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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1975-11-13, Page 25.. J Ck .1ARNONAM-.6.:014141,:.;0110,00 • 10 (FPI, LONDON • 11 CINCH HAMILTON • 0(0 KITCNEMi,R The folowing progrdms, listed as ►pled by the TV stations, are subjectto to change. MON. NOV. 17 6:00 Hilarious* House of Fht- enstein 11 University of the Air 13 6:30 Trouble with Tracy 13 7:00 Canada Ali? 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 11:00 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 12:45 Movie 10; "Daughter of the Mind" 8 1:00 Match Game 13 Double Exposure 11 1:30 Definition 13 Days of Our Lives 11 Doctor in the House 6 2:00 Celebrity Dominoes 13 Guiding Light 6 2:30 The Doctors 11 _ What's the Good Word? 13 Horoscope Fortune 6 Edge of Night 8, 10 3:00 Take Thirty ,8 Another World 13 City Lights 10 General Hospital 11 Rimstead -6 3:30 ThYoung, Restless 11 Pink Panther (cartoon) \ 6 Celebrity Cooks 8, 10 4:00 Forest Rangers 8 Take Thirty 10 Flintstones 13 Dinah! 11 Gilligan's Island 6 4:30 Comin' up Rosie 8, 10 Brady Bunch 13 The Monkees 6 '15:00 Ironside 13. Hogan/8 Heroes.6,„2„,) Adam 121 , Truth.- or ro IPencea 8 7:00 Friends • If Man 11 Odd' Couple 6 N. Thai's My Mang13 - Little E ussie on the Prair- ie 8• Bob Newhart 10 7:30 Movie.6 Phyllis 10 Headline Hunters 13, S.W.A.T. 11 8:00 Marcus Welby 13 • Rhoda 8, 10 8:30 Front Page Challenge 8,10 Know Your Sports 11 9:00 Football 11 All in the Family 8, 10 • Petroce)i 13 9:30 `Chico and the Man 8, 10 Maude 6 N.. '10:00 Grand Old Country 13 Global News 6 News Magazine 10, 8 10:30 Man Alive 01 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 Beretta. 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. 18 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. Dressup 8, 10 • Galloping Gourmet 13 11:00 Sesame Street 10, 8 Betty and !Friends 13 Canadiain•'teita dde 6 -Galloping-Gourmet 11 Partridge Family 10 Medical Centre 11 30 Partridge Family 8 I Love Lucy 10 '" That Girl 6 . 00 News 6, 11, 13, 8, .10 00 Party Game 11 My Three Sons 13 (They say- An apple a day keeps the Doctor 'away - If it doesn't work try Health Foods and Vitamins R. amu MUSIC, KODAK & HOBBY SUPPLIES HEALTH SUPPLIES 291.4202 LISTOWEL 11:30 Horoscope Dollars 13 I Saw That 11 12:00 Cartoons 8, 10, 13 vports Probe 6 Midday 11 1Z:30 News 8, . 10, 6 Price Is Right 13 12:45 Movie 10; "Flaming Feath- er" 8 1:00 Match Game 13 Double Exposure 11 1:30 Definition 13 Doctor in the House 6 Days of Our Lives 11 2:00 Celebrity Dominoes 13 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) 4:00 Forest Rangers 8 !Take Thirty 10 Flintstones 13 Gilligan's Wand 6 Dinah! 11 4:30 Brady Bunch 1:3 The Mopkees 6 . . Hlecttcmly 8 5:00 Phil Silvers 3 Partridge Family 10 Movin' On 11 ironside 13 Hogan's Heroes 6 5:30 PartridBe Family 8 That Girl 6 I Love Lucy 10 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, 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 Beretta 11 ' Fifth Estate 10 Prime Time 8 ,'The Rookies 13 10:00 Joe Forrester 13 The Great Debate 11 The McLean Stevenson - Show 8, 10 News 6 Rimstead 6 11:20 Local News 13, 40, 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. 19 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;-0; 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 Movies 10; "My Six Loves" 1:00 Match Game 13; Double Exposure 11 1:30 Definition 13 Days of Our Lives 11 Doctor in the House ' 6 2:00 Celebrity Dominoes ,13 The Guiding Light 6 6 2:30 What's the Good Word? Edge of Night 8, 10 The Doctors 11 Horoscope Fortune 6 8 13 P P 'Vaflaco Avenue South, Listowel, Ontario LISTOWEL TEXTILES and MILL ENDS Phone 291-2271 AMPLE FREE PARKING - SAY IT WITH SEWING 3:00 TakeIhirty 3 VtyLOW n' Rimstead 6e General Hospital 11 Another World 1.3 ~. 3:30 Celebrity Cooks` 8,10 The Young, Rustlers 11 Pink Panther (cartoon) 6 4:00 The Flintstones 13 Forest Rangers 8 Dinah! 11 Take Thirty 10 Gilligan's Islaind 8 4:30 Comin' up., Rosie 8, 10 Brady Bunch 13 The Monkees 6 ' 5:00 Ironslde 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 6:00 News 6, 8, 11), 11, 13 6:30 My Three Sons 13 • Truth or Consequences 8 Party Game 11 Adam 12 6 7:00 The Jeffersons 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 ii Country,. Wax 13 11:00 Nat. News 8, 10, 11, 13 11:20 Local News 8, 10, 13 11:30 Larry Solway 11 Rimstead 6 11:45 Mery Griffin 8 Cannon 10 12:00 Mery Griffin 11 Mike ' Douglas 13 12:45 Alfred Hitchcock 10 ITIS" Sh0W BIZ One late night last week, 1 sa- crificed my beauty sleep, think- ing I would see the grand Strauss waltz come to life once again as flawlessly, the magic feather feet of Arthur and Katherine Murray would make its romance glow and leave us in a fantasy world. No such luck! They didn't dance at all, only talked! It all happened on Mery Griffin's show and it is primarily a talk show. But mention the Murrays and you automatically think of dancing. How dare Mery deny us that? . After 50 years of marriage, the Murrays are still together and as charming as ,ever. They live in Hawaii now but we ,remember them from the days they lived in New York and began a chain of dancing studios where Sidiiteould ...learn to waltz, fox trot, do' the boogie, or the jitterbug, all of the dances taught by professional dancers who had learned to do it properly fromthe Murrays; Sur- prisingly eno h, ballroom danc- ing is still popular in the large cities and people are still learn- ing how to dance the old favor- ites. Katherine Murray came on Merv's show looking like a little Dresden doll, the shining white of her hair looking gorgeous against the sky blue of her elegant chiffon gown. Arthur's deadpan face hasn't changed in 30 years. As Mery quipped, "If he were alive today, he'd be a really sick man!" Only agood friend could get away with a statement like that! A wave of nostalgia swept over me when I saw them - I thought of Ed Sullivan and the shows each year when he presented the Har- vest Moon Dance Champions, dancing at its finest. And I thought of the dancers I see today who wouldn't know a waltz if it hit them in the Blue Danube! Where have the beautiful old days of dancing gone? I guess there just weren't enough Arthur and Katherine Murrays to go around! 0-0-0 Just when I open my big mouth and say that Rowan and Martin going By Vonni Lee are becoming extinct, comes word that they are beginning a new series on the ABC network. It is a takeoff on the news stories of the day and if they can find any thing fuimy in this news the,se days, they're smarter. than I think! They wouldn't have dared do this kind of series a year ago when Watergate was the top of the news and a sdurce of embar rassment to anyone loyal to the stars and stripes. But now it seems they have found something to laugh at in the news and they're going to see if they can again sell themselves in, another series. It won't be "Laugh-ln" b4t it might click. No word of it hitting the Canadian networks as yet, Guess we'll just have to wait and see! ages as the case may be, of live television programming were again proven on Monday night when Miss Canada was being chosen.' Having just introduced Miss Canada 1975 for her last walk aniong her people, host Jim Perrie stood back to let the retiring queen take her place. But a group of militant women's - libbers had other ideas' and dis rupted the proceedings for a few minutes. Television cameras im mediately. flashed away but the terrified looking girls gave the secret away that all wasanything but well. After the commotion, (he 1975 Miss Canada, looking very poised and recovering very nicely, said her good-bye speech, adding that she was `iiielighted' to give up her crown. Like the streaker who dis rupted the Academy Awards show one year, these kooks are bound to appear now and then. In. live television, there is little hope of stopping them before they gain the attention they so badly want. It was unfortunate that this epi sode happened when it did for already frayed nerves and ten sions. too great to contain, were only increased by the disruption. VVhatever one's feelings about beauty pageants, it Continues to be a tradition and no weirdos are to change it. YOtIran have fan Maurine out your message from the Orient by/ use of this pi t little letter pause. if the number of letter. In your first name 1s 5 sr les.. subtract from 7. If more than 3 letters In your IIrsl name. subtract from 13. Now take Okla result and end your key letter In the word ORIENT et the top of this &tussle. Then.-tsrtIns at the upper left corner. cheek each one of your large key letter. as If appears from left to right. 'Below, the key letters le a•esde ssessaee for you. 0 s 11 p 1 b E 1 N bus 0 T I ea E RN e` e P e E b I m ON n t TR e r O n T k E o R s I o N t R o 0 E r IN r end TOR n T e I e EN e r I e R g' a O a N t E a TR w b 0 y T a EN r o I r TR v 1 ON s m I a ER n e I tee T E N o 0 a N r E s T n 1 e K m 0 p 0 e N r 1 f T u E t, R i 0 a IN u o TR e e E 1 TIN s 1 w OE d y R n HOCKEY REMAINS the great Canadian game for youngsters of all as --the onesnrha remember and the ones who are now building up memories. (Canadian Government Office -of Tourism .Photo) Grooming tomorrow's stars BY JORDAN JUBY For generations, Canadian boys have been tucked into bed with visions of playing profes- sional hockey dancing in their heads. Frosty -faced kids with runny noses, come in out of the cold to defrost and dream after playing long hours of outdoor hockey. Their bedrooms usually resemble miniature hockey halls of fame with pictures of hockey players plastered on walls. The traditional Christmas gift for Canadian boys is a hockey stick. But the best of all possible presents is a sweater' with favor- ite team colors, crest and the number of a reigning superstar stitched on the back. Hockey remains the great Canadian 'game -for youngsters of all ages - the ones , remem- ' her ifricr thc'2ohea **ha ' re now building up memories. During the 1972 Team Canada - Russia eight -game series, the country went into mourning after the Russiansdefeated a National Hockey League staffed team, 7-3 in the opener in Montreal. But when Paul Henderson, then with the Toronto Maple Leafs, pulled the trigger on Russian goalie Vladislav Tretiak with only 34 seconds left in the eighth and deciding contest in Moscow, a coast to coast cheer went up. • The goal gave Canada a 6-5 vic- tory and the series with a 'won four, lost three and tied one record. During the historic series, Canada became a nation of puck watchers. In four afternoon games beamed via satellite from Moscow, professors counted depleted ranks and cancelled classes, department stores set up window front television inviting passersby to watch and auto- mobile traffic reached an all- time low. During the 1974 series with players from the World Hockey Association representing Canada, Team Canada lost to the Russians marking the first defeat for North American major professional hockey in inter- national circles. But Gordie Howe of the Hou- ston Aeros and Bobby Hull of the Winnipeg Jets - two heavy duty performers who have become living legends in Canada - made hockey "Kanadski" style some- thing special in the U. S. S. R. While international hockey appears to be a coming trend, hockey played in. Canada re- mains a winter obsession for Canadians. Vancouver Canucks, Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Cana - diens of the NHL play before full houses and large television audi- ences. The pre -expansion Leafs and Canadiens are long estab- lished favorites compiling envi- able strings of Stanley Cup cham- pionships. Interest is beginning to perk in the Canadian Division of the WHA. The WHA has scheduled more games this year among Canadian teams who boast performers like Bobby Hull, Frank Mahovlich, J. C. Trem- blay, Marc Tardif and Czecho- slovakian star Vaclac Nedo- mansky. Calgary Cowboys, the recent addition to the division, have nat- ural rivals in Edmonton Oilers. The Cowboys will play out of the famous Stampede Park at the Corral. 'Other teams facing off in the division are the Winnipeg Jets, Toronto Toros and Quebec Nor- diques. While most of the game's glamor is focused on professional hockey, it's at the Major Junior A level where the stats of tomorrow are being groomed.... 'where professional scouts flock to,press boxes to evaluate talent and recommend players for ' their clients. Three Major Junior A leagues are in operation across Canada, Ontario, Quebec and Western Canada. The network includes 33 teams stretching from the Quebec Remparts in the east 'to the Victoria Cougars a Van- couver Island. Virtually every major Canadian city has its own Junior A hockey team. The leagues have turned out outstanding_ Or , ' rESPoSttp,. )'.Git r ery reault, Bobby Clarke, Rick Mac- Leish, Guy Lafleur, Denis Potvin, Brad Park, Yyan Cournoyer. The list is endless. The current Major Junior A and Memorial Cup champion Toronto Marlboros, are coached by former Toronto Maple Leaf great George Armstrong. The Marlboros defeated New West - minister Bruins and Sherbrooke Castors in a week long round- robin tournament last spring for the title. It's generally acknowledged that the best players in the Cana- dian minor hockey system sur- face at the Major Junior A level when they reach 16 or midget age.. - There are exceptions. All-star Denis Potvin now with the New York Islanders broke the age barrier at 14 becoming the Yee,. payer to PlaY Ma Junior A hockey He suited up with Ottawa 674 in their maiden year and went onto breast all the defenceman records established by Bobby Orr when he. stdrred with Oshawa Generals. -- The Major Junior A leagues hold annual drafts -- siniilsir "to the NHL's junior draft to divy yup talent and hammer out sched ules, some extending, to 66 games -. excluding playoffs. The premiere Major Junior A players have bright futures;' Less thanri0 years' ago the entire world of Major League Hockey consisted of six . teams located primarily in eastern Canada and the 'l`Jnited'States. This fall as the NHL opens its 59th . season and the WHA its fourth, some 32 teams will take to ' .-4theJnr ,tile . eantinet+"off.*,( season eicpa>nsio afId` 'the Sb fy ling Of franchises still looms making . the market more lucra- tive for aspiring young players. While some fans look back with fond memories at the sixteam system and some long for the "good old days," hockey in Canada continues to boom. The Canadian Amateur Hockey Association - the governing body for amateur hockey in Canada - reported a spiraling growth in the game over the last 10 years. Some 582,678 players were on 35,154 teams during 1974- 75 for an increase of 369,832 from the 1964-65 season. "I guessyou can say that hockey appeals to all cultures and newcomers to Canada," CAHA executive director Gordon Jukes explains. "With more arti- ficial ice, we've got rinks going day and night." SMORGASBORD SUNDAYS .4:30 TO 7:00 P.M. - $4.50 Children 10 years of age and under - Half Price For your added suppertime pleasure, we are happy to pre- sent the nostalgic organ styling of Richard Hutt playing your favorite request songs from way back when, every Sunday from 4:30 - 7:00. COMPLETE CATERING SERVICE for weddings, banquets, club parties, etc. Renton Place Call Palmerston 343-3906 Gift Certificates available at HolidaiyRenbA•Car we promise our customers a better deal...and we deliver! Featuring fine products. engineered by Chrysler GOING TO FLORIDA? - RESERVE THROUGH US holidaRent-A-Car Systemy/ INTSANATIONAL TOLL FREE RESERVATIONS 1-800-261-6055 STAN McRAE LTD., PALMERSTON 1727 343-2035