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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1975-11-06, Page 25The .allowing programs, liste Moo., Noy.\1O 0:00. Hilarious House of Fright- enstein 11 University of the Air 13 6:30 Troibte with Tracy 13 7:00 Canada AM 13 Special Place 11 7:35 Take Kerr 13 7:40 Canada AM 13 8:00 OECA 11, 10, 8 8:30 Romper Room 13 8:45 Friendly Giant 10, 8 9:00 Yoga 13 Mon Ami 10, 8 9:15 Ontario Schools 11, 8, 10 9:30 Joyce Davidson 13 10:00 It's Your Move 13 10:30 Galloping Gourmet 13 Mr. Dressup 8, 10 Sesame Street' 10, 8 Galloping Gourmet 11 Canadian Cavalcade 6 Betty and Friends 13 11:30 I Saw That 11 12:00 Cartoons 8, 10, 13 Midday 11 Money Talks 6 12:30 Price Is Right 13 News 10, 8, 6 Movie "A Spanish Affair' 8; Movie 1 Match Game 13 Double Exposure 11 Definition 13 Days of Our Lives 11 Doctor in the House 6 Celebrity Dominoes 13 Guiding Light 6 The Doctors 11 What's the Good Word? 13 Horoscope Fortune 6 Edge of Night 8, 10 Take Thirty 8 Another World 13 City Lights 10 General Hospital 11 Rimstead 6 The Young, Restless 11 Pink Panther (cartoon) Celebrity Cooks 8, 10 Forest Rangers 8 Take Thirty 10 Flintstones 13 Dinah! 11 Gilligan's Island 6 Comin' up Rosie 8, Brady Bunch 13 The Monkees 6 Ironside 13 Hogan's 'Heroes- 6 Phil Silveirs""'"\* Partridge Family 10 Medical Centre 11 Partridge. Family 8 I Love Lucy 10 That Girl 6 News 6, 11; 13, 8, 10 Party Game 11 My Three Sons 13 Adam 12 6 Truth or Consequences Friends of Man 11 Odd Couple 6 - That's My -Mama 13 Little House on the Prair- e8 Bob Newhart 10 Movie 6 Phyllis 10 Headline Hunters .W.A.T. 11 Marcus Welby 13 Rhoda 8, 10 rent Page Challenge 8, 10 Know Your Sports 11 11:00 12:45 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 '7:00 '7:30 r S r68:00 0 10 8 6 13 Football II All in the Family 8, 10 Petrocehi 13 9:30 Chiaco and the Man. 8, 10 Maude 6 10:00. Grand Old COuntry 13 Global News 6 News Magazine 10, 8 10:30 Man Alive 8, 10 Pig & Whistle. 13 11:00 Nat. News 8, 10, 13 Rimstead 6 11:20 Local News 8, 10, 13 11:30 In Private Life 6 11:45 Mery Griffin 8 Baretta 10 12:00 News 11. �. Mike Douglas 13 12:30 Larry Solway 11 12:45 Alfred Hitchcock 10 1:00 Mery Griffin 11 Tues., Nov. 11 as supplied by the TV stations, are subject to change. ►dam 7:00 The Jeffers126 ons 13 Odd Couple 6 Hee Haw 8 Little House on the Prair- ie 10, 11 7:30 Funny Farm 13 Mystery Theatre 6 8:00 Nature of Things ,8, 10 Movie or Hockey 13 Movie 11 8:30 Musicamera 8, 10 9:00 Kate McShane 6 10:00 News 6 Bob Newhart 11 Upstairs -Downstairs 8, 10 Newscope 13 10:30 Tommy Makem 11 Country Way 13 11:00 Nat. News 8, 10, 11, 13 Rimstead 6 11:20 Local News 8, 10, 13 11:30 Larry Solway 11 Going Places 6 11:45 Mery Griffin 8 Cannon 10 12:00 Mery Griffin 11 Mike Douglas 13 12:45 Alfred Hitchcock 10 -.. Ironside 13 Hogan's Heroes 6 5:30 Partridge Family 8 That Girl 6 1 Dove LtOcy 1Q 6:00 News 6, 8, 10, 11, 13 6:30 Truth or- Consequences 8 Party Game 11 Adam 12 6 My Three Sons 13 '- 7:00 Bowling for Dollars 13 The Odd Couple 6 Tony Orlando and Dawn 11, 6:00 Hilarious House of Fright- enstein 11 University of the Air 13 6:30 Trouble with Tracy 13 7:00 Special Place 11 Canada AM 13 7:35 Take Kerr 13 7:40 Romper Room 13 8:00 OECA 11, 8, 10 8:45 Friendly Giant, 8, 10 9:00 Yoga 13 Mon Ami 8, 10 9:15 Ontario Schools 11, 8, 10 9:30 Joyce Davidson 13 `��`" 10:00 Canadian Schools 10, 8 It's Your Move 13 10:30 Mr. D?essup 8, 10 Galloping Gourmet 13 11:00 Sesame Street 10, 8 Betty and Friends 13 Canadian Cavalcade 6 Galloping Gourmet 11 11:30 Horoscope Dollars 13 I Saw That 11 12:00 Cartoons 8, 10, 13 Sports Probe 6 Midday 11 12:30 News 8, 10, 6 Price Is Might 13 12:45 Movie "Moors Fire" 8; Movie 10 1:00 Match Game 13 Double Exposure 11 ,1:30 Definition 13 Doctor in 'the House 6 Days of Our Lives 11 2:80 Celebrity Dominoes 13 1 '‘The'Guiding Light 6 2:15 Shirley Taylor 10 2:30 Edge of Night 8, 10 The Doctors 11 What's the Good Word? 13 Horoscope Fortune 6 3:00 Take Thirty 8 City Lights 10 General Hospital 11 Rimstead 6 Another World 13 3:30 Celebrity Cooks 8, 10 • The Young, Restless 11 Pink Panther (cartoon) 6 4:00 Forest Rangers 8 Take Thirty 10 Flintstones 13 Gilligan's Island 6 Dinah! 11 4:30 Brady Bunch 13 The Monkees 6 Special: Almighty Voice 8 5:00 Phil Silvers 8 Partridge Family 10 Movin' On 11 10 Phyllis 8 7:30 Bobby Vinton 13 Circle Eight Ranch 8 Joe and Sons 6 8:00 Movie 6 Good Times 13 Cannon 11 Happy Days 10, 8 8:30 This Is The Law 10, 8 John Allan Cameron 13 9:00 Baretta 11 Fifth Estate 10 Prime Time 8 The Rookies 13 10:00 Joe Forrester 13 The Great Debate 11 Doctor's Hospital 10, 8 News 6 11:00 Nat. News 11, 13, 10, 8 Rimstead 6 11:20 Local News 13, 10, 8 11:30 Larry Solway 11 11:45 Mery Griffin 8 S.W.A.T. 10 12:00 Mery Griffin 11 Mike Douglas 13 12:45 Alfred Hitchcock 10 Wed., Nov. 12 6:00 Hilarious House of Fright- enstein 11 University of the Air 13 6:30 Trouble with Tracy 13 7:00 Special Place 11 Canada AM 13 7:35 Take Kerr 13 7:40 Canada, AM 13 8:00 OECA 11, 8, 10 8:30 Romper Room 13 8:45 Friendly Giant 8, 10 9:00 Yoga 13 Mon .Ami 8, 10 9:15 Ontario Schools 11, 8, 10 9:30 Joyce Davidson 13 10:00 It's Your Move 13 ,, 10:30 Mr. Dressup 8, 10 Galloping Gourmet 13- 11:00 Sesame Street 10, 8 Galloping Gourmet 11 Betty and Friends 13 Canadian Cavalcade 6 11:30 Horoscope Dollars 13 I Saw That 11 12:00 Cartoons 8, 10, 13 In Private Life 6 Midday 11 12:30 News 8, 10,6 Price Is Right 13 - 12:45 Movie "The Secret World" 8; Movie 10 1:00 Match Game 13 Double Exposure 11 1:30 Definition 13 Days of Our Lives 11 Doctor in the House 6 3:00 Celebrity Dominoes 13 The Guiding Light 6 2:30 What's the Good Word? 13 Edge of Night 8, 10 The Doctors 11 Horoscope Fortune 6 111////er NEW . for 1976 by BARRY MORE HI -LO Carved Carpets in 3 gorgeous color ' �■ combinations on rub- ber backs. a� Do it yourself and save! Only firs sq. yd. Cashco Carpets Ltd. IN BEAUTIFUL DOWNTOWN ST. JACOBS P OR LISTOWEL 661.3334 (Closed Mondays) 291-4140 N L L • • ' ING • ' APERIES •PAINT • WALL DOVE' I 3: 1 Take Thirty 8 City Lights 10 Rimstead 6 General Hospit 1.1 . Another World 13 3:30 Celebrity Cooks 8; .tQ . The Young, Restless 11, Pink Panther (cartoon) 4. 4:00 The Filintstones 13 Forest Rangers 8 Dinah! 11 Take Thirty 10 Gilligan's Island 6 4:30 Comin' up Rosie 8, 10 Brady Bunch 13 The Monkees 6 5:00 Ironside 13 Phil Silvers 8 Partridge Family 10 Starsky and Hutch 11 Hogan's Heroes 6 5:30 Partridge Family 8 I Love Lucy 10 That Girl 6 6.:90 News 6; 8, 10, 11, 13 6:30 My Three Sons 13 Truth or Consequences 8 Party Game 11 H. GORDON GREEN There were none of the great people in the funeral parlour, the other day when we burled old Rob, The paper carried only the briefest of announcements: no obituary. And the minister who read the Book beside the coffin didn't seem to think there was anything particularly remark- able about the deceased 'either. But.. as we carried him out I thought that we were saying something more than the usual, goodbye to a man who has lived his share of years. We were saying a last,goodbye to a way of life. For old Rob was probably the last man we would ever know who refused to lock . his ,door; Winter or summer, day or night; Rob's door was always open to anyone with the energy to turn the knob. "That lock you see a shining there," he told me once when I went over to borrow his chain- saw, "it was my young nephew that put that in. Thought he was doing me a favour. But I didn't have it there for a week before I lost the key. Lost it on purpose, sort of." .I happen to know why Rob's nephew bought that lock. A few days before one of the neighbours came up the lane after a night in the local tavern, thinking he would crawl onto the couch behind Rob's kitchen stove to sleep it off. And when Rob came downstairs next morning the place was in a hell of a mess. Not that old Rob had made much of a complaint about it. "Well maybe if I'd a had a wife that run out on me, I would of got drunk enough to get sick too," he said. "He's a, right enough sort most of the time." It never even occurred to Rob that the man might have at least asked if he could come in. "That's why you're better not to have your door locked," he said. "So's that somebody who needs to can come in without waking you up." It was the same with Rob's pick-up truck, which was all the car that he ever drove so far as anyone could remember. We used to borrow Rob's truck as well as his chain saw some- times. "No! No ! " he told my young lad -one evening when we took the truck back ' to him. "Leave the key in the switch, otherwise I'll sure as hell lose it!" But I think the real reason Rob always left the key in the dash was because he figured that there just might be somebody who might need that truck for some emergency ' when he wasn't around. • .The only time'ii his life that he ever had 'to pay a fine was the time the cop gave him a ticket for leaving his truck parked in front of the post office with the keys still in it. "Aw he was just a kid, that cop!" Rob said when he was telling me about it afterward. "I thought of asking him where this country would be today if the folks his grandpa knew had al- ways kept things locked up tight- er than Billy be damned, but I didn't. He wouldn't of under- stood." Rob was a little worked up that day he got the ticket. "If a man wants to steal from you, a key isn't going to stop him anyhow," he said. "All a key does is to tell every man that sees it that you don't trust him." Like I said when I started this, it wasn't a sad funeral. No tears really. But there should have been, I think. No, not for the man who had left us, but for the fact that in our neighborhood at least, the key had won its final victory over trust. And I think that the minister might have at least suggested that when old Rob got to that mansion beyond the river he would find the doors there as open as his own had always been down here. Inflated k shows objection to diet By DOROTHY ST. JOHN JACKSON Dear Dorothy: About two months ago, I went on a diet prescribed by my doctor. I succeeded and lost 15 pounds. Well, before I knew it, I gained it all back. Now all I think of and do is eat. What compels me to eat so much? M.S. Dear M.S.: The hardest thing about a diet is sticking with it. For you, tomorrow is an- other day. You'll worry about it when it comes. This is seen in the lack of upper and lower loop extension in your writ- ing. Frustration compels you to eat. You are always on guard for criticism of any kind, seen in your t and d loops. Your low t crossings limit your sites and you lack faith in yourself. You're unsure of your acceptance, by even those closest to you, and you don't know just where you stand. One thing you do know is that food will fill the gap right now, and so you eat. Like any normal person, you are totally involved in protecting your self-image, and you do it in several dif- ferent ways. For instance, you're hiding behind a set of homemade standards by which you want to live, seen in your short t and d. Your inflated k shows you rebel against anything forced upon you, including a diet. Then you have a dozen different excuses for why you eat and what you eat, justify- ing each bite you take. This is seen in the loop on the left side of a. If you want to lose weight, you have to face facts. It means counting your calo- ries, not just today, but to- morrow, too. 11a:J. ,3 SMOKING -Bobbi Michelle, played by Charlotte Gibson, and Barney Cashman, played by Patrick Smith, enjoy a little smoke after an afternoon of fine conversation. Bpbbiis quite involved in her career as a model and actress and doesn't find too much to hold her attention in the older married man who owns a fish restaurant. (Holliday Photo) Theatre Guild makes tickets available .Fighting complications brought on by the federal mail strike the Grey Wellington Theatre Guild is now circulating 'tickets for the upcoming produc- tion of Neil Simon's "Last of the Red Hot Covers" to be staged November 13, 14 and 15 at the Mount Forest District High School. Originally a large mailing list had been prepared but the recent stoppage of postal service has caused Guild members to change strategy. Tickets for the three -night production are now available through any member of the Guild or by calling Alex Adam in Mount Forest or Patrick Smith in Harriston. Adults will be admitted to the performance t 8 0 3 pe n ace a .,,$2.00 per person.. Students' and senior citi-: zens' tickets ire $1.00. Wickets will also be available at the door. "The Last of the 'Red Hot Lovers" is a three -act comedy with a cast of four. Barney Cashman, played by Patrick Smith of Earriston, is the middle-aged restaurant _operator who decides that he should ex- plore his own mind through the experience of an affair with someone attractive and different. His first `conquest' is' Elaine Navazio, an attractive wealthy patron of his business who has 'done this thing before'. He in- vites her to meet him in an apart- ment but when she finds out it is his mother's, Elaine begins to wonder about her latest choice' of partner. Mrs. Navazio is played by Lorena McGowan of Mount Forest, star of the last production of the Guild, "Plaza Suite". After several months of emo- tional recuperation from his unsuccessful first affair Barney arranged to meet with Bobbi Michelle, an 'earthy' actress and model with a past which makes him shudder. Bobbi, played by Charlotte Gibson of Holstein, is too inter- ested in telling about her experi- ences to begin another, but does manage to tempt' Barney to try a little of her life style. Disillusioned for a second time Barney finally manages to invite yet another woman to his mother's apartment. Grace Whetham of Mount Forest is Jeanette Fisher, wife of a good friend of Barney's. Mrs. Fisher turns out to be the most singu- larly depressed woman in New York and dampens Barney's spirits as well as his dreams for n another affair. Barney's three attempts as a modern day Romeo are not with- out humor or comedy. In each of , the three acts he changes to be most attractive and more seduc- tive with the women he chooses to meet. "The Last of the Red Hot Lovers" is produced by Stuart Farlow and directed by Patrick Smith and Jill Lorsch, all of Mount Forest. New members are always wel- comed into the Grey Wellington Theatre Guild. The second production of the 1975-76 season will be "Night Must Fall" by Emlyn Williams. It will be the first mystery -drama attempted by the Guild and will be staged March 18,19 and 20. -412 It was "0 Promise Me" time again and she must know the words by heart! Yes, marriage vows were again exchanged by Elizabeth Taylor Hilton Wilding Todd Fisher Burton Burton. I suppose their fans always knew it would happen. Since their divorce last year, Burton has been scooting from romance to romance but never really making any move to settle down. She lost some weight and slimmed down to a gorgeous" svelte figure, giving the idea that she was per- haps in the market for a husband. But used car salesman Henry Wynberg was just a friend, a musical interlude until the real symptont :began again. A weak unhealthy woman- who has always admitted she needed a strong domineering man, Taylor seemed to have found her perfect match in Burton. His escapades and bad behavior left her no other choice but the one she made last year and there is always a chance of that occurring again. For now, at least, they are together again and happy, win- ners once again in the game of love. The only loser in the game is Henry VVynberg. After all, what charm hath a used car after you've buddied around with Elizabeth Taylor for a year? 0-0-0 Each year the Friars' Club of New York 'roast' a famous per- son at a gala dinner party. You'll no doubt remember the times the roastings were a part of Ed Sulli- van's Sunday evening television show. The routine goes something like this - a bunch of guys in show biz get together and pay to insult you. Some of the insults can be pretty unkind, but it doesn't matter. You haven't really made it with your peers until you've been roasted by the Friars. Tis Show Biz By Vonni Lee This year, their victim is Frank Sinatra so hope he has his sense of humor with him that night! And oh yes, the 'dinner only costs about $500 a plate , which T guess isn't bad, if you're plate happens to be beside Sinatra's! Speaking of Sinatra, have you - noticed how much play • his recordings have .been getting since he came' out of retirement? Turn on any station almost 'any hour of the day and you're bound to soon hear "I'm Gonna Love You". Wattaguy! I'keep wonder- ing what he's going to sound like when he reached 85! ,0-00-0 Speaking of reaching 85, Groucho Marx just4idiAtith his appearance at the Academy Awards show last year after a long absence from the ' public . spotlight, it was a bit of a shock to see how very frail and weak the funny man had become. He seemed detached from the entire proceeding, as if he was not even 'with it'. , He's living a life of luxurious retirement and still with him is his favorite companion, Erin Fleming, a former Canadian who started working for him as a secretary and became as impor- tant to him as life itself. Create gemstone 7.welry at home for pleasure.. . and for profit. Make beautiful bracelets, earrings, cufflinks, tiepins, key chains, with beautifully polished agate, moonstone, sodalite, ame- thyst, with our Kits. Send today for FREE catalog worth 50t. No obligation. Gem Factory 1627 Spruce Drive. 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