CHAINSAW CUPPER PULVERIZER OUTBOARD MOTORS Tanaka 1.7 h.p., 3.5 h.p„ 5.5 h.p.Light & Robust ^¦V gas drill tm ¦ * Reg.$425 >375 iM AND The Service People yeor limited 'Ne e* loca1'°n S»SJaî .AGAIN BETTER \\ We hove .TRACTORS FROM - Ji 8 h.p.to 16 h.p.with 30 inch to 46 inch widths starting at LAWN MOWERS 3 h.p.to 4.5 h.p.Up to 6 Speed 1650$ SCIES à chaîne CLMJDE CARIER , ¦ «nawfrlawjjMMMuniMttti-.«»t«y -wo Don t wait for the grass to grow, this is the time to have your gas motors fixed.45 Craig St.North COOKSHIRE 875-3847 TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990—5 Tidbits and tattletales about Minton's past — by Reginald Conners The Vine and the Branches — a particular history \/ ( ll‘) \/1 I 1 rv*^ i ¦ _ _ _ By Claudia Villemaire MINTON — I remembered Reg Conners from the fairs.His reputation as a Holstein breeder went before him long years ago when Ayer’s Cliff fair and, for a few years, Sherbrooke Exhibition exhibitors knew and respected this man known for his fine Holsteins.But I never pictured Conners as a writer.Somehow, the two images didn’t come together in my mind.Well, the laugh’s on me.This week when we talked, a hard cover volume was not far away.The Vine and the Branches, the final evidence of 15 years of intensive research as Conners and his wife Doris scoured the immediate area for local tales, talked to far flung relations about half-forgotten incidents and tracked down the family trees of at least 15 families who were among the first settlers in the hills around Minton.Where is Minton, you ask?Anyone who has never travelled the hills and ridges between Kate vale and North Hatley has proba- bly never seen the lonely country church, sitting stoically on the corner of Minton Road and North Hatley Road.And if they have, how many folks realise the church is all that’s left of a once flourishing little village.Or do they know about the skimming station (butter factory I, or the school or even the post office where locals gathered every day to gossip a bit while they looked over the mail.Did you know there’s an Indian trail that begins in North Hatley and winds up and over the ‘copper ridge’, past Minton and back up into the hills.Or that the hills around Minton still bear the traces of copper mines, once the main source of income during the 1800s."1 had an uncle who was a great keeper of tales, bits of news, old legends and gossip,” Conners said.“So, when the inspiration hit me to try to write a book about the area and its people, Doris and I visited him often.” Conners listened to the tales as OLD TALES “I was born right here, in this house, he added.“And I always loved these hills and all the tales the old folks used to tell.” About 15 years ago, Conners decided to stop farming.The prize herd was sold and suddenly he had time on his hands."Then it hit me,” he remembers.The Conners began a search that would take them deep into New England, and to almost every corner of the Townships.They rediscovered long-lost relatives and found new ones.“We spent hours and hours finding cemeteries, then searching for the grave markers or tombstones and recording every bit of information we could find,” Conners remembered.“He tore around the cemeteries, picking out the markers he wanted recorded and struggled to decipher and write down the information,” Doris Conners recalled.“I was often quite a piece behind him.” written, the photos gathered and selected.It was time to begin the gigantic task of putting a manuscript together “Getting this mountain of writing, facts, photos — there are over a hundred — and family trees into some semblance of order took just about a year,” Conners said.Then, with everything gathered into a big bunch, it was off to the printers.A LOCAL HISTORY Today, The Vine and the Branches is in bookstores.It tells the story of the life and times of Minton, the history of the people who settled there so long ago, struggling to wrest a living from the soil or under it in the copper mines, a fair sprinkling of tales that are really legends, along with family histories and historical tacts are between the dark green book covers.“My husband has very strong, deep roots here in his home hills and thank God, so does our son Wendall.He wants to keen the fa- same mind herself.WIFE PROOFREAD “1 never thought of myself as a writer." Conners said.“But we worked out a system.1 wrote as best I could and Doris corrected the grammer and spelling.’’ “Without her help I would have been in some bad trouble,” he said, laughing.The Conners, childhood sweethearts in the 1920s, celebrated their 55 wedding anniversary recently.Perhaps that fact seems irrelevant, but the book, with opening photos of the Conners wedding certificate and the couple themselves, is, from the first pages, an expression of love that begins at home and goes far beyond their beloved ‘Copper Ridge’.The Vine and the Branches is available by mail from the Conners on Minton Road, from The Townships Sun in Lennoxville and by mail.Several bookstores in Len noxville and Sherbrooke also have the volume for sale The nriee is .MO r.Reginald and Doris Conners — childhood sweethearts still RECORD/DAN HAWALESHKA 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990 Métis actress striving for truth Nelson disappointing By Gwen Dambrofsky EDMONTON (CP) — Tantoo Cardinal is trying her best to be diplomatic about her role in Kevin Costner’s new film Dances With Wolves.Very happy for the work, she says, a little slowly.Wonderful opportunity, good for the career, etc.etc.Uh-oh.The smile is weakening.She’s starting to fidget.Thetruth?Cardinal doesn't have a clue how Dances With Wolves — expected to be released later this year — will turn out.But she’s not optimistic.It seems it’s not in the Alberta-born actress’s nature to play these little ain’t-everything-grand Hollywood games.Truth.Now that's a concept that means something to Cardinal, best known for her Genie-nominated performance as a hot-headed, proud Metis woman in Anne Wheeler’s drama Loyalties.She strives for it — to be true to herself, true to a role, true to her Metis heritage.It’s that last one that prompts her doubts about Dances With Wolves, which stars Costner as a U.S.army officer in the mid-l«00s who encounters a tribe of Indians on the fringes of the western frontier.ILL-INFORMED’ Cardinal plays the wife of the medicine man who becomes close friends with the army officer.The movie, which marks Costner’s debut as a director, examines the difference in cultures as epitomized in the character of a young white girl who has grown up with the tribe.“They all had the best of intentions but they were ill-informed," Cardinal says with a grimace."They didn’t know anything about Metis people, half-breed people.Did not know that such people existed.That we have the knowledge of how people combine cultures.” The truth is.she now knows, that truth isn’t important to everyone: “It was really kind of frustrating to see it happening and realize you were limited in what you could do.” Cardinal, who appears in her mid-40s, moved to Los Angeles three years ago when she married American television actor John Lawlor.whom she met when he was performing at a dinner theatre in Edmonton.FAR FROM HOME “I would never have gone to L A.for a career choice.” she says bluntly."In fact, it was presented as an idea some years before, but I never felt it was the place for me." It is a long way from her childhood home of Anzac, a remote village near Fort McMurray in northern Alberta.She was raised by her maternal grandmother: her white father abandoned the family just six weeks after Cardinal was born.The old woman’s entertaining and dramatic retelling of Indian legends was her first exposure to acting.An excellent student, Cardinal was sent to Edmonton to attend high school.She boarded with a Mennonite couple and eventually married their son, whom she later divorced.A chance meeting with Edmon- ton director Fil Fraser in 1979 led to her first feature film, Marie-Anne.In the years that followed she worked with native cultural groups and performed in theatre.Ironically, Cardinal’s move to Los Angeles came just as Loyalties was making her a hot property in Canada.There’s a hint of regret about that in her sharp, lyrical voice, but in another way, she’s grateful for the respite.NEEDED STRENGTH “Going away let me get back in touch with myself,” she says.“Things had been getting a little out of control.All of a sudden people were talking about projects and seeing me in a different light.I felt I had to be stronger than I was.” Now, more than anything, she wants to come home.All that's stopping her is a few commitments her husband has to finish and completing his paperwork for immigration.In the meantime, she’s temporarily back in Edmonton performing in Catalyst Theatre’s production of All My Relations, the first full-length play by a young Cree playwright from Saskatchewan named Floyd Favel.Chatting over a bowl of soup in a near-empty Greek restaurant, Cardinal’s thin face brightens perceptibly when the conversation turns away from Los Angeles and to her part in this production, the comic-dramatic story of a native family’s move from a reserve into Saskatoon.“Years ago when I first started.I would just die of loneliness because I would never see Indian faces in the audience,” she says.By Bill Anderson TORONTO (CP) — Willie Nelson made his name in the ’70s as an “outlaw” from the Nashville establishment, and today he still fancies the biker-style look of long flowing hair, red bandanas and black T-shirts.But for all the emotion he put into his concert on Saturday at the Sky-Dome, he might as well have been wearing glitter chaps and doing a stand at Caesar's Palace.Nelson ran off more than 20 songs during his 90-minute concert, most so brief they made the show seem like a K-Tel commercial for Willie’s Greatest Hits.In true Vegas style, there were also a couple of medleys, which disposed of classics like Night Life and Crazy in even more perfunctory fashion.Crazy, made famous by Patsy Cline, is one of the songs that helped the 56-year-old Nelson earn his first record contract in 1961.But as he sang it on Saturday, it also revealed how Nelson's stark, nasal delivery has a way of flattening every song to fit his mould.Yes, it’s unmistakably Willie Nelson, and there's no one else like him — but when his stoical cowboy style can’t hide a millionaire’s apathy, the resultsare a disappointing bore.All was not lost, however, as the concert at least raised some money for the Hagersville Environmental Relief Organization, which is working to clean up the small Ontario community recently devastated by a fire at a tire dump.Between various corporate sponsors, a share of ticket revenues and a pre-concert auction of country If—Z" LOOKS GREAT FOR A LONG TIME With Sico he Interior Finishing-Tbuchj^ i Pit 170 110 or less for 4 litres SUPER LATEX PLATINUM FINISH WHITE (164-110) or less for 4 litres INTERIOR LATEX PEARL FINISH WHITE (280-600) or less for 4 litre SUPER LATEX SATIN FINISH WHITE (161-110) or less for 4 litres SUPER ALKYDE PEARL FINISH WHITE (120-110) or less for 3 78 litres SUPER LATEX MAT FINISH FOR CEILINGS VHITE (160-112) or less for 4 litres , SUPER LATEX I SEMI-LUSTRE FINISH (WHITE (162-110) Check Out the SICO Circular Choice of 250 pastel colours.This offer ends June 22.1990 We do colours by computer! 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CENTRE DE PEINTURE NOËL, 135 Sherbrooke St„ Magog 819-843- music souvenirs and goodies, the show raised about $6,000, according to promoter Concert Productions International.Musically, the night also got a lift from two younger country acts that preceeded Nelson on stage.Ricky Van Shelton, a handsome rising star from Virginia, provided the most coherent performance with a smooth 45-minute set of mostly deep-hurtin’ country ballads.When he mixed in some rock ’n’ roll numbers — Oh Pretty Woman, Great Balls of Fire — his show also began to tilt toward Vegas, but when he kept to the melodramatic achin’ and cryin’ tunes he was just fine.Much the same could be said for George Fox, Canada’s newest hope to become an international country success.The 30-year-old rancher from Cochrane, Alta., won a Juno Award last week as country male vocalist of the year, but his career is only two years old and he knows he’s not a household name yet."For all of you who never heard of George Fox.well I come outta the foothills of Alberta,” he told the sparse crowd of less than 10,000 people."This is the first time playin’ in Toronto, in this intimate setting here out by second base.” Indeed, none of Saturday’s performers looked right performing in the mammoth SkyDome, which was cut down into the SkyBowl but was still woefully unsuited to the intimate, human-scale pleasures of country music.Regardless, the gentlemanly Fox seemed to grow more at ease as his 45-minute set progressed.And while Nelson barely said howdy, and Van Shelton limited his talk to a few kind words, Fox took | several opportunities to squeeze in I some of his personality and add a few jokes.His best line was a reference to the push he is getting in the United States from Warner Bros.Records.“Seeing as they’ve done a lot for Bugs Bunny, maybe they can help old George Fox," he said.The Nelson triple bill is scheduled to continue its swing through Central and Eastern Canada with performances today in Ottawa, Tuesday in Kingston, Ont., Wednesday in Montreal, Friday in Moncton, Saturday in Halifax and April 3 in St.John’s, Nfld.,S “ Québec ss TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990-7 Quarrington’s Logan in Overtime is best forgotten Logan In Overtime by Paul Quar-rington (DOUBLEDAY): $14.95, 215 pp.When the Governor General's Awards committe announced that Paul Quarrington’s Whale Music was declared the winner in the English writers of fiction category a month ago, considerable controversy developed.Many critics wondered how, or indeed why, Mordecai Richler’s massive, cornicle tome, Solomon Gursky Was Here could possible be passed over in favourof Quarrigton’s slender, and on merit slight, volume.Whale Music.Anyone with a passing knowledge of rock music was thoroughly dismayed that such a pastiche of reports about the legendary figure of Brian Wilson, of the Californian Beach Boys, could be so blatantly borrowed, rewritten and passed off as a major fiction.On originality, not to mention insight into rock ’n’ roll, comedy, or even characterization, Quarring-ton’s award winning fiction was very thin.Questions about the cheapening of the G.G.’s aside, it would be thought that the committee choosing Quarrington's book would perhaps be making their choice with consideration for its author’s future as a Canadian writer of merit — a new Atwood, Davies or Munro.The book that followed the rock spoof Whale Music, then, might be expected to carry on a tradition of excellence that the Governor General’s Awards purportedly recognize.Alas, Logan In Overtime is neither excellent, nor deserving of shelf space anywhere near Cat's Eye.World of Wonders, or The Moons Of Jupiter.Having done nothing to enlighten readers about the eccentric lifestyle of Beach Boy Wilson, Quar-rington turns to a surefire bestselling gimmick in Canadian quarters — the lonely, misunderstood, disreputable figure of the hockey player.As a fictional ploy to pique interest, he adds the familiar territory of smalltown Ontario, with all of its social quirks and crude characters haunting “beer parlours” and "rinks” across the broad face of the Canadian Shield.To turn these elements into rich comedy is not such a gigantic task — Richler, the overlooked, for instance, does a marvellous job with the sub-culture of Quebec cantines and Magog miscreants in Gursky which is often riotously funny! — but Quarrington’s "humorous novel about the longest overtime game in the history of hockey" is not even remotely funny.RESEARCH WAS NEEDED As another model.Quarrington would have been well advised to flip through a few books by Tom Robbins (Even Cowgirsl Get The Blues, or Another Roadside Attraction), to see how eccentricity, sci-fi elements and comic charate-rization can be generously employed to create the kind of comic novel that this author aspired to writing.Although the directive on a frontal page of Logan declares “This one is for a rainy day at the Lodge”, its author must have been Kaleidoscope Bw mr'Lj anrx ¦ ntie*/ ’ ¦ By RICHARD LONEY convinced of his work’s genuine appeal.He gives us the long-on-the-tooth, weak-in-the-knees goalten-der Mars Logan, who minds the pipes for the Falconbridge Falcons, a nondescript team of over-the-hill hockey players who more or less conform to the stereotype develped in Paul Newman’s film Slap Shot.The difference between Logan In Overtime and the hilarious film treatment about backwoods hockey legends is that the former is ploddingly dull, while the movie was slapstick and outrageous in its depiction of hockey “types".Quarrington's hockey lore is minimal (goaltenders go through the ritual of cutting up the ice in their crease to cut down the glare from the lights?), and his on-ice descriptive writing lacks any kind of fascinating appeal.For a sport that is so electirfyin-gly fast, played on the brink of violence, with the prospect for jolting bodychecks always present, it would appear that a prose stylist would have excellent material to work with.Unfortunately Quarrington's narrative style does not do justice to the game of hockey, and his play-by-play descriptions are stilted, stylized and lifeless.ADDS WHIMSY The decision by Quarrington to add an element of whimsical fantasy to his tale only manages to completely befuddle the reader with references to Zoltron, a “mindfucker from the Dogstar Sirius".whose earthly interferences have some vague connection to the knee injuries sustained by goalten-der Logan.Bringing in a play-by-play man, with his colour commentary partner from theCBC, named, wait for it, “Don and Dan ”, would appear to be a wonderful opportunity for Quarrington to indulge in some witty satire.After all, Danny Gali-van was one of the most noted bru-talizers of the English language (osculating off the herculite glass?, or apex of the epitome?) and Dick Irvine the most fawning homer in the history of televised hockey.But again.Quarrington only focuses on the fact that Dan and Don are continually tippling, often drunk in their presentation, missing wonderful opportunities to create comic characterizations that many Canadians would readily recognize.As Canadian fiction that is usua-ly subsidized by the grudging taxpayers of this nation, and that would sink like a stone on the open marketplace, work of this kind is deplorable; as a representation of the quality of fiction that wins Governor General’s Awards and Leacock Awards for Humour, Logan In Overtime is embarrassing and best forgotten.RECORD REVIEWS The Notting Hillbillies Missing- ; fyfAfîrw/nôts' J .Presumed Having A Good Time (WARNER BROS — WEA) Biding his time during the long hiatus between Dire Straits projects (Brothers in Arms.1985).Mark Knopfler decided to put out an album of the kind of music that has been a steady undercurrent since his earliest work on the album that produced “Sultan of Swing”.Country blues and delta blues licks are all over such offhand Knopfler things as “Settin’ Me Up”, (covered by Albert Hall and Highway 101), “Why Worry Now" (performed by the Everlys, Don & Phil), or “Water Of Love”, a huge country hit for the Judds recently.Knopfler’s affection for this countrified sound led him to recruit the Dire Straits keyboard man, Guy Fletcher, former duet partner Steve Phillips, and Bren-den Croker, an old mate from the early London scuffling days.The quartet began working on some tracks in Knopfler’s private studio in the area of London known as Notting Hill Gate, hence the playful title Notting Hillbillies.They also borrowed a London “tube” symbol for Notting Hill, and added the words “the” and “hillbillies" to the logo to come up with an instant identification.Musically, however, the Hillbillies have even more debts.From the Delmore Brothers they borrow what may be the signature tune here, ambience wise, in “Blues Stay Away From Me”, while from the country duo the Louvin Brothers they revive “Weapon Of Prayer”.The country twang of those two acts is perhaps being carried on today in the music of the O’ Kanes, but the Notting Hillbillies have dug deeply into their collective musical past to come up with some odd gems."Bewildered”, with its lilting rhythms and cocktail room piano filler, is one of the highlights here.“Railroad Worksong” is an updating of an old black worksong sometimes known as “Take This Hammer”.A song from the Silver Fox, Charlie Rich, “Feel Like Going Home”, fits in perfectly with the dreamy, bluesy styles on this record, while a new song from Knopfler, “Your Own Sweet Way”, can be identified by its author’s unique guitar style.With a Dire Straits project looming on the fall horizon, assorted soundtrack labours behind him (Last Exit To Brooklyn, The Princess Bride), and guest shots on many albums racked up.it’s not that Mark Knopfler lacked for playing gigs.Obvioulsy the music on this Notting Hill version of the Travelling Wilburys show remains very special to the musicians who enjoyed playing it so much — the songs have a warmth and a charm that couldn't be duplicated on an “end of contract” obligation to satisfy a 1 vm&n record company’s demands.They may only be a one shot lark, but Mark Knopfler’s Notting Hillbillies will be a diversionary delight for his fans awaiting fresh Dire Straits.Carly Simon My Romance (ARISTA — BMG) The sultry female vocalist who enjoyed a long string of smash hits in the seventies and early eighties turns her back on her soft-rock background to enter Linda Rons-tadt’s domain.Carly Simon, noting the success that ex-rocker Ronstadt has enjoyed with her Nelson Riddle arrangements and reworking of classic love songs, turns her hand to the kind of songs that the showpeople must have sung around her small New York home when her dad was forming Simon & Schuster publishing.Simon, who dedicates the album to a nursemaid and to Frank Sinatra (“who might as well have been singing directly to me”), turns her syrupy smooth voice loose on songs from Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart (& Oscar Hammerstien II for “Something Wonderful”), such as “My Funny Valentine”, “Little Girl Blue”, “Bewitched”, and the beautiful title track.Another Rodgers & Hart classic, last heard being sung by Bob Shane of the Kingston Trio, is the very moving song “He Was Too Good To Me”, given a wonderful interpretation by Carly here.That she was one of a million young ladies who thrilled to Sinatra's interpretations of “My Funny Valentine” or “Bewitched” becomes clear when Carly’s rendition of these “singer’s songs” is heard.If Sinatra “virtually invented modern pop song phra sing ”, as Stephen Holden has written in Rolling Stone's Record Guide, then Simon does a creditable job on these two songs so indelibly stamped by the master’s voice.Comparisons with Ronstadt will be unavoidable, and while Carly Simon can appear a bit weak in the upper register on certain tracks, she adds a torchy, cocktail lounge quality to these songs that Linda’s girlish exuberance and gushy voice cannot approximate. 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990 WHAT’S ON Notes_______________ By Claudia Villemaire Just in case you didn’t catch the news in Wednesday’s paper — Window to Yesteryear — makes its debut in South Durham tonight.Tickets are absolutely sold out for tonight’s ( March 30) show.BUT fates have conspired to ensure anyone wanting to see the play — will.That’s right, they’ll put it on again, at the Richmond Regional High School on April 14.Showtime is 8.Once again, tickets are by reservation so give Heather or Norman Carson a call soon at 819 858-2539.CBC RADIO Arthur Black, award-winning host of CBC Radio’s Basic Black is spending part of this week at the Calgary Zoo.He’ll broadcast highlights of his expedition Saturday, March 31 from 10:05 to 11:35.From the creators of the CBC Television hit series Seeing Things comes an astonishing new movie.Sanity Clause, telecasting on CBC-TV, Sunday, April at 8.Sanity Clause is a deeply personal film, says Louis Del Grande.“For a long time I’ve had a tremendous desire to go deeper and explore some areas that concern me,” he said.“This movie deals with some of my personal obsessions — mental illness, the quest for faith and the attempt to find and maintain a community.It’s a comedy with a lot of pain.” CTV Academy Performance brings Face of Love to viewers Saturday.March 31 at 9.ETV THIS WEEK Built at the command of a tsar and rocked by the upheaval and chaos of a revolution, Leningrad is an extraordinary and dramatic city.Now a new National Geographic Special finds voices of change filling the air as Leningrad’s resilient residents take another major step in their history.Voices of Leningrad airs April 4 at 8.At 9, Potemkin, the first of two Russian film classics is followed by October, considered almost a sequel to the first classic film.CBC NEWSWORLD With the help of Videon Cable, Newsworld provides exclusive live coverage of the fourth Federal Liberal Leadership Forum from Winnipeg on Sunday, April 1 beginning at 1.Louise Léveillé is featured at the next Caisse Populaire de l’Est exhibition.See EXHIBITIONS NFB FILMS On Newsworld — March 31 — The poetic genius of Canadian writers Al Purdy and Ralph Gustafson is celebrated in the films Al Purdy: A Sensitive Man and Winter Prophecy: The Poetry of Ralph Gustafson coming up on NFB Showcase at 9.Music A marvel of the classical music world performs at Centennial Theatre when gifted Canadian pianist Louise Bessette performs at March 30 at 8:30.The evening program will include the following works: Monodias Espanolas — Jose Evangelista, Estampes — Claude Débussy, Pupazzi, petite suite pour piano opus 36 — Florent Schmitt and Sonate pour piano — Henri Dutilleux.Tickets and reservations are available now through the box office at 819 822-9692.The spring concert of the Uustiop's UlniUersitp Singers and Chamber Choir under the direction of Nancy Rahn will be held Sunday, April 1 at 3 at Centennial Theatre.The program opens with a setting of the MAGNIFICAT by Imant Raminsh.This composition is scored for mezzo-soprano solo, chorus and piano.Guest soloist is Ruth Barrie accompanied by Cheryl Stroud.Admission is $5 and $3 for students and seniors available through the box office of Centennial Theatre 822-9692.L’OCOS, featuring Mike Gauthier and his jazz trio, are at the Imperial Motel in Stanstead every week — Friday and Saturday night.At The Hut on St.Francis Street in Lennoxville, March 31, the Good Ole Boys are the featured band, beginning at 9.Tom Wheeler — The Country Gentleman — is featured at Bar SEP, (old Hotel Broadway), Rte 112 in Ascot Comer every Friday and Saturday night.Richmond town is still featuring country music every weekend at Le Marquis Motel on Craig Road.The Rocky River Band, with Bob Drew and the boys, will tune up just once more — this Saturday — ending their gig during March.If you haven’t been out to hear them yet better get to it.They’re a pretty good country music band, excellent instrumentals and lots of well-known melodies.Steve and Jessie Aulis are still playing and singing up a storm at one of their favorite haunts in Cookshire — the Hotel d’en Haut.Country Fever has been drawing crowds all month and there’s still one more weekend to catch up on the good times.(By the way, that means one last chance for those two lady admirers to catch the whiskered fellow's eye!).This Saturday, Hotel d’en Haut will roll out the carpet for a benefit dance.It seems Bruno Rlouin and his family lost every single thing they owned when their house burned down last Friday in Cookshire.Now Bruno is the kind who always turns up when other folks are in trouble.The benefit will be a good chance for folks to show their appreciation.Country Fever will supply all the music required too.Also at the Cookshire hotel every Thursday, disco music featuring Rétro Rock with Douglas Tincarre.Co-owner Don Vallée tells me they are starting to play country disco between sets on the weekends too.So that means continuous music all weekend long.During the month of April you’ll find the local country music boys — Bobby Patrick on drums, brother Mike pluckin’ up some magical guitar sounds and boomin’ bass player Mike Doyle at the Richmond Legion.I just happen to know the band’s been practising regularly, so they’ll have lots of new music for country music lovers.Those Legion folks have decided to make April Country Music Month, so they’ve lassooed Country Plus to do the job every Saturday night.Dancing starts around 9.At the Golden Lion this week — special guests — Kick Back Mick Hall says they’re good and I respect his opinion.Music starts around 10 and admission is $2.At Salle Jean Paul in Bury, Réal and Gail will stir up old memories of traditional country music every Friday night and special Saturdays — March 31, April 14 and 28 A good old fashioned event is coming up at the North Hatley Elementary School.Those folks are planning a Sock Hop complete with no smoking’ and no brown-bagging’ — just like the old school events we loved so much.Music is by J OSepH Wolfis the featured artist at Sisljop ’s aimbrrsitp See EXHIBITIONS 'mm; .* • Mid Life Crisis and money raised — tickets are $10 — goes into the general school fund for special activities, playground improvements, trips and so on.You can call either Manon Jones at 842-2166 or Agnes Lilford at 842-4173 for more info.That’s April 28 and they have door prizes too.Theatre Window to Yesteryear, a two-act play written by Alleda Nixon, directed by Nick Fonda and cast with folks whose background is firmly rooted in the South Durham region plays March 30—tonight — in the village community centre and tickets are sold out.Colorful village characters and a bit of romance spice up this comedy written by Alleda Nixon, a woman who also grew up in the area.Curtain rises at 8.March 30.They’ll put the play on again at Richmond Regional High School on April 14 at 8.For tickets and/or reservations, call Heather or Norman Carson at 819 858-2539.Organizers at Lac Brome Theatre are planning a Battle of the Bands for May 25 to give rock bands an opportunity to compete in a class of their own.It’s time to come out of the basement or garage and present your talent to the world.I iekets for the second theatre Lac Brome talent show are $5.Showtime is 8 o’clock.For further information, call Emma Stevens at 243-6590 or Dwight Hickey at 242-1100.Also at the Knowlton-based theatre there’s a presentation of a series of National Film Board productions starting Tuesday, April 3 with Goddess Remembered.The series will continue for three weeks, admission to each is $7 but a series ticket may be purchased now for .$15.Call 514 243-4272 or 0361.Coming up next in the series is Behind the Veil: Nuns on Aril 10.Theatre Lac Brome is looking lor rooms to rent at reasonable rates for actors and actresses during the summer season.Please call 242-1100.The Champlain Theatre Department will present their major annual production this week.A Grand Romance opens at Bishop’s Studio Theatre Wednesday, April 4 and continues each evening through to Saturday, beginning at 8.Keep in mind seating is limited at the Studio so plan on getting there early.Admission is $3. TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY.MARCH 30, 1990-9 WHAT’S ON Events Next Thursday, April 5, Radio Noon’s Louise Penny is coming to broadcast from the Haskell Opera House in Rock Island.Listeners are invited to drop by the show between 12 and 2.The theme is Live on the Border.Another broadcast will come out of Lac Brome Theatre in Knowlton on Friday, April 6.The theme there is Development of Rural Areas.The Eastern Townships Model Trains Club will hold their first-ever exhibition May 5 and 6 at Montcalm School on Portland Blvd.As this is their first event, they’re pulling all the stops to make the show as interesting to spectators as it will undoubtedly be to amateurs of these working miniatures— many of them valued collectors pieces.We’ll have more about the show as the date approaches.For lovers of fine horses — the Quebec Arabian Horse Association will hold a special day-long Horsemanship Clinic on April 1 beginning at 9 a m.Topics include some of the TEAM training techniques, how to prepare your horse and yourself for a show, facts about arabian horses and lots more.Professor for the day is Louise Jolicoeur, a Canadian Equestrian Federation Instructor.The place to be is Les Ecuries Ellabank.541, Route 143.Bromptonville — 819 846-2554.The cost is $5.To register call Pam at 819 562-7592 or Line, 514 922-1701 — Before March 30.The figure skating club — Les Tourbillons de Richmond will present their annual skating show March 31 at the Richmond Arena on Gouin Street.The Tourbillons has heaped all manner of honors on their heads this year, turning out at regional and provincial competitions and bringing a heap of gold and silver awards back home.Should be a good show.Time to be there is 7:30.The Third Annual Ceildh, featuring not only the Eastern Townships Pipe Band but also a pipe band from Ontario — Almonte Legion Pipe Band is slated for The Hut on St.Francis Street in Lennoxville.So all you lovers of the skirl of bagpipes and whirl of highland dancers, underline April 7 on your calendar now.Music starts at 9.The Prix d'Excellence competition, sponsored in large part by this city’s cultural committee will have its grand finale and awards presentations April 4 at the Delta Prizes are awarded to cultural organisations such as local orchestras — cultural productions such as Theatre du Double Signe and notable careers in culture.The Gala is a show in itself with personalities from the various cultural activities in the region.For tickets and/or info call Ré jean Côté at 819 821-5400.The next meeting of the Yamaska Valley Branch of the Canadian Club will take place at 2 on Monday, April 9 at the Knowlton Pub Playhouse.Dr.Edward Keyserlingk of McGill University will give a talk about Medical Ethics and the Law.The Quebec Family History Society will hold their regular meeting Tuesday, April 10 at 7:30 at Le Maison du Brasseur, 2901 St.Joseph, Lachine.Guest speaker is Victoria M.Stewart, her subject — A Loyalist to the Canadian Cause.Deborah Rotherham will be guest speaker at an evening organised by the Brome County Historical Society.Subject, on April 3 is Wildflowers of the Eastern Townships.A longtime resident of Knowlton, Rotherham has lectured in Montreal, Toronto and Knowlton and has exhibited her beautiful wildflower illustrations in both Knowlton and North Hatley.The first of the Piggery Theatre’s 25th Anniversary get-togethers happens next Saturday, April 7.It s a Sugar Party at Hope’s Farm Sugar Bush, 80 Barnston Rd., Hatley ( 1 mile south of Hatley Village).They’ll have all the sweets you can eat plus a brunch to get you off to a good start.The menu includes pancakes, sausages, donuts and lots of other goodies all for the princely sum of $10 for adults and students 12 and over.For reservations call 838-4465,842-2431 or 838-5860.There will be a GIANT Garage Sale this Saturday, March 31 at the Lennoxville Fire Hall starting at 9 and ending at 1.The sale is organized by students from Alexander Galt High School who are raising money for a student exchange program to Germany.Coffee and German cakes will also be for sale.Each student musts raise $1,100 in order to go.They have sold spices, pens, wrapping paper and held drawings.Now this Garage Sale is another effort to reach their goal.The Eastern Townships Genealogy Society will hold its regular meeting at Edifice des Services Récréatifs et Communautaires, 1215 Kitchener, Sherbrooke, at 7.30.Guest speaker is Louise Brunelle Lavoie.A Rock for Recycling, an open air concert will happen April 14 from 10 till 6 in the Optimist Park in Lennoxville.It’s a gathering of local bands and concerned celebrity guest speakers.The goal of the event is to raise awareness and support for this a rea ’ s re-cycling progra ms.For info call 819 565-5009.Exhibitions There’s a new exhibition at Bishop's ilnibtrsitp— Champlain College Art Gallery since March 27.Featured are the dra wings of Joseph Wolf — considered a faultless natural history artist.This display of Wolf’s lifelike drawings will highlight original charcoal sketches of pheasants.The exhibition continues until April 12.Gallery hours are Tuesday to Friday from 11 to 3, and Thursday evenings from 7 to 9.An exhibition by members of the Arts Sutton Gallery titled The Nude opens April 7 with a vernissage from 2 to 5.This will be an especially interesting show because of the variety of techniques used by the artist-members.Gallery hours are Tuesday to Sunday from 1 to 5.An exhibition of works done in the ’60s take the viewer down memory lane at Uni veristy of Sherbrooke Art Gallery.Artists in the show are Paterson Ewen, Charles Gagnon.Yves Gaucher, Jacques Hurtubise and Jean McEwen.The exhibition continues until April 22.An exhibition by the Sherbrooke District Scouting Association continues at the Uplands Museum in Lennoxville.The museum is open from 1 to 5 every weekday except Monday.The exhibition includes a history of scouting in the area and lots of other things that will surprise everyone.Also on display at Uplands are the works of Ethel MacKay — painter and a special presentation of Treasures of the Uplands Collection.You’ll find the museum at 50 Park St.At Haut 3e Impérial gallery/workshop in Granby is an exhibition titled Lieux Protégés by Danyèle Alain.This accomplished artist uses all kinds of material to depict his expression and symbolic interpretation.You’ll find works where the artist has used wood, both new and used, canvas, acrylic, oil paints, wax and even tar.The exhibition continues until April 22.Visiting hours are from Wednesday to Sunday each week — 1 to 5.Musée des Beaux Arts in Sherbrooke at 174 Palais, presents an exhibition by Maurice Lebel.The exhibition continues till April 8.At Arts Sutton Gallery, 7 Academy, Sutton, a presentation of the photographs of Angela Grauerholz dealing with the condition of images in the contemporary world.Gallery hours are Thursday to Sunday from 1 to 5.At Musée du Séminaire de Sherbrooke in Le Centre d’Ex-position Léon Marcotte, a remarkable exhibition and study of Quebec swamplands and marshes continues until April 15.Precise moquettes complete with recorded native birdsong make this one of the best seen at the centre so far.Well worth a visit.Opening April 6 at Galeri Horace, an exhibition of recent works by Lau Tin-Yum and Marie-Louise Guillemette is featured.Continuing this weekend at Horace a combination of dance, music and artistry by Jocelyn Fiset, Annie Coridon and Jean Voguet.They’re open March 30 from 12 to 8:30, March 31 from 1 to 8:30 and Sunday, April 1 from 1 to 2.A collection of works—watercolors and enamel on copper — by well-known local artist Emokcde Gafocs.vcontinues at Collège du Sacré Coeur.155 Belvédère North, Sherbrooke until April 11.The exhibition is in the library and is open during usual library hours — 8:30 till 4 each weekday.The Sherbrooke Historical Society invites the public to a new exhibition in Pavillion 3, Domaine Howard.Entitled Allez aux colonies.Go to Canada, the exhibition takes the viewer on a journey back in time to the days of the arrival of the first settlers in the Townships.Galeri l’Espace on Main Street in Magog presents the watercolors and oils of Sylvie Paradis in an exhibition titled Myths and Legends.The show continues until Aril 8.Also opening in Hall B, ceramics by Julie Bessette and Nicole Girard as well as paintings and prints by Ginette B.Marcoux and Mario Pouliot will go on display at the same time.For info call 819 847-4040.Louise Léveitlé is the featured artist at La Caisse Populaire de Sherbrooke-Est, opening April 2, continuing till April 27.The artist is well known across North America and has had several exhibitions in New York and Soho.This display is titled Fantaisie Céleste.Gallery hours are Monday, Tuesday and Friday from 10 to 3, Wednesdays from 10 to 5:45 and Thursdays from 10 till 8.Art 90.exhibition of recent works by the students of the Fine Arts Department in the Norton Fine Arts Studio at Bishop’s Unibrrsitp.The show opens Friday, April 6 at 8 and continues through the weekend until April 8, opening each day between 12 and 8.Musée Beaulne will present an exhibition of sculptures by Daniel Martineau, opening Sunday, April 1.The exhibition continues until April 29.Movies The Hunt for Red October, starring Sean Connery opens at the Carrefour de l’Estrie Cinéma this week.Curtain rises Saturday and Sunday at 1,3:50,6:40 and 9:30.Week days — 6:40 and 9:30.Second feature this week is once again Blue Steel starring Jamie Lee Curtis.Curtain rises at 12:40, 2:50, 5, 7:10 and 9:20 Saturday and Sunday, week days at 7:10 and 9:20.Merrill’s Showplace features Academy Award winning Driving Miss Daisy with Jessica Tandy, winner of the Best Actress award Curtain rises Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 7:10 and 9:10.matinées Saturday and Sunday at 1:40 and Monday to Thursday at 7:10.Also down south of the border at Merrill’s you can still catch the stirring film telling the story of a few of Vietnam’s veterans — then and now.Born on the Fourth of July stays on but only Friday.Saturday and Sunday at 7 and 9:30.Matinées Saturday and Sunday at 1:30, Monday through Thursdays — 7.Hard to Kill with Steven Seagal stays over too at Merrill’s this week.Curtain rises at 7 and 9:30 Friday, Saturday and Sunday — matinées Saturday and Sunday at 1:30— Monday to Thursday at 7.New film of the week is Driving Miss Daisy, the highly recommended warm and compassionate story that has won the hearts of millions and is a good bet for several Academy Awards.Curtain rises at 7:15 and 9:15 Friday and Saturday — 1:30 matinées Saturday and Sunday — 7:15 Sunday through Thursday.Sünity Clause, an unusual comedy on CBC.See NOTES 10—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990 Travel —____««I record Lizanne Winser wins Club Med trip MAGOG (l)H) — With the arrival of spring, most people are not considering southern vacations — except for one notable exception.Austin resident Lizanne Winser is most certainly considering going south after becoming the lucky winner of a Club Med trip for two to Guadeloupe.Winser won the one-week vacation by filling out a ballot she received for test-driving a Toyota Corolla.“/ thought it was a prankster,” Winser said, adding "I never win these things.” Winser said in an interview that she isn't sure when she’ll take the trip.“It depends how fast I can clear my desk,” she said.Has she bought the car yet?“Not yet,” said the smiling Winser, “but I’m coming back.” Toyota Canada awarded a total of five trips to Quebec residents as part of a promotional campaign.Jacques Longpré — left and Crystian Longpré of Toyota Magog Inc.were on hand to present the free trip to Winser.Albania opening to Cdn.tourists Discount fare passengers are low airline priorities By Richard Abbott The Canadian Press Once upon a time when mortals thought the Earth was flat, there was a land called Terra Incognita somewhere between the edge of the map and the place where you fell off.In the tourism world, there’s still the occasional terra incognita, but one of them is opening up this year for Canadians: Albania.Isolated politically since the Second World War.the secretive Communist regime in Albania appears to be responding to the winds of change in the rest of ^astern Eu rope.Leslie Martin, president of Exo-tik Tours of Montreal and Toronto, has just returned from Albania where he says the Marxist government has now decided, for the first time since the war, to accept tourists from Canada.“Previously, Albania was off limits for Canadians — for almost everybody except (people from).Scandinavia, Switzerland, France.It was one of the few countries where nobody ever went.“So finally they agreed to accept Canadians and they appointed me as sole (travel) representative in Canada.” TWO PROGRAMS Martin, a tour operator for 30 years, believes Albania will appeal to “people who like to see undiscovered, new destinations.Also there’s the snob appeal for those who wilf be able to say, T ha ve been there.’” Exotik Tours is planning two programs in conjunction with Air France flights.‘ ‘One will be a 12-day tour consisting of 10 days in Albania, out of which there will be seven days of touring and two or three at the beach.Passage will be from Montreal or Toronto.The price will run from $1,600 and up for air fare, meals, hotel and sight-seeing." Another tour, starting at $2,000, will include eight or nine days in Albania and 10 days on the Adriatic coast of Yugoslavia.The first departure is aimed for the middle of June and the tours will be run until November.“We expect to have groups of 15 to 30 people,” Martin says.“Tours include all meals, but if you want to have something extra it’s very, very cheap.” Martin stresses that everyone on the tours must have a Canadian passport.VIEW OF ALBANIA Since so few people are allowed into Albania, there is a dearth of information available about the country.Nicolas Miletitch, a reporter for the news service Agence France-Presse who got in last year by crossing from Yugoslavia, gave this description of what he saw.He wrote that the military presence was everywhere.Bunkers could be seen in fields, along railway lines, between houses, buried in the sand at the edge of the sea, and at the entrance to Tirana, the capital city, which was also protected by a battery of antiaircraft guns.Individual tourism is unknown, Miletitch wrote, except for rare visits by diplomats and journalists authorized to travel in personal cars.Portraits of Enver Hoxha, the former leader and premier of the country who died in 1985, were everywhere, along with slogans promoting the unity of the people and the party and glorifying the achievements of socialist Albania, Miletitch reported.OX-CARTS COMMON Motor vehicles on the roads ranged from Chinese or Romanian jeeps to Soviet or Chinese trucks, decades old, some going back to the Second World War.Western cars were for party or government officials.Other than that: ox-drawn carts.In the streets of Tirana, old buses from Paris putter along until they’re scrap.As for relations between Canada and Albania, a spokesman in the External Affairs Department in Ottawa says they exist but are relatively inactive.There’s no Albanian representative in Ottawa and no Canadian representative in Tirana.The Canadian ambassador to Albania also acts as ambassador to Yugoslavia and Bulgaria and lives in Belgrade, Yugoslavia.The Albanian ambassador to Canada is officially resident in New York at the country’s United Nations mission.For further information, contact Exotik Tours, 1117 Ste-Catherine West, Suite 805, Montreal ; 514 284-3324; or 1179 Finch Ave.West, Suite 201, Downsview, Ont.M3J 2G1 ; 416 736-9669.By John Davidson The Canadian Press On Thursday, Feb.15, Canada’s busiest airport— Pearson International in Toronto — turned into a jungle.Freezing rain forced the cancellation of hundreds of flights.Reservation counters became combat zones as frustrated travellers fought to get seats on the next available flights.Baggage got lost.Tempers frayed.Loud words were exchanged.The stranded travellers soon learned a simple law of the airline jungle: the price of your ticket is what counts.Those who had seat-sale or discount-fare tickets discovered they were way down at the bottom of the list when it came to getting on another flight.The airlines hastily began to book seats on later flights for their top-priority customers : people holding first class, business and full-economy tickets.They rushed to get their full-fare passengers booked into hotels near the airport.And finally, after all that was done, frazzled airline staff told their seat-sale customers: “Perhaps you’d better go home and try booking your seats tomorrow.” These words did not ring happily in the ears of travellers who had been inconvenienced just as much as the first class, business and full-economy passengers.AIRLINE POLICIES What obligations do airlines have to seat-sale and discount passengers in the event of a flight cancellation?If the cancellation is due to mechanical failure, the answer is clear : the airline’s equipment is at fault and the company must take care of all passengers.But cancellations caused by weather are quite different, and Canada’s two major carriers have set out definite policies.“We have to have priorities during weather-related flight cancellations,” says Christiane Brisson, an Air Canada spokesman.“Obviously, we re going to pay more attention to the traveller who paid $1.000 for his or her ticket than someone who paid $400 for the same trip.“ We’ll do our best for all our passengers, but there’s only so much we can do.” Marie-Josee Tremblay of Canadian Airlines International agrees.“During a weather situation, we don’t discriminate against any of our passengers.But we definitely re-book by priority: first class, business and full-economy clients get the first available seats and the discount customers get the best we can find for them — even on other airlines if they have the same fares as ours.BENEFITS FEW Both Air Canada and Canadian say they’ll honor discount tickets on other flights, but passengers shouldn’t expect too many other benefits if they’re stranded at an airport by weather.For example, discount ticket holders at their point of origin are unlikely to see the inside of a free hotel room if they're delayed overnight.If such travellers don’t want to go home, they may get meal vouchers and best wishes from the airlines, but that’s about all.Only passengers such as mothers stranded with small children might be able to appeal to the goodwill of ground staff and get a room.After the freezing rain at Pearson, some discount travellers were unable to get new flights for as long as three days because they were going to destinations the airlines don’t fly to regularly.But they couldn’t even cancel the trip and ask for their money back.“If a discount traveller can give us an excellent reason why he has to cancel, we might give him credit toward a new ticket in the future, but not cash,” said Air Canada’s Brisson.MOSTLY DISCOUNT She points out, if it’s any consolation.that discount travellers have a lot of company in their misery.Almost 70 per cent of people buying tickets on Canadian airlines purchase discount tickets.In fact, the airlines encourage the purchase of discount tickets with their advertising.But the airlines often don’t explain to discount customers that they’re last in the pecking order in case of problems.Peter Haanappel, of the International Foundation of Airline Passengers’ Associations, doesn’t find the priority system unreasonable but says it should be explained to discount customers.“It’s unrealistic for seat-sale consumers to push for the same service as full-fare passengers,” says Haanappel.“The less you pay, the less you can expect.But, unfortunately, neither the airlines nor the travel agents want to explain this fact to travellers in their advertising.” cance* CANADIAN | SOCIÉTÉ CANCER I CANADIENNE SOCIETY I DU CANCER TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1990-11 French artist Louis Feraud shows paintings in New York By Suzy Patterson PARIS (AP) — Louis Feraud, artist, is happy in his garret.“What else could I possibly want?” asked the couturier, wielding a slim brush on a very large painting of a reclining nude woman.The woman isn't a model for his clothes, but a figure in one of Fe-raud’s colorful canvasses on show at the Urban Gallery in New York to April 12.“It's my first American one-man art show, and a very exciting moment for me.” he said.What else, indeed, could Feraud want?He’s got the sun in the morning and the moon at night in his artist’s attic — and what an attic.It looks on to the French presidential palace across the street on the fashionable Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore, not to mention the Eiffel Tower looming gracefully in the background.Meanwhile.Feraud's chic shop and workrooms downstairs are generating plenty of money.If his lifestyle is simple in the flat above the shop, or sporty in the Provencal house in his native southern France, he is doing well in the fas- hion business.MAKES MILLIONS With 20 fashion-related licences, the Feraud annual revenue is a comfortable 2.8 billion francs (about $580 million Cdn).And while he isn’t sole owner, Feraud shares more than 50 per cent of the company stock with his ex-wife and present partner, Zizi.Although Feraud was divorced from Zizi and briefly married in the late 1960s to an American, he has now reverted to his French family life again, in amicable partnership with Zizi and their daughter Kiki.While other designers exhaust themselves preparing for luxury ready-to-wear shows, Feraud doesn't even bother to hold one any more.“The buyers know me,” he said.And they know his quality work produced with the backing of a German firm named Fink, with whom he has had a happy partnership since 1970.His first boutique in Cannes shot to fame when a new star named Brigitte Bardot sailed out of his shop in a white lace Feraud.Top ten country music hits Here are the week’s Top 10 country songs in Canada, based on radio play, as compiled by the national music trade source.The Record.Bracketed figures indicate position the previous week.1 (3) Hard Rock Bottom of Your Heart — Randy Travis 2 (4) Seein' My Father In Me — Paul Overstreet 3 (21 Chains — Patty Loveless 4 (5) Not Counting You — Garth Brooks 5 (6) Five Minutes — Lorrie Morgan 6(1) Fast Movin’ Train — Restless Heart 7(11) Quittin’ Time— Mary Chapin Carpenter 8 (13) Oklahoma Swing — Vince Gill and Reba McEntire 9 (9) Sooner or Later — Eddy Raven 10 (15) Here in the Real World — Alan Jackson QflfC Minto Alfalfa QUALITY FORAGE SEED 'yiMttiA • Mixtures for Hay & Pasture • Seed Corn • Turf Grasses For Fast Dependable Service Call Us ishop seeds TRUST Stephen Hodge R.R.#1 Melbourne, Tel: 819-826-5468 Clinton French R.R.#1 Cookshire, Tel: 819-875-3960 P.O.Box 338 Belleville, Ont.Tel: 613-968-5533 Coinciding with his art show in New York, Feraud will open a slick new Fifth Avenue boutique, in a prestige location at 56th Street between the Fendi and Norma Ka-mali shops.ADORES WOMEN “I adore women,” says Feraud, repeating his well-known motto.At 70.the ebullient grandfather looks more like a virile playboy of 50.“I still feel like 30.” As women inspired this son of a butcher from Arles to design pretty clothes for them since the 1950s.they also fill his exuberant canvases.With exotic flowers, parrots and landscapes in happy shades of cobalt.viridian green, cadmium yellow, turquoise, crimson and shots of gold leaf, the paintings glow like a dream invented by Baudelaire.The influences are obvious: hints of Sonia Delaunay, Raoul Dufy and Gustav Klimt, all of whom worked in textiles as Feraud does.He personally draws and paints more of his fabric designs than any other couturier.“There’s no school of Feraud.” he said with a smile.“In painting I'm simply a stylistic copyist, drawing from Dufy or wherever, and I don’t mind admitting it.” He probably could earn a good living at painting, having sold several canvases in prices ranging from $30,000 to $50.000 US at shows last year in Paris’s Urban Gallery and the Harajuku Gallery in Tokyo.“I don’t really know why other designers don’t show paintings,” said Feraud.“Perhaps they’re modest.Perhaps they don’t even paint But I’m the first one to give a true art show." Versatile Feraud has also hau time to write a few novels.“Romantic tales based on Arlesian fol klore, but hardly best-sellers,” he said.1- 1 WISH IT WOULD RAIN DOWN Phil Collins 1 2- GET UP Technotronic 4 3- 1 GO TO EXTREMES Billy Joel 2 4- ROAM B-52’s 6 5- KEEP IT TOGETHER Madonna 7 6- ESCAPADE Janet Jackson 3 7- BLUE SKY MINE Midnight Oil 15 8- PERSONAL JESUS Depeche Mode 5 9- LOVE WILL LEAD YOU BACK Taylor Dayne 16 10- I’LL BE YOUR EVERYTHING Tommy Page 19 11- LET YOUR BACKBONE SLIDE Maestro Fresh-Wes 12 12- SUMMER RAIN Belinda Carlisle 11 13- NO MYTH Michael Penn 13 14- C'MON AND GET MY LOVE D—Mob 14 15- TOO LATE TO SAY GOODBYE Richard Marx 9 16- IN THE 21st CENTURY Men Without Hats 18 17- CHOCOLATE BOX Bros 22 18- EVERY LITTLE TEAR Paul Janz 20 19- DANGEROUS Roxette 10 20- ALL AROUND THE WORLD Lisa Stansfield 29 21- PRICE OF LOVE Bad English 8 22- DON’T WANNA FALL IN LOVE Jane Child 30 23- CARRY ON The Box 28 24- SACRIFICE Elton John 25 25- ALMOST HEAR YOU SIGH Rolling Stones 26 26- CATCH ME IN THE ACT Paradox 27 27- LOVER OF MINE Alannah Myles 32 28- FOREVER Kiss 33 29- ALL OR NOTHING Midi Vanilli 21 30- CRUEL CRAZY BEAUTIFUL WORLD Johnny Clegg 35 31- TRUE BLUE LOVE Lou Gramm 36 32- LITTLE SALVATION Luba 17 33- THE HEART OF THE MAHER Don Henley 38 34- WE ALMOST GOT IT TOGETHER Tanita Tikaram 34 35- DON’T LOOK BACK Kenny Maclean 37 36- BEFORE WE FALL Sheree 39 37- GOT TO GET Leila K.PL 38- THE DEEPER THE LOVE Whitesnake 23 39- ANY OTHER WAY Celine Dion PL 40- HOW CAN WE BE LOVERS Michael Bolton PL 12-TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY.MARCH 30, 1990 This week's TV Listings for this week's television programs as supplied by | lÉMriiMWMiliin While we make every effort to ensure their 1 accuracy, they are subject to change without notice.STATIONS LISTED Channel Station o CBFT o WCAX e WPTZ o CBMT o CHLT o WMTW e CKSH
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