The record, 30 septembre 1988, Supplément 1
1 ridjv Nv|*Uniiuf 1 inivai.a woman with bm dreams 2—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.SEPTEMBER 30, 1988 Canada hasn’t issued “He shoots, he scores.” Once more those words are heard from radios and television sets the width and breadth of the North American continent.People take their hockey very seriously in this country.That of course can be attested to by the furor caused by the blockbuster trade that saw Wayne Gretsky traded to Los Angeles from Edmonton.This furor even made its way to the Canadian Parliament.Hockey has been and still is Canada's favorite winter pastime.In fact it has taken over from Lacrosse as Canada’s national sport.Hockey is supposed to have originated in Nova Scotia in 1828.The first game recorded played with a puck was in Kingston Harbour, Ontario, in 1860.Hockey progressed slowly through the years, refining itself with rules, equipment and rink sizes.Leagues were formed with I J Today's pleasure at yesterday's prices It's sinfully delicious At Montparnasse ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL ! ¦ Come celebrate your birthday with us The owner offers a discount equivalent to your age The great table Here are four important ingredients in our recipes stamp of national sport, hockey Stamp corner By Peter McCarthy the Amateur Hockey Association being the strongest in the late 1800’s.It was in 1892 that the Canadian Governor General, Frederick, Arthur, Lord Stanley of Preston, donated a cup that was to be given to the top Canadian team, which was to be determined by playoffs.The cup became known as the Stanley Cup and was first played for in the 1893-1894 hockey season, being won by the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association Team.Since 1917 it has gone to the winner of the National Hockey League Playoffs.The Stanley Cup is the oldest Trophy that can be won by professional athletes in North America.Hockey owes its existence to many people, organizers and players alike.The Hockey Hall of Fame is full of great names.There’s the Patrick family — Joseph and his sons Lester and Frank.Great players 1 such as Eddie Shore, one of the | most ferocious yet, one of the most skillful players the game has I known.Howie Morenz can also be re-! membered for setting early day re-| cords with the Montreal Canadiens.Goaltenders such as Turk Broda, George Hainsworth, Bill Durnan, Terry Sawchuck, and Foster Hewitt,the dean of hockey broadcasters who broadcast the first hockey game from Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto by telephone.Canada can no longer claim world supremacy in hockey.However, Canada made the sport so popular that it is now played at the national level in more than 30 countries around the world.That in itself is quite an achievement.Unlike the United States, who have honored their national sport of baseball philatelically by issuing several stamps of the sport itself, and of celebrities, Canada has done very little in the philatelic area for hockey.The Canadian Post Office has issued a grand total of two stamps with regard to hockey.The first was a five-cent commemorative released on January 23, 1956, an Olympic year.The second was issued on October 15, 1986, to publicize the 1988 Winter Olympics held in Calgary.That, along with the remainder of the Olympic series, was among the worst stamps Canada has ever issued.That’s not saying much for a country that gave birth to such a great sport.In 1968, Canada issued a stamp commemorating the Indian game of Lacrosse as our national sport.The imported game of curling was commemorated a year later.The canoe-kayak and the women’s field hockey championships had stamps issued to mark the events in 1979.On November 20, 1987, Canada issued a stamp commemorating the seventy-fifth anniversary of the Grey Cup, symbolic of football supremacy in Canada.Its claim to fame is that it is the only Canadian Professional sport to be played solely in Canada.They fail to mention that it is played mainly by U.S.pro-ball hopefuls and has-beens.More recently, on September 14th to be exact, Canada Post saw fit to issue a stamp commemorating a sport that, although thoroughly enjoyed by many, is definitely not Canadian, baseball.It’s rather shameful that we must rely on other countries to issue stamps on our behalf.However, that’s the way things have been.Now is the time for topical collectors of hockey stamps to call upon Canada Post to do something on their behalf.Don’t let this get away from you like the Oilers allowed Gretsky to get away from Canada.SERVICE • QUALITY • PRICE • DECOR FEAST 40 shrimps 20 scampies for 2 persons 1695 1795 SEAFOOD COMBO 2 scallop brochettes à la diable 10 scampies 2 sole filets with crab 10 shrimps à la Provençale for 1 person (201 825 02, 8“ 2 pen.1 pers.2455 12M SURF AND TURF Filet mignon, scampies, or shrimps, or coquille Filet mignon brochette Chicken brochette 1295 995 795 All plates are served with rice, green salad and daily fresh vegetables.' 7 nights a week Reservations: accepted 562-4764 III .the Eos».- *° dist0Ver " The gem of,he montparnasse les Galeries Quatre Saisons.Sherbrooke r TT Biography exposes Duchess’ gossip By Rod Currie CP Entertainment Editor A new biography of the Duchess of Windsor, the illegitimately born Wallis Warfield Simpson, paints a portrait of a cunning, manipulative American gold-digger who aimed to be Queen.Unfortunately, the picture presented in The Duchess of Windsor: The Secret Life is frustratingly off-focus, often distorted by immoderate layers of gossip.Author Charles Higham — hailed for his earlier expose-style books on Katharine Hepburn, Charles Laughton and Errol Flynn — has been diligent and resourceful in digging up the story of the woman for whom the goldenhaired King Edward VIII, the darling of the nation, gave up the British throne in 1936.Higham reveals that Simpson was fathered in Baltimore by the weak, tubercular Teackle Wallace at a time when TB patients were forbidden by law to cohabit with women; that she spent 10 harrowing years with her alcoholic and bisexual first husband, Earl Winfield Spencer ; and that she learned bizarre sex tricks during visits to Chinese bordellos that later helped her enchant the prince And Higham claims in his book that Edward, although he had several mistresses before Simpson, was probably an impotent masochist.He cites evidence that Edward enjoyed a sort of nursery-room type of sex, including diapering, spanking and baby talk, until he was initiated into more adventuresome sex play by the twice- married Simpson.TIED TO NAZIS Higham also records the depth of the Windsors’ involvment, after their exile from England and their marriage, with Nazi and Fascist figures as they dreamed of eventually ruling a Fascist Britain.Higham has done some sound work in digging into seized German archives and British intelligence dossiers — and concluding the duchess had a role in leaking wartime secrets to Nazi Germany — but he seems to have been too easily lured off track by capricious gossip, juicy though it may be.For instance, there is the story — attributed to navy wives of the day — that while in China, where her officer husband was posted, Simpson became pregnant by handsome young Count Galeazzo Ciano, later foreign minister of Fascist Italy, and that the abortion she had prevented her from ever having children.Then there is the story that the death of Edward’s father, King George V, was hastened by a morphine injection so the death announcement could be made in time to catch the morning edition of the Times.And Higham says the feud between the duchess and the present Queen Mother Elizabeth was inflamed when Elizabeth walked into a room and caught Simpson in the midst of a cruel imitation of her.LIVES IDLE Even without such tittle-tattle, the book is an intriguing document of the times, giving a fascinating glimpse into the romance that stunned millions, the indolent lives of the idle rich and the workings of the Royal Family.The Windsors are depicted as a pair of aimless social butterflies, totally self-centred and acquisitive, although Edward had built an undeserved reputation in Britain as the champion of the underdog.It was the public outpouring of affection, which Edward attracted almost all his life, that restrained the British government and the rest of the Royal Family from moving decisively against the couple and exposing their political conniving and their expensive, unrelenting selfishness.Through all this Winston Churchill, the wartime prime minister, remained an amazingly indulgent ally of the prince.Even during the darkest days of the war, Churchill patiently handled petulant cables from Edward worrying over supplies of his favorite tobacco and peevishly campaigning to have the duchess granted the title of Her Royal Highness — an honor never accorded her.TASTE FOR BEST As a fledgling social-climber, Simpson was quick of wit, ingratiating and extremely clever if not intellectual.She soon developed an unerring eye for the best in clothes, furniture and expensive jewels, all of which helped make up for her rather homely, sharp-featured appearance, as she clung to her lifelong motto: “You can’t be too thin or too rich.” — TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1988-3 Here’s how to become an Olympic commentator “So you want to be a CBC Sports-caster?” “Yes, sir.I’ve been watching the Olympics and I think.” “None of that, my old son.This is the CBC.” “Sorry, sir.” “We have an image to uphold.” “Yes, sir.” “The first thing you’ll need is a red tie.” “I bought two of them, sir.” “Very good.Next, you’ll have to be able to talk like a circus poster.Let’s have a sample.” “From the ‘Land of the Morning Cough’ it was the RACE OF THE CENTURY between The Men Who Would Be Kings with Ben Johnson, ‘The World’s Fastest Human’, emerging as the ‘Destroyer of Time’, PERFORMANCE PERSONIFIED, ‘Technician Extraordinaire’, the Human Rocket Sled who’s time will be ETCHED ON THE FACE OF OLYMPUS!” “And how much does he give?” “One hundred and ten percent!” “Excellent.And what about attitude?” “He has a great attitude.He used to have an attitude problem but he worked hard on his attitude right up until race time and got his attitude back up there where it belonged until his attitude came through and he was able to give absolutely the max.It was incredibly unbelievable and unbelievablv incredible Who’s who By TADEUSZ LETARTE and The Golden Glow Goes On!” “Very good.And what do you ask a man who’s just run faster than anybody in the history of the world?” \ “How do you feel right now?” “And what do you ask his mother who’s beside herself with joy in the stands?” “How do you feel right now?” “And what do you ask his sister-in-law weeping uncontrollably in Rexdale, Ontario?” “How do you feel right now?” “And what do you ask a man who plunged overnight from Everlasting Glory to International Disgrace?” “How do you feel right now?” “You’ve got it! Now go home, brush up on your inanities and practice talking with nothing to say until you can sound excited for fifteen or twenty minutes at a stretch without a moment’s thought.” “Yes, sir!” “And come back in four years.” *** “Life,” says Chickenfat, “is a drowned virgin with seaweed in her hair.” *** The alternative to the Freer Starr swallows a lot in his job By Nelson Wyatt MONTREAL (CP) — Entertainer Stevie Starr says his favorite foods are sausages and fried chicken, but he’s also enthusiastic about swallowing billiard balls, live bees, goldfish, coins and Rubik’s cubes.The slender Starr, who hails from Scotland, has been regurgitating professionally since he appeared in a talent show at the age of 17.He was in Montreal recently for the Just for Laughs international comedy festival, where his act caught the eye of a talent scout who booked him for a gig in Las Vegas.Starr says he discovered his unusual talent at an early age, but “I was too young to understand."1 just popped things down and up they came,” said the 25-year-old performer, who has appeared on the Late Night with David Let-terman and That’s Incredible TV shows.SWALLOWS BEE “I tried different things.I went into the garden, took a live bumble bee, swallowed the bee, coughed him out and watched him fly away.“In later years, I tried doing other things, like swallowing Rubik’s cubes and turning the sides around, changing the colors on them.” That stunt is now part of his act.Starr chuckled about the time he walked into a bar, asked a bartender for an orange from a bowl of fruit and swallowed it whole.He broughtitbackupagain.“Thebar-tender just freaked and ran out.He came back and said, ‘Man, you’re from the Twilight Zone.” Starr insists his routine is a great way to meet people.“If I was in a bar, I’d get to know everyone in a half-hour.’’ Starr, who claims he can swallow between 30 and 50 coins, said he’s never been stung by any bee he’s swallowed.He said billiard balls and light bulbs are the toughest things to swallow because he has to stop breathing while they’re going down.GET SQUEAMISH He concedes some people do get a bit squeamish when he begins his act.“I did a live TV show in Malta once and the cameraman fainted when I swallowed the goldfish.” Starr maintains his act isn’t dangerous but advises others against trying it.“You’ve got to be able to know how todoit,” he said, swallowing a handful of coins, one at a time.“It’s total control, pure muscle control.” A statement from Edwin Dawes, a British university professor and author of The Great Illusionists, says Starr is the first regurgitator since a French showman known as the Human Aquarium was brought out of retirement in the 1950s to resume his act of swallowing live goldfish and frogs and then regurgitating them.Trade Act, of course, is ruthless competition with the Elephant taking up most of the bed but this bill is bringing out a lot of nasty nationalism and ugly anti-American feeling.The lead story in last Friday’s Record concerned a coalition of environmentalists decrying the agreement as having “profound and disastrous implications for the Canadian environment.” It did not explain how you can separate the environment along the political boundary but went on to concentrate concern on acid rain imports and fresh water exports.Back in the summer, Wa-terwatch spokeswoman Adele Hurley got her knickers in such a twist over the possibility of selling water to a thirsty Elephant that she cried “Water is sacred to Canadians!” No it isn’t.We piss in it.We use it to flush our toilets.We use it to carry off our sewage and industrial waste.All we ever use it for, when you come down to it, is to foul it up and throw it out.CHAMPLAIN’S FEET And water is the ultimate recyclable — as those environmentalists should know.We never use it up but borrow it a while and pass it on.The water in your morning tea may have washed Samuel Champlain’s feet and passed through a dinosaur or two before that.Yet back in July, a Gallup poll revealed that 69 per cent of Canadians opposed exporting water to the Elephant and 71 percent would not vote for a political party which proposed such a thing.(One wonders if the result would have been the same had the question been asked after a February storm and referred to as the sale of snow.) A few days later, Angus Reid Associates asked the same questions and found only 3 per cent wanted to ban water exports and 57 per cent favored it under government regulation.It was clear that everybody was confused by the issue and John (I’se the Boy) Crosbie, everybody’s favorite Newfie joke, attempted to reassure voters with a ‘Commentary’ sent to the Record.(Hard-nosed newspaper editors rank unsolicited commentary somewhere below the Crossword and only slightly ahead of horoscopes.) “The Federal Water Policy,” he wrote, “clearly states that the government of Canada will not permit the large scale export of water or the diversion of Canadian rivers to the United States.” Big deal ! TURN RIVERS BACK Suppose the United States felt the same way and stopped sending water to Canada ?Suppose it built a dam across the Straits of Macki nac and made Lake Michigan into a giant reservoir?Suppose it began turning its rivers back at the border?A glance at the map reveals that practically everything brings the Elephant’s water to Canada from the Clyde into Lake Memphrema-gog to the Kootenay into British Columbia — and the Ausable into Lake Champlain and the Red Ri ver into Winnipeg and everything between into the Great Lakes.A small boy losing his fishing bobber in a creek near Rutland, Vermont, Fort Wayne, Indiana, or Fargo, North Dakota, will eventually have it float — barring accident — through our dear queer Quebec.Ill ecHh K n.,**L>co** I*0'”.S'"*” Regional office: 102 King W., Sherbrooke G K.Chesterton wrote somewhere; "And Noah he often said to his wife when he sat down to dine, “‘I don’t care where the water goes if it doesn’t get into the wine.’” LONG JOHN BALDRY SATURDAY OCT.1,8:30 pm ^ ' / COMING FRIDAY.OCT.14 X “MANTECA” 9 piece pan-fusion ! BISHOP'S UNIVERSITY LENNOXVILLE 819-563-4966 THEATRE CENTENNIAL THEATRE 4—TOWNSHIPS WEEK-FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1988 ¦¦ïçsmmt Uplands gets money The Lennoxville-Ascot Historical and Museum Society president Muriel Brand (right) was happy to announce this week a federal grant of $25,000.Also present during the announcement at the Uplands Museum in Lennoxville was Lennox-ville mayor Duncan Bruce.Brand said the money would go to help finish the museum’s renovation.Quebec music stars tour against drugs SHERBROOKE (MHG) -Twelve Quebec musicians are singing out against drugs.These musicians and Quebec's rock video station Musique Plus will go on the road as part of a year old federal government-funded anti-drug campaign.The program is directed towards youths under the guise of pop music.Fifteen second video clips from the 12 artists such as Mitsou, Marie-Denise Pelletier, Bundock and Marie Philippe will be shown on a Musique Plus caravan.The caravan will tour 12 Quebec cities and stop at colleges and shopping centres.On the video clips, artists will j impress upon youths the importance, from their own point of ;| view, of the quality of life without | illegal substances.Pamphlets and information on government youth programs will also be available.Minister of State for Youth Jean j Charest said at the launching Fri- |j day most youths today have their I first contact with drugs when they 1 are 14 years old.He said studies also show in families where there | is a lack of communication, youths | are more apt to be drug and/or al- 1 cohol users.m we conserve mm WETLANDS.THE DUCKS AND GEESE DO THE REST.Call: 1-800-665-DUCK for more information.HMtS Of fONSfUNATION ^ Ducks Unlimited Canada r IAMB *POkK ¦roast UNDER THE TENT SAT.OCT.1 st STARTING AT 4 P.M.CREPES SUZETTE BY THE S &ani)3flarnifr CHEF IN PERSON MUSIC AND BONFIRE DRAUGHT BEER AVAILABLE O'Keefe RESERVATION 843-8683 il AUTOROUTE 10, EXIT 118 ROUTE 247, GEORGEVILLE After all these years, Quebec still loves Rivard MONTREAL (CP) — International stars like Bruce Springsteen and Sting grabbed most of the headlines when they performed at the Amnesty International benefit concert at the cavernous Olympic Stadium earlier this month.But when a low-key Quebec singer-songwriter named Michel Rivard took the stage, the 60,000-member audience was rapt.After more than two decades in the music industry, Rivard is still relatively unknown outside of Quebec.But at home, he is a superstar.In the '70s, Rivard was a member of the enormously popular folk-rock group Beau Dommage.Now he is pursuing an independent recording career and rapidly becoming a Quebec phenomenon.His most recent solo album, Un Trou dans les nuages, has gone platinum, selling a remarkable 120,000 copies in the small Quebec market.Seventeen months after its release in April 1987, it remains in the Number 2 slot on francophone music charts.Last year, he won three Felixes — Quebec s highest music industry award — and will likely grab several more at next month’s 1988 awards ceremony.Rivard’s star is also on the rise in other francophone countries.Last February, he was awarded France’s prestigious Grand Prix International du Disque Paul Gilson, for song lyrics.WORKED ON SONGS “I’m just grateful to whoever’s in charge,” Rivard joked in an interview.“After Beau Dommage, the one thing I wasn’t looking for was getting back that huge audience that we had.All I wanted to do was write songs and have my songs appreciated by an audience.” Before Un Trou’s release in 1987, Rivard’s solo work had attracted a loyal — if small — following.But he had a hunch this record might reach a larger audience: “I worked so hard on this album.I wanted it not to be perfect, because I don’t like perfect things, but I wanted it to be well-crafted.” In the past, he worked quickly on albums, mainly recording live in ffm tHALLj N.WILLOLIQHBY LAKE \BARTOM VT Il X 05822 / { (xH/stf/y Çfiet/ ic QirtaÂfat $rvi “/c>r a/l seasons Your Hosts.The Pyaens (802) 525 6930 Fox Hall is located on the N.W.shore of Lake Willoughby.Guests have full use of facilities which include: Swimming, Windsurfing, Canoeing, Volleyball, Croquet, Ping-Pong and Paddleboats.Rest and Relaxation — Magnificent views from a “Great Porch".Reunions — Weddings — Special Occasions Rates accepted at par for mid-week Sept, and all of Oct.and Nov.Rates upon request.studio.With Un Trou, he decided to take his time, devoting three years to the project, working on everything from his songwriting to his voice.One of Rivard’s primary goals is to reach as many people as he can.“I want to be a popular artist.What I do, in French, is chanson populaire.“I like my songs to be understood.I don’t want to be a cult artist.I want my songs to be useful in everyday life.” The Amnesty concert was a highlight of Rivard’s year, and not only because he strongly supports the human rights cause.It also meant a chance to work with people whose work he admires.CLOSED SHOW Minutes before the concert, Springsteen asked him and Daniel Lavoie, the other Quebec participant in the show, to go over the opening song, Bob Marley’s Get Up, Stand Up.They also collaborated on the closing number, Bob Dy- lan’s Chimes of Freedom.“I went there with Daniel,” recalled Rivard, “and there was Springsteen with Sting.And he says, ‘So you think you guys can translate a bit of it (Get Up, Stand Up) in French?’ “Those moments were amazing to me.I’ve admired these people for a long time.” Rivard’s introspective songs have long made him a political icon for Quebec’s francophone press.His opinions are often sought on numerous topics, but it’s a role that makes Rivard uncomfortable.“I think artists should stay artists and not become politicians or sociologists,” he said.“I’m not a spokesman, I’m a singer.The songs I write are not real topical, they’re not protest songs.They’re songs with some consciousness in them, and I like them that way.“I did two (benefit) shows this year, and as I said each time in the press conferences and the interviews , T did it for the cause — and I did it for the fun.’” Do music videos have blurred sales impact?By Gwen Dambrofsky TORONTO (CP) - Michael Jackson’s choreographed capers with corpses may have helped send his Thriller album into the record-sales record book, but do videos prompt country music fans to dig into their wallets?Not surprisingly, video programmers say yes.But at least one record company executive has her doubts.“We’re really pondering whether or not music videos work in country, and by work, I mean, do they have an effect on sales,” says Jo Bergman, vice-president of video for Warner Bros.Records of Burbank, Calif.“I’ve spent years waiting for those reports to come back from the field personnel, saying that the video is helping sell a particular record.Without that, it gets extremely difficult to persuade people to make them for other than the hit acts.” Bergman says Warner Bros, paid for the production of 135 rock videos in the last two years, compared with only 10 country videos in the same period.Artists on the country list include Randy Travis, Crystal Gale, Hank Williams Jr.and Dwight Yoakum.The latest is a video of Canada’s K.D.Lang performing a number from her Shadowland album with Brenda Lee, Loretta Lynn and Kitty Wells.In the United States, country artists have two avenues for video exposure — the Nashville Network and Country Music Television.The largest video network, MTV, almost never broadcasts country music.“Randy Travis might be the exception, but that’s about it,” says Bergman.“Radio is still the most important promotional avenue in country music.” TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30.1988—5 Duval’s cat is not the only one with big dreams REVE, REVE , PETIT CHAT Guy laine Duval's first children's book.Rêve, rêve, petit chat, may get published, but she says she will definitely make it as an artist someday By Rossana Coriandoli LENNOXVILLE — Hidden away in a little house lives a young woman who’s trying to make it the only way she knows how.Diminutive, bespectacled Guylaine Duval plans to draw her way to success, nnH if vnn tnkt» tho timp tn liston tn messy hair and little make-up, she looks much younger than her 26 years.But that look can be deceiving.This is one artist who knows what she wants and is willing to put in all the effort it will take to get it.Since she graduated from Champlain College in 1983 in Fine Arts weeks later, were all bad news,” she said.“But the good answers are starting to come now.” As for the children’s book, which she has been working on for the last year, it is already in the possession hands of her potential publisher.Duval said at first she had only considered illustrating one of An-fousse’s stories, as she didn’t think she could write one of her own.But with her mentor telling her she has “I’ve made all the big mistakes already,” she said, and feels she has learned more from life experience and work than from her years in art school.“I can learn by myself,” she said emphatically.“I need motivation, but needing money is the best motivation you can find.her, she’ll tell you she’s already on her way there.She looks much younger than her 26 years.But that look can be deceiving.This is one artist who knows what she wants and is willing to put in all the effort it will take to get it.Her major step has been to create a children’s story book.Intended for pre-schoolers, the book, Rêve, rêve, petit chat, or Dream, dream, little cat, is about a house cat that dreams of going out and flying like the birds it sees from its perch on the window sill.Although Duval has been out of school for five years now, she still has a bright-eyed appearance about her.And with her slightly her talent in drawing.While working picking strawberries for nearby farms, or as short order cook at the Golden Lion Pub in Len-noxville, she never stopped drawing, and trying to make money from it.CHRISTMAS CARDS She has created a calendar with her own illustrations which she sold to people and shops in the area.She also sold individually illustrated Christmas cards.“When you have to draw each card,” she said with a smile, “you can imagine it’s not very profitable.” Another one of Duval’s entrepreneurial ventures is the t-shirt she is handpainting with the cat from her story book.She has sold five or six t-shirts so far, she says, and is sure she will sell more.She is also planning on selling some t-shirts to the Golden Lion Pub, with the pub’s crest painted on them.Duval has also been working hard writing letters and samples of her work to magazine editors and artistic agencies in the'U.S.and Canada, hoping they’ll take an interest in her.“The replies I got right away, about three or four of Sherbrooke publisher Editions Compton.And although she has not yet received a definitive answer from the editor, Duval says she is not too worried about the outcome.“I have very, very good hopes,” she said.“Especially with Ginette backing me up, I have a good start.” GUIDED BY HER MENTOR The Ginette she referred to is Ginette Anfousse, a children’s book writer herself and Duval's mentor.Anfousse guided her through the writing of the story and through the evolution of the drawings from what Duval first thought they should be to what is now in the the potential to write a children’s book as well as illustrate it she decided to take a crack at it.Duval said it took her five years to finally write the story.During that time she wrote several tentative stories which she then took to Anfousse for a verdict.But every time she did she was told it was not right.“Every time she would say there was too much narrative,” Duval remembered.“It wasn’t exciting enough for children.” So Duval learned to tell the story with each picture and to have a simpler narrative.Rêve, rêve, petit chat now has 15 drawings, one short sentence going with each drawing.She said the final draft of the story with pictures took her ten minutes, and Anfousse liked it right away.WITH LEFT HAND But to do the actual drawings to go with the narrative she wrote it took Duval much longer that ten minutes.“I had more trouble with the drawings,” she said.“One year ago 1 drew the first attempt with my left hand.” With her left hand?Duval explained that the left hand is controlled by the right side of the brain which is also the creative part of the brain.So when she feels a creatively blocked she tries to let her créa tivity come out through her left hand.Well, at least for her the trick worked.She began to draw and two cats came out.Then going back to her right hand she developped the drawing, bringing it each time to Anfousse, who always had a suggestion or two for her.One year later, the final result was the yellow cat with purple ribbon around the neck.The drawings in Rêve, rêve, petit chat are simple.But, for that matter, all of Duval's drawings are almost childlike.Certainly, they’re the kind of thing young children can enjoy, particularly when they are as colorful as those in her story book.But although Duval has finally finished her first children’s book, she is not sitting around the house, waiting for a call from the publisher.She is now working on her next venture, a fantasy for children and adults.WITCHES AND DRAGONS Always having been interested by the fantastic world of witches and dragons, Duval is now researching the history of witches, and mythology dealing with witches.Her bookshelves can attest to this interest, as does her portfolio.Presently she is working on develop-ping just the right kind of dragon for her story.Meanwhile she is reading all about Salem, Massachu-sets, where witches were once burned at the stake.Duval says she would like to make it a story book with her own illustrations.“It will be kind of like Tolkien (who wrote The Lord of the Rings),’’ she said.“But the illustra tions are going to be very important.” Duval said she is not worried about finishing this project, or about someday managing to support herself through her art."After a while you have to learn to become a professional,” she said confidently.“I’ve made all the big mistakes already,” she said, and feels she has learned more from life experience and work than from her years in art school.“I can learn by myself,” she said emphatically.“I need motivation, but needing money is the best motivation you can find.“I want to do something with that,” she added pointing towards her drawings.“And it has to work because I don’t want to go work as a waitress or a cook.” 6—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1988 lanzelo will brings first Chinese ruler to Imax screen «-* « r • ITvrrvrv Oil .By Victor Dabby The Canadian Press Canadian film-maker Tony lanzelo has finally been given a chance to prove that only a really BIG movie screen can communicate the grandeur of an era that spawned such architectural marvels as the Great Wall of China.Qin Shihuang, the legendary Chinese emperor with the imagination of a Cecil B.deMille, seemed like the perfect subject for a giant-screen film.As the first ruler of a united China some 2,200 years ago, Qin had ordered 750,000 slaves and prisoners to build the 2,400-kilometre Great Wall — dubbed “the world’s longest cemetery” for the toll it took — to keep out the invading Mongols.Later in life, Qin declared himself a demigod, mobilizing some 700,000 workers in his home province of Xian to construct a subterranean palace that contains a clay army assigned to eternal guard duty.SOUGHT BACKING For eight years, lanzelo, a veteran director with the National Film Board, has been doggedly pursuing investors and Chinese officials to get them to back his plan to bring Qin’s story to the Imax screen.lanzelo played heavily on his reputation as one of the pioneers of the expensive, hi-tech movie format used to capture spectacular vistas — such as space shuttle flights — or to entertain crowds at Disney World.Canada's best-known Imax production is Transitions, lanzelo’s flashy 3-D film seen by an estimated 1.75 million people at Vancou- ver’s Expo 86 The film-maker finally managed to cobble together a deal with public and private backing — from Telefilm, the Canadian Museum of Civilization and Crawley Films Ltd.of Ottawa — which allowed him to embark on one of the most ambitious NFB productions to date.HIRE CHINESE Called The Tiger Emperor, the 35-minute, $7-million docu-drama will employ an entirely Chinese cast of thousands and will include footage of Qin’s fabled underground vault, where no movie camera has ever been allowed.And, lanzelo will get to shoot The Tiger Emperor in Imax, a celluloid format that’s 10 times larger than the 35-millimetre frame used to show feature movies in neighborhood theatres.To project the image, Imax requires a screen that’s 27 metres wide and 20 metres high.For this production, an entire textile factory in China has switched to manufacturing the elaborate costumes to depict the pageantry of the emperor’s court.Other craftsmen are creating the weaponry and chariots that will be used in the enormous battle scenes, which will involve about 2,000 extras.TOUR VAULT lanzelo’s biggest cinematic coup, however, came with official permission to shoot inside one of China’s greatest archeological treasures — the vault built by Qin to house more than 6,000 life-size terracotta soldiers and horses.Although “we kept getting en- couragement from people in China when we first started, most of them said, By the way, we don't think you’ll get permission (to shoot inside the vault), but good luck,”’ said lanzelo.“We kept on and when we finally made contact with this large studio in Xian, they were enthusiastic, saying : 'This is a natural, it’s right in our backyard.We don’t have Imax but we would love to learn about it.’ “They helped us get permission to shoot on the site.” BUILD THEATRE The Tiger Emperor is being filmed over three months this fall and will have its premiere next summer in an Imax theatre being constructed as part of the Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa.There are six other Imax theatres in Canada and only a few dozen in the world.This film deal is the second time that China has entered into a movie co-production with Canada under an agreement signed in 1986.The first was Bethune, the floundering $16-million co-production that has been dogged by internal bickering, cost overruns and production problems.lanzelo says the NFB’s solid reputation and the eagerness of the Chinese to learn about the Imax process clinched the co-production deal with Xian Film Studios, one of the country’s most aggressive production arms.“The Xian studio people told us they have put the equivalent energy into this 35-minute Imax that they would put into three feature films.” Unger starting to lack of motivation HAMILTON (CP) — People in 24 countries get their daily giggle from Herman cartoons, but the creator of the popular comic panel isn’t laughing.Jim Unger says the rigors of producing 300 daily cartoon panels a year for 14 years has taken its toll.“Well, it’s great to meet people,” said Unger after a recent autographing session at the McMaster University bookstore in Hamilton.“But the actual cartooning is now a complete agony.” Hundreds lined up to buy a copy of Unger’s sixth and newest collection of Herman cartoons.The drawing is usually a pleasure, it’s the gags that are tough.“I’d like to quit,” he added.“I mentioned it last week to the syndicate and they nearly went freaky.’’ No wonder.Unger is a one-man cartoon empire.Herman appears in more than 350 newspapers and his books, six collections of cartoons, have sold more than 1,6 million copies.His latest book has pre-sold a million copies.NEEDS A REST Still, Unger is envious of fellow cartoonist Gary Larson, creator of The Far Side, who is taking a year sabbatical.Even though Unger estimates he would lose about $20,000 a month, quitting still looks attractive.With money in the bank and lack of motivation, this former poor boy from London now now admits to struggling with cartoonist’s block.“I’ve had a real tough time the last few weeks,” he said.Despite the problems, the affable 51-year-old knows Herman has given him a great life, a spacious villa in West Nassau, Bahamas, and enough money to never work another day.When he came to Canada twenty years ago he was earning $200 a week at the Mississauga Times near Toronto as a graphic artist.One day he filled in for the regular cartoonist who was sick.The paper loved his work and offered him a regular spot until a syndicate lured him away with a $1,000 a week, three-year contract.Unger and Herman never looked back.Unger left for the sunny, low-tax shores of the Bahamas in 1982 to escape Canadian taxes.VISITS CANADA Today he uses Nassau as home base, but often visits his sisters in Canada, or does book tours of the United States and Europe to meet Herman fans.“I’ve got five letters from Frank Sinatra,” he said.“He’s a big Herman fan.” As for Herman, Unger said he knows why the character is popular.“I figured it out a long time ago .everybody knows themselves when they see Herman,” he said.“We all think we’re so different and we’re not.” Now that money is no longer a problem, Unger isn’t certain what will happen next.Etpplecobe 3mn A TRIP TO FLORIDA! Sufvi ftiU SMwoke (819)838-4296 Ripplecove LISTEN FOR CONTEST DETAILS A charming Country Inn on beautiful Lake Massawippi 4 Season Resort SUNDAY BRUNCH S15 (Aduiti ’9”, FASHION SHOW Sunday, October 2, 1988 at brunch time WÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.SEPTEMBER :«), 198R-7 Garcia Marquez’s characters are easy to recognize Love In The Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (KNOPF- ___ reminiscent a bit of Levon Helm of whose style is as refreshing as it is Love In The Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (KNOPF-RANDOM HOUSE) : $26.75, 348 pp.The fact that a novel by Gabriel Garcia Marquez is firmly established in the top ten of most respected bestseller lists is an indication that many North American readers are discovering the quality of his writing.Kaleidoscope Dir*lj a on I fMiev LOY Tl K lh re.M P o F C irab riel ( i a r e \ a \ 1 a r q u e z The native Columbian, who now resides in Mexico, and writes in Spanish has been a minor celebrity in our hemisphere since the publication of One Hundred years Of Solitude.For this novel, and story collections, he received the Nobel Prize in 1982.Luckily, Love In The Time of Cholera will further establish the deserved, rock-solid reputation of this remarkable writer.Even though his Spanish sentences — elephantine in length and packed with verbal surprises — must be a marvel to read in their original form, the translation by Edith Grossman does no disservice to the appeal of Marquez’s fertile imagination.A novelist in the genuine sense of that label as it is applied to Dickens, Tolstoy or Joyce, Marquez weaves a wonderful tapestry of social richnes in this fascinating story of love in all its manifestations.It is a tale of young Florentine Ariza, a postal clerk who is also a minor poet, a scribbler of custom-written love letters, whose chance hapening upon a vision of a young woman changes his life irrevocably for over half a century.After Ariza is smitten by his vision of Fermna Daza, as she sits in her father’s house, he dedicates himself to a life of eternally keeping vigil over her from a neighbouring park, and pining for her for over By RICHARD LONEY fifty-one years.SOCIAL CUSTOMS During the course of this endless devotion, Marquez treats the reader to a fascinating study of the culture and social customs of his created world that is both Caribbean and Central American in its cosmography.The events narrated so minutely occur at the turn of this century, as the Spanish-influenced world is throwing off the nineteenth century and discovering Johann Straus’s latest waltzes, air-balloon rides and holidays in exotic places such as Paris.Marquez’s canvas is ever-expanding.As the novel opens he writes about the death of Dr.Juvenal Urbino — the husband of Fer-mina Daza — explaining how the death of this man has opened the door of opportunity for Florentino Ariza to renew his long-suffering love for the woman he has worshiped from afar.Marquez uses flashbacks to fill in the bizarre lives of Ariza — who becomes a lecherous, unlikely womanizer by default — and of Urbino — who enters into romantic liaisons with certain of his patients.Holding these two strange men in a state of thrall — and the other figure in the menage a trois that is at the centre of Marquez’s novel — is the much sought after Fermina Daza.The complex social customs and old-world courting taboos are elaborated on by Marquez, as the reader is caught up in a world of trained parrots, eternal civil strife between the Liberals and Conservatives, and marital rituals that are far closer to European sensibilities than to North American habits.BALDNESS It is also the world of a gifted comic novelist, with Marquez trea-ting us to the kind of gently mocking sature that sees his protagonist, Florentino Ariza, worrying about the ravages of baldness even as a “Civil War of a Thousand Days” bleeds his country.Marquez is well versed in the human foibles of his characters, and while they remain South or Central American in their social habits, they represent readily identified universal types.This aspect of Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s writing is surely the element that has encou- Ask for your passport from Auberge Bromont Auberge des Carrefours Au Boeuf Doré Au Petit Suisse Chez Clovis Chez Tony Chez Trudeau Elite La Bécassine La Casa du Spaghetti La Closerie des Lilas La Petite Auberge La Poivrière La Place du Roi raged the promotion of his novels in so many languages.The greatest writers in any language — Balzac, Dante or Cervantes — have been masters of the art of characterizing “everyman”, and Marquez’s characters are so downright human, and therefore, often ridiculous, that we observe them with a sense of familiarity.RECORD REVIEWS John Hiatt Slow Turning (A&M) His near tragic bout with substance abuse behind him, personal relationships back on a manageable course, and one of 1987’s most talked about albums (Bring The Family) still echoing faintly in programmers’s ears, John Hiatt leaps back into the spotlight with Slow Turning.Although the session artists who made his last record so exciting — Ry Cooder, Jim Keltner and Nick Lowe — reportedly began this current project with Hiatt, only to have some kind of falling out, the B-squad of pickers is not half bad.Under the watchful eye of Glyn Johns, producer of everyone from The Eagles to The Stones, Hiatt calls upon a band he calls the Goners: Ken Blevins on drums.Sonny Landreth on everything stringed, and David Ranson on Fender Bass.Whoever the sharepickers are sittin’ in with Hiatt, they get to play on some superb pop songs.There’s a gem here about “Tennessee Plates”, that weaves a lifetime of Elvis worship in with a tale about dragnets on interstates, and a life of crime: “Four bank jobs later, three cars hot wired/ We crossed the Mississippi like an oil slick fire”.The kickoff tune on this record is “Drive South”, and it is typical Hiatt all the way through: a wry look at southern sensibilities laid against some stirring guitar work and a chugging, infectious beat.On “Georgia Rae” Hiatt turns to look at his own darling daughter with the eye for comic lines that usually find their way into his songs : “She is beautiful, she is small/ She don’t wanna play basketball.But right now she can’t even crawl”.Hiatt’s broad southern accent, reminiscent a bit of Levon Helm of the Band, adds just the right touch to his title track that celebrates, among other things, the joys of family travel : “Now I’m in my car/1 got the radio on/ I’m yellin’ at the kids in the back seat/ ’Cause they’re bangin’ like Charlie Watts”.Perhaps what apears to be complacency in the listener regarding John Hiatt’s second winner of an album in a row is not so much a sense that this album is a fraction off the standard set by Bring The Family, but merely that any collection of songs following that rebirth would pale by comparison.In any case, any rock poet who has the gumption to rhyme “kiss” with “somnambulist” has to be at least worth a close listen! Bobby Enriquez Wild Piano (PORTRAIT-COLUMBIA) Jazz pianist Bobby Enriquez comes by his sobriquet “The Wild Man of Mindanao” honestly, which any listener will readily concede after listening to his very percussive piano work on Wild Piano.One fellow musician attested that Enriquez “learned piano from Bruce Lee”.Indeed, this self-taught, completely unorthodox musician takes an attack approach into his keyboard stylings, particularly on the beautiful “September Song”, which he steps up the tempo on, and “Classical Gas”, a piano interpretation of Mason Williams’s guitar piece.Hailing from the mountains of the Philipines, Enriquez brings a spontaneity to his keyboard touch that results from a player having never learned what he wasn’t allowed to do on his instrument.The recordings on this album were cut in one afternoon, with never more than three takes per tune being needed to get a satisfactory master.On something like “Bye Bye Blackbird” Enriquez is able to show his allegiance to jazz greats such as Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker — who he calls the “apostles” — as he continues to spread the gospel.Other material on this album pays tribute to Thelonius Monk (“Round Midnight”, “Four In One”), and Miles Davis (“All Blues”), while showing Enriquez’s respect for classics such as “Cherokee”.Even those who are non-jazz fans will concede that Bobby Enriquez is a masterful, versatile pianist whose style is as refreshing as it is hypnotic.VIDEO SCREENINGS Frantic (WARNER BROS.VIDEO) In Frantic, Roman Polanski, once the enfant terrible of American cinema, finally shows what it was he wanted to be when he grew up — Alfred Hitchcock! Polanski directs Harrison Ford in a jangly, action sparked film that is set in contemporary Paris, which lives up to its title’s warning.Harrison plays Dr.Richard Walker, who with his wife Sondra (Betty Buckley) has arrived in the French city to give a paper at a medical conference.As the low key doctor is showering in his hotel room, after a long flight in from the States, his wife mysteriously disappears.There is a chance that a luggage mix-up may have something to do with Sondra’s disappearance, or she may have merely wandered off with a Parisian acquaintance that the doctor is unaware of.What follows is a roller-coaster ride into murder, kidnapping, extortion and international criminal activity that Polanski keeps canonbailing along with exciting film technique and an eye for odd characteriza-' tions.One of his latest proteges, who is a delectable casting-couch find in his tradition of finding ladies that the big-screen loves to display, is young actress Emmanuelle Sei-gner.Seigner plays Michelle, a coke-sniffing young modern who becomes entangled with Harrison Ford’s anxiety over his wife’s exit, and who ends up as his accomplice in a twisted plot dealing with mistaken suitcases, suspected double-crosses and back-street Paris intrigue.Ford’s klutzy role as the som-nambulent doctor is a long way from his Indiana Jones identity, as he becomes the shambling, awkward Dr.Walker.Polanski’s witch’s brew of violence and unexpected twists in the story line of Frantic make for absorbing esca pist drama almost on the level of his last big American film Chinatown.(VIDEO AVAILABLE AT LE CLUB VIDEO, QUEEN STREET, LENNOXVILLE; AND AT TREIZIEME AVENUE, SHERBROOKE.) the 27 participating restaurants L from October 6 - 23 La Petite Marmite La Maison Chez-Nous L'Augergade Le Baril Le Bistro de Sweetsburg Le Castel Le- Caste! de Brome Le Chateau Bromont Le Dragon Vert Le Granbyen Me McChaffy Lotus d'Or Place Granby 8—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1988 WHAT’S ON Notes Greetings.Did you know that October is 'make music month’?Well, it is, and it means that if you don’t already play an instrument you should choose one and start this month.‘Make music month’ is a campaign to promote the personal, social and cultural benefits of learning to play a musical instument.The campaign’s creator is Music Industries Association of Canada, a national, non-profit trade association representing Canadian manufacturers, wholesalers and distributors of musical instruments, sound equipment and accessories.O K.so these people have something to gain by a national ‘make music month’.But when you think of it, so does everyone else.Playing a musical instrument is great fun, and it can make for a lot of fun with friends.It’s certainly something to consider.Besides, over $100,000 in musical instrument prize packages can be won by filling out an offical entry ballot at any participating Make Music retailer across Canada.To find the nearest participating retailer call (416) 485-8295.By Rossana Coriandoli win NVd x wi xvaox And staying on the topic of music, the National Youth Orchestra announced it’s accepting applications from young musicians for auditions for the 1989 National Youth Orchestra.All players of orchestral instruments between 10 and 26 years old are encouraged to apply for a free audition.Full scholarships of $6000 are granted by the NYO to successful candidates.Each year eminent teachers and conductors from overseas are brought to Kingston to give professional guidance to young musicians in the art of orchestral playing, providing them with advanced training not available elsewhere.No academic requirements are demanded of applicants, the sole criterion for participation in the orchestra is musical ability, but there is a limit of 100 people to be accepted.Audition applications must be submitted bu Oct.30 and are available with all relevant information from the NYO, 1032 Bathurst St., Toronto, Ont.M5R 3G7, or call (416) 532-4479 or 532-4470.For more information contact Svetlana Vlahovich at any one of those two numbers.On to other things, the season premiere of Townships Magazine is on Oct.3.The guests featured this week are Jacques Boisvert, noted diver and local historian, Marie Brodeur, from the Sherbrooke Hospital, Shirley Hall, from the Lennoxville Women’s Center and a spokesperson from the Partage St-François.You can see the show on Tuesdays at 9 p.m., Wednesdays at 11 p.m., on Fridays at6 p.m.and Saturdays at 4 p.m.To put an announcement on Townships Magazine you can call 822-6806.On Vermont ETV, there’s a treat for Charles Dickens lovers.On Saturday at 9 you can catch the film adaptation of his great novel A Tale of Two Cities, starring Ronald Coleman and Elizabeth Allan.Also this week on Vermont ETV, the series that tries to teach Americans a little about their neighbors to the north (namely us) continues with part four.The Imigrants, which looks at Toronto, where half of Canada’s immigrants settle.The show airs at 10 on Monday.Also Monday evening, you can catch the Front Row Feature, which is a movie with Hollywood hero Cary Grant.Walk Don’t Run is a 1966 love story about a woman (played by Samantha Eggar who shares her apartment during the housing shortage at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.Finally, on Wednesday at 11:30 you can catch a great film starring one of the most famous Hollywood couples of all time, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.The movie.The Taming of the Shrew, was one of Franco Zeffirelli's masterpieces, and a lavish production of one of Shakespeare best comedies.Music Legendary British bluesman Long John Baldry is performing at Centennial Theatre at «isliop's Wmlwsitp on Saturday at 8:30.Everyone knows the sensual mood of a Long John Baldry ballad.His voice mesmerizes even those who aren’t used to the blues.His interpretation of the Righteous Brothers’ You Ve Lost That Lovin ’ Feelin ' is classic of Bal-dry's unique vocal power.Now he’s at Centennial and you can listen and see him, just call the theatre’s box office to reserve the best seats at 563-4966.Well-known Quebec singer Celine Dion is at the University of Sherbrooke on Oct.4, 5 and 6.Tickets are on sale right now at the university’s Centre Culturel.Reserve now because tickets are going fast.As for local musicians.Rod Bray and the Countrymen are playing at the St.Francis Valley Plowmen’s Association banquet and dance on Saturday starting at 10:45.The dance is at the Mt.Scotch Hill in Danville.At the Motel Bretagne in Waterville the band Longshot is playing every Friday, Saturday and Sunday this month.Also all this month the Good Ole Boys are playing at the Army, Navy & Air Force, Unit 318 in Lennoxville on Saturday nights.Everyone is welcome At the Salle Jean Paul in Bury the band Country Express is playing every Friday and Saturday night this month.Admission is free and there are door prizes.This Saturday there’s also a pizza party you shouldn’t miss.Exhibitions/Events For the third year, the National Film Board and District Women’s Center are co-sponsoring a film series.The first film in the series is Speaking Our Peace, a film about wo- TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1988-9 WHAT’S ON men, peace and power.The film will be shown Wednesday, Oct.5 at 7 p.m.at 151 Queen Street in Lennoxville.For more information call 564-6626.As for exhibitions, the Lennoxville-Ascot Historical & Museum Society is presenting the paintings of local artist Eileen Littlejohn Drew.The exhibition is at the Uplands museum in Lennoxville starting Saturday and continuing until Oct.9.The Arts Sutton gallery is presenting the works of sculptor Anne Kahane.The exhibition begins Saturday and continues until the end of the month.For more information call 538-2563.The Sherbrooke Municipal Library is presenting the works of artist Michelle Quintin titled Géographie de 1’invi-sible.The exhibition begins Tuesday and continues until the end of the month.The Blue Armoire is displaying the three paintings being raffled by the Brome County Historical Society.The paintings, Hibiscus, by Evelyn Blackwood, The Mill Pond by Gordon Ladd and Winter Morning by Mary Martin.Tickets for the drawing are available at the Blue Armoire or from the historical society.The drawing will be held at the society’s Arts and Crafts Fair next week.The art gallery at the Caisse Populaire de Sherbrooke-Est is presenting the works of painter Andrée Bergeron from Monday until Oct.28.The Beaulne Museum in Coaticook is presenting an exhibition of texts and engravings by Francine Fortier-Blouin and Lucie Fontaine-Charbonneau.These two artist will present 16 lithographs accompanied by texts.Ten albums will be available for visitors.The exhibition continues until Nov 14.At the Marsil Museum in St.Lambert you can see an exhibition of photographs by one of the world’s premier photographers, Alfred Eisenstaedt.The show includes nearly 100 photographs taken over a period of more than 50 years that began when the artist, now 90, made his first pictures in Berlin.The most recent photos in the show were made in Germany in 1980.Frequently described as one of the fathers of photojournalim, he became of of Life magazine’s original four photographers in 1935.He remained with the magazine for the next 40 years.The show continues until Nov.27.Movies At the Cinema Princess in Cowansville this week you can see Big Business starring Lilly Tomlin and Bette Midler This movie was made for the sole purpose of bringing together two of the most lucrative female comics in Hollywood.Unfortunately the plot just didn’t make it.Tomlin and Midler play two sets of twins who get separated at birth and end up on opposite sides of the track.Showtime is 7:15.Also at the Princess is Cocktail starring one of the very biggest money-makers in Hollywood, Tom Cruise (last seen in The Color of Money and Top Gun).This time Cruise plays a bartender trying to hit the big time who meets up with something he didn’t expect, a girl he falls in love with.Showtime is 9.As for across the border at Merrill’s Showplace in Newport, you can catch two movies, Cadyshack II and Hot to Trot, starring Don the Talking Horse.Sorry, I wasn’t able to get the showtimes for these movies, so if you’re interested, just call Merrill’s Showplace in Newport at (802) 863-4825.'if': Tril€ North, a Vermont ETV tion.series about Canada airs this week.For more information read the /Votes sec- ’vml * aûêr Tom CriliSB and Elisabeth Shue the Movies section.star in Cocktail, playing at a theatre in the area.For more information read WEVE TOUCHED THE HEART OF SOMEONE YOU KNOW.Give to the research that’s saved more lives.CANADIAN HEART FUND 1ft—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1988 Travel «¦___Mi icecora New York’s bed-and-breakfast market is booming By Judie Glave NEW YORK (AP) — If Valerie Dimitri’s bed-and-breakfast guests don’t look out the window, they can fantasize that they are staying in a cosy country cottage, complete with a fat cat sitting in front of a white brick fireplace.Actually it’s a Manhattan penthouse facing East 86th Street, with a noisy rumble of fume-spewing buses, taxis, trucks and people down below.“Well, if you want us to replicate the inn in Vermont, you better go there,” says Mary McAuley, proprietor of Urban Ventures, one of seven registries that send visitors to bed-and-breakfast hosts in New York City.McAuley and others in the B and B industry say the market for their brand of big-city hostelries is booming in the 1980s.They appeal to tourists tired of paying $13 US for a bowl of cereal, and to business people tired of staying in $100 US-a-night hotel rooms where brass statues are riveted to tabletops to prevent theft.PAY COSTS B and Bs are an affordable way to explore urban life.Prices range from $45 to $90 US a night for two, depending on the location and other amenities.The arrangement also helps New Yorkers pay their soaring housing costs.Overseas visitors have long known the charms of B and Bs, which originated in Europe.The idea spread to the United States early in the century, but the cottage industry was nearly wiped out after the Second World War when rural roadways dotted with B and Bs were replaced by highways and hotel chains.Country and seashore B and Bs and unusual urban inns like San Francisco’s Bishop Mansion survived, but city B and Bs disappeared.Things began to change around 1979 thanks to rising housing and hotel costs.Big city B and Bs are now “the fastest growing segment of the hospitality industry,” says Susan Morris of Bed and Breakfast Association Worldwide, Inc., a New Orleans-based trade group.Urban Ventures had 15 hosts in 1979.In 1988, it has 700.NUMBERS RISE The number of people using big-city B and Bs increased 200 to 300 per cent each year, Morris says.One reason is their variety.“They come in condos and apartments and mansions and even in yachts in some locations,” she says.There are ranches and log cabins in the West, antebellum mansions in the South and French Quarter homes in New Orleans.In New York, guests can find rooms in nearly every Manhattan neighborhood, from an artsy loft in Soho to a Central Park penthouse.There also are a few B and Bs in the outer boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn.There are even country-style London Show Tour $ 576.Per person — based on double occupancy INCLUDED: Round trip Montreal-London with British Airways 6 night stay at Hotel Tavistock Tax, service.Continental breakfast included.Transfers to downtown by bus from Heathrow Three "GRAND THEATRE" tickets.Departure dates — October 16th to December 10th, 1988 Consult: voyage/ aiftoui Quebec Permit hoWer 817 Principale, 514-263-6531 Cowansville 1-800-363-8936 places like Dimitri’s penthouse.Cheery country red walls welcome visitors into an apartment filled with antiques and lace.A black kettle doorstop and scatter rugs strewn over polished hardwood floors add a country cottage atmosphere.LOOKS HOMEY In the living room, a small round table near the window is covered with delicate, spidery lace and adorned with yellowed family photographs.Guests can cosy into an overstuffed claw-footed chair with a cup of blackberry tea.Some hosts enter the business “because they like to meet people from other parts of the country and other parts of the world,” says Morris.Others do it out of necessity.“In the cities, it’s a help in paying exorbitant rents people are being charged now.” Dimitri is one of Urban Ventures’ most popular hostesses.“I like to get a little fancy-shmancy,” says the diminutive Dimitri, a speechwriter.“I put mints under pillows, give honeymooning couples a split of champagne and always use the good crystal.” Notes and fresh flowers welcome each guest; bus and subway maps and magazines tell them what’s going on around town, and Dimitri offers tips on the best restaurants and Broadway shows.Guests pay Dimitri $65 US a night for one or $80 US for two.But they often find other ways to repay her hospitality, like the 80-year-old French perfumer who sends her a bottle of his special scent each year on her birthday.Danish Legoland attracts millions By Michael Duggan BILLUND, Denmark (Reuter) — The capital city of a plastic brick empire lies on an isolated 10-hectare patch of heath in western Denmark.It has attracted 16 million visitors — more than three times the Danish population — since its founding 20 years ago.It is Legoland, a miniature landscape where famous cities and monuments of the world are accurately reconstructed at waist-high level in pollution-resistant, non-scratch plastic, courtesy of the Lego toy company.“We have many schools doing geography tours, because they can see in quite a small area what different styles are like,” said spokesman Holger Henriksen.The Acropolis is here, in plastic but cleaner and safer from acid rain and car exhaust fumes than in its native Athens.BUILD TOWN The typical old English town called Medbourne isn’t on any British map.It’s an amalgam of half-timbered buildings from York, Chester and Stamford, yet more perfectly laid out than any of them.Visitors can dream through the German Rhineland, with its castle, or along the miniature waterways of an artificial Amsterdam.From the side of a Mount Rus-hmore rising to about nine metres, the plastic heads of U.S.presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt stare down at a scene startlingly different to the one they enjoy in South Dakota.The tiny towns are also an attraction for specialists in miniature bonsai gardening, as the civic plants must grow in proportion to the buildings.PLAY WELL’ About 33 million plastic bricks have been linked to produce this fantasy world since Godtfred Kirk Christiansen, then Lego company director, hit on the idea of Legoland, which opened in 1968 next to the firm’s headquarters.His father.Ole, started the firm by making wooden toys in 1932, inventing the name Lego from the Danish “leg godt” meaning “play well.” Since plastic bricks were included in the range in 1949, the company has spread to five continents.Six of 10 visitors are from abroad, and Henriksen said about 60 per cent of these named Legoland as their main reason for coming to Denmark.“We were amazed ourselves,” he added.Less than a third of the visitors are children, and the information chief said youngsters really preferred the many activities offered by Legoland to looking at models.They can take a realistic driving test, visit a Wild West town or roll through a safari park inhabited by plastic lions and elephants, frozen in their natural poses.But what is the attraction of plastic stones, when many visitors could see the real thing for the same money?Henriksen’s explanation was simple: “People like to dream.” ‘Holy Island’ anticipates tourist invasion By Kerin Hope PATMOS, Greece (AP) — Nightclubs and nudity are banned on this island, where tradition holds that St.John wrote the Book of Revelation in a cave overlooking the Aegean Sea.Under a special government decree, Patmos has a unique status among Greece's 200 or so inhabited islands as a “holy island” still dominated by its 900-year-old Byzantine monastery.“We prefer our visitors to be pilgrims rather than ordinary tourists and we would like them to respect our tradition,” said Abbot Isidores, who heads the 30-member community at the Monastery of St.John the Theologian.But plans for an airport coupled with widespread publicity of the monastery’s 900th anniversary ce- lebrations this year are expected to bring mass tourism to Patmos in the coming years.ATTRACTS RICH The tranquillity of Patmos, a rocky outcrop in the Dodecanese group of islands with around 2,000 residents, attracts wealthy Greeks and foreigners who have restored scores of traditional mansions clustered beneath the monastery’s grey fortress-like walls.Many have given donations to the monastery to help maintain its library of rare manuscripts and early books, along with a collection of priceless icons — portraits of saints painted in gold and bright colors.Signs in Greek, French, German and English scattered around the island's beaches point out that nudity is not allowed.One disco ope- rates on a remote bay, but the narrow alleys around the monastery fall silent by 10 p.m., even in summer.“People sometimes go topless on the beaches, but.on the whole the rules are respected,” said Christos Kyrozis, the island’s doctor and mayor.The development project planned by Greece’s state tourist organization, together with the monastery and town authorities, calls for construction of an airport, zoning for new hotels and bungalows and improved harbor facilities.“Past experience shows that once an island gets an airport, mass tourism is very difficult to avoid,” said Eleni Bonou, who heads the project.“But an airport is essential because it serves the islanders first." TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30.1988—11 Photo exhibition celebrates work of ‘paparazzi’ By Philip Pullella ROME (Reuter) — Italy’s paparazzi, the notorious street photographers who exposed the secret affairs of movie stars during the heyday of Rome’s Dolce Vita, have finally won respectability.For years the paparazzi suffered abuse and often violence from the stars they hounded.Now a major exhibition through December at Venice’s Palazzo Fortuny has credited them with changing the rules of photojournalism.The paparazzi burst on the scene in 1958.At night on Rome's now legendary Via Veneto, Hollywood stars, deposed kings, and the residue of Italian nobility frolicked and held court at the sidewalk cafes.Some didn’t want their pictures taken.But those who did rushed to pose at the mere sight of a earner a.Tazio Secchiaroli, the photographer who was the inspiration for much of Federico Fellini's 1960 film La Dolce Vita (The Sweet Life), discovered that editors paid him more for “surprise pictures.” LOVE SURPRISES For instance, an angry movie star using a newspaper to cover the face of a woman who was not his wife was worth three times as much as one with a broad smile.Secchiaroli, who with his friends developed tactics to bring the stars to life, says the Dolce Vita was born on the night between August 14 and 15, 1958.That night 30 years ago he and his “accomplices” immortalized Egypt’s deposed King Farouk overturning a table, Tony Francio-sa punching a photographer who had caught him dining with Ava Gardner, and a two-fisted Anthony Steel lurching at a lensman while the blonde, buxom Anita Ekberg waited in a car.The pictures, so unlike the glossy publicity stills the movie studios spoon-fed to newspapers, caused a journalistic sensation.Photo editors clamored for more.TAKES NOTES Fellini, already toying with the idea for a film about cafe society, took Secchiaroli and his friends to dinner.He grilled them about their work.He took mental notes.“Practically, we invented La Dolce Vita,” Secchiaroli, now 63, said in an interview.“But had it not been for a true artist like Fellini it would have died on the pages of Italian newspapers.” Fellini gave the name Paparazzo to the character based on Secchiaroli in the film.“The immense success of the film flooded Via Veneto with photographers and small-time actresses seeking each other and tourists seeking them both,” Secchiaroli said.IMITATE STARS The real Dolce Vita moved indoors while the pretenders imitated the film on the street.The hard-core paparazzi perfected their cloak-and-dagger techniques and sought sensational scoops, usually working solo, with months of painstaking groundwork.Thus did Elio Sorci become one of the world’s most celebrated photographers in April 1962.Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton were in Rome filming the epic, Cleopatra.A source in the studios confir- filtf DINING ROOM LA POIVRIERE DU MOTEL DU LAC Entrées: Artichoke, Greek style Game pate “du chef” Crab cocktail with cognac sauce Snails “gastronome” Soups: Parisienne Solfarino Main dishes: Lamb sauté with Madera wine Doria chicken breast Halibut filet in Papillotte Beef Medallion with 5 peppers Lobster tails with Armagnac wine Pork filet mignon with Porto sauce Salads: Lukewarm goose salad Avocado Pamplemousse Desserts: Apple “flanc" with blueberry sauce Crêpe Georgette Cardinal cup Your choice: $19.95 For the hardy appetite Coquille St-Jacques Capitaine s platter Your choice: soup, salad and dessert $28.00 255 Denison East, Granby Reservations: (514) 372-5930 med to him rumors that Burton and Taylor — both married to others at the time — were involved in an off-the-set romance.CAUGHT KISSING The result was world exclusive pictures of Taylor and Burton eating at a restaurant in the Roman countryside, returning in a car from a secret picnic, and kissing off the set.“What interested me was a journalistic scoop, to get it alone no matter how much time it took,” Sorci, 56, said in an interview.“I considered it my business to take pictures in places where photogra- phers were not allowed.“What we did, without knowing it at the time, was begin a new era in photojournalism,” he said.The 100-photo exhibition at the Palazzo Fortuny is a tribute to Secchiaroli, Sorci and three other famous paparazzi.Langrick wants to do variety of roles TORONTO (CP) — Margaret Langrick, known for her portrayal of Sandy, a naive Canadian 12-year-old who is starstruck by her tough American cousin in the hit movie My American Cousin, has only one ambition.“I just want to be a really good actor,” says the Genie Award winner.“I’m not going to do any one kind of acting.I want to do it all.” Langrick, 17 going on 38, is already well on her way to achieving the objective.Now in Toronto shooting her fifth movie, tentatively titled Thunder-ground.she has played characters from all extremes.“I’ve been blessed,” she says.“I’ve only been in the business four years.but I’ve been handed all these different roles; a young brat (My American Cousin), a girl locked up all her life (Cold Comfort, filmed earlier this year) and a hobo (Thunderground.)” Unklike Sandy, Langrick is neither naive nor starstruck.Lighting up a cigarette, Langrick suddenly looks much older than her years.She has been filming all night and at late afternoon, she’s just out of bed.CLAIMS MATURITY “I’m a mature kid,” she readily admits in her drab mid-town hotel.She says she likes the idea of being famous, but she has no desire to become a star.“That would take away from my enjoyment of life.I’d be happy doing Canadian projects and just making a living.” After winning the best-actress Genie, Langrick dropped out of school in 1986 to concentrate on acting full-time.When Thunder-ground finishes in two weeks, she'll be off to California to begin shooting California Dreaming, the se-quil to Cousin.“The two worlds (school and acting) are so difficult to combine.I was used to being treated as an equal, but instead, I was told to stand in line, not to chew gum and so on.” She hopes to complete her education later, but for now, her new teachers are directors, crew members and other actors.“Life teaches more than school anyway.” e Équestre © %% % \ M .x .I »'***>•.Take advantage of the fall to discover the equestrian sport in an enchanting decor and dream weather.RENTING OF HORSES: for 1 hour — Vz day — whole day outings Why choose the Centre Equestre Omerville?— Hospitable personnel ready to fill you in on the world of horses — We have magnificent purebred horses, Arabian and Am Quarter Horse — Courses for beginners and experienced people — Horse boarding starting at $100 per month — Reception room above the stables — Qualified personnel — Open 7 days a week — Always ready to respond to our clients’ needs — Buy, sell, trade (horses and accessories) Sale of purebred colts i & GOAL: Promote the equestrian sport ITS ROLE: Respond the needs of clients and tourists Leasing ol horses: lor outing starting at {7 - $10 • $15 1 hour: $10.'/?day $40.Whole day: $05.Special group nln.For Information and reservations: 843-4559 hoarding Horses of i ,i e*»n C» aa- k ¦ ct .n .__n 'Exit 36 Eastern Townships Autoroute, towards Omerville, Dot) bl-micnel Street, Omerville -04o-4&D9 BourqueBlvd (route HZWest), up to Assomption street and I & a % \TV.VJflfcR Mur^ follow St-Michel Street.» 12-TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1988 This week's TV Listings for this week's television programs as supplied by liiMriiMïfeMaiiilf V/hile we make every effort to ensure their l accuracy, they are subject to change without notice.^ Channel G O o o o STATIONS LISTED Station CBFT WCAX WPTZ CBMT CHLT WMTW CKSH Œ) CFTM IB CFCF f£ WVNY Œ ETV MM FC TSN PC \ y Saturday MORNING 5:00 (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (TSN) WORLD OF HORSE RACING (R) (PC) MOVIE: PRIERE POUR UN TUEUR (1985, Drame Policier) Sho Kosugi, James Booth.Des criminels se vengent sur Sho, nouvellemnt immigre aux Etats-Unis, ’R' 5:30 OB GIMME A BREAKI (FC) MOVIE: MONSTER SQUAD {1987, Comedy Adventure) Andre Gower Bobby Kiger Dracula and Frankenstein try to get an amulet from the Monster Squad.PG13' (TSN) CANADIAN SPORTFISHING A look at this popular sport in various Canadian provinces.6:00 B Q SEOUL 88 Reportage Sur les Competitions O FUNTASTIC MAX Q GALAXY RANGERS (B SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON æ TRANSFORMERS (MM) SPOTLIGHT U2 (TSN) PRO WRESTLING PLUS (R) 6:30 0 TEST PATTERN G FLINTSTONES O WONDERFUL WORLD OF DISNEY (B PAUL HANN œ BISKETTS (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS 7:00 O WONDERFUL WORLD OF DISNEY [Education) Hayley Mills unravels the mysteries of the art of animation G RITCHIE RICH O TOUTE AMITIE (B DENNIS THE MENACE m BUFORD AND GALLOPING GHOST (FC) MOVIE: THREE AMIGOS (1986, Western Comedy) Steve Martin.Chevy Chase Three silent movie stars take a job south of the border.PG’ (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada.NR (PC) MOVIE: LA FIDELE LASSIE (1943, Conte Dramatique) Boddy McDowall, Donald Crisp Lassie est vendue a un seigneur.'G' 7:30 O JOHNNY QUEST O MONDE A VENIR O DR.FAD A “BIG BLOCKADE” SUNDAY MORNING MOVIE (1946, Drama) Michael Redgrave.John Mills.Story of the Allied Forces blockade put into action during WWII.a COEUR A TOUT Q JERRY FALWELL Q JOUR DU SEIGNEUR De Montreal * JUMPIN' JACK FLASH (1986, Comedy) Whoopi Goldberg, Stephen Collins.Computer operator gets urgent SOS messages from a trapped British spy.R' 1:30 O MOVIE: LA FILLE DE TRIESTE, 1E PARTIE (1982, Drame Psychologique) Ben Gazzara, Ornella Muti.Un artiste tombe amoureux d'une patiente d'un hôpital psychiatrique.2:00 (PC) MOVIE: CORPS ET BIENS (1983) Dominique Sanda, Lambert Wilson.Un meurtre est commis par un gigolovisant une riche héritiers.'G' 2:30 (FC) MOVIE: **?'/.ROUND MIDNIGHT (1986, Drama) Dexter Gordon, mm ¦ JOHNNY CARSON celebrates his 26th anniversary as host of The Tonight Show with Ed McMahon, Doc Severinsen and a variety of comedians Thursday, Oct.6, on NBC.Johnny Carson celebrates 26 years on ‘Tonight’ Spontaneity a definite key to show’s success By Anne Wheeler Johnny Carson has been host of The Tonight Show for so long.How long has he been host?Twenty-six years to be exact.Thursday, Oct.6, on NBC comedians will come from behind the curtain to reminisce about those years.Carson has been host of the show since Oct 1.1962.Contenders for the job that Jack Paar had held for five years included Bob Newhart.Jackie Cilcason, Joey Bishop and Groucho Marx, who all declined NBC’s offers.So the network gambled on a young game show host named Johnny Car-son.The move proved to be a gamble in which the network hit the jackpot.There are no set formulas for the show's continued success over the years, but spontaneity is certainly a major ingredient.“He’s perfect for television because he's so quick.He can play off something someone says to him and turn it into a joke in a second," said Ed McMahon, who has worked with Carson since the talk show host hosted the game show Who Do You Trust?more than 30 years ago.Through the years speculation has arisen that Carson would not continue after 10, then 15.then 25 years.But he has proven that wrong.“I certainly don't want to retire.Ifyou like to work and enjoy what you do, and you retire, it's a way to grow old very quickly.I just didn’t want to do that,” he said.Appearing on this year's prime-time special on Thursday will be comedians Garry Shandling, David Letterman and Jay Leno.Additionally, memorable clips from the show’s current season will be included.The clips feature comedians Bill Cosby, Robin Williams, Chevy Chase.Billy Crystal, Eddie Murphy, George Carlin, Dan Aykroyd.Joe Piscopo and Martin Short.* The TV Listing Uroup Iik Francois Cluzet.A young French jazz fan will do anything to keep his hero performing.'R1 4:00 (MM) MOVIE: BRING ON THE NIGHT (1985.Musical Documentary) Sting, Omar Hakim.The camera follows Sting as he assembles a band for his debut album.'PG13' (PC) MOVIE: ADIEUX LES ANGESI (1985, Comedie) Les "Anges" reviennent nous rendre visite avec leur camera indiscrete.'G' 5:00 (FC) MOVIE: PLACE OF WEEPING {Drama) Action and timely drama in a film by South Africans.PG' 5:45 (PC) MOVIE: LE TRESOR DE SAN LUCAS (1987, Drame de Suspense) Carey Lowell, Charles Pocket.Etudiante kidnappée découvre le fameux trésor de San Lucas.PG' DAYTIME SPORTS 5:30 (TSN) MEN'S PRO BEACH VOLLEYBALL (R) 6:30 (TSN) BODIES IN MOTION (P) 7:00 (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada NR’ 7:30 (TSN) EUROPEAN REPORT (R) 8:00 (TSN) L'ARC DE TRIOMPHE THROUGHBRED RACING SPECIAL L'Arc De Triomphe, From Paris (R) 8:30 (TSN) IMSA GTP AUTO RACING SERIES Columbus 500, from Ohio (P) m 10:30 (TSN) NASCAR MODIFIEDS AUTO RACING From Wilkesboro, N.C.(P) (T) 11:30 (TSN) BODIES IN MOTION (R) 12:00 (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada NR' 12:30 (TSN) CHECKERED FLAG (R) 1:00 (TSN) 1988 TRANSAMERICA OPEN TENNIS TOURNAMENT (R) 4:30 (TSN) WRESTLING (P) EVENING 6:00 e MONTREAL CE SOIR O Q O Q 9 NEWS O MONDE Q EN ESTRIE CE SOIR (D ICI MONTREAL (B PULSE (B MACNEIL/ LEHRER NEWSHOUR (MM) SPOTLIGHT Michael Jackson (TSN) WIN PLACE (P) 6:30 0 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS Q 0 (E) CHARIVARI 0 0 ABC NEWS ?(MM) ROCKFLASH WRAP-UP (FC) MOVIE: SITTING IN LIMBO (1986, Drama) A warm story of the everday lives of two black teenagers in Montreal.'PG13' (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show In Canada.NR' 7:000 O MA TANTE ALICE H Q CBS NEWS O USA TODAY O PEOPLE FIRST O CURRENT AFFAIR (B ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Yoko Ono 9 WHEEL OF FORTUNE g 0 CALL THE CANDIDATES Vermont's Congressman (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (TSN) JIMY WILLIAMS AND THE BLUE JAYS (P) 7:15 (PC) MOVIE: LE GARDIEN OU FUTUR (1984, Drame de Science-Fiction) Tim Thomerson, Helen Hunt.En l’an 2247, un policier est envoyé a la poursuite d'un criminel.'PG' JIM PALMER, future Hall of Fame pitcher, commentates the baseball playoffs on ABC.7:300 O ROBERT ET COMPAGNIE g 0 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 0 JEOPARDY! g 0 DANGER BAY Jonah comes to terms with his life-long fear of fire.§ 0 ENTRE CHIEN ET LOUP 0 KATE AND ALLIE 0 LIVE IT UP Potato Delicacies g 0 CURRENT AFFAIR (MM) MUCHWEST (TSN) HOCKEY NEWS PRESENTS PLAYERS OF THE DECADE Bobby Hall, Gordie Howe (P) 8:000 Q DAMES DE COEUR Q O Q NEWHART Michael steals program idea from a student in his production class.(R) g 0 ALF g O 0 DYNASTIE Jeux d'Ombres Q vjy TBA 0 MACGYVER MacGyver must find and destroy wreckage of downed secret aircraft.(R) g 0 WILL ROGERS’ U.S.A.(1988) James Whitmore portrays the humorist in a one-man political satire.(MM) MOVIE: **?BRING ON THE NIGHT (1985, Musical Documentary) Sting, Omar Hakim.The camera follows Sting as he assembles a band for his debut album.'PG13' (TSN) CHEVRON DELO 400 BIB RIG RACE (P) Big Rig Truck Race 8:30 o CAVANAUGHS Father Chuck Jr., a Roman Catholic priest, considers marriage.O THE HOGAN FAMILY Q 0 DEGRASSI JUNIOR HIGH Themes: Depression divorce, parental dating, conflicts.NR' g (FC) MOVIE: TRAIN OF DREAMS (1987) Jason St.Amour, Marcella Santa Maria.Tony learns what his future may hold when he is sent to an institute.PG13’ (TSN) NASCAR WINSTON CUP AUTO RACING SERIES (P) Holly Farms 400 (PC) L’ARC-EN-CIEL DES AMOURS (1988) Roberta Weiss.Marshall Colt.Une très belle scientifique rencontre un beau chauffeur de taxi.G’ 9:00 0 0 LOI DE LOS ANGELES Ethique et Justice O MOVIE: “UNHOLY MATRIMONY” CBS SPECIAL MOVIE (1988, Fact-based Drama) Patrick Duffy.Charles Duming.Detective investigates a minister and a doctor with a double identity, g 0 MOVIE: “PEOPLE ACROSS THE LAKE” NBC MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES (1988, Suspense Drama) Valerie Harper, Gerald McPaney.A family discovers a terrible secret about their new lakeside home, p O KATE « ALLIE g O 0 OR OU TEMPS 0 0 MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Cowboys at Saints (L) g 0 MOVIE: "THE SECRET LIFE OF KATHY MCCORMICK” CTV MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE ( 1988) Barbara Eden, Josh Taylor.A grocery store checker inadvertently gets Involved in high society.§D CAMPAIGN: THE PRINT-TIME PRESIDENT (1988) Bill Moyers.Examine the positive and negative impact of TV on electing Presidents.9:300 DESIGNING WOMEN g 10:000 O TELE JOURNAL g O NATIONAL AND THE JOURNAL O 0 AD LIB 0 CANADA: TRUE NORTH Explore Canada's policy of multiculturalism.NR'g (MM) SPOTLIGHT Michael Jackson (FC) MOVIE: WWW MANHUNTER (1986, Adventure) William Petersen, Kim Greist.A retired FBI agent reluctantly agrees to help find a serial killer.'R' (PC) MOVIE: IL FAUT MARIER PAPA (1963, Comedie Sentimentale) Glenn Ford.Ronny Howard Le petit Eddie fait tout pour trouver une nouvelle femme pour son pere G' 10:300 O POINT (MM) ROCKFLASH WRAP-UP 11:000 O NOUVELLES DU SPORT O O 0 NEWS 0 0 NOUVELLES TVA 0 CTV NATIONAL NEWS g O BILL MOYERS' WORLD OF IDEAS (1988.Informational Programming) Moyers talks with a wide variety of people about America's choices.'NR' (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada.NR’ 11:150 MOVIE: QUEUE JOIE DE VIVRE! (1961, Comedie Burlesque) Alain Delon, Gino Cervi.Dans l'Italie de l'entre-deux-guerres, un orphelin devient anarchiste.0 MOVIE: CONTRE UNE POIGNEE DE DIAMANTS (1974) Michael Caine, Donald Pleasance.Un chef de gang kidnape le fils d'un agent secret britannique.11:300 NIGHT COURT O BEST OF CARSON Guest Host: Jay Leno Q KATE « AUIE g O 0 FRANC PARLER 0 PULSE O MOVIE: WALK, DON’T RUN (1966, Comedy) Cary Grant, Samantha Eggar, A young woman takes in two unlikely roommates for the Tokyo Olympics.'NR' (MM) MUCHWEST (TSN) WIN PLACE (R) 11:450 0 SPORTS 12:000 “HUNTER” CBS LATE NIGHT Hunter and McCall search for woman suspected of murdering two men.(R) O MOVIE: “YOUNG ONES” CBC LATE NIGHT (1960) Cliff Richard, Robert Morley.A man runs a youth club for his friends.Q MONGRAIN DE SEL (R) 0 0 NEWS 0 MOVIE: COVER GIRLS (1977, Drame Policier) Cornelia Sharpe, Jayne Kennedy.Mésaventures de deux mannequins qui travaillent comme espionnes aussi.0 BENNY HILL (MM) MUSHMUSIC (FC) MOVIE: ** NUMBER ONE WITH A BULLET (1986, Comedy Drama) Robert Carradine, Billy Dee Williams.Two narcotics detectives step outside the law.R' (TSN) CHECKERED FLAG (R) (PC) MOVIE: LES AMOURS EXOTIQUES D’EMMANUELLE (1980, Drame de Moeurs) Laura Gemser, Gabriele Tinti, Emmanuelle aide des enquêteurs démanteler un reseau de trafiquants.'R' 12:300 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 0 0 NIGHTLINE g (TSN) WRESTLING (R) 12:450 MONDE (R) 1:00 O MOVIE: V.“IN THE SHADOW OF KILIMANJARO” CBS LATE MOVIE (1986, Suspense) Timothy Bottoms.John Rhys-Davies.African drought turns normally peaceful baboons into vicious killers.R' 0 LOVE CONNECTION 0 MOVIE: HEY BABEI (Comedy Drama) Buddy Hackett.Vasmine Bleeth.An aging vaudevillian helps a talented young girl become an actress.'NR' 0 FEED MY PEOPLE (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS 1:150 Q Q FERMETURE 1:300 LATER WITH BOB COSTAS 0 0 SIGN OFF 0 NEWS 0 NATURESCENE (Documentary) Examine Cumberland Falls, a waterfall 68 feet high and 125 feet wide.'NR' (PC) MOVIE: PIEGE (1985, Drame Sentimental) Michael Keaton, Maria Conchi-ta Alonso.Joueur de hockey s eprend de la mere d’un jeune garçon voyou.‘G’ 1:450 FERMETURE 2:000 USA TODAY O 0 SIGN OFF (FC) MOVIE: ** PROM NIGHT (1980.Suspense Drama) Leslie Nielsen, Jamie Lee Curtis.The anniversary of a girl's death falls years later on prom night.R' (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada 'NR' 2:300 O SIGN OFF (TSN) JIMY WILLIAMS AND THE BLUE JAYS (R) 3:000 MOVIE: ELIZA FRASER (1977) Susannah York, John Waters Eliza Fraser is a woman liberated 150 yrs.ahead of her time.PG13' (TSN) NASCAR MODIFIEDS AUTO RACING (R) 3:15 (PC) MOVIE: PAULETTE (1986 Comedie) Jeanne Marine, Georges Beller.Paulette, une milliardaire de 20 ans.aime l'aventure.'PG' 4:00 (MM) MOVIE: WW* BRING ON THE NIGHT (1985, Musical Documentary) Sting, Omar Hakim.The camera follows Sting as he assembles a band for his debut album.'PG13' (FC) MOVIE: ** MR.KLEIN (1977.Drama) Alain Delon, Jeanne Moreau French Catholic discovers a Jew with the same name as his.'PG' (TSN) ROTHMANS WORLD MOTORCYCLE CHAMPIONSHIP (R) American Grand Prix TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY.SEPTEMBER 30, 1988—17 T uesday LEE REMICK stars as a selfless nurse in a desert community in Jesse, Tuesday on CBS.DAYTIME MOVIES 6:15 (FC) MOVIE: WANDA (1971, Drama) Barbara Loden, Michael Higgins A passive young woman leaves her husband and children.'PG 8:00 (FC) MOVIE: V.RAD (1987, Drama) Bill Allen, Bari Conner.A high school BMX champ must convince his mother to allow him to race.'PG' 9:30 (FC) MOVIE: BIG SHOTS (1987.Drama) Ricky Busker, Darius McCrary Tragedy links two boys from opposite sides of the track.'PG13' 10:00 03 MOVIE: J'AI VOLE MES ENFANTS (1979, Drame Social) Beau Bridges, Blair Brown.Un divorce enleva ses deux enfants confies a la garde de son ex-femme (PC) MOVIE: DUO POUR UNE SOLOISTE (1986, Drame Psychologique) Julie Andrews, Alan Bates, Une célébré violiniste est atteinte de paralysie progressive.G' 11:00 (FC) MOVIE: BROTHER ANDRE (1987, Drama (Dubbed)) Marc Legault, Sylvie Ferlatte.Based on the life of Brother Andre,a Holy Cross Brother, ¦G’ 12:00 (PC) MOVIE: LES AILES DE LA JUSTICE (1986.Comedie Policiere) Robert Bedford, Debra Winger 12:30 (FC) MOVIE: ++'/, THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS (1987, Action Adventure) Timothy Dalton, Maryam dAbo.James Bond tackles the KGB, cuts the heroin trade and falls in love.'PG' 1:30 O MOVIE: LA FILLE DE TRIESTE.2E PARTIE (1982.Drame Psychologique) Ben Gazzara.Ornella Muti.Un artiste tombe amoureux d’une patiente d'un hôpital psychiatrique.2:00 (PC) MOVIE: LES LOUPS ENTRE EUX (1985, Drame d'Espionnage) Claude Brasseur, Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu Dix gens acceptent la tache de délivrer un détenteur de secrets.PG' 2:15 Q Q MOVIE: PANACHE (1976, Drame d Aventures) Rene Auberjonois, David Heaiyb.Richelieu cherche a se debarrasser d'un vaillant mousquetaire.3:00 (FC) MOVIE: MADE IN HEAVEN 4:00 (PC) MOVIE: LA FOLLE JOURNEE DE FERRIS BUELLER (1986, Comedie) Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara.Ferris Bueller s amuse semant la pagaille dans l'ordinateur de l'ecole 'G' 5:00 (FC) MOVIE: *'/, SAVING GRACE (1986, Comedy) Tom Conti, Giancarlo Gianinni.A simple, good hearted priest is unexpectedly elected pope.'PG' O DAYTIME SPORTS 5:00 (TSN) CHEVERON DELO 400 BIG RIG RACE (R) 6:30 (TSN) BODIES IN MOTION (P) 7:00 (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada.'NR 7:30 (TSN) NASCAR WINSTON CUP AUTO RACING SERIES (R) 10:00 (TSN) JIMY WILLIAMS AND THE BLUE JAYS (R) 10:30 (TSN) WORLD OPEN 9-BALL BILLIARDS CHAMPIONSHIP (R) 11:30 (TSN) BODIES IN MOTION (R) 12:00 (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada.‘NR1 12:30 (TSN) PRO WRESTLING PLUS (R) 1:30 (TSN) CHEVERON DELO 400 BIG RIG RACE (R) 2:00 (TSN) TRANSWORLD SPORT Weekly round up of current international sports news and highlights.NR' 3:00 (TSN) FASTEST MEN ON EARTH (R) 3:30 (TSN) JIMY WLLLIAMS AND THE BLUE JAYS (R) 4:00 (TSN) IMSA GTP AUTO RACING SERIES (R) EVENING 6:00 a MONTREAL CE SOIR O B O Q S NEWS B MONDE O EN ESTRIE CE SOIR (Q ICI MONTREAL (B PULSE (B MACNEIL/ LEHRER NEWSHOUR (MM) SPOTLIGHT Tiffany (TSN) SUNDOWN GRAND PRIX AUTO RACE (P) From Mosport Park Ontario (PC) MOVIE: COMMANDO POUR UN CASSE (1986, Drame Policier) John Sheerin, Tony Rickards.Un groupe d'hommes commet un vol a main armee.'PG' 6:30 B NBC NIGHTLY NEWS ?B (D CHARIVARI B Œ ABC NEWS ?(MM) ROCKFLASH WRAP-UP (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada.'NR' 7:00 a O STAR D'UN SOIR 8 CBS NEWS B USA TODAY O FRAGGLE ROCK g a CHOP SUEY Q CURRENT AFFAIR © CHOP SUEY Riches et Célébrés (B ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Sylvester Stallone B WHEEL OF FORTUNE © NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (FC) MOVIE: BROTHER ANDRE (1987, Drama (Dubbed)) Marc Legault, Sylvie Ferlatte.Based on the life of Brother Andre,a Holy Cross Brother.'G' (TSN) BUCK RODGERS AND THE EXPOS (P) 7:30 B HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 8 JEOPARDY! Q B HOOPERMAN g B EPOPEE ROCK 8 KATE AND ALLIE © EPOPEE ROCK Party Country © LAST FRONTIER The Foundation travels to the frozen home of the harp seal, g B CURRENT AFFAIR a FALL PREVIEW A Look at the New Season (MM) MUCHWEST (TSN) CANADIAN SPORTFISHING A look at this popular sport in various Canadian provinces.8:00 B B HERITAGE g O HIGH RISK Premiere a SUMMER OLYMPIC REVIEW g 8 FIFTH ESTATE How taxpayers money is being spent, a a FORMULE 1 8 © a MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL National League Game 1 © t?OVA (1988) Observe the science of restoring old art, especially Sistene Chapel, g (MM) OUTLAWS AND HEROES (TSN) 1988 COORS INTERNATIONAL BICYCLE CLASSIC (P) From California to Colorado (PC) LE MONDE DE RAY BRADBURY: LE CERCUEIL Denholm Elliott, Dan O Heriihy.A la fin de sa vie, riche inventeur veut concevoir son propre cercueil 8:30 (FC) MOVIE: ?* SOUL MAN (1986 Comedy) C.Thomas Howell, Rae Dawn Chong To win a scholarship, a Harvard bound student pretends to be black.PG13 (PC) LE MONDE DE RAY BRADBURY: LE VENTRILOQUE Alan Bates, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Marionette d'un ventriloque declare une vérité sur un meurtre 9:00 B O DALLAS Les Petits Enfants a MOVIE: “JESSE" CBS TUESDAY MOVIE (1988) Lee Remick.Selfless woman is arrested for practicing medicine without a license, g 8 MARKET PLACE Products that couid be dangerous O © MATCH DE LA VIE Q) THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE (1988) The rebuilding of San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake is featured, g (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (TSN) 1987 CURACAO WINDSURFING CHAMPIONSHIPS (R) (PC) LE MONDE DE RAY BRADBURY: LA VIEILLE DAME Mary Morris, Roy Kinnear 4 hommes entrent dans le logis d'une vieille.Ils représentent la Mort 9:30 8 MAN ALIVE Astrology is scorned by sceptics (PC) MOVIE: LE PROJET MANHATTAN (1986, Comedie Dramatique) John Lithgow, Christopher Collet Jeune bricoleur fabrique sa propre bombe atomique-maison.'G' 10:00 B Q TELEJOURNAL g 8 NATIONAL AND THE JOURNAL B ©ADLIB 8 GLOBAL RIVALS (1988) Explore foreign trouble spots and the changing superpowers’ interest, g (MM) SPOTLIGHT Tiffany (TSN) CANADA'S CUP YACHTING (P) Best-of-Seven Yacht Race 10:30 B Q POINT (MM) ROCKFLASH WRAP-UP (FC) MOVIE: DEATH OF AN ANGEL (1985) Nick Mancuso, Bonnie Bedeha.Angel promises salvation to his devoted followers.'PG13' 11:00 B B NOUVELLES DU SPORT B B 8 8 NEWS a © NOUVELLES TVA © CTV NATIONAL NEWS g 8 BILL MOYERS' WORLD OF IDEAS (1988, Informational Programming) Moyers talks with a wide variety of people about Americas choices.NR' (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada.NR' 11:15 B MOVIE: LE CRI DU SORCIER (1978, Drame Psychologique) Alan Bates, Susannah York.Un individu strange se pretend dote de dons surnaturels.Q MOVIE: ***/.FRAULEIN DOKTOR (1968.Drame dEspionnage) Suzy Kendall, James Booth.Les prouesses d'une jolie espionne allemande pendant la guerre 14-18.11:30 a NIGT COURT B BEST OF CARSON 8 KATE & ALLIE g B © FRANC PARLER 8 NIGHTLINE g © PULSE 8 NEWS 8 MOVIE: **** TALK OF THE TOWN (1942, Comedy Drama) Cary Grant, Jean Arthur.Man accused of arson hides out in a teacher's house.‘NR’ (MM) MUCHWEST (TSN) SUNDOWN GRAND PRIX AUTO RACE (R) (PC) MOVIE: PRISE AU PIEGE (1986, Drame dAction) Amy Madigan, Michael Ironside.Officier des Marine Corps reveie un scandale militaire et il est tue.PG' 11:45 0 ©SPORTS 12:00 B "NIGHT HEAT” CBS LATE NIGHT Stakes at a poker game are high when a loser kills the players.(R) 8 MOVIE: ** “SUMMER HOLIDAY" CBC LATE NIGHT (1963, Comedy Musical) Cliff Richards, Lauri Peters Young musicians touring Europe pick up some stranded American girls.¦NR’ B MONGRAIN DE SEL (R) 8 LOVE CONNECTION © MOVIE: RAS-LE-BOL A L’ITALIENNE (1977, Comedie Satirique) Paolo Villagio, Silvia Dionisio.Homme doit faire face aux nombreux problèmes de l'Italie moderne.© MOVIE: PRIME SUSPECT 11982, Drama) Mike Farrell, Teri Garr Law abiding man becomes a prime suspect in a sex murder 8 NIGHTLINE g (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (TSN) TRANSWORLD SPORT Weekly round up of current international sports news and highlights.'NR' 12:15 (FC) MOVIE: ** 52 PICK-UP (1986 Suspense Drama) Roy Scheider, Ann-Margret.A businessman is wrongly framed in a murder.'R 12:30 B LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 8 NEWS 8 BLUEPRINTS FOR SUCCESS 12:45 B MONDE (R) 1:00 B FERMETURE B MOVIE: “A BILLION FOR BORIS" CBS LATE MOVIE (1985, Comedy) Scott Tiler, Mary Tanner Three children fix a broken TV set and it broadcasts one day ahead.NR 8 8 SIGN OFF (TSN) CANADIAN SPORTFISHING A look at this popular sport in various Canadian provinces.1:15 B ILE FANTASTIQUE O FERMETURE 1:30 B LATER WITH BOB COSTAS 8 SIGN OFF 8 FALL PREVIEW (TSN) FASTEST MEN ON EARTH (R) (PC) MOVIE: TOURMENT (1986) Taylor Gilbert, William Witt.Bob veut supprimer une jeune fille qu'il sent qu elle le provoque.R 2:00B USA TODAY © MOVIE: REHEARSAL FOR MURDER (1982.Suspense Drama) Robert Preston, Lynn Redgrave On the eve of a film star’s marriage, she is found dead.8 SIGN OFF (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada.NR' 2:15 B FERMETURE (FC) MOVIE: TRICK OR TREAT (1986 Horror) Marc Price, Tony Fields.A misfit heavy metal fan develops an obsession with a dead star.'R' 2:308 B SIGN OFF © FERMETURE (TSN) BUCK RODGERS AND THE EXPOS (R) 3:00 (TSN) WOMEN'S PRO BEACH VOLLEYBALL (R) (PC) MOVIE: LES AILES DE LA JUSTICE (1986, Comedie Policiere) Robert Bedford.Debra Winger Procureur & avocate s'allient pour defendre une cliente accusée de vol G' 4:00©MAGNUM, P.l.(MM) OUTLAWS AND HEROES (FC) MOVIE: THE CURSE {Horror) WH Wheaton.John Schneider.Terror strikes as a meteor falls from the sky into the water supply.R' (TSN) IMSA GTP AUTO RACING SERIES (R) Crossword Puzzle The answer to the Crossword Quiz is found within the answers in the puzzle To find the answer, unscramble the letters noted with asterisks within the puzzle.Crossword Quiz Having played a priest on The Waltons.which actor went on to his own successful comedy senes7 Across: 1______57th 4 Role for Susan St.James.7 Tour of Duty ro\e, perhaps 9._____in the Family.10 Bruce Willis series.14 No, ., Nanette 15.Such as, for short 16.Danza of Who’s the Boss: mit 18 Role for Nancy McKeon 19.Actress Carter; init.20.Comedian Williams; mit.21 the People 22.Plays Beauty and the Beast s Vincent, mil.24.My Mother the 26.M-A’S‘H star 28.-Margret.30 Landing 31.Me the Head of Dobie Gillis.32.Johnson or Shaw 35.Sherman Hemsley senes 36 Day Day 37 Nick and Nora s canine Down: 1.Actor Holden; init 2.Sonny 3.Dawns partner; mit 4 Actor Lukes monogram 5.Roommate of 4A 6.Newsman Bradley.8 Wheaton or Shrmer 9.Fire remnant 10 Andy Griffith series 11 48 Hours' actor.12 Detroit player 13 With 22D.Alan Thicke series.17 ___________Cab 18 Hooperman star, mit 21 Murder, She 23.See 12D 25 Newley's monogram 26 One Life to Lives Buchanan.27 Actor Vigoda 29.Imts for 11D 33.Perry Mason star; mit 34 Baseball s Cobb joint) ui|or uoi)n|os zmo pjomssojq © IV8X The TV l.iitm?Group.Int ¦jji‘ ____ [o|n|i h i a s |0[.n | x u ! v o N I N : V v ; a ! 1 D N I 1 HD 1i1 NiOOW 1 S 3 M 18—TOWNSHIPS WEEK—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1988 Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES 5:00 (PC) MOVIE: LE PROJET MANHATTAN (1986, Comedie Dramatique) John Lithgow, Christopher Collet.Jeune bricoleur fabrique sa propre bombe atomique-maison.G' 5:30 (FC) MOVIE: ADVENTURES OF FAUSTUS BIDGOOD (1986) Andy Jones.Greg Malone.Faustus Bidgood has an advisor that only he can see.'PG13' 7:30 (FC) MOVIE: ** TRUE STORIES (1986, Comedy) David Byrne.John Goodman.A journalist is sent to record a patriotic celebration in Texas.'PG1 q 8:30 (PC) MOVIE: LE SECRET DU RAPPORT QUILLER (1966, Drame d Espionnage) George Segal.Alex Guinness Américain est envoyé en Allemagne pour localiser un groupe neo-nazi.•G' 9:00 (FC) MOVIE: Vi MODERN GIRLS (1986, Comedy) Daphne Zuniga.Virginia Madsen.Gorgeous girls break loose on the Los Angeles singles scene.PG13' 10:00 (D MOVIE: LES MORFALOUS (1983 Drame de Guerre) Jean-Paul Belmondo, Marie Latoret Des legionnaires disputent a des Allemands un trésor en lingots d'or.10:30 (FC) MOVIE: LIFE CLASSES 11987) Jacinta Cormier.Mary's life turns upside down when she discover she is pregnant.'PG13' (PC) MOVIE: SIR ANTHONY BLUNT: ESPION (1986, Drame d'Espionnage) Ian Richardson, Anthony Hopkins Traite de la vie de Sir Anthony Blunt, espion britannique.G’ 13:30 (FC) MOVIE: ***>A HAROLD AND MAUDE (1972, Comedy) Bud Cort, Ruth Gordon.Harold, 20 years old, is the perfect match for 79 year old Maude.PG' 1:30 O MOVIE: SI ELLE DIT OUI.JE NE DIS PAS NON (1982, Comedie Sentimentale) Mireille Date, Pierre Mondy.Une journaliste deluree s'attache a un quinquagénaire déprimé.EVENING 6:00 8 MONTREAL CE SOIR 8 8 0 8 8 NEWS 8 MONDE O EN ESTRIE CE SOIR Œ) ICI MONTREAL IB PULSE O) MACNEIL/ LEHRER NEWSHOUR (MM) SPOTLIGHT Northern Pikes (TSN) MOTORING'88 (R) (PC) MOVIE: STAR TREK IV: LE RETOUR SUR LA TERRE (1986, Drame de Science-Fiction) William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy.Voyage dans le temps du Entreprise,du XXIIIe au XXe siecle.G 6:308 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS ?O 03 CHARIVARI Q 8 ABC NEWS ?(MM) ROCKFLASH WRAP-UP (TSN) SPORTSDESK The most comprehensive sports news show in Canada.NR' 7:00 8 O LASER 33-45 8 CBS NEWS 8 USA TODAY O FRONT PAGE CHALLENGE Season Debut ?8 Œ) HEURE JUSTE 8 CURRENT AFFAIR etets am # TITLE SWEET CHILD O'MINE LOVE BITES DON'T BE CRUEL ONE GOOD WOMAN IT WOULD TAKE A STRONG MAN PERFECT WORLD I CALL YOUR NAME SIMPLY IRRESISTIBLE NEVER TEAR US APART DANCING UNDER A LATIN MOON NOBODY'S FOOL WHEN IT'S LOVE DON’T YOU KNOW WHAT.TRUE LOVE STAYING TOGETHER MONKEY ROUND AND ROUND GROOVY KIND OF LOVE FAST CAR VOODOO THING I DON'T WANNA LIVE WITHOUT YOU DON'T WORRY BE HAPPY FOREVER YOUNG ALL FIRED UP SUPERSTITIOUS CHAIN OF LOVE WHAT YOU SEE THE LOCOMOTION DREAM ON FALLEN ANGEL SPOT YOU IN A COAL MINE HANDS TO HEAVEN TRUE DEVOTION ANOTHER PART OF ME ANOTHER LOVER I DON’T WANNA BE A HERO WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND HEART WILD WILD WEST ENDLESS NIGHT LAST WEEK # Guns ’n Roses 4 Def Leppard 8 Cheap Trick 7 Peter Cetera 6 Rick Astley 3 Huey Lewis 2 Johnny Clegg 9 Robert Palmer 1 INKS 12 Candi 11 Kenny Loggins 14 Van Halen 5 Steve Winwood 18 Glenn Frey 22 Debbie Gibson 21 George Michael 10 Frozen Ghost 19 Phil Collins 24 Tracy Chapman 13 Colin James 23 Chicago 16 Bobby McFerrin 27 Rod Stewart 29 Pat Benatar 15 Europe 35 Erasure 28 Brenda K.Starr 25 Kylie Mmogue 32 Bivd 30 Poison 34 Corey Hart 37 Breathe 17 Samantha Fox 39 Michael Jackson 20 Giant Steps PL Johnny Hates Jazz 26 Information Society PL Pet Shop Boys PL Escape Club PL Eye Eye PL 8 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Billy Crystal 8 WHEEL OF FORTUNE 8 NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT (MM) MUSIC VIDEOS (FC) MOVIE: LIFE CLASSES (1987) Jacinta Cormier Mary's life turns upside down when she discover she is pregnant.'PG13' (TSN) SPORTS PAGE (P) 7:308 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES B JEOPARDY! ?8 BEST YEARS Avoiding disasters in investing.?8 MOVIE: L’AMOUR SUR BEQUILLES (1979, Comedie) George Segal, Glenda Jackson.Les difficultés conjugales d'un professeur de college américain.8 KATE AND ALLIE 03 ALLO CINE 8 DEAR JOHN (1988) Married man, suddenly single, copes with help from family and friends 8 CURRENT AFFAIR 8 DEGRASSI JUNIOR HIGH Stephanie runs for school office on the platform One Kiss, One Vote.'NR' (2lM) MUCHWEST (TSN) INSIDE THE PGA TOUR (P) 8:00 a 8 JEUNES LOUPS DES ANNEES FOLLES ?8 LIVE! DICK CLARK PRESENTS a UNSOLVED MYSTERIES Examine UFO sightings, a convict's escape and missing person.8 NATURE OF THINGS The sense of smell is the least understood of all the canÇA*.Q
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