HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1984-07-04, Page 24f
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Open 9,5 PM Weather permitting
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DENfURE
THERAPY
_CLINIC
RICH 58 WEST Sl.
(Kitty corn!! to Polka Station)
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' Corporation of the
TOWN OF GODI.',.RICH
SECOND PUBLIC MEETING
RE: THE FUTURE OF TOURISM'
IN THE GODERICH AREA
The Town of Goderich invites , all interested residents.
businessmen or individuals concerned about tourism In the
Goderich area to a . Public Meeting scheduled for Wednesday,
July 11th, 1984 at 7:30 pem, at the MacKay Centre, 10 Nelson
Street East, GodeOch'. The Town hopes, from the Public Meeting,
to be able to determine the future direction of tourism as it
relates to Goderich and surrounding area.
Your input and comments are required in order to create a pian
for tourism promotion to meet the need of the area.
LARRY J. McCABE
Administrator
TOWN OF GODERICH
57 West Street
GODERICH, Ont. N7A 2K5
(519)524-8344
ft•••,„,-..
H.O. JERRY
(1983) LTD.
• 185 PARK STREET, GODERICH
PAPER & PLASTIC PRODUCTS FOR:
Weddings, Dances, Parties and Dinners,
gTlastic and Paper Plates, Cups, Knives,
orks, etc.
FOOD PRODUCTS BY:
Heinz, E.D. Smith, Kellogg Salado;
Ketchup, Tomato Juice, Pickles, Spices,
Drink Crystals, Jelly & Pudding Powders,
Tea, Coffee, etc.
CLEANING MATERIALS:
S.C. Johnson's waxes & other products for
home & industry, garbage bags all sizes.
ALUMINUM PRODUCTS:
Pans, rolled foil & sheets.
BATHROOM SUPPLIES:
Toilet tissue, paper towels, soaps &
,dispensers.
TELEPHONE:
524-2855 OR 524-4266
TOLL FREE
1-800-265-7043
HOURS: 8 AM -5 PM MONDAY TO FRIDAY
TREAT YOURSELF
Part-Time_anld Continuing Education
COIESTOGA COLLEGE
Summer School '84
July 16 - August 23,1984
Clinton Campus
Vanastra Rd., Clinton, Ontario. NOM 1LOTel. 482-3458
Most classes•start the week of July 16, 1984
REGISTER BY MAIL TO SAVE TIME-
,
�A-
‘41.!1".• 1-„1..2.11__ Ne_____. ---.1 __Ial!1?-
l�V`= �7T�j y�
Use theapplication/Registration Form 1'•t/'1/�.404101!
11;;;g
/���il'
on the bottom of this advertisementI1
or Your receipt will be mailed to you. !s•
4:A "%r'
REGISTER AT THE CLINTON CAMPUS- Commencing June 18, 1984 from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm
Monday to Friday and from 6:30 pm to 9:00 pm -
Tuesday and Thursday
SYSTEM OF
CLERICAL /SECRETARIAL
PROGRAMS
Typewriting
Tues. & Thurs. 1:30-4:30 p.m. 6 wks. July 17.
'27. Location: Wingham Farm Information
Centre OR
Mon. & Wed. 7:00-10.00 p.m. 6 wks. July 16.
'27 'Locatign: Bayfield Town Offices.
Note: More than one semester may be
required to complete the course. Persons
Interested in taking this course should phone
the campus and have their name put on the
wa_ i� list.
COMPUTER LITERACY
eetellEIM
Computer Literacy For The Office
Tues. & Thurs. 700-1000 p.m. 6 wks. July 17.
'46 Room' 6
Fee includes '10.00 surcharge.
Note: Persons interested in taking this course
should telephone the campus to have their
name added to the waiting list.
COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
Data Processing Concepts
Tues. 8 Thurs 9'00 a.m.-12 noon. 6 wks.
July 17. '36. Room: 4
Note: The scheduled time provides for some
hands on experience on terminal;.
Persons interested in taking this course should
telephone the campus to hove' their name
added to the waiting list
TREAT
YOURSELF
CUT OUT APPLICATION/
REGISTRATION FORM AND
MAIL IN TODAY! •
TECHNICAL
Woodworking For Women
Tues. & Thurs. 6:30-10:00 p.m
'84. location: Seaforth
Carpentry Shop, 38 Railway St.
Fee includes '10 for consumable supplies.
Students purchase their own materials.
6 wks.
July 17.
DESIGN AND FASHION
Introduction To Crochet
Tues. 8 Thurs, 7:00-9:30 p.m. 3 wks. July 17.
'26. Room: 2.
IQQQ PREPARATION
Cake Decorating
Tues. 8. Thurs. 9:00 a.m.1 noon. 4 wks.
July 17.'44. Location Bayfield Town Offices.
Fee includes '6. for supplies.
Chocolate Making Workshop
Wed. 9:00 a.m.-1200 noon. 1 wk. July 18. '8
Location Bayfield Town•Offices OR
Wed. 9:00 a.m.-12:00 noon 1 wk: July 24 '8
Room 2.
Fee includes '2. for demonstration supplies.
r®adzanea®e®age=brzybelega
ARTS AND CRAFTS
Flower Arranging And Design
Tues. & Thurs. 7:30-10:00 p.m. 4 wks. July 17.
'20. Location: Blyth Public School.
Note: There -will be' an additional charge of
approximately '10. per week for flowers and
supplies.
CARDIOPULMONARY
RESUSCITATION (C.P.R.)
Basic Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
(C.P.R.)
Tues. 8 Thurs. 7:00-10:00 p.m. 2 wks. July 17.
'16. Room 4.
Fee includes '4. for texts.
Note: Applicants are required to complete a
brief questionnaire irrdicating medical
condition.
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Re -Cern ication (C.P.R.)
PersoTts who wish to be re -certified should
telephon the Continuing Education Office at
482-3458 between the hours of 1200 noon and
8:00 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday.
Application/Registration Form
PLEASE PRINT ALL INFORMATION
Return form lathe Campus offering the course.
We would appreciate a separate cheque for each course.
"esaCol
C° Awl. Arts lege
and Technology
Campus:
NOTE' THIS IS NOT A RECEIPT.
I~
Course:. •
-
Spacdy your cho,ce of time slot if
mors Mad one Class 9s adoen'sed on
tine same day'
Name:
Oay: Starts
Last name
F,rst name
Address:
AO7 rte.
City:
Postal
Code:
Sex Male 0
Female 0
No and Steed?
Employer
Residence
Telephone
Business
Telephone:
PLEASE CHECK ONE (a) I am under 19 and have sucedastully completed Grade 12 ❑ (c) I am a Senior Citizen I Age 60 and over) 0
OF THE FOLLOWING: 4b7 I am under 19 and have not successfully completed Grade 120 (0)1 am over t9 end em 1101 a Senor C,titen0
MOW 010 YOU FIND OUT ABOUT SUMMER SCHOOL '84.
Radio
Newspaper
Catalogue
Friend
Other Vaasa spec I(y)
Ct oque or Money .
Order enclosed for 5(full cole
urse e) payable to Conestoga College We do not accept post -dared cheques.
ffegotralmn Is homed to Canada,. COO rens 009/0, ,andOd ,mm,graQ to unfmla edit nl porraf.as,en nal Oman granted by Employment Ind •mm.gral.on _
Canada You may apply fora prorated rotund O,'Ore Me end of 1047 '.rd 1.erwh fed clad! Fa add,upnel tnlormehon pease .oro. 10 tum ttetuno
amcf,On .n Ins frpn1 01 lad Ia0,o.0 WO do 004 accept reg,ltrattonl 0r resery4 ,paces over Ila veoeh000
Applicant's Signature'
Date:
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World premiereis exceilent poIuc
,,,
Pt
consistently vVlth such gh Il1T Yp '
sitter yelastr chllafthe,l redit'for lsg iso
founding artistic director ac,,,, y
THEATREJanet.
his successor Amos , _ Who have--
_limissEwitagm. committed themselvestlfe development
of new Canadian materia. This material, In' -
tflrn, .has- not let anyone downs
SPIDER will run at the Elly* Festival in
repertory until August 160• Do yourself a
favour and don't miss it!
BY JOANNE'BUCHANAN
Brian Tremblay has a bright future as a
playwright if A SPIDER IN THE HOUSE is
any indication of the calibre of his work yet
to come.
SPIDER had its .world premiere on the.
Blyth Festival stage June 26 and proved to
be a production of excellent quality from
start to.finish.
The plot carefully interweaves the,lives of
a Victorian -era family with the life of a
maderneday writer. The device which
makes it all work is the setting, a house that
has been preserved as It was in 1915.
It is.a tribute to Tremblay's writing skills,
Kim. McCaw's directing skills and the
talents of the cast, that the transitions back
and forth from 1984 to 1915 are made so
smoothly and so realistically.
When Clair Meredith (Mary Ann Coles)
retreats to an old house in the country to
concentrate on a moviescript she is writing,
she becomes drawn into the past through
letters and a diary she finds. there. The
,house may not have running water or
electricity but it is alive with the spirits of its
very first inhabitants, the Preston family.
The family consists of three women, the
elderly Sarah (Beth Amos) , and her two'
nieces, Ellen (Laurel Paetz) who awaits the
return of her soldier husband from Worldp-
War I and 16 -year-old Anna (Janet Land)
whose emotional development has stopped
at the age of eight following a tragic fire.
•
. When Robert Darsay (Gerald Lenton) is
hired as Anna's tutor, more tragic events
unfold for the Preston family. But to go into
detail here would spoil the mystery for those
who have not yet seen the play.
Besides the elements of mystery and
tragedy, the play also has humor. The
humorous moments are mostly provided by
Clair's boyfriend Alan (Andrew Martin
Thomson) and her agent friend Val (Jenny
Munday),`two modern-day people who do
not have the same insight into the past as
she does.
Except for Mary Ann Coles and meth
ArnOS, all the actors in SPIDER are
newcomers to the Blyth stage. And what
welcome additions they have proven to be!
Audiences can look forward to seeing each
of them again in two more Blyth productions
this year.
Set designer Gwen Keatley has done a
marvelous job in creating a room that is
filled with plants and antiques yet remains
spacious and airy at the same time.
One would be hard-pressed to find any
flaws with this production which will also' be
staged at the Kawartha Festival in Lindsay
later this summer, with playwright
Tremblay and his actress -wife Judith
Goodwin portraying two of the characters.
Leave it to the Blyth Festival to produce
two original plays which are, so radically
different from one another yet so equally'
enjoyable as GARRISON'S GARAGE and A
SPIDER IN THE HOTJSE; Area audiences
are indeedianiong the most.fortunateln the
country in their selection of such
entertainment.
'it is, amazing that Blyth can keep coming
In this scene from A SPIDER IN THE HOUSE which premiered at the Blyth Festival on
June 26, Robert Darsay (played by Gerald Lenton) warns Anna Preston (Janet Land) about
the dangers of poison mushrooms.
Sleuth opens at Playhouse July 3
SLEUTH is one of the world's great detec-
tive thrillers. It is so filled with ingenious
skulduggery, skillful suspense and inventive
tricks that it provides great fun for all fic-
tional crime addicts.
SLEUTH is set in a stately old English
manor house owned by Andrew Wyke
(played by Tony Lloyd), a writer of detec-
tive stories. Wyke is estranged from his
wife, a• lady of expensive tastes. and healthy
appetites. She has a
named Milo Tindle (played by Larry clever solver of riddles. Is there a murder?
Aubrey). One evening, Wyke invites Milo Was there a murder? Will there be a
over for a few drinks and some very civiliz- murder? And, if so, who is doing what to
ed banter. He also tells Milo that he knows of whom?
the affair and, rather than being annoyed,
. he is willing to let the lovers be and, in fact, For connoisseurs of suspense, SLEUTH
has a splendid idea that would profit them opens at. Huron Country Playhouse July 3
all. and runs through to July 14. Tickets are now
And so begins an evening of pranks and on sale at the HCP box office and the usual
puzzles which slowly reveal a diabolically outlets in Sarnia, Exeter and Strathroy.
lover, a travel agent convoluted plot that defies even the most
Musicians featured at the Blyth Inn
Mose Scarlett, well-known jazz and blues
musician, describes his music as "songs of
the broken -,bearted, goodtime songs, old-
time favourites, obscure tunes, ditties and.
trivia". Mose kicked off the new joint ven-
ture between the Blyth Inn and 'the Blyth
Festival -Music at the Blyth Inn.
On Thursday evenings, Festival theatre
goers are invited to arrive well before cur-
tain time and stay after the performance to
take\ in the music being performed in the
dining roomof the Blyth Inn. The first ses-
sions are from 7 - 7:45 pm; the second ses-
sions start after the play, at around 10:30
Pm -
The line-up for the next few weeks is: July
5, Richard Knechtel (country, folk and
bluegrass); July 12, Michael O'Kelly and
Kelly Mullen (Irish jigs and reels); July 19,
Bob Burchill (country, folk, and rock and
roll).
Come and spend an entire evening of
music and theatre in Blyth. There is no
cover charge forMusic at the Blyth Inn and
no reservations possible (except for din-
ner).
Tickets for the theatre are $8, available
from the box office, (519) 523-9300 or 523-
9225.
Magician will entertain at Playhouse
Brian Glow, Canada's foremost magician,
will be featured in tw J very special, very
spectacular children's shows at Huron
Country Playhouse on July 10 at 11 a.m. and
'
Daring escapes, puzzling sleight-of-hand,
incredible illusions and delightful comedy
will entertain everyone in attendance. In a
unique blend of magical activities, Brian
guides his audience into the realm of the
mysterious, accompanied by a mixture of
wonder and suspense.
Brian has appeared across both Canada
and the United States as well as in Greece,
Africa, Great Britain and most of the coun-
tries of continental Western Europe. He is
recognized in magicians' circles as an in-
novator and creator of new illusions. He has
also created special theatre „effects at
Manitoba Theatre Centre and iS a magic
consultant for the National Film Board. _
Brian Glow's mind-boggling enter-
tainments are specially designed to
mesmerize the whole family, Tickets are
now on sale at Huron Country Playhouse
and at regular HCP outlets in Sarnia, Ex-
eter and Strathroy.
More to Eurhythmics than meets the eye
By Janet Tench
When Boy George and his variegated
dress came to North America, everyone
asked "Who's that girl?", to which, he
replied in Karma Chameleon "I'm a man".
Great shock! (But notice he's on all the
magazine covers? )
The musical answer to this is the co -writer
of Who's That Girl, Annie Lennox, who con-
vinced many people at the Grammy's that
she was a man.
Now she's on the magazine covers So go
the '80s.
However, there is much more to The
Eurhythmics than meets the eye. Annie
Lennox and Dave Stewart, while having
controversial personas, have a magical
musical fusion when they Work together.
Annie's voice is incredible - it's rich, it's
Aribrant' and'str01�a v feminine. - _.--. -._- _
,Dave does all the Instrumenl.s, not to men-
tion production. Their music is intriguing
and explorative, danceable and appealing.
Take for example Here Comes the Rain -
Again; there is the elusive feel of rain about
this song. Who's That Girl has something
medieval in its rpusic. Furthermore, there
is a vast difference between their second
album, Sweet Dreams, (their first album
was In the Garden, which was not released
in the U.S-) and Touch. The latter has blues,
punk, rhflmba, jazz, soul and any other
labels you want to put on these leaders for
the New Music. ,
The Eurythmics (the word means free-
style rhythmic body movements to music)
now have their own recording studio, bought
with revenue from Sweet Dreams. (An in-
teresting fact about the album is that it only
cost $700 to produce. It is debatably the most
-ine'xpellsivp oibilm.to 1 aC the Tep 40). -
The 24 -track studio is in a 16th century
church; complete with rooms designed for
filmingviEeos.
Beneficially for the music industry, the
Eurythmics are more than just a flash in the
pan. They're still feeling out their sound
(they do not seem overly concerned with
lyrics) .
The more you experiment the more you •
discover," said Annie. "We've tried to take
some of the energy that came out of the,
punk '!movement, the sweetness from soul
music, and the alienation of European syn-
thetic mechanical rhythms and blend it
together into Eurythmics music."
No matter whether she resembles Blondie
(she has a wig) or Bowie, Annie Lennox of
the innovative Eurythmics will continue to
be visible and audible in the future. Sweet
Dreams Rating: 7112. Touch Rating: 9.
17
J
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