HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1983-07-20, Page 71trounce
the Leafs
�nP
BY GEOFF KING
Love: Carol, -Debbie, Brian
Lisa and their families
HAPPY 20TH ANNIVERSARY
MOM and DAD
(BM arid Alberta Moore)
Happy Birthday On
July 23rd '83
From The
In -Laws To Be!
The Generals trounced the
Leafs 114 in Goderich Minor
Recreational Ball Lockey
League action Monday night.
In the first period, the
Generals opened the scoring
with seven goals to the
Leafs' lone goal scored by
Tim Gerrits unassisted.
During the second period,
the Generals added five
more goals. Tom Bean and
Chris Sideris both played an
excellent game, scoring
three goals and getting one
assist each. Mark Cauchi got
two goals and an assist.
Kevin Talbot set up most of
the Generals' plays with four
assists and a goal. Brad
O'Neil and Mike Creamer
scored the final two markers
for the Generals.
Insects
studied
at Falls
Join in at the Falls
Reserve this weekend for an
inside look at the insect
'world. Find out about our
friends, the mosquitoes and
black flies and other two,
four, six and eight legged
creatures.
On Saturday morning a
hike on one of the park's
trails will show you the im-
portance of insects in the
delicate balance of nature.
Saturday night's "Moonlight _
Movies" will feature a
Disney film entitled
"Secrets of the Insect
World". After the movies,
we'll make a quick in-
vestigation of the creatures
of the night.
Sunday morning a special
craft is planned using paint,
paper and the help of some of
the park's resident spiders.
Come and find out what it's
all about — at the Falls
Reserve Conservation Area.
For more information
about the Falls Reserve or
the Visitor Services Pro-
gram, phone 524-6429.
The Falls Reserve is
located four miles east of
Goderich on County Road 31.
Members of the, Goderich swim team competing this year In
the eight and under and 8=10 age grotrlps are, front row, left
to right, Jason Woodall, Sean Cargin, Amanda MacKenzie,
Sherry Hogan, Cheryl MacKenzie, Wendy MacKenzie,
Leslie Brereton and Kelly Muir; and back row, left to right,
Alana Graham, Tracy Mellek, Tara Cornish, Becky
Harrison, Trisha Rumig, Steven Hogan and Darcy Moulton,
Absent for photo was Angle James. Swim team coaches are
Tracey MacEwan and Karyn Drennan. (Photo by Joanne
Buchanan)
Members of the Goderich swim team competing this year in
the 11 and up age group are, front row, left to right, David
Boyce, Kathy Brown, Melanie Woodall, Laurie Dawson,
Jane Hall, Teresa Ferguson, Juli Mefek, Jeff Boyce and
Mac Irwin; next row, left to right, Buffy Cook, Kristen
Knox, Janet Boyce, Lisa Kisch, Stacey Bean, Lisa Morgan,
Dave McCurdy and Chris Breckles; and back row, left to
right, Tim Bakker, Brian Moulton, Kevin Telford and Rick
Worsen. Absent, for photo were Andrew Telford, Gary Erb,
Kelly Kent, Angie Bakker, Mark Stokes, Tim Goddard and
Mike Worsell. (Photo by Joanne Buchanan)
Blyth play makes you glad to be alive
As a child, Robbie O'Neill
had St. Vitus dance, a
spastic condition that is like
a form of cerebral palsy. In
1981 when he decided to do a
show about Leo Kennedy, a
man born in the twenties
FOR
DELICIOUS FOOD
AND
FRIENDLY
SERVICE
1�1
•HEARTY BREAKFAST
•QUICK & TASTY LUNCHES
Specials Different Every Day
•DELICIOUS FULL COURSE DINNERS $65
Served from S p.m. •
$265_$400
ic4 RESTAURnMT
STEAK MOUSE AND TAVERN
WEST STREET, GODERICH 524-9291
OPEN 6 A.M. TILL 1 A.M.
SALTFORD VALLEY
HALL
FOR RENT
c.« 524-2892
Always welcome.
Of all the ways
to cook chicken in
this world, only
Kentucky Fried
Chicken wins hands
down every time.
That's because we
cook each piece of
fresh young chicken
perfectly according
to the Colonel's own
secret recipe.
No matter what
you're up to. drop
in and pick up some
Kentucky Fried Chicken.
There's nothing that
can beat the finger
lickin' good taste when
you're really hungry.
�y.
•
Colonel Sanders'
boys and girls
make It
finger liddn'
good.
GREAT FOR SUMMER VISITING OR ENTERTAINING.
Kentucky FidCk 94 ELGIN AVE. GODERICH
ir WINS
who had cerebral palsy all
his life, it was with a strong
personal link. The show,
Tighten the Traces -Haul in
the Reins combines with Ted
Johns' one man play, Naked
on the North Shore under the
title Maritime Faces at the
Blyth Summer Festival.
Robbie describes Leo as
"feisty, a tremendously
outgoing person with an in-
triguing vocation", a man
who decided early in life
neither to treat himself nor
be treated like an invalid.
"The Lord never closes one
door but he opens two
others," says Leo. He
became a peddler and walk-
ed around Cape Breton for 25
years with his suitcases full
of everything from can
openers to watch straps.
Leo was a striking in-
dividual who affected people
* QUEEN'S *
* HOTEL *
SEAFORTH
*Entertainment
Wed. Thurs. Fri.
* WHITE
* FROST
Next Week
Wed. - Sat.
NIGEL
* CROOK
Tues. Night
*LADIES NIGHT*
* Happy Hour
* 4:30-6:00 *
No Cover
*-1F414•11•4• Jr
very strongly; everyone had
his own imitation of Leo.
Reaction to Robbie putting
together a show about Leo
was mixed so Robbie asked
Leo to be the judge. But the
show was not a mockery and
Leo was in such .whole-
hearted support that he.gave
Robbie a replica of his dory
and his suitcases still packed
from his days on the road.
Tighten the Traces -Haul in
the Reins reveals the
humour, strength and
courage that were part of
Leo's life. The one-man one -
act play, sometimes called
The Leo Show, met with
much success in school, at
the Mulgrave Road Theatre
Co-op in Guysborough, Nova
Scotia and on tour.
When Janet Amos, artistic
director of the Blyth Sum-
mer Festival, saw The Leo
Show in Halifax last April,
she was impressed and ask-
ed Robbie to come to Blyth.
Robbie was impressed with
Janet's conscientiousness in
travelling the country look-
ing for good new Canadian
plays to bring back to her au-
diences,
The play has been; record„
ed by C$C TV for release'
this fall. After the season in
Blyth, Robbie will be touring
his show across Canada and
to the National Arts Centre
next spring. The play has
met with critical acclaim
everywhere. The Halifax
Daily News called it "a
brilliant piece of theatre that
makes you feel good to be
alive."
Although he still doesn't
understand personally a lot
of the problems that,people
with disabilities have, Rob-
bie has learned a lot in the
making and performing of
the play. "It is an incredible
thing," says Robbie, "to be
able to project a character
and his condition and to pro -
yoke thought."
Maritime Faces plays at
the Blyth Summer Festival
from July 19 to August 19.
Call 523-9300 or 523-9225 for
tickets or information.
Ted Johns takes
you north at Blyth
This summer you can
travel to Northern Canada
for the price of a theatre
ticket at the Blyth Summer
Festival. Ted Johns, whom
audiences will remember
from The School Show and'
He Won't Come In From The
Barn, brings the village of
Old Fort alive in his one-man
show Naked on the North
Shore. He re-creates Old
Fort, near the Straits of
Belle Isle on the north shore
of the St. Lawrence. He does
so with an extra ordinary
Demolition
S Derby 4
Seaforth Fair Grounds
Sun. July 31
1 p.m. Sharp
Powder puff Class for Ladies
For Entry Forms Call:
527-0398 or 4829196
Sponsored by:
SEAFORTH
AGRICULTURAL
SOCIETY
combination of humour,
poetry, mime and sheer
gusto. The style is both his
own and at the same time
immediately identifiable in
most rural communities in
Canada.
Ted explores the
mythology of isolation, a
town cut off without
telephones or electricity but
hooked up with its imagina-
tion. The play is fast-moving
and energetic.
In writing the play, Ted set
out to awaken the south to
the vast hinterland that com-
prises the north and to the
difficulties in adjusting to it.
Northern communities, even
though they may be
separated by thousands of
miles, are more similar to
each other than they are to
southern urban centres.
Come and hear the tale of
Sam's camp and the odd
visitors that arrive there.
Enjoy the rollicking
festivities of Sports Day.
Follow Henry on his travels
to the south and back to Old
Fort.
Naked on the North Shore
combines with Robbie
O'Neill's one-man show
Tighten the Traces/Haul in
the Reins under the title
Maritime Faces. Maritime
Faces plays at the Blyth
Summer Festival from July
19 to August 19. Call 523-9300
or 523-9225 for tickets or in-
formation.
DAYTIME
MORNING
5:00 RELIGIOUS TOWN HALL
(Wed)
5,00 A BETTER WAY (Thu)
5:00 CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
(Fri)
5:00 THIS IS THE LIFE (Tue)
5:30 UNIVERSITY OF
MICHIGAN PRESENTS
6:00 FARM AND GARDEN
(Wed)
6:00 TV -5 AND YOUR COM-
MUNITY (Thu)
6:00 SCOPE (Fri)
6:00 U.S. FARM REPORT (Mon)
6:00 HEALTH FIELD (Tue)
6:30 EARLY TODAY
7:00 TODAY
9:00 DIFF'RENT STROKES.
9:30 SALE OF THE CENTURY
10:00 HAWAII FIVE -0
11:00 HOUR MAGAZINE
AFTERNOON
12:00 NEWS
12:30 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
1:00 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
2:00 ANOTHER WORLD
3:00 FANTASY
4:00 MOVIE
5:30 M.A.S.H.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1983
DAYTIME MOVIES
4:00 "THE GRASS IS ALWAYS
GREENER OVER THE SEPTIC
TANK" Carol Burnett Charles
Grodin
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7:00 P.M, MAGAZINE
7:30 THREE'S COMPANY
8:00 REAL PEOPLE
9:00 THE FACTS OF LIFE
9:30 BUFFALO BILL
10:00 THE NEWS IS THE NEWS
10:30 TAXI
11:00 NEWS
12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN
1:30 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
2:30 SIX MILLION DOLLAR
MAN
THURSDAY, JULY 21. 1983
DAYTIME MOVIES
4:00 "FUN WITH DICK AND
JANE' George Segal, Jane Fon-
da
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7:00 P.M. MAGAZINE
7:30 THREE'S COMPANY
8:00 FAME . •
9:30 CHEERS
10:00 HILL STREET BLUES
11:00 NEWS
11:30 TONIGHT
12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN
1:30 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
2:30 BIONIC WOMAN
FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1983
DAYTIME MOVIES:
4:00: "CALL HER MOM" Connie
Stevens, Von Johnson
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7;00 P.M. MAGAZINE
7:30 THREE'S COMPANY
8:00 THE POWERS OF MAT-
THEW STAR
9:00 KNIGHT RIDER
10:00 EISCHIED
11:00 NEWS
11:30 TONIGHT
12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN
2:00 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
3:00 "RIDER ON THE RAIN"
Charles Bronson, Jill Ireland
4:30 "RIVER OF GOLD" Dock
Rambo, Suzanne Pleshette
SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1983
MORNING
6:00 VEGETABLE SOUP
6:30 NEW ZOO REVUE
7:00 CARRASCOLENDAS
7:30 THUNDARR
8:00 THE FLINTSTONES
8:30 THE SHIRT TALES
9:00 SMURFS
10:30 THE GARY COLEMAN
SHOW
11:00 FLASH GORDON.,-
11:30 SOUL TRAIN
AFTERNOON
12:30 EBONY -JET CELEBRITY
SHOWCASE
1:00 BIONIC WOMAN
2:00 "ROLL, FREDDY, ROLL"
Tim Conway, Jan Murray
3:30 "A MAN CALLED SLEDGE"
James Garner, Dennis Weaver
5:00 SHA NA NA
5:30 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 HEE;HAW
7:30 BJ/LOBO
8:00 DIFF'RENT STROKES
8:30 SILVER SPOONS
9:00 QUINCY
10:00 MONITOR
11:00 NEWS
11:30 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
1:00 BENNY HILL
1:30 "WHITE LINE FEVER" Jan -
Michael Vincent, Kay Lenz
SUNDAY, JULY 24, 1983
MORNING
6:45 DAVEY AND GOLIATH
7:00 OPEN CAMERA
7:30 IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
8:00 DAY OF DISCOVERY
8:30 REX HUMBARD
9:00 ORAL ROBERTS
9:30 SUNDAY MASS
10:00 THE ADDAMS FAMILY
10:30 THE MUNSTERS
11:00 "POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL"
Shirley Temple, Alice Faye
AFTERNOON
12:30 MEET THE PRESS
1:00 OPEN CAMERA
1:30 "THE CADDY" Dean Mar-
tin, Jerry Lewis
3:00 THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL
3:30 DETROIT TIGER PRE -GAME
-- 4-0'I tr i SEB Li
EVENING
6:30 NEWS
7:00 VOYAGERS!
8:00 CHiPS
9:00 MOVIE: "GOIN' SOUTH"
Jack Nicholson, Mary Steen-
burgen
11:00 NEWS
11:30 "HUSTLE" Burt Reynolds,
Catherine Deneuve
MONDAY, JULY 25, 1983
DAYTIME MOVIES
4:00 "MACON COUNTY LINE"
Jesse and Alan Vint, Max Baer
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7:00 P.M. MAGAZINE
7:30 THREE'S COMPANY
8:00 LOVE, SIDNEY
8:30 FAMILY TIES
9:00 "THE PRISONER OF ZEN -
DA" Peter Sellers, Lynne
Frederick
11:00 NEWS
11:30 THE BEST OF CARSON
12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN
1:30 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
2:30 SIX MILLION DOLLAR
MAN
3:30 "MYSTERIES FROM
BEYOND EARTH"
TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1983
DAYTIME MOVIES
4:00 "A SMALL TOWN IN TEX-
AS" Timothy Bottoms, Susan
George
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7:00 P.M. MAGAZINE
7:30 THREE'S COMPANY
8:00 THE A -TEAM
9:00 REMINGTON STEELE
10:00 ST, ELSEWHERE •
11:00 NEWS
11:30 TONIGHT
12:30 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN
1:30 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
2:30 BIONIC WOMAN
3:30 "THE SALZBURG CONNEC-
TION- Barry Newman, Anna
Karina
Huron Farm f,
and Home News
�-H demonstration New layer flocks cut
competition The Ontario Egg Pro -
Are you busy ono Monday, ducers' Marketing Board
July 25? If not, drop by the passed a regulation at their
Central Huron Secondary July meeting stipulating that
School at 8 p.m. for a free new unregulated flocks have
evening of educational enter- been reduced from 500 to 100
tainment being provided by birds.
several Huron County 4-H Producers with 500 birds
Clubs. They will be perform- or less in production prior to
ing demonstrations that July 5, 1983, are exempt. The
educate, inform, entertain pew producer who did not
and promote 4-H. have hens in production
It is an excellent oppor- prior to July 5, 1983, is
tunity to see what skills the limited to 100 birds.
4 - H members have To increase flock size, pro -
developed and what they are ducers are allowed to pur-
learning in their 4-H clubs. chase quota from other
Judges will select the best registered producers.
demonstration which will Quotas are transferred
represent Huron County in a through the Ontario Egg
Regional Competition on Ju- Producers' Marketing Board
ly 28 in Street
Also, youStratford. will have an op- Willowdaleat5799 , OntarioYonge,
portunity to meet with the 3V3 or phone 416-223.5330.
Saskatchewan 4-11 exchange The OEPMB or your local
delegates who will be agricultural office can
visiting Huron County from answer questions on the
July 19-26. change ill poli
John Bancroft, Pa$ ,
Rural Organizations Farm enlent,
Specialist. list.