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  • Sherbrooke, Quebec :The Record Division, Quebecor Inc.
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Townships week t el>ru;ir\ >.IvSS ) 2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988 PBS show takes a chilling look at the Lennon killing By Bill Anderson LOS ANGELES (CP) - The Man Who Shot John Lennon, a PBS documentary to be shown Feb.9, is not only a chilling trip into the mind of a killer but a fascinating look at the modern phenomenon of the celebrity stalker.Mark David Chapman, as most people will remember, fatally shot the former Beatle outside Lennon’s New York apartment building in 1980.But what many people may not recall is that in addition to a gun, Chapman was carrying a copy of J.D.Salinger’s novel The Catcher in the Rye.For psychologists who later interviewed Chapman, this incongruous fact helped open the door to Chapman’s disturbed state of mind.It also confirmed a pattern of behavior that has become familiar to security consultants like Los Angeles-based Gavin de Becker.De Becker, head of a firm that provides protection for celebrities, explains in the program that Lennon’s assassination was more than the purely fateful act of a madman.Chapman’s reason for killing Lennon was tied to his fixation with Salinger’s novel, in which fictional teenager Holden Caulfield rails against the “phoniness” of the adult world.By killing Lennon — whom Chapman considered “one of the biggest phoneys of our time” — the assassin hoped to expose what he saw as the hoax of the ’60s social revolution, as well as trigger worldwide readership of The Catcher in the Rye.The actual comments made by Chapman, now serving a sentence of 20 years to life, are played in the documentary from audio tapes belonging to the psychologists who examined him.They range from morbid reconstructions of the actual shooting to explanations of the tangled motive behind the murder.“He looked at me,” Chapman says.“I tell you the man was going to be dead in less than five minutes and he looked at me.“My head started saying ‘Do it, do it, do it, do it, do it.“I don’t remember taking aim, although I must have.I just pulled the trigger steadily five times.The guy had five bullets in him.Big hunks came out of him, they had to.” After police seized Chapman, they found an inscription in his copy of the novel: “To Holden Caulfield from Holden Caulfield.This is my statement.” Later, Chapman told authorities: “Unless you know me and know the book, you can’t understand it.I am The Catcher in the Rye of this generation.” ‘ASSASSINS TALK’ However, de Becker said in an interview that one can place too much emphasis on the explanations of the mentally ill.“Assassins talk a lot,” he says, “and if you let them talk long enough they will say anything.” The important thing is to see the larger pattern of common traits that identify a celebrity stalker, and thus possibly prevent an attack.“We look for people claiming a shared destiny with the star,” says de Becker, “as well as people who claim to have some present relationship with the star, those who claim they are acting under a higher authority, such as God, and those who claim some universally important reason for their ties to the star.” LENNOXVILLE — History?Ugh.If that’s your reaction to the past, then this is a book for you.If you’re one of those people who’s been turned off of Canadian history by one too many fact-filled, boring, 20 lb text on the political history of 17th century Canada, then take heart.Ten Ring on the Oak (Bishop’s University, 327 pp., $20) is about as text-bookish as the script to Upstairs, Downstairs.Written by past Bishop’s professor Donald Masters and wife Marjorie Masters, the book chronicles the lives of the founding families of the unversity, back when the school was about all there was in Lennoxville and Quebec was still Lower Canada.LONG HOURS Anna Grant, a Special Collection Librarian and the book’s editor, says the book is the product of long hours pouring over personal letters and photo archives.Grant edited the manuscript and chose the photographs of the people and places described in the book.Ten Rings grew out of Master’s earlier books and articles on the Nicolls family and the university’s early years.But it reads more like a diary than a history.The book uses the Lennoxille school and the social whirl of Quebec City as a mere backdrop to a family that sounds startlingly modern.Masters quotes freely from the correspondence between Harriet and Jasper Nicolls, the first principal of Bishop’s, and Harriet’s family in Quebec City.The result is a detailed picture of wealthy English family life in colonies spanning the years from her marriage in 1847 until 1856.The letters ring of daily concerns, parties, politics, with a healthy dose of wit and exaggeration to make them lively reading.To read them is to peek through the parlor windows at people who seem to have lived only yesterday.SOCIAL BUTTERFLY Especially entertaining is Kate, Much of this is done through reading the star’s fan mail — both the obvious “threat material” and the more convoluted entreaties.“Some people write every day to their star,” says de Becker.“One of my clients receives 40,000 letters a year.“Presumably if there is a Merv Griffin out there, there is a mentally ill person obsessed with him — though not as many as, say, with Madonna.” SONG SEDUCES Indeed, de Becker says study of the phenomenon — including the pursuit of Canadian singer Anne Murray by a Saskatchewan farmer — indicates that the most likely targets of celebrity fixation are female TV actresses and pop musicians, especially those performing seduction-fantasy material.“If you say T want your touch, Anna Grant.‘Letters paint a poignant picture'.N K'1'1, * Harriet’s younger sister, a born flirt and a woman ahead of her time.Her letters, like teengage telephone marathons, describes the ups and downs of being a social butterfly.Kate’s account of a trip to Montmorency Falls, near Quebec, is particularly wry.The party had packed a picnic lunch: “But when we opened the tin box to get some luncheon, oh terrible! Everything in the box had taken a sociable disposition and had paid p, visit to all their neighbors.This with the hot sun beating down on the tin box had made the whole come and see me,’ the person says ‘Well, here I am.’” De Becker says television has played a major role in all this, because it creates an illusion of intimacy between star and audience.In addition, its coverage of the daily lives of celebrities makes the frenzied behavior of their most adoring fans and groupies seem somehow normal and acceptable.But de Becker does not see television as a primary cause of violent attacks on stars.Rather, television’s constant glamorization of fame and wealth plants the seeds of dissatisfaction in everyone—especially the mentally ill.“Some people think television is a window on the world, but it is a closed window,” he says.“Through it, we see all the opportunity and riches most of us will never attain.” contents of the box most disgusting, so much so that we had to turn out the men while Georgy and and I, with out sleeves tucked up to our elbows, sat down to a regular process of excoriation, wiped the peeper from the biscuits and gingerbread, rescued the unhappy oranges from the interior of the veal pie etc, etc.” The family may have been concerned with rug sizes and dress patterns, but even in Leenoxville the outside world intruded.A exerpt of a letter from Mrs.Mountain to her daughter in 1848 shows how some things never change : “Mrs., or rather, Aunt Armine, is at Umballa, with the rest of the camp ladies.It is in the Sikh territory which is under British protection while the Sikhs are fighting against us in the Punjuab next door.” CONCERNS ECHOED Closer to home, Harriets father, Bishop Mountain had concerns that his descendents echo toady.At the time, the British population was shrinking as fast as the French were looking for new territory to farm.In 1848, Louis Papineau was leading the movement.Religion, and not language, were the issue, but the concern is all too familiar in 1988: “To speak now in a different vein, I trust in God that the schemes of Messrs.O’Reilly and Co., in which the name of Mr.Papineau now figures, to swamp the Protestant interest altogether in the townships and to overwhelm us in the only corner of Lower Canada where we have anything like a prepondering interest, will be defeated.Yet who can say what may not be permitted to happen?What wonderful times we live in, and what auguries appear to offer themselves on all sides, of a great impending crisis in the world?Fortunately, Bishop Mountain wouldn’t live to see the fruit of such attitudes.Ten Rings on the Oak is availible at the Bishop's University bookstore.— Grade MacDonald THÉÂTRE CENTENNIAL THEATRE BISHOP'S UNIVERSITY LENNOXVILLE TEL 819/563-4966 \ iVtS»**’ \ tôhkV.è *3» » ANS • YEARS Is it history or social chit-chat? TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988—3 Techies: Unsung heroes a critical part of theatre magic The first law of theatre: The show must go on.By Jack Branswell LENNOXVILLE — The lighting booth.the final frontier.These are the voyages of the Starship Improvise.It’s three-day mission: to seek out new lighting schemes.To boldly go where no techie has gone before.This weekend the third annual Bishop’s University drama festival hits the stage at Centennial Theatre.When it’s all over the actors will have received their accolades and maybe even bouquets.But the average theatre-goer — as well as the average critic — rarely sees what goes on behind the scenes.While the actors take their curtain calls and bow graciously, the technicians, make-up people, floor managers, stage hands, lighting crew and a myriad of others sit back, watch and heave a sigh of relief.Rare is the critic who praises the technical qualities in a play.When they give out Academy Awards do you think it is by accident that awards such as best technical production are given out first?Would you sit through the ceremony if the best picture were announced first?HECTIC SCHEDULE Wednesday night as the drama students were in the midst of their final dress rehearsal Michael C.Boisvert, the festival’s sound te-chician, lighting programmer, and SMOK Michael C.Boisvert is right at home at the lighting board.Costumes mistressGail Corey takes measure.Below Bona Duncan gets some make-up.the man in charge of computer operations, took a few minutes out of his hectic schedule to talk with The Record.Technicians guide spotlights, they don’t get to stand in them.Is never getting recognized frustrating for techies?“It is something that people working as technicians come to expect,” Boisvert says.“My satisfaction is seeing a show going well from a techincal standpoint,” he adds.There are two instances where See next page RKCORIXiRANI SIMhON PLAYERS & U R P H Y UNCENSORED UNCUT IRRESISTIBLY IHE CONCtai MOVIE RECORD/GRANT SIMEON Alex Bulmer puts some last touches on her costume jpk 14« [zSz?^ colloborolion with £5 ClNEPLEX ODtON vCjr THEATRE GUIDE Even- dream has a price.On the cover L Carrefour I'EgYpig FRIDAY: 7 SATURDAY.SUNDAY S:30 - 7:30 - »:30 p.m.Techincal Director Michael Medland and Artistic Co-orindator Rebecca Harries took time out from their busy schedules to be photographed 3050 bow.PORTLAND ses-osM CINEMA CAPITOL Saturday SMr RRnOOKf 4—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.FEBRUARY 5, 1988 Play line-up features a mix of comedy and drama Set Crew Chief Howie White poses in front of his hardware.RKCORD/GRANT SIMH1N From last pane the technical aspects of shows are noticed, Boisvert says.The first is when a major screw-up occurs.The second is when the effect — lighting, sound, sets etc.— is outstanding.Because of this “technicians tend to be self-critical,” he says.The festival contains seven different acts, which amounts to a nightmarish set-up for the technical crew.Boisvert, who worked at the Piggery Theatre last summer, explains that for a normal play at Centennial Theatre about a 100 different lighting instruments would be set up.This festival required 140.PLACED CAREFULLY Each of the 40 lights has to be carefully placed and tested.On top of this all the lights have to be coordinated so they can fit into the festival’s master lighting plan.This adds up to lots of work.Bois- Toll booth The third annual Bishop’s Theatre Festival is playing at the Centennial Theatre in Lennox-ville on Friday and Saturday.Show time is 8p.m.Ticket prices are $3 for students and $4 for nonstudents.The list of plays are in the adjoining article.vert said the technical crew had been working 18-hour days for the last three days leading up to the show.Not everyone is there the whole time but it still amounts to the old Chinese proverb: Many hands make lights work.Wednesday night the work seemed to be paying off.From the lighting booth at the back end of the theatre, the rehearsal was running smoothly.As techies talked into head sets — “stand by to cue 35” — Boisvert and technical director Michael Medland finally had time to get a glimpse of the acts from the audience’s vantage point.••• As for the plays themselves there is a an interesting line-up of comedy and melodrama as well as a vaudeville-style act called It’s a Dog’s Life and a series of sketches on Life in Vermont.The latter is directed by Brad Moss.The former is done by Simon Maxwell.Other plays include James McLure’s Laundry and Burbon.This is a warm play about three Texas women talking about their men.It is chock-full of “colorful metaphors.” It is is directed by Brad Moss and stars Marya Piffer, Alison Maxwell, and Melissa Dodd.The one-act play has a quick tempo to it.It is funny, sad, and charming all at the same time.The Big Bla ck Box by Cle ve Hau-bold is an intriguing skit about greed and over-extending oneself.It stars Rob MeFaul, as a pompous commuter and Jay Rosenfeld, as .well the box.Other plays include Bishop’s theatre professor George Rideou’s own Gild on the Lily.This stars Bona Duncan, Alex Bulmer —a stand out in last fall’s presentation of En Pièces Détachées — Hamilton Shippee, Heather Stevenson, Andrew Gibbs and Gabriela Andrews.The Orphan's Dowry, directed by Joanne Van Allen is a melodrama.The quest is to get the pearl out of the oyster.The actors in this are Randi Robinson, Nathanial Hautcoeur, Laura Thomson, and Don Munro.Tennessee Williams’ This Property is Condemned, directed by Caitlin Hume, and starring Joanne Van Allen and Rob Howard rounds out the festival schedule.Special mention needs to given to three students — Brad Moss, Joanne Van Allen, and Simon Maxwell — who have taken on the dual responsibilities of acting and directing in the festival.Here comes ‘the white answer to the Pointer Sisters’ By Joe Edwards NASHVILLE.Tenn (AP) — They call themselves Ethel and the Shameless Hussies, and their back-up band is named Nice Young Men From Decent Homes.This wacky trio sings tunes with outrageous titles such as / Thought He Was Mr.Right Until He Left and Fred Ain t Dead (He’s Just a Little Flat).They wear gaudy costumes, decking themselves in a blizzard of scarves, hats, leotards, earrings, lingerie, exotic cowboy boots, sunglasses and animal print blouses.“The boots are hard to find,’’ says Blanche Hickey, one-third of the campy threesome.Ethel Beaverton and Bunny O'Hare round out the group, wrapping up work on its first album.The brazen Hickey, whose real name is Valerie Hunt, plays an egomaniacal sexpot in the comedy routines the three perform on stage when not singing.The bold O’Hare, really Becki Fogle, is the dippy one with a high-pitched voice.She always chews bubble gum, preferably flavored with zucchini.The daring Ethel, also known as Kacey Jones, describes herself as “a well-balanced brunette.” She tends to be the straight one among the three, but confesses, “I get my share of barbs.” Formed two years ago, the group sings music Ethel calls “country-pop-swing” and does comedy spots rated from G to R.CALLS IT FUN “Our music is fun female songs that are aggressive and tongue-in-cheek,” Ethel says.“We’re the white answer to the Pointer Sisters on the country music side.” In fact, one song they perform is the Pointers’ Fairytale.They also sing early rock ’n’ roll hits such as My Boyfriend’s Back.Chain Chain Chain and Don't Say Nothin ' Bad About My Baby.They also do the Andrews Sisters' In the Mood and the McGuire Sisters’ Sincerely.A less serious song is One Night Stan, which Ethel says is about “a jerk (Stan) who gets it in the end.” The trio’s name is taken from Ray Stevens’old hit.The Streak, in which a woman named Ethel saw a naked runner and her outraged husband declared: “Ethel, you shameless hussy!” The three, all in their late 20s, hope to do some concerts with Stevens this year.“He’s been encouraging and he gets a kick out of us,” Ethel says.They've already performed with Ronnie Milsap and Sawyer Brown and have appeared frequently on The Nashville Network on cable TV.At their personal appearances, the audience sometimes gets playful with them.“They try to ‘out-hussy’ us,” says the undaunted Blanche, formerly of Salt Lake City.“They get real shameless sometimes.” The trio, though, threaten to retaliate by placing this bumper sticker on offenders’ cars: “Truckers Are Gutless Punks.” JOINS IN FUN The nightclubs also join the fun, creating drinks such as “the shameless shooter” and “the fuzzy hussie.” “We try to appeal to both men and women,” says Ethel, formerly of Los Angeles.“The women seem to really get a kick out of the act.“They come from their computer data job and have a great time.” Among their props are several inflatable play guitars, often color-co-ordinated in red, pink, white and black to match their colorful costumes.The trio started doing comedy to set up their songs and because they didn’t have enough tunes to fill the time, according to Ethel.They get their outlandish outfits from Frederick’s of Hollywood, thrift shops and boutiques.Bunny says.Blanche, ever the fashion plate, adds: “Jeans wouldn’t cut it.” Bunny, formerly of Saddlebrook, N.J., and Albuquerque, N.M., was going to take one of the band members home to meet her mother until she found out his background.“He’s from the Show Me state,” she said in mock disgust.Allen wins second round in look-alike NEW YORK (Reuter)— Woody Allen has won another round in his battle to stop people who look like him from profiting on his carefully cultivated schlemiel, or loser, image.Judge Constance Baker Motley of Manhattan Federal Court ruled in Allen's favor on Tuesday against a Long Island-based clothing chain that used a picture of Allen’s look-alike in a 1986 advertisement in a local newspaper.Motley said the ad “evoked the schlemiel persona Allen cultivated up through his appearance in Annie Hall” and that the defendants violated Allen’s rights under federal trademark laws.Allen sued Men’s World and its advertising agency Ribaudo and Schaefer for using a picture of his look-alike in an ad that said È Men’s World Made Me a Sex Symbol.—— — .ad battle Below the caption was a picture of Phil Boroff, Allen’s look-alike wearing his familiar large glasses and blowing a clarinet.Underneath the picture, the copy read: “My great body and sheer animal magnetism can only take me so far — even in Hollywood.That’s why I use my brains and shop at Men’s World.Now, I look so good that I have to turn the ladies away.And to think they use to laugh at me — before Men’s World made me a sex symbol!” Allen, an ethusiastic clarinetist, won an earlier court battle over the same ad in a suit against Buroff and his employer, Ron Smith Celebrity Look-A-Uke.Motley issued an order similar to the one she filed in 1986 barring the defendants from using pictures of Allen’s look-alike in an ad again.Original microfilmed at varying intensities because the text is printed on greyish or colour backgro TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988—5 Also: George Michaels, Prince could learn something from Lady Soul Pop historian Berton’s memoirs shed light on North Starting Out: 1920-1947 by Pierre Berton (McClelland & Stewart): $29.95 .343 pp.For many Canadians, Pierre Berton's vision of the history of their country, through books such as The Last Spike, Klondike and Flames Across The Border, has been clearly expressed in these slices of pop culture that often read like extended pieces of magazine journalism.It will come as no surprise to them, upon reading Berton’s memoir, to learn that the boy who grew up in Dawson City, Yukon would go on to learn the rudiments of his profession at student newspapers, and later, major dailies in Vancouver.Berton came by his love of Canada’s North quite honestly, having been raised there for the first 11 years of his interesting life.His penchant for scribbling appears to have been a family inheritance, in that his mother, Laura Beatrice Berton, was an habitual writer of short stories, although they were never published.Later in life her I Married The Klondike made it into print and gained Pierre’s mother a certain amount of notoriety.But the story of how Berton’s parents forged a life in the hostile north comprises the first section of Starting Out, and his memories of Dawson City, all formulated before he reached the age of eleven, offer a rare glimpse of the Land of the Midnight Sun and how its environmental harshness shaped the lives of the inhabitants.The contrast between Canada's North and what they called “the Outside” (the equivalent of the down-easterner's characterization of those they deem to be “from away”) is clearly detailed when Berton’s parents transported Pierre and his younger sister Lucy to Toronto, or as it was called in 1931, Hogtown.What began as a visit, with Pierre's father on leave from his job in the Yukon, turned into a permanent removal from the North, as the Berton family settled in Victoria.Their residence in this city from 1932 until 1939 allows Berton to depict the cultural background to a boy’s living his teenage years against the deprivation of Pierre Berton Starting Out Kaleidoscope By RICHARD LONEY iisnswp.» Jb&thptT&nktbi ei*iH>(ûcfyz>u the Great Depression.Pierre’s reading material, the radio shows that were as important in binding families together in the living room as the readings by father in Dickens's London, and the adventures that took children to the movies, will strike rich chords in those readers who came through the Dirty Thirties in Canada.What follows is a rapid survey of Berton’s associations with the University of British Columbia student newspaper.The Ubyssey, and his graduation to the ranks of the professionals as he wrote for the Vancouver News-Herald and Sun.The antics of the news gatherers and their activities in Vancouver are well documented by Berton, perhaps to the point of supersaturation.The reader is somewhat relieved when Berton’s story takes him into the ranks at the outbreak of the Second World War.His chequered army career forms the bulk of the latter pages of his memoir, marked as it was by interminable training stints and embarkation leaves that were continually being granted without the expected shipping out to Europe.Berton feels a nagging guilt about his inability to get into action in the war, but on his mustering out he returns to his journalism with vigour.His debunking of the Headless Valley myths, which involved the Bermuda-Triangle-like powers of a northern valley reputed to contain tropical vegetation and to have accounted for the deaths of 13 men.led to one of Berton’s journalism coups.As the first volume of Pierre Berton’s autobiography closes he has just been recruited by a man named Scott Young of Maclean's magazine, and is set to move to Toronto.Readers who are fascinated by the life story of Canada's pop historian, who throughout his memoir refers to himself as a “Famous Celebrity”, will have to await patiently the publication of the continuing Pierre Berton saga, when the years following 1947 will offer forth additional personal tidbits.RECORD REVIEW George Michael FAITH (CBS-COLUMBIA) Call it state-of-the-art dance music, and set aside the controversial “I Want Your Sex” track, but the title track from ex-Whamer George Michael’s chart-leading new album has a few moments of interesting music-making.“Faith” has a catchy guitar line from Hugh Burns and Michael himself multitracks the backing vocals on the song that kicks off this set.“Father Figure”, which begins with a riff from a Beatle track, a George Har- rison melody at that, contains some blue-eyed soul that is not quite as blatant a rip-off of the Michael Jackson Songbook as is the following cut, “I Want Your Sex”.Why George Michael would want to sound like the moonwalking collector of cadavers is anybody’s guess, but the extended song is surely the low point of this album.Those who persevere through the “Monogamy Mix”, as it is laughably labelled, will get to a track called “One More Try”, which is a fine, soul-felt ballad.The balance of George Michael’s blockbuster album is expected fare, nothing really jumping off the grooves.Aretha Franklin 1 NEVER LOVED A MAN THE WAY I LOVE YOU (ATLANTIC-WEA) From the ridiculous to the sublime, Lady Soul’s retrospective of great hits is one of those Atlantic Records collections that reach back in time to compile the most influential recordings of top artists.Aretha’s album contains liner notes by Atlantic mogul Jerry Wexler.explaining how songs like “Respect” and “Dr.Feelgood” and “Do Right Woman-Do Right Man” were recorded in the space of five days.Aretha sat at the piano and belted out these soul classics to the accompaniment of her own remarkable piano playing.The rhythm tracks, horns and vocal answers were layered on later, after the side-men had rushed into the control room to marvel at the tones and clarity of this exceptional artist.These eleven soul songs could be compared in the power of their influence to Elvis’s Sun Sessions, because of the impact that Aretha had on the Motown sound in the sixties—and all soul music, or ersatz soul that followed.George Michael and Prince should be sure to pick up a copy of this indispen-sible album! VIDEO SCREENINGS 84 CHARING CROSS ROAD (RCA/ COLUMBIA VIDEO) The epistolary form of the novel, in which action is forwarded simply by the printing of letters written from character to character has been in and out of vogue since the 18th century.To adapt a novel of this genre into film form would appear to be a rather chancey gamble.But with actors of the rare talents displayed by Anne Bancroft and Anthony Hopkins in 84 CHARING CROSS ROAD, director David Jones must have known he was on very solid ground.This story, based on a book by the principal character.Helene Hanff (Bancroft), involves the warm relationship that grew over a period of some twenty years, between a New York bibliophile and a clerk at a Charing Cross Road bookseller’s shop known as P.P.Marks & Co., in London, England.When Helene Hanff begins her witty, bookish exchange of letters with Frank P.Doel of Marks & Co., she was driven to seek an overseas supplier of books because of the wretched state of the book trade in her native New York.As the film progresses we see that Hanff has an eclectic taste in reading material, ranging from the collected sermons of John Donne to the diaries of Samuel Pe-pys.As she inquires about the availability of certain texts, Hanff takes an interest in the clerks and secretaries at the London shop, learning about their families and the state of post-War London.Her care-packages of basic staples such as canned ham and fresh or powdered eggs are sent at holiday times of the year, endearing her to the Londoners for her generosity and thoughtfulness.Hopkins is superb as the taciturn Frank Doel, delighting in the outspoken character of his correspondent, as she rails against cheap editions from the American firm Modern Library.Bancroft’s gutsy performance as Helene Hanff is as touching as it is remarkable, given the limitations of the structure of this film.In the tradition of THE DRESSER or ROOM WITH A VIEW, 84 CHARING CROSS ROAD is a rare piece of film-making that reveals how different are the backgrounds of British actors, steeped in stagecraft, from their American counterparts whose inspiration comes from the artificiality of soap-opera.(VIDEO AVAILABLE AT LE CLUB VIDEO.QUEEN STREET, LENNOXVILLE; AND AT TREIZIEME AVENUE, SHERBROOKE.) 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988 Culture clips hit French commuters in the metro By Barbara Bright PARIS (Reuter) — Tired commuters in the Paris underground can get a few minutes’ relaxation with an unusual diversion peculiar to France — a Marcel Proust video.As pictures flash by of an elegant era of seaside vacations and candlelit dinner parties, office workers, shoppers and students can experience something similar to Proust’s memories.Proust, the turn-of-the-century novelist whose subtle, sensual novels made him one of France’s most talked-about writers, is best known for his 15-volume Remembrance of Things Past.He is the subject of writer-producer Gonzague Saint Bris’ latest “cultural clip,’’ a mix of video graphics and art that over the past year has introduced highbrow subjects to the masses.The cultural clips are shown — along with news, theatre and film trailers, and job listings — on television screens alongside the platforms at the subway stations.“The idea .is to do culture without making it boring,” Saint Bris said in an interview.“We’re the teasers, the previews.” Saint Bris believes master artists of the past can attract a broader audience if their works are exploited with modern communications techniques.Metro riders, at least until the next train arrives, are the perfect captive audience.LITTLE DEEPER’ “A few years ago people talked about culture in the streets,” said Saint Bris.“I said let’s go a little deeper.” He believes the video clip will inspire a wider audience to read Proust’s works.“Proust himself predicted he would be read in the Metro,” Saint Bris said.The clip is also an eight-minute retort to Proust contemporary Anatole France, who said of the writer’s long-winded 3,000 pages: “Life is too short and Proust is too long.” The video was released just as Proust’s writings enter the public domain, with several new editions and translations appearing on the market.Saint Bris, 40, a writer, musician and filmmaker, has done three earlier cultural clips, on Leonardo da Vinci, Jean Cocteau and Edouard Monet.All, like the Proust production, were sponsored by the private sector.The luggage maker Louis Vuitton paid for Proust — The Short Memory.The sponsors receive prominently displayed credits at the end of the clips.“There’s a boom in culture now,” says Saint Bris.“Everybody wants to be culturally richer.Without culture, communications is savagery.” (OCOOOOOOaOOOOOOOOOOOOOMOQQOOMOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMOOOMOOOOOOOOMlimdMOOilOOilOOMCOi The Area's Dining Guide {fine imisine AT1"4 70 Main St., North Hatley (819) 842-4246 £c P rc vc i ic i 4 stars of excellence "Après-ski" menu À la carte or Table d’hôte” Chef Gunter Thomsen serving you since 1961.Your host Mr.Dick 5156 Bourque Bvld.Rock Forest — 819-864-9124 PIZZAVILLE LENN0XVILLE 4 Breakfast specials *169 ,0 *-|99 Seafood - Charcoal Steaks -B.B.Q.Chicken Fully licensed Free delivery in Lennoxville 564-2400 - 564-2408 116 Queen St.Lennoxville Grills Brochettes Seafood Table d’hôte every night Bring your wine 734 13th Avenue North, Sherbrooke 819-562-4348 I Gëorâzvilte Enjoy on atmosphere of the past century Refined regional and traditional Complete 5 course dinners ditterenl every night Open 7 days 843-8683 Route 247 Georgeville (Exit 118, Autoroute 10) _Gegrgszvilfe He boucanier La place da steak Steak Lovers! New York cut flambés Chateaubriand Filet mignon in mushrooms Brochettes Rib Steak Surf and Turt Seafood combinations 300 King St.West Sherbrooke 563-9922 3jeb Glruta fflarmiteB A delightful combination of quality and quantity is yuurs to enjoy at The Trois Marmites! The popular specials are the roast beef buffet (13.95) Wed , Fri., Sat.or Italian Buffet (10.95) Thurs., Sun.and for you or your group it's all you can eat! Come on in and try! 7:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.7 days 475 Main St Magog 843-4440 RESTAURANT eriimsQ Fine Italian Cuisine • Homemade Pastas > Delicious Seafood Plates • Super Italian Buffet (All you can eat) At noon $4.95 and night $7.95 Free delivery in Sherbrooke (minimum $4.75) 2192 King St.West Sherbrooke • 569-5511 TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY.FEBRUARY 5, 1988-7 Downchild get acts together after extended layoff By Tim O’Connor TORONTO (CP) — It’s not uncommon for people to feel moved by music, but.at a recent performance by Downchild more than a few folks felt a lump in their throats.Music industry types and well-wishers had packed a Toronto bar to celebrate the release of the blues band’s new album, It’s Been So Long, the group’s 10th LP in its 20-year existence.As the eight-man band took the stage to perform, the cheering had a bittersweet edge — the record is the band’s first since it was struck by tragedy.In 1982, Downchild leader and founder Donnie Walsh was living with the group’s pianist Jane Va-sey.Her leukemia had been detected in 1977.“I was on stage in Niagara Falls, (Ont.,) and she’d gone into the hospital for more treatment,” Walsh said.“Someone came up to me in the middle of a song and said ‘Stop the band, there’s a phone call for you.’ “Then I knew.The hospital told me she’d gone.” After recording hits like Flip Flop and Fly, inspiring the Blues Brothers, and earning a reputation across North America as a premier blues act, the group sputtered to a halt.Singer Tony Flaim went solo.Walsh ran fishing charters on Lake Ontario.SPARK MISSING The band eventually drifted back together and played sporadically, but the spark was gone.Walsh, the group’s songwriter, couldn’t put pen to paper.When Vasey’s death was brought up in an interview, Walsh fell silent.Flaim jumped in.“It’s hard to do something positive when something like that happens,” said the big-voiced Flaim, whose neck is thicker than most people’s thighs.“How do you go around .and say ‘Hey guys, I wrote a good tune.’ Like, who cares?” Slide guitarist Mike McKenna gave the group some of its old spark back when he joined about three years ago.McKenna, whom Walsh compares with legend Elmore James, played with McKenna Mendelson Mainline in the early '70s.Flaim rejoined a year later and “the last piece in the puzzle” was the addition of Gene Taylor about four months ago, Walsh said.Taylor, from Texas, is one of North America’s top boogie woogie piano players, having worked with T-Bone Walker and the Blasters.“As the band started becoming a band again,” Flaim said, “I noti- ced the the songs started to come to Donny again.” NEW CONTRACT All it took was a one-minute meeting to set up a deal with Edmonton label Stony Plain.The album was recorded in late 1987 in Toronto with Walsh handling production.“You know that expression, ‘Boy, we shudda?’ Well, there isn’t any of that on this record,” Walsh said with conviction.It’s a boogie-fest from start to finish, The horns gives it big-band sparkle, McKenna’s guitar adds muscle and Walsh contributes some of the best blues harmonica this side of Chicago.Walsh said it’s the best Down-child album yet, mainly because he let the players have plenty of say in the studio.That’s surprising considering Walsh's reputation as an iron-fisted leader.Nearly 70 musicians have trooped through Downchild through the years.Walsh has turfed out many for unreliability, including his brother Richard.But Walsh said most of those musicians couldn’t play his brand of blues.“The reason I started the band was because I liked the style of blues I heard on records, and nobo- dy was playing it,” said Walsh, noting he drew his inspiration from artists like Muddy Waters and Lowell Fulsom.INSPIRES ACKROYD It was Walsh who inspired comic and friend Dan Ackroyd to create the Blues Brothers.Ackroyd, a big Downchild fan, developed the duo on the Saturday Night Live TV program with the late John Belushi.Their album.Briefcase Full of Blues, sold more than three million copies in 1980 and Walsh’s tune Almost became a hit worldwide.But Downchild was unable to capitalize on the Blues Brothers success because a U.S.tour was poorly organized.Now1, with an accomplished new record and a hot band.Walsh is confidently preparing for a Canadian tour.As Downchild fans watch the group in action, there’s little doubt they’ll find themselves agreeing with two lines from one song on the album : “It’s been so long since I felt like clapping my hands.But I just can’t help it when 1 hear a real good band.” ‘It’s been so long since / felt like clapping my hands.But 1 just can’t help it when I hear a good band.'How do you go around.and say 'Hey guys, / wrote a good tune! Like, who cares?' ‘Trust me’ says Sledge it is a very ‘funnnn-eeee’ series By Jerry Buck LOS ANGELES (AP) — David Rasche is in his second year as that outrageous detective Sledge Hammer, but it seems few people knew it.The reason is that for most of this season his ABC comedy show was opposite NBC’s The Cosby Show on Thursday nights.A nudist beauty contest would go unnoticed in that slot.A few weeks ago ABC moved Sledge Hammer back to Friday nights, opposite NBC’s Miami Vice and CBS’s Dallas.That’s the same spot where it went unnoticed its first year.This show may not be for everybody, but in the immortal words of Sledge himself: Trust me.This show is funny! Make that funnnn-eeee! Sledge Hammer is a big lug who, like Fearless Fosdick, shoots first and thinks later.He talks to his gun and takes it to bed with him.Nothing is sacred on Sledge Hammer.It has parodied Max Headroom, Play Misty for Me, horror films, and Elvis Presley impersonators.It has poked fun at such macho figures as Clint Eastwood, Charles Bronson and Sylvester Stallone.“I think one of the reasons the show’s in a marginal position in the ratings is that it takes a long time to get it,” Rasche says.“Sledge thinks guns are great, that women are bimbos.“It’s a satire.“It has all the cliches of the cop show.I think the show is at its best when it isn’t real but is played as a stylized spoof of what other people do.“In every police show you have to explain the crime.In an episode spoofing Vertigo we did it while he was kissing a woman.” Rasche, a one-time member of Chicago’s Second City, plays Sledge with a myopic vision.He always creates chaos on his way to a solution of the crime.But Sledge is blind to it all, like a big dog waiting to be patted after trashing the living room during some spirited play.He’s been known to shoot jaywalkers and once blew up a whole building to get a rooftop sniper.“This is not about a family,” Rasche says.“We don’t have any cute pets.It’s a spoof.Style is an abstraction.When you play with that, people have to get it.Oh! They’re doing a parody of the old prison movies.They’re doing hit-chcock.” On the show, Sledge has been slandering his ex-wife for the last two years.She recently appeared and was played by his real-life wife, Heather Lupton.Toronto-born Anne-Marie Martin stars regularly in the series as Rasche’s side-kick Detective Doreau.By coincidence, Sledge Hammer now follows the new ABC comedy The Thoms, which is produced by Mike Nichols.“Mike Nichols is the reason I got into show business,” Rasche says.“He had earned a master’s degree in English, had studied abroad, taught college English for a year and was going to enter divinity school when he decided to follow his muse.“I had all of Mike Nichols’ routines with Elaine May down cold,” Rasche says.He was so nervous when he enrolled in a Second City workshop that he paid a friend’s tuition to go through it with him.He soon overcame his nervousness and from 1972-74 appeared at Second City Cabaret with Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, Betty Thomas, Canada’s John Candy and others.“One of the reasons I took the series was that I couldn’t find a play,”he says.“This show seemed like it had a good chance.“I’ve played a lot of heavies, so this was a chance to say something about violent shows.It seemed like an opportunity to say something.“There seemed to be a real idea behind it.It was an opportunity to do a real spoof.” Cats ends run in Montreal leaving good memories for cast MONTREAL (CP) — Cats is gone after 19 weeks, leaving only a Memory for those who saw it.For those who didn’t, the roadshow company, including some from the Montreal cast, will hit Ottawa and Western Canada for a 17-week run this summer.The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, based on the Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats by T.S.Eliot, was a sellout and a show stopper when it opened in London nearly seven years ago.And, in Canada, more than 1.5 million people have seen it since the Toronto opening on March 14, 1985.The figures are now in on the Montreal run — and they’re both surprising and disappointing.Surprising for the number of tickets sold —190,000 at $45 each with a gross of more than $8 million; disappointing because the show, the most ambitious English-language production ever mounted here, could only play to 62 per cent of the house at the St-Denis Theatre.For the cast, the Montreal run is now history.Some are leaving permanently but others will go on the road.Lorena Cingolani, who started in Toronto on opening night, has called it quits for Cats but will be auditioning for the touring company of Les Misérables this spring.“It’s going to be very painful to leave,” she says.“I doubt if I’ll ever have an experience like this again.“Worse,” says Cingolani, who played Rumpelteazer, “this could be the last time I’ll ever get to lick a person’s ear in public.” For the moment at least, there are other things to think of.“It’s time to move on, to start a life with my husband,” says Cingolani.“But I still have mixed feelings about leaving the show.The cast and crew have become my family.We’re emotionally dependent on each other.” As well, she says, there’s only so much a body can take.“I’ve been suffering from a slew of stress injuries of late and, since my role is so physical, I just don’t think my body could have been able to sustain the punishment.” Stephen Foster, 23, also an original member of the cast, has had his share of injuries and he, too, has dropped out.“Let’s see,” he says, clutching an ice bag.“I’ve broken a foot, a finger, and lots of little things I can’t remember.But that’s the nature of this business.” EYES WELL UP Barbara Fulton, the 29-year-old Nova Scotian who as Griza-bella brought the house down every night when she sang Memory, remembers that even her eyes welled up with the music.“But it’s also tough to make the song sound fresh nightly.” When she first heard Barbra Streisand sing it six years ago, she never imagined it would become her song as well.Fulton hasn’t decided yet whether to join the summer cast.Nor have David Malek of Montreal or Jimmie Earl Perry of New Jersey.Malek, who has a film assignment coming up in Toronto, has played six different roles in the show “and playing in front of a hometown crowd has been a dream come true.” 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988 WHAT’S ON Notes Sisbop’s Mmbtrsitp is the focus of the wild and wonderful — as usual — this week.The happy-go-lucky campus has brought English Theatre back to the area in no uncertain terms.The drama students’ festival started Thursday night and runs through to Saturday night.I did not get a chance to see all of the plays and skits, but what I saw I enjoyed.They are a talented bunch of people.A wide variety of comedy and melodrama is the order of the night in this the third annual festival.Showtime is 8 p.m.By the way, a spontanous ovation for the technical crew would not be frowned upon.See the article on page three; you'll get the idea.This next piece of information comes from jBisbop’s fflmber-sib> again.The Northern Pikes are booked in the Bish Pub for Feb.20.They are the Canadian pop rock group that sings such hits as Teenland, The Things I do For Money- Well, for $5 dollars for students and $7 for the rest of us, The Northern Pikes will sing.The rest has to be negotiated.Music Apologies.apologies.apologies Bar Bretagne, and the Good Ole Boys were left out of this column for the past two weeks.I had been off this beat for a month and returned last week, and well, you know how transition weeks go.This week they headline the column.The Good Ole Boys are playing at the Bar Bretagne this week and for the rest of the month.They perform on Friday and Saturday nights, as well as Sundays from 4 to 8.In Lennoxville The Lakeshore Rockers are playing the F.L.Hideaway this weekend.I know this to be true because I heard it on K900, However, I am not so sure of the hours because my car stalled.The last time this band was around it was a lot of fun.They play some pretty upbeat music.Uptown plays at the Georgian Hotel again this weekend.Ricky Hodge, Lloyd Perkins, what’s his name.ah Art Rublee and Bob Drew bring their country rock music to 'a* «fr By Jack Branswell this late night drinking establishment.With this onslaught of snow we have had in the last few days the Cedarwood Lodge in Jay, Vermont — i.e.the ski hill — may be a perfect place to listen to some apres ski music.Mike Goodsell, from the Stanstead area, plays there every weekend from 9 to 1.The Hut in Lennoxville is featuring one of my favorite Townshippers, Rod Bray, this weekend.Although I have never met the man he just seems so jovial on the blower, that he must be a decent guy.But those of you going to see him and The Countrymen already know that.1 am told that people who frequent The Hut have asked for Bray to come Rob Howard and Caitlin Hume go a talented line-up in Bishop's theatre festival this weekend, through the make-up process together.The two are part of See Notes.m back.Well folks, now you have him, so love him to death.Showtime is from 9 to 1.As usual everyone is welcome.Little Wing brings its Top 40 dance music to Jimmy’s in Derby Line, Vermont.Tom Wheeler is playing alone for the next two weekends.But don’t worry about him because he’ll soon be playing with Georgia Country.Wheeler is playing at the Sawyer-ville Hotel (Crete’s).Meanwhile Gatean Beaulieu is playing at La Ronde in Rock Forest Friday to Sunday.Country Fever, that is Steve Aulis and Jessie’s band, is at the Auberge Saguenay in Cookshire.They perform on Friday and Saturday.Exhibitions/Events If you can’t make it to the Quebec Winter Carnival, don’t feel bad.The Island Pond Chamber of Commerce is putting on its own winter carnival this weekend.You’ll probably bump into Bonhomme Carnaval or one of his clones wherever you go.Friday night the fun kicks off at?with a variety show at the town hall.At 9 all you snowmobilers can get in on the activity when the torch-light parade fun begins.This of course is a torch-light snowmobile parade — fun for the whole family.On Saturday boomball starts at 8 and various sports continue throughout the day.Dancing is the order of the night starting at 9.And then more fun on Sunday.For something on the more comical side the Knowlton Pub has its bi-weekly comedy night called The Comedy Nest’s Road Show.There is a $15 roast beef supper special which includes admission price.Otherwise it is $4 I think.You can get more information by dialing (514) 243-6862.This Sunday the city of Sherbrooke is putting on an Ex-traordineige — pretty funny eh?The whole population is invited to play in the snow and what have you at Victoria Park from 1 to 4.Hey, it sounds like fun.Besides, free hot chocolate will be served.The local branch of the Children’s Wish Foundation will be at St.Patrick’s Church Hall at 1:30 Sunday to explain the goals of their organization.A video presentation along with The stage managers are here, the stage managers are here.These are some of the behind the scenes people that the audience won’t see — unless something terrible happens.Shown are (standing) Sheila Kerr, Tosha Schiebel, Randi Robinson, Gurth Michael Pretty, Maryanne Sheerer, and (sitting) John Gordon. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 198S-9 WHAT’S ON Charlie Sheen stars in Wall Street, which plays at the Capitol this weekend.Sheen is an ambitious young trader who hopes to make a killing.See Movies.commentary is the order of the afternoon.The foundation grants wishes to terminally ill children.Turning to the world of exhibitions, ihstiop's Umbtreitp seems to be the hottest venue with its fine arts faculty show.Everyone from David Sorensen to Paul Lindell to Ophra Benazon are exhibiting his or her works.The interesting part is that the art ranges from photographs to fabric art.Sounds like a very worthwhile exhibition.David Morgan’s studio in Lennoxville is exhibiting Richard Davis’ material.Movies Yes Virginia, there are English movies.For weeks English-speaking Townships movie-goers have been forgotten.There were no movies in English in the Townships and seeing an English film meant driving to Montreal (the main land) or to beautiful downtown Newport, Vermont.But fear not.There is a God in movie distributing heaven who looked down upon these poor souls and said, “Let’s give them a movie without English sub-titles.” Thanks.Wall Street is probably the best bet this week.The Captiol in Sherbrooke brings Platoon star Charlie Sheen to the big screen in this (apparently ) true-to-life story of a young stock broker on Wall Street.Michael Douglas and Daryl Hannah also star.Wall Street plays Saturday and Sunday at 2, 4:35, 7:10 and 9:45 p.m.and weekdays at 7 and 9:20 p.m.If you’re not into financial wheeling and dealing then maybe you're in the mood for comedy or action.Cowans-ville's Cinema Princess has Overboard with Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell for starters Hawn, whom you may remember from Private Benjamin, plays a wealthy millionai-resse who falls overboard and gets amnesia.She bumps into Kurt Russell and his kids and well, .hilarious antics follow Cinema Princess also has the latest 007 movie The Living Daylights with Timothy Dalton as James Bond.This is Dalton’s first Bond movie after Sean Connery and Roger Moore threw in their respective towels.The plot is truly Bond: if you’ve seen one.you probably know what to expect from the rest.Showtimes were not available so give the Princess a ring at (514) 263-1933.Eddie Murphy gets Raw at the Carrefour in Sherbrooke.This flic sounds a lot like Delirious, Murphy’s stand-up comedy movie Raw is Murphy on stage doing his shtick and it’s uncensored and uncut so that means it’s probably not for the little ones.K900 has the premiere and lots of free tickets to give away so be listening and that way you may not have to pay to see this one.Showtimes are Friday at 7:30 and 9:30 and Saturday and Sunday at 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.Merrill’s Showplace in Newport, Vermont wasn’t responding to it's ringing phone.Give them a call yourself and see what’s up at (802)334-6830.As Siskel and Ebert say, see you at the movies.Donald Côté is showing his watercolorsatthe Galerie d’Art de la Caisse Populaire de Sherbrooke East until Feb.26 10 TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988 Travel 11____Ssi ftCBCOTu An Arctic vacation is slightly off ‘the beaten track’ By Felicity Munn The Canadian Press Cold weather, travel by dogsled, spending maybe 20 minutes at the North Pole after paying thousands of dollars for the privilege .The Arctic is definitely not the most popular holiday destination on Earth.But there are a number of guided tours to the Far North that may appeal to those curious about the area, bored with baking on a beach down south, or ready for an offbeat — and off the beaten track— kind of holiday.This year’s batch of tours — most are in the summer — includes a visit to the North Pole, kayaking in the fiords of Greenland, hiking on Ellesmere Island, canoeing in the Northwest Territories and dogsledding across the sea ice off Baffin Island.Prices range from $1,200 per person for two weeks of hiking around Baffin Island to roughly $10,000 for an eight-day North Pole tour out of Edmonton.The cost covers food, accommodation, guides, transportation, equipment — everything except travellers’ clothing.So what do you get for your money on, say, a trip to the North Pole?LOOKS TO 100TH Special Odysseys, based in Medina, Wash., has been taking groups of no more than 14 people to the Pole once a year for 10 years and expects to put its 100th client there in April.Travellers fly to Resolute Bay from Edmonton and on to Eureka, a weather station at the 80th parallel, for a night, then board a Twin Otter for the flight across some 1,000 kilometres of polar ice-cap to the Pole.How long they actually spend at the Pole depends on the weather.Last year, the group was there for about 40 minutes, says tour operator Skip Voorhees.“It was pretty warm — somewhere around 25 below (Fahrenheit), but there was a bright sun.” Tour members spend the rest of the week based in the Inuit settlement of Grise Fiord on the south coast of Ellesmere Island, where they go for snowmobile rides with Inuit guides up the face of a 700-metre glacier and ride sleds across the ice at the mouth of the fiord.They can sleep in igloos, but that’s optional.Otherwise, accommodation is in a building with showers down the hall.PRICE LOWER Ecosummer Expeditions of Vancouver offers a similar trip for about $6,500 at the end of April; the package does not include the cost of travel to Resolute Bay, which partly accounts for the lower price compared with Special Odysseys’ $10,000 trip.Various other tours are available, mainly from operators specializing in so-called adventure travel.Black Feather Wilderness Adventures of Toronto, for instance, has been taking tourists to the North for the past decade.This MSI roSrol'-, à 0'*' V0, n0' ^ valld m con,unction with any other discount or incentive offered by either Sears Travel or its supplier(s) Copyright Canada.1985 Sears Canada Inc Any reproduction without the written consent of Sears Canada Inc is prohibited Quebec permit holder SEARS your money’s worth., and more summer it offers two-week hiking on the Nahanni River, N.W.T., and trips to Baffin Island and Elies- kayaking in the fiords of Green-mere Island, canoeing expeditions land.Black Feather limits its groups to a maximum of 10, with two guides.“It’s really important in a fragile environment to have small groups,” says spokesman Wendy Grater.Travellers sleep in tents, Grater says.Temperatures usually range from a high of 10 to 15 C and a low near freezing.OFFERS TRIPS Special Odysseys has week-long dogsled trips off Baffin Island, a June wildlife trip to Pond Inlet, N.W.T., and, in August, a 13-day wildlife tour.Ecosummer, another veteran operator of northern trips, offers two-week hiking or kayaking trips to both Ellesmere Island and Baffin Island ; as well, it has photographic and art expeditions to Ellesmere, one of them accompanied by artist Toni Onley.Ecosummer also has a couple of trips to the Antarctic ; for $6,800 out of Punta Arenas at the bottom of Chile, it runs a week-long kayaking expedition to the Antarctic peninsula each January, and in November it has a 12-day climbing-skiing trip, for $21,000, in the Ellsworth mountain range.Next January, it’s planning a two-week art workshop trip to the Antarctic with Onley and a separate photo expedition there with photographer Freeman Patterson; each will cost $7,850 out of Punta Arenas.If given enough notice, the operators can also provide private tours for groups requiring their own itineraries.And if money is no object, you might consider a visit to the South Pole — for $25,000 US per person for an eight-day trip.Voorhees of Special Odysseys organized a January trip for 19 people to the South Pole.He plans another in November.919 829 939 879 1239 1049 1159 200 80 nuiinwys inciuuw; naiurn ainare from Montreal via Wardair wids-bodiad jets • Transfers at destination and accommodation as selected • Services of Wardair representatives.NOTE: prices shown ipptf only to dales listed hen. TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988—1] Listings for this weeks television programs as supplied by Compulog Corp.While we make every effort to ensure their 1 accuracy, they are subject to change without notice.STATIONS LISTED 0 CBFT - Montreal (Radio Canada) O WCAX - Burlington, Vt.(CBS) 0 WPTZ - Plattsburgh, N.Y.(NBC) 0 CBMT - Montreal (CBC) O CJtLT - Sherbrooke (TVA) Q WMTW - Poland Spring, Me.(ABC) Q CKSH - Sherbrooke (Radio Canada) Œ) CFTM - Montreal (TVA) © CFCF - Montreal (CTV) ffi WVNY - Burlington (ABC) SD Radio-Québec 00 Vermont ETV - Burlington (MM) - Much Music (FC) - First Choice (PC) - Premier Choix (TSN) - The Sports Network N y Saturday MORNING 5:00 (PC) MOVIE ** Les Irréductibles (1985) Michael Angelist, Avis Butinage.Tout le monde se souviendra du réveillon de fin d'annee au Club Charleston.(TSN) LPGA GOLF Mazda Classic: Second Round.From Boca Raton, Fla.(R) 5:25 O MAKING OF 5:45 (FC) MOVIE ** Odd Jobs ' (1986, Comedy) Paul Reiser, Robert Townsend.After they each lose their jobs, five college pals decide to open up their own moving business.PG-13' 5:55 Q PK'S VIDEO GOLD 6:00 (3 ROCKET ROBIN HOOD m TRANSFORMERS (MM) SPOTLIGHT 6:30 0 PINK PANTHER O EXERCITE 0 TEDDY RUXPIN m GHOSTBUSTERS 7:00 QTHUNDERCATS 0 FUNTASTIC WORLD OF HANNA-BARBERA O G.l.JOE 0 CARE BEARS FAMILY 0 TRANSFORMERS (PC) MOVIE La Bataille de l'univers" (1983, Dessin anime) Le general Dai-mos, un robot géant dote de capacité fantastiques, doit protéger la Terre des attaques venues de l’espace (TSN) SPORTSDESK 7:15 O MIRE ET MUSIQUE (FC) MOVIE One Magic Christmas" (1985, Fantasy) Mary Steenburgen, Harry Dean Stanton.A Christmas angel tries to bring the Christmas spirit back to a wife and mother whose recent life has been plagued with misfortune.'G' 7:30 Q O COLARGOL 0 SILVERHAWKS 0 HEATHCLIFF a LES VISIONNAIRES 0 ADVENTURES OF THE GALAXY RANGERS 0 100 HUNTLEY STREET (TSN) SQUASH Mennen Cup Championship: Semifinal.From Mississauga, Ont.(R) 7:45 0 0 CALIMERO 8:00 Q 0 PASSE-PARTOUT 0 HELLO KITTY'S FURRY TALE THEATER 0 TEDDY RUXPIN O DAME BOUCLELINE ET LES MINI COUETTES O LITTLE CLOWNS OF HAPPY-TOWN MoWe Rttlngt Outstanding.Excellent.Very Good.Good.Not Bad.Fair.Poor.?H .?» .* POACHING JJL ^0 FACTS OF LIFE On the "first Time" episode of NBC’s "The facts of Life,” airing SATURDAY.FEB.6.Natalie (Mindy Cohn) is upset by her housemates' reactions after she spends the night with Snake (Robert Romanus).CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME ® DEFENDERS OF THE EARTH 0 SESAME STREET g (MM) VJ HOST 8:30 0 0 TOM ET JERRY O JIM HENSON'S MUPPET BABIES 9 0 SMURFS O JEM O POUND PUPPIES 0 POPPLES 0 PAUL HANN AND FRIENDS Guest: Red the juggler.® VISIONARIES (PC) MOVIE *** "Transylvanie 6-5000" (1985, Comedie) Jeff Goldblum, Ed Begley Jr.Deux reporters a l’emploi d'un journal a sensations sont envoves par leur patron en Transylvanie pour y enquêter sur la legende de Frankenstein.(TSN) AUTO RACING Highlights of Fuji 1000, from Japan (Taped) 8:45 (FC) MOVIE **'/2 "Restless Natives" (1985, Comedy) Vincent Friell, Joe Mullaney.Two eccentric young men become unlikely folk heroes when they quit their dead-end jobs, don funny masks and take to robbing tour buses in the Scottish countryside PG 9:00 0 0 BELLE ET SEBASTIEN O 0 MA PETITE POULICHE O MY PET MONSTER 0 EXTRA, EXTRA m GHOSTBUSTERS © NEWTON’S APPLE The deadly effects of hypothermia; the causes of the moon's phases; why a boy s voice changes during puberty; a yak.(R) g 9:30 0 0 NILS HOLGERSSON O 0 LE VILLAGE DE NATHALIE O LITTLE WIZARDS @ ROCKETS 0 MOVIE **** "Marty (1955, Drama) Ernest Borgnine, Betsy Blair.A shy bachelor falls in love with a woman who has resigned herself to a life alone.(TSN) WORLD OF HORSE RACING 9:54 O GOOD MORNING-THOUGHT FOR TODAY 10:00 0 0 LA BANDE A OVIDE O PEE-WEE'S PLAYHOUSE 0 ALF g Q LES PITOUS O © REAL GHOSTBUSTERS g 0 MOVIE *** "Un Oeil pour un oeil" (1981) Chuck Norris, Maggie Cooper Un policier démissionné afin de venger un collègue abattu par des trafiquants de drogue.0 SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON © MYTHOLOGIE GRECO-ROMAINE (R) (MM) VJ HOST (TSN) SOCCER Big League.Game of the Week from the English First Division.(Taped) 10:15 (FC) MOVIE (Hr’/j "SpaceCamp" (1986, Adventure) Kate Capshaw, Lea Thompson.Five teen-agers spending a summer at a camp for future astronauts are accidentally thrust into space when an experimental robot tampers with the test firing of a space shuttle.PG (PC) MOVIE ** "Le garçon qui venait du ciel" (1985, Comedie) Lewis Smith, Jane Kacxmarek.Dans les années cinquante, un jeune homme est tue dans un accident de voiture et pour avoir le droit d'aller au paradis, il doit servir d'ange gardien a un gamin des années 80.10:30 O O L'AUTOBUS VOLANT DU PROFESSEUR POOPSNAGLE Les aventures du professeur Poopsnagle.0 MIGHTY MOUSE: THE NEW ADVENTURES g 0 ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS O SKIPPER AND COMPANY 0 LES POPPLES O 0 REAL GHOSTBUSTERS g 0 CAPTAIN POWER 11:00 0 0 LES HEROS DU SAMEDI Tournoi provincial pee-wee enregistre a l'arena Entienne-des-Marteaü de Montreal.O POPEYE AND SON 0 JIM HENSON'S FRAGGLE ROCK 0 SESAME STREET O CASSE-TETE 0 m BUGS BUNNY & TWEETY SHOW g © HONEYMOONERS © CREER SON PAYSAGE (R) 0 HOMETIME 11:30 O DENNIS THE MENACE O KIDEO TV O VIDEO STAR O ® FLINTSTONE KIDS g 0 RENOVATION ZONE © GERER SA FORET 0 THIS OLD HOUSE Installing cast acrylic countertops and sink, and custom-made cabinets in the kitchen; a table saw demonstration; adding picket-style fencing to the garden area, g AFTERNOON 12:00 O 0 LA SEMAINE PARLEMENTAIRE O TEEN WOLF g O WHAT’S NEW?(R) O MOVIE **'/2 "Un cowboy en col-ere" (1975, Comedie) Lee Marvin.Les aventures hilarantes de deux cowboys retrouvant un ancien associe qui s etait enfui avec l'or trouve par le trio.0 ANIMAL CRACK-UPS Guests: Charlotte Rae, Richard Lewis, Jean Kasem, Wil Shriner.0 SAMEDI MAGAZINE © WORLD WRESTLING FEDERATION CHAMPIONSHIP WRESTLING 0 MINDPOWER © L'ENAP PRESENTE Une sérié d’entretiens portant sur l'administration publique.(R) 0 WOOD WRIGHT’S SHOP (PC) MOVIE ** "Poltergeist II: l'autre cote" (1985) Craig T.Nelson, JoBeth Williams.Quatre ans apres les tragiques événements qui ont dévasté la demeure de la famille Freeling, la petite Carol-Ann reçoit un étrange coup de fil sur son telephone-iouet.(MM) VJ HOST (TSN) LPGA GOLF Mazda Classic.Third round from Boca Raton, Fla (Live) 12:15 (FC) MOVIE **Vz "The Adventures of Mark Twain" (1985, Fantasy) Voice of: James Whitmore.Mark Twain searches for Halley s Comet in a hotair balloon, while stowaways Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn and Becky Thatcher are treated to visualizations of some of the author's works in this Claymation feature.'G' 12:30 o o CAP DANGER Le Dr Roberts cherche a comprendre la cause du comportement bizarre du singe Ponga (Sous-titre) 0 GALAXY HIGH O WONDERSTRUCK (R) O NARC © DE FAMILLE EN FAMILLES (R) 0 VICTORY GARDEN g 1:00 O O D'HIER A DEMAIN Andre quitte son travail et decide de faire carrière dans l'astrologie O AL LINDER'S IN-FISHERMAN SPECIAL 0 WWF WRESTLING From Boston Garden O FISHING IN CANADA O WEEKEND SPECIAL "The Secret World of Og" (Animated) The children attempt to escape in a straw boat from an angry mob of Og people.(R) (Part 3 of 3) g 0 MOVIE ** "The Kid With the Broken Halo" (1982, Fantasy) Gary Coleman, Robert Guillaume.To prove he is worthy of Heaven, a 12-year-old wayward angel is sent to Earth to patch broken lives and save three families.O MORE BEAUTIFUL YOU 0 MOVIE *** “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" (1967.Musical) Robert Morse, Michele Lee, A window cleaner works his way to the top of a company with the help of a book, a girl and a gift of gab (MM) VJ HOST 1:30 0 LAND « SEA O WILD KINGDOM © WALLEYE MAGAZINE © PROGRAMME A COMMUNIQUER 1:55 OO NOS ESPOIRS 88 Tableau complet des sports d'hiver devant etre présentes aux Jeux Olympiques de Calgary.2:00 0 0 MOVIE “Mon pere, ce héros" (Partie 2 de 2) Damon Herriman, Stephen Bisley.Les aventures d'un garçon qui retrouve son pere, capitaine d un navire cotier.O COLLEGE BASKETBALL Syracuse at St.John s or Houston at Louisville.(Live) 0 AT THE MOVIES 0 NAKISKA KIDS A look at the War Amps Child Amputee (CHAMP) ski team as it challenges the slopes of Nakiska at Mount Allan In Alberta 0 AMERICA'S TOP TEN 0 MOVIE "Catlow (1971, Western) Yul Brynner, Richard Crenna.Un marshall se voit force de poursuivre au Mexique un ancien camarade de guerre © WORLD CUP SKIING © MOVIE "L'Evasion" (1980) Timothy Bottoms, Kay Lenz Un jeune homme s echappe d'une prison au Mexique apres avoir ete emprisonne sans procès pour avoir essaye de passer de la cocaine hors du pays (R) (FC) MOVIE "Turtle Diary'' (1986.Drama) Ben Kingsley.Glenda Jackson The uneventful lives of two ordinary people brighten after they discover a shared interest in sea turtles.PG' (PC) MOVIE **'/2 Critters" (1986, Comedie) Dee Wallace Stone, Billy Green.Une bande de huit marmottes estra-terrestres.cannibales injurieuses, vient semer la panique sur terre.(MM) SPOTLIGHT (TSN) COLLEGE BASKETBALL North Caroline State at Duke.(Live) 2:30 0 TO BE ANNOUNCED O OPEN ROADS O DEUX FONT LA PAIRE O SUPERCHARGERS 3:00 0 TRACK AND FIELD Millrose Games From Madison Square Garden.(Taped) 0 SPORTSWEEKEND Scheduled Five-Pin Bowling, from Toronto; 1987 Summer Pro Bass Fishing Tournament; European Figure Skating Championships, from Prague, Czechoslovakia.(Taped) O © PRO BOWLERS TOUR $140,000 Bowlers Journal Florida Open From Galaxy Lanes in Venice.Fla.(Live) 0 CANADA IN VIEW 0 ROCKSCHOOL 3:30 O MEDITATION TRANSCENOAN TALE 0 SKI BASE ® INNOVATION A look at the benefits and risks in the use ol computed X-ray tomography, nuclear scans and ultrasound as substitutes for other diagnostic procedures (PC) LE PRINCE ET LE PAUVRE Ils sont nés le meme pur et se ressam-blents, le prince Edward, vivant a Buckingham Palace et le pauvre Torn, vivant dans le bas-fond de Londres 3:45 (FC) MOVIE *** "Clockwise" (1986, Comedy) John Cleese, Penelope Wilton On the day that he's to become chairman of a group of his peers, an obnoxiously punctual English headmaster falls victim to a series of indignities.PG' 4:00 0 O UNIVERS DES SPORTS O PGA GOLF National Pro-Am (Third Round) From Monterey.Calif (Live) 0 COLLEGE BASKETBALL DePaul at Georgia Tech.(Live) O CAPITAINE POWER 0 FLASH VARICELLE Magazine d'information pour les 8 a 12 ans (Sous-titre) O WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: Road to Calgary" Olympic preview features a look at the games match-ups and rivalries, a look at demonstration sports short track speedskating, freestyle skiing and curling, and a last look at the facilities and final preparations.(Live) 0 POINTS DE VUE (R) 0 FACES OF JAPAN (MM) VJ HOST 12—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988 Saturday (TSN) DIVING Men's Highboard Championships.From London.(Taped) 4:30 B FISHING CANADA O ® WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS Scheduled: Vinnie Pazienza (23-1-0, 18 KOs) vs Greg Haugen (21-1, 10 KOs) for the ISF World Lightweight title, scheduled for 15 rounds, from Atlantic City, N.J.(Live) 09 PLEXI-MAG #B EUROPEAN JOURNAL (PC) MOVIE Les Fables d Esope' (TSN) AUTO RACING Rothmans Porsche Challenge.(R) 5:00 a GRAND AIR O LE MONDE CETTE SEMAINE a MOVIE L Epreuve de Force" (1977, Drame policier) Sondra Locke, William Prince.Depeche a Las Vegas pour ramener une prévenue qui doit témoigner a un procès, un officier de police devient bientôt la cible de mystérieux assaillants.80 NORD-SUD (R) 09 FRENCH CHEF HB Eggs' Hard Boiled Eggs.(TSN) SPORTSWORLD INTERNATIONAL Highlights of North Carolina-Notre Dame college basketball and PBA Kodak International Bowling Championship match between Tom Baker and Steve Wunderlich.(R) 5:30 B GENIES EN HERBE (Q INFO WEEK-END (S PINOCCHIO a FRUGAL GOURMET (FC) MOVIE **V2 "Labyrinth (1986, Fantasy) David Bowie.Jennifer Connelly.George Lucas and Jim Henson collaborated on this magical tale of a young girl's desperate search for her captive baby brother in the goblin king's mystical domain.PG' (PC) MOVIE ?Le Casse-pieds' (1981, Comedie) Jack Lemmon, Walter Matthau.Un tueur a gages s'installe dans une chambre d hotel et se prepare a abattre un gangster qui doit témoigner danss un procès impliquant la pegre, EVENING 6:00 O LE TELEJOURNAL (Sous-titre) O Q O NEWS O SATURDAY REPORT Q B MOVIE Tonnerre de feu" (1982, Drame) Roy Scheider.Malcolm McDowell.Un ancien pilote de guerre, membre de la police, doit mettre a l'essai un helicoptere perfectionne et concu pour la lutte anti-terroriste.BD CASSE-TETE (B PULSE Si ABC NEWS g 03 PASSE-PARTOUT 89 LAWRENCE WELK SHOW (MM) VJ HOST (TSN) THOROUGHBRED DIGEST 6:05 B IMPACT 6:30 O CBS NEWS a MAMA S FAMILY Q THIS WEEK IN PARLIAMENT O ABC NEWS g B POP EXPRESS B DICK IRVIN S HOCKEY MAGAZINE B SEA HUNT 09 A PLEIN TEMPS Dan et Linda coinces entre l’amour et le quotidien, g (TSN) SPORTSDESK 7:00 B B SAMEDI DE RIRE Invites: Clémence Desrochers et Claire Lamarche.O WONDERFUL WORLD OF DISNEY O SIMON & SIMON B HE SHOOTS, HE SCORES Pierre decides to stay in Quebec and win his ex-girlfriend back instead of going to Europe where the team is training for the World Cup.g B STAR SEARCH B IN SESSION B STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION B VIOEOTOUR De courts videos, realises un peu partout au Quebec.B AUSTIN CITY LIMITS (TSN) COUNTDOWN TO ’88: THE CALGARY GAMES The final preview of the Calgary Winter Olympic Games.A look at ice hockey, plus predictions for all 10 Olympic events.(Taped) 7:15 (PC) MOVIE ** "Warbus" (1985) Daniel Stephen, Gwendolyn Cook.Un petit groupe de civils prisonniers s emparent d'un autobus scolaire au cours de la derniers [ournee de la guerre au Vietnam 7:30 B CHACUN CHEZ-SOI B AMEN The Rev Gregory s confused by a wealthy widow who offers to make a donation to the church s day-care center but seems more interested in him.g (FC) MOVIE ++Vi "Tai-Pan ' (1986, Drama) Bryan Brown.Joan Chen.James ClaveH s best-sedino novel in- spired this tale of love, rivalry and conflict set during the development of Hong Kong by British traders in the 1840s R' (TSN) SQUASH Mennen Cup Championship: Championship.From Mississauga, Ont.(R) 8:00 a Q HOCKEY Red Wmgd de Detroit contre Canadiens de Montreal.B HIGH MOUNTAIN RANGERS Attempts are made to rescue Jesse and an injured runner when they are trapped in the woods by a sudden summer snowstorm.B FACTS OF LIFE Natalie and Snake plan to mark the anniversary of their first year together with a sexual encounter.(In Stereo) g B NHL HOCKEY Detroit Red Wings at Montreal Canadiens.(Live) B B TELETHON Plus de 200 artistes participeront au spectacle fj © DOLLY Tom Selleck is among the guests scheduled to join Dolly Par-ton.(In Stereo) g B MOVIE "Making of a Male Model" (1983, Drama) Joan Collins, Jon-Erik Hexum.The owner of a Manhattan modeling agency plucks a handsome Nevada rancher from obscurity and proceeds to turn him into a superstar sex symbol.(R) g © PARLER POUR PARLER B WONDERWORKS Robbed of all their money, the Greenwoods arrive in an Australian gold-mining community where they are confronted by a new enemy.(Part 2 of 2) g (MM) VJ HOST 8:30 B 227 Sandra helps her new roommate change from a shy individual into a sexy vamp.(In Stereo) g (TSN) TENNIS John McEnroe vs.Jimmy Connors in Exhibition Play.From Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto.(Live) 9:00 B HOUSTON KNIGHTS A family of hooligans forces Lundy and LaF-iamma, who are on the brink of breaking up their stormy partnership, to team up once again, g B GOLDEN GIRLS Sophia encourages Dorothy and Stan to pretend that they're still married - at least until her clergyman brother leaves town.(In Stereo)g B ® OHARA Federal agents impede Ohara and Shaver's pursuit of cocaine smugglers who have abducted Ohara's female acquaintance.(In Stereo)g B MOVIE ** Rambo: First Blood Part II" (1985, Adventure) Sylvester Stallone, Richard Crenna.The dynamic exploits of former Green Beret John Rambo continue, as the one-man army returns to the jungles of Vietnam in search of American prisoners of war.(In Stereo) g © MOVIE ** "Etats d ame" (1985, Drame) Robin Renucci, Jean-Pierre Bach.En mai, 1981, cinq amis fetent l’arrivee de Mitterand au pouvoir et le Place de la Bastille est bondee de monde.© MOVIE +*** "Fanny & Alexander" (1983, Drama) Pernilla Allwin, Berth Guve.Four Oscars, including Best Foreign-Language Film, went to Ingmar Bergman s bittersweet portrait of life within a Swedish theatrical family during the early years of the 20th century.(PC) MOVIE **+ "Top Gun” (1986) Tom Cruise, Kelly McGillis Dans une ecole de formation des elites de l'aviation, un jeune pilote de la marine de-montre qu'il est un des plus courageux de son groupe.9:30 B AMEN The Rev Gregory s confused by a wealthy widow who offers to make a donation to the church s day-care center but seems more interested in him.(In Stereo) g 10:00 a WEST 57TH B SUPER BLOOPERS AND PRACTICAL JOKES Hosts Ed McMahon and Dick Clark present flub-ups from shows including "Cheers and "The Golden Girls": also, a practical joke on Kirk Cameron (“Growing Pains").(In Stereo) O © SPENSER: FOR HIRE Spenser is forced to fight a brute while a revengeful gambler lies in wait to kill him if the brute doesn't.(In Stereo) g (FC) MOVIE ** Raw Deal (l9Bb, Mystery) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Kathryn Harrold.A former FBI agent, who left the agency in disgrace, is brought back to infiltrate and destroy a Chicago crime family R (MM) SPOTLIGHT 10:30 B O LE TELEJOURNAL (Sous-titre) (MM) BIG TICKET Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers in Israel" (TSN) LIGHTER SIDE OF SPORTS Host: Jay Johnstone.(R) 10:50 B B LES NOUVELLES DU SPORT (PC) MOVIE ** "Jeunesse heureuse" (1985) Doug McKeon, Kelly Preston.En 1955, dans une petite ville de l'Ohio, les amours adolescentes battent leur plein.10:55 O B TIRAGE DE LA LOTTO 11:00 B B B NEWS B NATIONAL g o © les NOUVELLES TVA (Sous-titre) © ABC NEWS g © UNIVERS DE Le milieu de la mode a travers le quotidien et l'activité créatrice da la designer Chantal Gagnon.(TSN) SPORTSDESK 11:05 B B LA POLITIQUE FEDERALE a © TELETHON Plus de 200 artistes participeront au spectacle.(Programme Poursuit) 11:15 B B MOVIE "Intérieurs (1978, Drame) Diane Keaton, Marybeth Hurt.Trois soeurs, les filles d’une dame d’un gout raffine, ont l'occasion d'e-changer leurs problèmes a l’occasion du remariage de leur pere.(Sous-titre) B PROVINCIAL AFFAIRS B ABC NEWS g © STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION 11:20 B NEWS 11:21 B PULSE 11:30 B NEXT PRESIDENT B SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE (In Stereo) B THROB (MM) VJ HOST (TSN) TRUCK AND TRACTOR PULL 11:45 BRACING GAME 12:00 B © TELETHON Plus de 200 artistes participeront au spectacle.(Programme Poursuit) B SOLID GOLD IN CONCERT B MOVIE **’/2 "Honkytonk Man" (1982, Drama) Clint Eastwood, Kyle Eastwood.An over-the-hill, alcoholic country-western singer travels to Nashville with his 14-year-old nephew for a last-chance audition at the Grand Ole Opry.(FC) MOVIE "Something Wild (1986, Comedy) Jeff Daniels, Melanie Griffith.A mild-mannered Wall Street executive's life is changed forever when an encounter with a mysterious woman leads him into an outrageous and ultimately dangerous adventure.R' (MM) VJ HOST (TSN) TOP RANK BOXING Doug De-Witt (29-5-3, 16 KOs) vs.Jose Quinones (23-6-2, 20 KOs) for the USBA Middleweight title, scheduled for 12 rounds, from Atlantic City, N.J.(R) 12:15 © COSSMAN’S SECRETS OF SUCCESS © AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE g 12:30 a MOVIE ** "Before and After" (1979, Comedy) Patty Duke Astin, Barbara Feldon.When her weight problem begins to affect her marriage, a housewife goes to a fat farm to shed pounds, only to learn her husband's being unfaithful in her absence.(PC) MOVIE "Contact mortel (1985, Drame) Sam Waterston, Kathleen Quinlan.Lorsqu'un flacon éclaté dans un laboratoire de recherches agronomiques, les savants sont contamines et transformes en monstres dégénérés.1:00 B 40C.FOLLIES B NEWS 1:15 © AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE "The Return of Hickey" g 1:30 B DISCOVER PHANTRON 2:00 (FC) MOVIE *** "Manhunter" (1986, Drama) William L.Petersen, Kim Greist.A former FBI agent known for his unusual methods of investigation is brought out of retirement to track down a serial killer.R' (MM) VJ HOST (TSN) SPORTSDESK 2:10 (PC) MOVIE ** “La Premiere fois" (1966, Comedie) Ole Soltoft, Ghita Norby.Deux adolescents se laissent aller a la decouverte de leur premiere experience sexuelle.2:30 B MOVIE **'/2 "Something for Joey (1977, Drama) Geraldine Page, Gerald S.O Loughlin.The true story of Heis-man trophy winner John Cappelletti and his close relationship with his younger brother, who was stricken with leukemia.(TSN) FFKA KARATE 3:00 a © TELETHON Plus de 200 artistes participeront au spectacle.(Programme Poursuit) 3:30 (PC) MOVIE ** "La Race des violents" (1983, Aventure) Harrison Muller, Henry Silca.Un agent secret doit se rendre en Thailande pour détruire un trafic de drogue dirige par un ancien compagnon d'armes au Vietnam.4:00 (FC) MOVIE "Hamburger: The Motion Picture" (1986, Comedy) Leigh McCloskey, Dick Butkus.A young man needs a degree to gain his inheritance, so he opts to study food franchising at Busterburger University.R' (MM) VJ HOST (TSN) TRUCK AND TRACTOR PULL 4:2§ B WALTONS 4:30 (TSN) SQUASH Highlights of the U S.Open Men s Finals, from New York.
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