HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1975-05-01, Page 25d
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� CKMIt WING110 a MOM TORONTO - 10 OK LOP
N• 11CNOIHAMILTON
SCO KITCNENER
The
MON., MAY 5
0:00 University of the Air 13
rrighteniteitt 11
6:30 Ga Gourtnet 13
7:00 Canada A.M. 13
Special Place 11
7:35 Concern 13
7:40 Canada A,M. 13
'8:00 Ont. Shcools 8, 10, 11
8:30 Romper Room 13
8:45 Ed Allen 11
Mon Ami 8 and 10
9:00 Yoga 13
Friendly Giant 8, 10
9:15 Ont. Schools 8, 10, 11
9:30 Pay Cards 13
10:00 It's Your Move 13
10:30 Mr. Dressup 8 10
HoroscopeDollars 13
11:00 Ladies' are 13
Sesame Street .8, 10
Five of a Kind 11
11:30 Let's Talk 13
I Saw That 11
12:00 Cartoons 8, 10. 13
Midday 11
12:30 News 8 and 10
Let's Make a Deal 13
12:45 Movies 'Annabell Takes
A Trip' 8; 'Brother
John' 10
1:00 Hollywood Squares 13
Larry Solway 11
1:30 Definition 13
Days of Our Lives 11
Canadian Cavalcade 6
2:00 What's the Good Wd. 13
2:30 Edge of Night 8, 10
The Doctors 11
Alphabet of Life 6
He Knows She Knows 13
3:00 Another World 13
Juliette 8
Monday at Three 10
General Hospital 11
That Talk Show 6
°pawing progrqms, listed + ssuFplied by tfie TVstations, are subject -to change.
3: Juliette 8
Wednelfy .at Throe 10
emtemi 0. 11
Another W , 1*
That Talk Dhow 8
3:30 Take Thirty' 8, 10
The Young, Restless 11
4:00 The Flintstones 13 •
Family Court 8. 10
Dinah 11
Doctor in The House 6
4:30 Forest Rangers 8, 10
My Three Sons 13
5:00 IHroB ins de 13 Squares 6
Hogan's Heroes 8
P dg1lFamily 10
MannixGilligan's Island 6
5:30 Partridge Family 8
Dick Van Dyke 10
Hogan's Heroes 6
6:00 News 6, 8, 10, 11, 13
6:30 The Brady Bunch 13
Truth, Consequences 8
Movie 'The Tempest' 6
Party Game 11
7:00 That's My Mama 13
Gunsmoke 8
Little House on The
Prairie 10,11
7:30 Banjo Parlor 13
Movie 'Act of The Heart'
13
8:00 Baseball: Chicago at
Montreal 8, 10
Movie 'Escape from The
Planet of The Apes' 11
9:00 Mac Davis 6
10:00 Global News Hour 6
Bob Newhart 11
Adam 12 13
10:30 Love Thy Neighbor 11
Can. Sports Report 8, 10
Newscope 18
11:00 Nat. News 8, 10, 11, 13
World of Wicks 6
11;20 Local News 8, 10, 13
11:30 Larry Solway 11
Movie 'Mystery Street' 6
11:45 Mery Griffin 8
Movin' On 10
12:00 Movie 'The Bang Bang
Kid' 13
Mery Griffin 11
1:20 Concern 13
3:30 Take Thirty 8, 00
Allen � 11
4:00Contt g, 10
Pllnstonea 1S
Dinah 11
Doctor in the House 6
4:30 Forest Rangers 8, 10
My Three. Sons 13
Hollywood Squares 6
5:00 Hogan's Heroes 8
Partridge Family 10
Mannix 11
Ironside 13 °
Gilligan's Island 6
' 5:30 Partridge Family 8
• Dick Van Dyke 10
Hogan's Heroes 6
6:00 News 6, 8. 10, 11, 13
6:30 Truth or Consequences 0
Party. Game 11
The Brady Bunch 13
MModvie6 'The Angel Wore
Re'7:00 Gunsmoke .10, 11
Hee Haw 8
The Rookies3
8:00 'Mary Tyler Moore 8, 10
Movie The Weekend
Nun' 11
Ian son 13
8:30 This Is The Law 8, 10
Medical Centre 13
Good Times 6
9:00 Burt Bacharach 6
Cannon 8, 10
9:30 Pig and Whistle 13
Tommy Banks 11
10:00 News Magazine 8, 10
The Sweeney 13
Global News Hour 6
10:30 Ein Prosit 11
Man Alive 8, 10
11:00 Nat. News 8, 10, 11, 13
Global Journal 6 '
11:20 Local News 8, 10, 13
,Channel 6 Entertainment
THURSDAY, 6:30 p.m. -"TREASURE GALLEON". The true story
of the recovery of the fabled treasure lost when a hurricane
sank a Spanish treasure fleet in 1715. Narrated by Rod Serling.
THURSDAY, 8:00 p.m. -"DON'T MAKE WAVES". Tony Curtis
stars as a California tourist who loses his ear and possessions
when he becomes involved with a beautiful Italian g' 1. With
Claudia Cardinale, Sharon Tate and Robert Webb
THURSDAY, 11:30 p.m. -'THE . INCIDENT". The pass• :ers on
a subway car are terrorized by two drunken hoodlu . Tony
Musante, Martin Sheen, Beau Bridges, Ed McMahon.
FRIDAY, 11:00 p.m. -"PERFECT FRIDAY". Weary, of
life, an assistant bank manager decides' to rob his o
joined by an extravagant aristocrat and her husband.
Andress, Stanley Baker, David Warner, Patience Collier.
' SATURDAY, 10:00 WMAN urt,, Lancaster st•
1 the marsltal 'or 8 /N040, 1e'*tcb'' towlir ','h €adrest the ho,
of a whole community when he arrives to arrest seve
for the accidental killing of an old man. With Robert
Lee J. Cobb, Sheree, North.
;• SATURDAY MIDNIGHT -"FROGS". An 'army of frogs and other
reptiles seeks revenge On a family gathered, on a secluded
tropical island. Ray Miland, Sam Elliott, Joan Van Ark.
MONDAY, 6:30 p.m. -"THE ANGEL WORE RED". The story of
a priest who leaves the Church at the start of the Spanish
Civil War to aid the loyalists and falls in love with an easy-
going. entertainer. Ava Gardner, Dirk Bogarde, Joseph Cotton.
MONDAY, 11:30 p.m. --"LIBEL". With evidence indicating him to
be an imposter, a man finds his suit for libel going badly
as he has difficulty remembering details. Dirk Bogarde, Olivia
de Hamiland, Robert' Morley, Paul Massie.
TUESDAY, 6:30 p.m.- "CONFIDENTIALLY COINIE". Janet
Leigh, the pregnant wife of an underpaid professor, schemes
tQ draw him 'out of academic circles, while- her father-in-law
connives to bring him back to his Texas ranch. Van Johnson,
Louis Calhern, Walter Slezak, Gene Lockhart.
TUESDAY, ,.8:00 p.m. -"TARGET FOR KILLING". A secret agent
is sent to Lebanon to investigate a mysterious crime syndi-
cate trying to kill a young heiress. Stewart Granger, Curt
Jurgens, Molly Peters.
TUESDAY, 11:30 •.m.-"ROBINSON CRUSOE ON MARS". An
adventure fi '` sed on Daniel Defoe's theme as an astro-
naut and chi p, 'stranded on Mars, try to eke out an exist
ten • . Paul . a' ee, Vic Lundin, Adam West.
WEDNES'1 AY 1 p.m. -"THE TEMPEST". -A young Russian
army • er is suspected of treason. Imprisoned, he finds
his life . ngs on the word of a hated enemy. Ven Heflin,
Viveca L dfors, Agnes Moorehead, Geoffrey Horne.
WEDNESDAY, 11:30 p.m. -"MYSTERY STREET". Set in Boston,
a doctor and young detective try to track down the killer
of a nightclub dancer amid the city's society set. Ricard Mont-
alban, Sally Forrest.
I ti
.' 1
d
bank, 4:30
sula
• 5:00
men
an,
11:30 ,Larry Solway 11
Movie 'Ubel 6
11:0 Mery Griffith 8
Rockford Iles 10
12:00, Mery Griffin 11
• Heritage Highways 13
12:05 Movie The Ipvisible
Man' 13
Mery Griffin 11
1:20 Concern 13'
TUES., MAY 6
6:00 University of the Air 13
Frightenstein 11 -
6:30 Galloping Gourmet 13,
7:00 Canada A.M. 13
Special Place 11
7:35 Concern 13
7:40 Canada A.M. 13
8:00 Ont. Schools 8, 10, 11
8:30 Romper " Room 13
8:45 Ed Allen 11
Mon Ami 8 and 10
9:00 Yoga 13 ,
Friendly Giant 8, 10
9:15 Ont. Schools 8, 10, 11
9:30 Pay Cards 13 .
10:00 It's Your Move 13
Canadian Schools 10
10:30 Mr. Dressup 8, 10
Horoscope Dollars 13
11:00 Five of a Kind 11
Sesame Street 8, 10
Ladies' Fare 13
11:30 Let's Talk 13
I Saw That 11
12:00 Cartoons 8, 10, 13
Midday 11
12:30 News 8, 10
Days o fOur Lives 11
Let's Make a Deal 13
12:45 Movies 'Monsoon' 8
'The List of Adrian
Messenger' 10
1:00 Hollywood Squares 13
Larry Solway 11
1:30 Definition 13
Days of Our Lives 11
Canadian Cavalcade 6
200 What's The Good Wd. 13
2:30 Edge of Night 8, 10 •
The Doctors 11
He Knows She Knows 13
Alphabet of Life 6
3:00 Juliette 8
Tuesday at Three 10
General Hospital 11
Another World 13
That Talk Show 6
_3:30 . T : Thirty 8, 10
e ` • ung, Restless 11
4:00 amily Court 8, 10
Dinah 11
Flint: ones 13
Dbct r in the House 6
'Fore ' t Ranger 8, 10
My ree Sons 13
Holly • od Squares 6
Hogan's ..eroes 8
Partridge, amily. 10-•
Mannix 11
Ironside 13
Gilligan's land 6
5. 0 '114114! Family . 8
Die an Dyke 10
Hogan's Heroes 6
6:00 News 6, 8, 10; 11, 13
6:30 Truth or Consequences 8
Party Game 11
The Brady Bunch 13
Movie 'Confidentially
Connie' 6
7:00 Maude 10
Rhoda 8
Manhtpter 11
Cher 13
rr
7:30 Chico and The Man10
Circle Eight Ranch 8
8:00 NHL Playoffs 8
Happy Days 10
Hawaii Five -4 '11
Excuse My French 13
Movie 'Target for Kill-
- ing' 6
8:30 Marcus Welby 13
Police Story 10
9:00 Barnaby Jones 11.
9:30 Headline Hunters 13
' Fr. Page Challenge 10
10:00 Harry -O 13
To be announced 10
Tommy Banks 11
Global News Hour 6
10:30 All Around the Circle
8 and 10
11:00 Nat. News 8, 10, 11, 13
Design Explosion 6
11:20 Local News 8, 10, 13
LISTOWEL TEXTILES BRIDAL DEPARTMENT
n
GETTING MARRIED?
Your first thought should be a beautiful wed-
ding dress. If you are interested in saving
money and at the same time having a most
elegant dress for you and your attendants, let
Mrs. Muriel+ Elliott help you choose the right
styles and material as well as make the dresses
for you at a very low price. She will be at
Listowel Textiles Bridal Department every
Saturday morning.
t4 TEXTILES a MILL ENDS
�• LJ n Aar n ff S • 99 w M, .46• 0449
•
v• Q W
LISTOWEL TEXTILES
and MILL ENDS
Wallace Avenue South, Listowel, Ontario Phone 291.2271
AMPLE FREE PARKING SAY IT WITH SEWING
11:30 Larry Solway 11
Movie !Robinson ;
on Mars' 6
11:45 Mery Griffin 8
Night Stalker 10
12:00 Mery Griffin 11
Heritage Highways 13,
12:05 Movie 'Tight as A ,
Drum' 13
Mery Griffin 11
1:15 Concern 13
WED., MAY 7
6:00 University of the Air 13
Frightepstein 11
6:30 Galloping Gourmet 13'
7:00 Canada A.M. 13
Special Place 11
7:35 Cancern 13
7:40 Canada A.M. 1.3 '
8:00 Ont. Schools 8, 10, 11
8:30 Romper Room 13
8:45 Ed Allen 11
Mon Ami 8 and 10
9:00 Yoga 13
Friendly Giant 8, 10
9:15 Ont. Schools 8, 10, 11
9:30 Pay Cards 13 '
10:00 It's Your Move 13
10:30 Mr. Dressup 8, 10
Horoscope Dollars 13
11:00 Sesame Street 8, 10'
Five of A Kind 11
Ladies' Fare 13
11:30 Let's Talk 13
ISaw That 11
12:00 Cartoons 8, 10, 13
Midday 11
12:30 News 8 and 10
Days of Our Lives 11
Let's Make a Deal 13
12:45 Movies 'Trunk to Cairo'
8; 'Arabesque' 10
1:00 Hollywood Squares 13
Larry Solway 11
1:30 Definition 13
Days of Our Lives 11
• Canadian Cavalcade 6
2:00 What's The Good. Wd 13
2:30 Edge of Night 8, 10
The. Doctors 11
• He Knows She Knows 13.
Alphabet of Life 6
t p
Mary Chapman, the beautiful and talented co -host of the
CBC -TV series This Land, has a varied background in the per-
forming arts -from drama to music. For besides doing much of
the interviewing and narration, it is Mary who sings the This
Land theme song which begins each edition of the series. She's
also a great lover of animals and is pictured here with her pet,
Salty, a Newfoundland.
tir-y'1/ v-tiiV �rv�
dlh
(0
•
'Stratford's Third Stage pre-
. sents some surprises in its 1975
season, the most notable the fact
that actress Pat Galloway will be
directing and actor -director
William Hutt will be playing the
role of a woman.
Opening on July 30 will be two
one -act operas, "The Fool" and
"Le Magicien". Both are Can-
adian and will be presented as -
one program. "The Fool" is the
story of a court jester; the
French work, by Quebec corn
poser Jean Vallerand, is about a
modern Pygmalion who brings to
life a Harlequin and a Columbine
painted on paper panels. Jan
Rubes will direct the former, he.
of course, is a fine operatic star in
his own right. `Magicien' will he
directed by Pat Galloway who is
an associate director of the Third
Stage. She has produced a
number of successful revues and
this spring she staged a produc
tion of "The School for Scandal'.
at the National Theatre School in
Montreal.
The following evening, a third
opera will debut on The Third
Stage. "Ariadne•aufI Naxos", also
`directed by Mr. Rubes, was
written by Richard Strauss. Both
presentations will be backed by
the Stratford Festival Ensemble
A new Canadian play, ' `Fellow
ship", by Michael Tait, will he
the first dramatic production on
The Third Stage, opening August
7. Set in present-day Toronto, the
'Tis
Show BIZ
by Vonni Lee
t
play deals with upheaval in a
small religious group led by a
man who believes he has unique
spiritual powers. It will be
directed by Bernard Hopkins.
William Hutt will direct "Oscar
Remembered", opening August
116, and featuring a one-man pre-
sentation of the life and works of
Oscar Wilde. memories from the
mind of Lord Alfred Douglas.
On August 25, another modern-
day pay entitled "Kennedy's
Children" will debut. This' play
was written by Robert Patrick
and opened in London, England,
last year. Set in 1974, it tells of the
people who grew up in John Ken-
nedy's America and were badly
disillusioned when their cireams
and hopes fell by the wyside.
Bill Glassco makes his Stratford
debut as director of that produc-
tion.
A `surprise season finale' will
open on The Third Stage on
September 29. Directed by the
Festival's Artistic Djrector,
Robin Phillips, "The Importance
of Being Ernest" will star
William Hutt as Lady Bracknell
in this best known of all of Oscal'
Wilde's works. This will be Hutt's
first female role and you can be
sure he will play it to the hilt.
Oughta be great!
Members of the Festival
Company will also star in the
Third Stage production, a third
Stratford Theatre that is gradu-
ally coming into its own as far as
conkmporary and 04410 works
are VeaeeMefi.
e MS music season t ti'at-
fool includes the Slegivai Ea?
orate, cellist Gisela 3 !►epkat,
jazz vocalist Cleo Lance who. has
great following among .Music
lovers who gill to her Ma tie
loin .octave range, and Canada's
great folksinger, Bruce 01)ck-
burn, in Sunday Cone , These
SuadGay concerts begin on July 13
and continue until Must 44.
•
Moving from 1071 to IW in
Stratford, it has ally ► been
confirmed that ilagsie Atha
famous intentational stale and
screen star, will perfornai in lead -
big roles at next year's Festival.
This is really ,gait news for any-
one appreciating fine talent; hers
is among the finest. She won an
Academy Award for her great
performance in "The Prune of
Miss Jean Brodie" a few years
ago and last year was nominates
for her role in "Travels With My
Aunt", losing to fellow Britisher
Glenda Jackson.
Though she has made a number
of top movies, the stage has
always been her first love and her
roles have been many and varied
on the finest stages in the world.
She was on tour in a stage play
and performing in Toronto when
she visited Stratford and looked
in -On rehearsals for this season's
plays. She was so impressed that,
then and there, she talked of a
future with the Company. Fortu-
nately for Stratford and all of
Western Ontario, she has been
able to fit it into her busy sche-
dule and will be here next year.
Watch for every production to be
a sellout!
9
ssr
BETTER ENGLISH
By D. C. Williams
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED.
Do shot say, "The wedding oc-
curred in the bride's home." Say,
"The wedding TOOK PLACE."
Things TAKE PLACE by arrange-
ment, and they OCCUR by. chance
or accident.
The use of "absolutely" with the
word "correct" is superfluous. Say,
"The solution is correct," not "ab-
solutely correct."
Do not say, "It's no use for me
to write him." Say, "It's OF no use
for me to write TO him."
Do not say, "What we need are
more textbooks." Say, "What we
need IS -more, .textboaiks." "What
we need" is a noun clause 'expres-
sing the idea of our need, which is
singular.
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED
Extraordinary. Pronounce eks-
tror-di-ner-i, principal accent on sec-
ond syllable, and in FIVE syllables
- not as sometimes heard in six
syllables, as "eks-tra-or-di-ner-i."
Aeric (nest .of bird of prey).
Rhymes with "carry."
Doughty. Pronounce dow-ti, ac-
cent first syllable.
Blasphemous. Accent FIRST syl-
lable, not the second.
Confiscatory. Accent SECOND
Syllable, not the first.
OFTEN MISSPELLED
Flare (an outburst of flame or
light). Flair (an instinctive liking or
aptitude). Misogamist (hater of
marriage). Misogynist (hater of
women). Relevance; "ance." Retic-
ence; "ence." Exhort; observe the
"h." Exorbitant; no "h." Meritori-
ous (praiseworthy). Meretricious
(showy; gaudy): observe the second
"e." Imminent (impending). Im-
manent (dwelling within).
WORD STUDY
"Use a word three times and it
is yours." Let us increase our vo-
cabulary by mastering one word
each day. Words for this lesson:
DISPIRITED (adjective); dis-
couraged; dejected; gloomy. "After
their third consecutive defeat, some
of the team's members became dis-
pirited."
COMPENDIUM; a brief sum-
mary of the main heads, main prin-
ciples, or substance, of a larger
work or system; a digest. "This
manuscript is but a compendium
of the author's -book."
DEFILE (verb); to pollute; cor-
rupt; tarnish or sully the purity of;
to dishonor. "By your words you
defile all we stand for."
Hampton
hopes.
for series
By NANCY ANDERSON
HOLLYWOOD • ails
wra.nntan sable pbiy 4 cop
IW " Y*'d
Burt stirrer
men I* the pea, portraYed a
in out of the pa in
"Force Fiver, a. Ilniversal
TV movie j s t aired Ow CBS
which mow spin t> a Vis.
The show is about five non-
violent ex -cons, each highly
skilled in a particular line of
criminality, who've been
freed to help catch crooks.
"This show is a little like
'Mission: Impossible,' Jun
concedes, "but it has a little
more humor. I don't think you
can take it too seriously, be-
cause it's almost played
tongue-in-cheek."
While Hampton says he'▪ s
pleased to have done the show
and hopes it becomes a suc-
cessful series ("because I
like to go to work every day; I
enjoy being able to work in
tfoll'in; and- 'I w1
ries ") ♦he .reY~ e
"ThIs ate` �It
of d s ust, ha
"Fierce T'ltv�et'
sion that� !
4stun ecce wit.
Be c'. '� 'i n'.
eras, ,a Btl O t
law. We're ,saw, ; t"
words, tisoe
aa, ata a dies er .sr . . 4.1,0 ., ,..
SAP 4+IF•U* *UM° !w�r!�!n syar, Warr
Irkg to have to w
Ori. And, frattklYjidea uncomforteble,"
old
Jim. who viti )1004r014'
penitentiary
making "The
and Lesn'torworth
Y�
a 'televisionopectil,'
ardently of the Treed for
on reform.
"I've been int ereated itt
prison conditions for' a U
time," he says. . ,"We need
prisons. There's no question
about it. But 1 don't think we
should be schizophrenic chi
what we think about' them.
"Do you know how the worli
'penetentiary' .came into be-
ing? Before the Puritan peri.
.0d, the only prisons were
dungeons in which people
were put for debts or for po-
litical reasons.
"Other crimes drew .cor
poral punishment, hanging,
flogging or being branded or
something, But the riitans
didn't believe in cotporal,
punishrrtent, so they locked
the criminals away in places
where they could read •their
Bibles and be penitent and re-
form. •
"Penetentiaries were de-
signed as places for rehabili-
tation. And that's what they
should be'. But when we put a
man in prison, he usually
comes out worse than he was
at first.
"What else can you expect
when you have 2,000 men be-
ing rehabilitated by two psy-
chiatrists who couldn't make
it in private practice?
"We've never been willing
to pay the cost of real reha-
bilitation." '
0,
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•
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1
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SMORGASBORD
II
SUNDAYS 4:30 TO 7:00 P.M. - $4.00
Children 10 Years of age and under - Half Price •
DON'T BE disappointed, book
now for summer and fall wedding
receptions, club dinners or
dances, business meetings or pti-
vate parties. Accommodation to
300 people. Bar if . required.
• COMPLETE CATERING SERV-
ICE. Ranton Place. Call Palmer-
ston 3434113 or 343-3906. Give a
gift of dinner to someone. Ask
about our gift- certificates.
We have now available a limited number of
TOP QUALITY nationally advertised
TAPES from $3.33
RECORD ALBUMS from $1.97
Always in stock a large selection of brand
named musical instruments including
FENDER, OVATION, GRETSCH AND NOR rHERN
Specialists in stereo components, brass and
reed instruments and related supplies
.ADLAM'S MUSIC STORE
DURHAM, ONT.
Tel. 369-2456
IN A CLASS
OF ITS OWN
The F-11 2,50
Tough enough to give you the
power you need, but with a
smooth ride that isn't tough
on you
While Stacks Last, This Bike Can Be Yours For ONLY $1,100.
MERWOOD,C. SMITH LTD.
R. R. 2, Listowel, Tel. 291-3810
"OUR LOCATION SAVES YOU MONEY"