HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1975-05-29, Page 251
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,80(11)(VISIGHAM I" GLOM TORONTO "10 •CFPL MOON 1 CHH HAMILTON ..1 3 .,0 KITCHENER
•supplied bythe TV stations,are sub°ect to change.
The following programs, listed as I
MON.,\JUNE' 2
9:00 Yoga 13
Friendly Giant 8, 10
9:15 Ont. Schools 8, 10, 11
9:30 Pay Cards 13
- Summer Schools 8
A Place of Your Own 10
10:00 It's Your Move 13
Mon Ami 8and 10.
10:15 Friendly Giant 8, 10
10:30 Mr..Dressup 8 10
Horoscope Dollars 13
11:00 Ladies' Fare 13
Sesame Street 8,
Ed Allen 10
Five of a Kind 41
11:30 Let's Talk 13
Juliette 10
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 'The Court Jes-
ter' 8; 'Oue, Two,
Three' 10
1:00 Hollywood -Squares 13
.3 Larry Solway 11
1:30 Definition 13
Days of Our Lives 11
2:00 What's the Good Wd. 13
2:30 Edge of Night 8, 10
The Doctors 11
He Knows She Knows 13
3:00 Another World 13
Juliette 8
Monday at Three 10
General Hospital 11
3:30 Take Thirty 8, 10
The Young, Restless 11
4:00 Family Court 8, 10
Flintstones 13
Dinah 11
Alphabet of Life 6
4:30 Forest Rangers 8, 10
The Brady Bunch. 13
Canadian Cavalcade 6
5:00 Hogan's . Heroes 8
Partridge Family 10
Mannix 11
Ironside 13
Hogan's Heroes 6
:30 Partridge amily 8
Dick Van Dyke 10
Doctor inT be House 6
00 News 6, 8, 10, 11, 13
30 'Fruth or Consequences 8
Party Game 11
My Three Sons 13.
00 Gunsmoke ,10
Tommy Banks 11
Sergeant Bilko 6
Hee Haw 8
The Rookies 13
The Honeymooners 6
Mary Tyler Moore 8, 10
Baseball 11
Goodtirme Country 6
Ian Tyson ,13
This Is The Law 8, 10
Medical Centre 13
Good Ti1es 6
Lucas Tanner 6
Cannon 8, 10
5
6:
6:
7:
9:00
9:30 Pig and Whistle 13
10:00 The Sweeney 13
- V.I.P. 8 and 10
Global News Hour 6
10:30 Take 'Thirty 8 and 10
Joker's Wild 6 •
11:00 Nat. News 8, 10, 11, 13
Callan 6
11:20 Local News 8, 10, 13
11:30 Larry Solway 11
11:45 Mery Griffin 8
Rockford Files 10
12:00 Mery Griffin 11
Heritage Highways 13
12:05 Movie 'Amy Prentiss:
Profile in Evil' 13
1:20 Concern 13
TUES., JUNE 3
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
8:30 Romper Room 13
8:45 Ed Allen 11
9:00 Yoga 13
9:30. Pay Cards 13
Mr. Piper 8, 10
10:00 It's Your Move 13
Mon Ami 8, 10
10:15 Friendly Giant 8, 10
10:30 Mr. Dressup 8, 10
Horoscope Dollars 13
11:00 Five of a Kind 11
Sesame Street 8,
Ed Allen 10
Ladies' Fare 13
11:30 Let's Talk 13
Juliette 10
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 `Hot Bllood' -. 8;
Nearly a Nasty Acci-
dent' 10
1:00 Hollywood Sqqares ,13
Larry Solway 11
1:30 Definition 13
Days of Our Lives 11
2:00 What's The Good Wd. 13
2:30 Edge of Night 8, 10
. The Doctors 11
He Knows She Knows 13
3:00 Juliette 8 -
Tuesday at Three 10
General Hospital 11
' Another World 13
3:30 Take Thirty 8, 10
The Young, Restless 11
4:00 Family Court 8, 10
Dinah 11
Flintstones 13 -
.. �Ran8
.L' ,8
�:NS o est ger 8, 10,
The Brady Bunch 13
Canadian Cavalcade 6
5:00 Hogan's Heroes 8
Partridge Family 10
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WAS :tea=
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11,9 ter
MORGASIOJtD
SUNDAYS 4:30 TO 7:00 P.M. - $4.00
ren 10 Years of age and under - Half Price
DON'T BE disappointed, book
now for summer and fall wedding
receptions, club dinners or
dances, business meetings or pri-
vate parties. Accommodation to
300 people. Bar if required.
COMPLETE CATERING SERV-
ICE. Ranton Place. Call Palmer-
ston 343-3113 or 343-3906. Give a
gift of dinner to someone. Ask
about our gift- certificates.
Pgclote
Mannix 11
Ironside, 13
io$an's Heroes 6
5:30 1 artridge Family 8
Dick Van Dyke 10
Doctor in The House 6
'600 News 6, 3, 10, 11, 13
6:30 Truth or Consequences 8
Party Game 11 ,
My Three Sons 13
7:00 Maude 10
Rhoda 8
Movin' On 11
Cher 13
Sergeant Bilko 6
7:30 Chico and The Man 10
Circle Eight Ranch 8
The Honeymooners 6
8:00 Happy Day 0, 10
Hawaii Five -O 11
Excuse My French 13
Movie 'Girls, Girls,
Girls' 6
8:30 Marcus Welby 13
Police Story 8, 10
9:00 Barnaby Jones 11
Three Times Four 8
Frt. Page Challenge 10
10:00 Harry -O 13
Look Who's Here 8
To be announced 10
Tommy Banks 11
Global News 6 •
10:30 Aquarium 8, 10
Joker's Wild 6
11:00 Nat. News 8, 10, 11, 13
MoVie 'The Apprentice'
6
11:20 Local News 8, 10. 13
11:30 Larry Solway 11
11:45 Mery Griffin 8
Night Stalker 10
12:00 Mery Griffin 11
Heritage Highways 13
12:05 Movie 'Emergency' 13
1:45 Concern 13
WED., JUNE 4
6:00 University of the Air 13
Frightenstein ,11
6:30 Galloping Gourmet 13
7:00 Canada A.M. 13
Special Place del
7:35 Cancern 13
7:40- Canada A.M. 13
8:30 Romper Room 13
8:45 Ed Allen 11
9:00 Yoga 13
9:30 Pay Cards 13 -
Summer Schools 8
A Place of Your Own 10
10:00 It's Your Move 13
Mon Ami 8, 10
10:15 Friendly Giant 8, 10
10:30 Mr. Dressup 8, 10
Horoscope Dollars 13
11:00 Sesame Street 8
Ed Allen 10
Five of A Kind -11
Ladies' Fare 13
11:30 Let's Talk 13
I Saw That 11
Juliette 10
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 'Hell Is for
Heroes' 8; 'Prescription
Murder' 10
1:00 Hollywood Squares 13
Larry Solway 11
1:30 Definition 13
Days of Our Lives 11
2:00 What's The Good Wd 13
2:30 Edge of Night 8, 10
The Doctors 11
He Knows She Knows 13
3:00 Juliette 8
Wednesday at Three 10
General Hospital 11
Another World 13
3:30 Take Thirty 8, 10
The Young, Restless 11
4:00 The Flintstones 13
Family Court 8. 10
Dinah 11
Alphabet of Life 6
4:30 Forest Rangers 8, 10
The Brady Bunch 13
Canadian Cavalcade 6
5:00 Ironside 13
Hogan's Heroes 8
Partridge Family 10
Mannix 11
Hogan's Heroes 6
5:30 Partridge Family 8
Dick Van Dyke 10
Doctor in The House 6
LISTOWEL TEXTILES BRIDAL DEPARTMENT
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.
6:00 News 6, 8, 10, 11. 1$
6:30 My Three Sons. 10
Truth, Consequencesarty Game 8
U
7:00 That's My Mama 13
Gunsmtoke 8
Little House on The
Prairie 10, 11
Sergeant Bilko 6
7:30 Banjo Parlor 13
Baseball: 8
The Roneynlooners 8
8:00 Movie 'Showdown' 13_,
Movie 'The P ' 11
Baseball: Los gelee
at Montreal 8, 10
Movie 'In Saigon: Sonic
May Live' 6
9:00 Mac Davis 6
10:00 Global News 0
Bob Newhart 11
A Night Out 13
10:30 Love Thy • Neighbor 11
Can. Sports Report 00, 10
Newscope 13
Joker's Wild 6
11:00 Nat. News 8. 10, 1103
Movie `Shadow in The
Sky9
11:20 Local News 8, 10. 13 -
11:30 Larry Solway 11
11:45 Mery Griffin 8
Movin' On 10
12:00 Movie 'D.A. Conspiracy
to Kill' 13
Mery Griffin 11
. 1:40 Concern 13
Channel 8 Efltertainment
THURSDAY, 12:45 p"mAA- 'MORGAN" starring Vanessa Redgrave
and David Warner. Morgan[ a painter, an instinctive anarch-
ist, a complicated young man who seeks the truths of life
in a world of fantasy.
THURSDAY, 9:00 p.m.-" EATH CRUISE" starring Richard Long
and Polly Bergen. Suspenseful story of three couples who,
after winning a pleasure •pruise find that their tickets have
guaranteed them a one-way :passage to death.
FRIDAY, 12:45 p.m.- "SCALPHUNTERS" starring Burt Lan-
caster
ancaster and Shelley Winters.
SATURDAY, 1:15 a.m..-- "ASSASSINATION BUREAU" starring
Diana Rigg and Oliver Reid.
SATURDAY, 11:45 p.m.- "A NEW KIND OF LOVE" starring
Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. A New York depart-
ment
epartment store buyer in Paris deceives a newspaper columnist
she met on the plane into falling in love with her.
SUNDAY, 11:50 p.m.- "LAURA" starring Gene Tierney and
Clifton Webb. A girl is murdered and the detective on the
case falls in love with her portrait and then the girl shows up.
MONDAY, 12:45 p.m.- . "THE COURT JESTER" starring Danny
Kaye and Gyniss Johns. An ex -circus clown joins a band of
outlaws trying to oust a. monarch and replace him with
the real king.
TUESDAY,. 12:45 p.m.- "HOT BLOOD" starring Jane Russell
and Cornel Wilde. A seductive gypsy girl lives by becoming
betrothed to wealthier gypsies and then decamping with
the. marriage settlement.
WEDNESDAY, 12:45 p.m.--= "HELL IS FOR HEROES" starring
Steve McQueen and Boby Darrin. Battle -weary GI's, ordered
to stave off a German attack, give their lives to carry out
the order.
This wee. ',had the chore of
sorting through :a huge pile of
a pplicatiosis for a job on our high
school staff teachingringii.
One job and about 80 appliea-
tions. That's the way things are
these days in the teaching game.
It's a cruel world V'or young
people trying to break into the
profession. Armed with their
pieces of paper on which it says
right there in print that they are
now qualified teachers, they sally
forth to put into practice their
high ideals, their warm persona-
lities, their love for young people,
and the results of four or five
years of university slugging.
And what do they find? A vast
indifference. Nobody wants
them. Principals' want people
with experience. But how do you
get experience if you can't get a
job? It's an old story in the world
of free enterprise,, but it's still a
sad one for those caught in the
vicious circle.
It's exactly like- another facet
of the system of which we are so
proud: banking. If you're broke
and need money, a bank won't
loan it to you. If you're rich and
don't need money, you have to
beat off the bankers with a stick.
I couldn't help thinking, as I sat
toying with people's lives, of the
vast change that has taken place
since I began teaching, about 15
years ago.
Those were the days when the
great post-war baby boom was
hitting the high schools.
Principals were raiding indus-
try for technical teachers, busi,
ness far commercial teachers.
If you had a university degree,
it was as much as your life was
worth to walk past a school. A
lasso would snake out, you'd find
yourself getting a hot sales pitch
in a principal's office, and next
thing you knew you were stand-
ing in front of 35 kids with your
mouth hanging open.
Anyone who was not obviously
drunk or noticeably retarded had
a pretty fair chance of winding up
in teaching.
One daily newspaper ran pages
and pages of teacher -wanted ad-
vertisements each spring, and
school boards spent hundreds of
thousands of dbllars on advertis-
ing.
I remember one spring when I
'could have taken my pick of 28
jobs as an English department
head, by picking up the phone.
Those were fat times for the
young graduating teachers, too.
Armed with nothing more than a
puny B.A„ they could pretty well
pick and choose where they
wanted to work and live.
Fellow winners of the award
this year honored a distinguished
Canadian colleague, Robert Wea-
ver, when they chose him as this
year's recipient of the John
Drainie Award for distinguished
contribution to broadcasting. He
received his award at this year's
telecast of the ACTRA Awards
presentation.
Now it has been announced that
. still another honor has come to
this fabulous Canadian ,who,,
along with the contribution he
himself has made, has also tried
very hard to encourage new tal-
ent in the ails. He was named
winner of the Diplome d'Hon-
ne4r, awarded by the Canadian
Conference of the Arts and pre-
sented by Governor General
Jules Leger at a ceremony in
Government House., This award
was made in recognition of the
support he has given to writing in ,
Canada and the encouragement
and exposure he has given to
Canadian writers both in radio
and the printed word. As head of
' CBC Radio arts -programming, he
is responsible for such radio
shows as "CBC Tuesday Night",
"CBC Stage" and "Anthology".
He has also been associated for 18
years with "The Tamarack Re-
view", a literary magazine.
Weaver is a Canadian from the
word -go. Born in Niagara Falls,
he was educated there and in To-
ronto. He majored in philosophy
• and English at the University of
Toronto and also served in the
RCAF and the Canadian army for
a while. He has been with the
,CBC since 1948.
He has edited several collect
tions of short stories for the Ox-
ford University Press and is cur-
rently working on another such
project. With William Toye, he
co -edited The Oxford Anthology
of Canadian Literature. He edited
The End of the World and Other
Stories by Mavis Gallant for Mc-
Clelland and Stewart's New
Canadian Library and also re-
views mystery novels for the To-
ronto Star.
In 1972 he was awarded an hon
orary degree of Doctor of Letters
by Brock University in St
Catharines.
To be honored by the general
public is great, but to be honored
by your peers and your competi-
tors is indeed a lifetime goal.
Robert Weaver has achieved the
goal, and fairly. Any of us who
are writers know the feeling that
comes when the manuscripts re-
turn to us with the little rejection
slips. Those of us who have been
lucky enough to be in contact with
some other Robert Weavers in
this country, know that no feeling
can equal that of knowing your
Wallace Avenue South, Listowel, Ontario Phone 2912271
AMPLE FREE PARKING - SAY IT WITH SEWING
work is beit`lg accepted because
someone somewhere sees some
promise in it and wants to take a
chance with you. A writer never
forgets people like that.
All over this country, there are
many talented people who re-
member Robert Weaver for giv-
ing them that little push of en-
couragement when they needed it
most. Fortunately, his service
has not been overlooked. These
are awards well deserved by a
fine man of letters and the arts.
0 0 0
Onecannot be sad when talking
about The Three Stooges. With
the death of Moe- Howard last
week;, the group is gone. But they
weren't the type to be mourned,
only fondly remembered with a
smile. And they brought so many
smiles to people. -
The stooge, group contained
many people, but the three who
lasted together the longest were
Larry, Curly and Moe. Moe was
the leader of the group, the one
who looked as though someone
had thrown a bowl on his head
and cut his dark hair around it.
Their comedy was at times,
slick, at times corny 'vaudeville.
What they taught us most was to
laugh at ourselves, because once
you stop laughing at yourself,
you're a sorry case. Their come-
dy wouldn't be subtle or satirical
enough for today but we really
don't need the "three" stooges to-
day; we have plenty around us all
the time! Ironically, what was
considered corn then, is accept-
able now.
The boys were together for 24
years. Curly died in 1952 and har-
ry last year. Moe was 78 at the
time of his death, is survived by
his wife, a son and a daughter.
YOU CAN -FIX-IT
By Gene von
WQRKSHOP BOOKEND
You can convert an in-
frequently -used C-clamp into a
very efficient 'and convenient
bookend when it is fastened to a
shelf in your workshop
Each spring there was an event
which came to beknown rather
cynically as "the cattle market."
School boards from all over the
province would take over a big
hotel in the city. Potential teach-
ers would flock in by the thou-
sands. It was a seller's market.
The student teacher walked the
halls, checked the signs on doors.
If he deigned to knock, he was
snatched through the door by a
principal, had coffee or some-
thing stronger forced on him,
generally given the glad hand
and usually assured a job, even if
"he" happened to be a bald fe-
male with green teeth.
Of course, the pay wasn't much
then, about $4,000 to start, but
that was worth more than twice
as much as it is now.
When I was hired, I wrote a
letter applying for the only Eng-
lish teaching job left in the prov-
ince. The principal was on the
phone the minute he got my
letter. He couldn't believe that I
had an honor degree in English.
Apparently I was the only person
left in Canada with such a degree
who wasn't teaching.
Just two years later, I had a de-
partment headship forced on me.
I didn't particularly want it.
Ftyerspn Institute wanted me to
go thre and teach journalism.
The president of Waterloo Uni-
versity wanted me -to go there
and handle public relations and
teach some English.
If I were fired tomorrow, with
my honors degree, and 15 years
experience, 1'd be lucky to get a
job in Nooknik, teaching English
As A Second Language to Eskimo
kids.
I checked with five of my
colleagues in the English -depart-
ment, who entered teaching
during those halcyon years.
Three of the five were hired by
phone, sight unseen.
Now, we sort through a vast
sheaf of applications. Here's a
guy with a B.A., M.A., and Ph.D.
in English. Discard him. Over-
educated, no experience. Here's
one with an honor degree, ex-
cellent recommendations, just
out of teacher's college. Discard
her. No experience.
And when we narrow it down to
six or eight, they have to show up
for a gruelling interview (gruel-
ling for me too)' and may have
driven 300 miles for it, and dive
home with nothing to show for it
but a hearty "Thank you for
coming."
The whole thing makes me
sick: There's a great Waste of
talented young teachers, litany of
whom, in disgust, go into some
other way of making a living:
There's a whole slew of old
teachers still in harness, who are
hanging on because archaic
regulations make them hang on
until they are too old and sick and
stupid and tired to be of any use
o anyone, met*.:t ' draw their
pensions
Surely Mia country With r+e-
WIMPS, and in an age when ,the
computer can make accurate
prtiOns, wecan do better
than use tins outmoded system Of
supply and demand, which may
be ,all right .for the cattle market,
but all wrong for human 'beings. ,
PIRATE HANGED.
Pirate Capt. William Kidd;
was hanged in London May
23, 1701.
Channel 10 Entertainment
THURSDAY, 12:45 p.m.- "THE NIGHT WALKER" starring itW
ert Taylor and Barbara Stanwyckl A wealthy widow, wbose
blind husband died in an explosion, is haunted by a dream,
which recurs night after night,
FRIDAY, 12:45 p.m.- "MOMENT TO MOMENT" starring 'Jean
Seberg and Honor Blackman. The love story of a chance Meet,
ing with a stranger --a moment of impulsive , desire, and a
twisting of fate.
FRIDAY, 11:45 p.m.- "THE WAY WEST" starring Kirk Doug-
las and Robert Mitchum. The bestseller • about a perilous
wagon journey to Oregon in the 1840s.
SATURDAY, 6:30 p.m.- "CLASS OF '63" • starring Joan Hackett
and James Brolin. A woman discovers the - love she'd been
seeking since ' graduation ten years before at a college re:
union. 1 -
SATURDAY, 11:45 p.m.- "COMPANIONS IN NIGHTMARE" star-
ring Anne Baxter and . Melvyn Douglas. A group of emotionally
disturbed people come together at a research. -institute for
therapy.
MONDAY, 12:20 a.m. "A GIRL IN EVERY PORTi' staining
Groucho Marx and Marie Wilson. Navy buddies acquire two
race horses and try to conceal them aboard ship.
MONDAY, 12:45 p.m.-- "ONE, TWO, THREE" starring James.
Cagney and Hoist Buchholz. A business executive in Berlin,
aiming for a top London post, sees his plans go down the
drain when his daughter becomes involved with an East Ber-
lin beatnik.
TUESDAY, 12:45 p.m.- "NEARLY A NASTY ACCIDENT"
star-
ring Shirley Eaton and. Jimmy Edwards. The escapades of a
Royal Air Force technician who has a problem --everything
he touches turns to -disaster!
WEDNESDAY, 12:45 p.m.- "PRESCRIPTION: MURDER" starring
Peter Falk and Gene Barry. A psychiatrist and a Qbeautiful
patient plan the murder of his wife.
'Channel 11 Entertainment
THURSDAY MIDNIGHT- "HERE WE -GO ROUND THE MUL-
BERRY BUSH" starring Judy Geesen and Barry Evans. A teen-
ager
eenager can think about nothing but girls, but thinking about
them gets hire nowhere. A series of attempted romances
leaves him more bewildered than ever.
FRIDAY MIDNIGHT- "JUDITH" starring Sophia Loren and.
Peter Finch. Last year of the British mandate in Palestine'
and first days of Israeli independence. Leaders of the country
desperately want a former German officer to utilize his
knowledge. -
SATURDAY, 10:30 p.m.- "GRAND SLAM" starring Edward G.
Robinson and "Janet Leigh. A Rio convent professor makes
a deal with a big-time racketeer to crack a safe filled with
millions' of dollars in diamonds.
SUNDAY, 12:55 a.m.-"INSPECTOR CLOUSEAU" starring Alan
Arkin and Patrick Cargill. Information has been received
that the Great Train Robbery gang is about to pull off their
biggest caper. .
SUNDAY, 7:00 p.m.- "DELANCEY STREET" starring Walter
McGinn and . Lou Gossett. A former convict develops a Foun-
dation,
oundation, a self-help rehabilitation centre for ex -cons, addicts.
SUNDAY, 9:30 p.m.- "THE GREAT NIAGARA" with Richard
Boone.
WEDNESDAY, ' 8:00 p.m.- "THE PARTY" starring Peter Sellers
and Claudine Longet. After a career of sorts on the New
Delhi stage an Indian actor is imported to Hollywood where
he drives director and executives nearly mad
SIX APPEAL
See and Drive Triumph T R 6
LONDON MOTORS LIMITED
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THIS WEEK MAY 26 - 31
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