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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1977-02-24, Page 22PAGE 4A--GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, '1977 • TV Chenuel 5 - Saginaw w Stile for Febnaery -24 to March 2 (Exclusive to Signal -Star Publishing) MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28 AFTERNOON 4:00 STUDIO FIVE: "ALL IN A NIGHT'S WORK" Dean Martin, Shirley MacLaine - When a tycoon dies under mysterious circumstances, his nephew inherits the empire and the headaches surrounding the demise. MORNINGS _MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 1:00 - TODAY SHOW 7:3C - TODAY SHOW 9:00 - IRONSIDE 10:00 - SANFORD AND SON 10:30 = HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 11:00 - WHEEL OF FORTUNE 11:30 - THE STUMPERS 12:00 - NEWS MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAYS AFTERNOON 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 1:00 THE GONG SHOW 1:30 DAYS OF OUR LIVES 2:30 THE DOCTORS 3:00 ANOTHER WORLD THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24 AFTERNOONS 4:00 STUDIO FIVE: "ROUSTABOUT" Elvis Presley, Barbara Stanwyck - A roving, reckless singer joins a carnival and romances the owner's daughter. EVENING P.m. 6:00 NEWS 6:30 N.B.C. NEWS 7.:00 ADAM - 12 7:30 MICHIGAN STATE LOTTERY SHOW 8:00 TEN WHO DARED - Episode Seven"- HENRY MORTOI'STANLEY - Stanley's epic 999 -day journey, begun in 1874, travelling the length of the Congo to prove it was not the River Nile, He drove his expedition through all opposition, and at the end he was the only white man left alive. 9:00 BEST SELLERS "7TH AVENUE" (Episode 3) 11:00 NEWS _ 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW 1:00 TOMORROW FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25 AFTERNOONS 4:00 STUDIO FIVE: "FOLLOW THAT DREAM" Elvis Presley, Arthur O'Connell - Southern family tries to homestead a piece of unclaimed land alongside a busy Florida highway. EVENING 6:00 NEWS 6:30 N.B.C. NEWS 7:00 THE GONG SHOW 7:30 THE MUPPETS 8:00 SANFORD AND SON 8:3Q CHICO AND THE MAN 9:00 ROCKFORD FILES 10:00 QUINCY 11:00 NEWS I 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26 { MORNING 7:00 LAND OF THE LOST 1' 7:30 - MUGGSY 8:00 - WOODY WOODPECKER SHOW 8:30 - PINK PANTHER } 10:00 SPEED BUGGY i 10:30 MONSTER SQUAD f 11:00 SPACE GHOST—FRANKENSTEIN JR. % 11:30 HOT FUDGE 12:00 SOUL TRAIN } AFTERNOONS % 1:00 SCIENCE -FICTION ADVENTURE THEATRE: "BENEATH THE PLANET OF THE APES" '70 James Franciscus, Kim Hunter - Astronaut is sent to find his fellow astronauts on the site of New York -2,000 years after it is destroyed by an atomic blast. tl He stumbles on an underground society of mutated 7 aliens who worship the atomic bomb. • t 2:30 THE UNDERSEA WORLD OF JACQUES COUSTEAU NO. 3 "WHALES" - Scientific ad- venture depicting the romance and splendor of the clargest sea mammals in the world. t! 3:30 FANTASTIC"JOURNEY: "CHILDREN OF THE GODS" 4:30 - WILD KINGDOM 5:00 - CANDID CAMERA t 5:30 - ANDY WILLIAMS SHOW EVENING t 6:00 NEWS 6:30 HEE HAW }; _ 7:30 BOBBY VINTON SHOW 8:00 NBC SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES: t "THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT" Doug Mc- ; Clure, John McEnery 10:00 T.B.A. 11:00 NEWS t 11:30 MILLION DOLLAR MOVIE: "ONE HUNDRED i RIFLES" Raquel Welch, Jim Brown, Burt Reynolds - An Indian bank robber, an American I Negro lawman and a female Mexican revolutionary join forces to help save the Mexican Indians from % annihilation by a despotic military governor. 1:00 FIVE STAR THEATRE: "CISCO PIKE" Gene ( Hackman, Karen Black, Kris Kristofferson '71 - Ex- recording star, released from jail for dealing in drugs, returns to his girl friend and promises to turn I over a new leaf. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27 % MORNING 6:45 - DAVEY AND GOLIATH %7:00 - OPEN CAMERA _7:30 CARTOON CARNIVAL 8:00 - REX HUMBARD 9:00 - ORAL ROBERTS } 9:30 - TELEVISED MASS 110:00 ABBOTT AND COSTELLO 11:30 DAKTARI 1! AFTERNOON t12:30 THE LONE RANGER 2:00 MEET THE PRESS 2:30 MOVIE: "THE RUNAWAYS" Dorothy McGuire '75 - A teenaged boy runs away from home; a young leopard escapes from an animal compound. The j two fugitives cross paths and their mutual need j creates a strong bond. ( 4:00 SUNDAY SPECTACULAR: "THE CROWDED 1 E11SKY" Dana Andrews, Rhonda Fleming '60 - A jet liner and a navy plane are bound, for a fateful collision. , EVNING 6: - NEWS 8: WILD, WILD WORLD OF ANIMALS 7:00 DISNEY "THE STRONGEST MAN IN THE WORLD" 9:00 THE BIG EVENT: "IN THE GLITTER PALACE" Chad Everett NBC 11 :00' NEW,,,$ 11:30 _CINEMA FIVE: "MURDERER'S ROW" Dean Martin, Ann -Margaret, Karl Malden - Fortner Counter -espionage agent is summoned from his life of i (YieneN to rescue a renowned sCientiat from ... ..._..�..,.._... Si 1 t EVENING 6:00 NEWS 6:30 N.B.C. NEWS 7:00 ADAM -12 7:30 BEWITCHED 8:00 NBC DOUBLE—FEATURE MOVIE: "BIGFOOT, THE MYSTERIOUS MONSTER" (8- 9:30) "THE STRANGE POSSESSIONS OF MRS. OLIVER" (9:30-11:00) 11:00 NEWS 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW TUESDAY, MARCH 1 AFTERNOON 4:00 MOVIE: "WHO'S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED" Dean Martin, Elizabeth Montgomery '63 - Handsome doctor hero of a TV series, constantly pursued by women fans, goes to a psychiatrist for help. EVENING, 6:00 NEWS 6:30 N.B.C. NEWS 7:00 ADAM - 12 7:30 BEWITCHED 8:00 BAA, BAA BLACK SHEEP 9:00 POLICE WOMAN 10:00 - POLICE STORY 11:00 - NEWS 11:30- TONIGHT SHOW WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2 AFTERNOON 4:00 STUDIO FIVE: "FIVE CARD STUD" Dean Martin, Robert Mitchum '68 - Professional gambler gets involved in a crooked poker game and is unable to prevent the other players from lynching the cheat EVENING 6:00 - NEWS 7:00 - ADAM - 12 7:30 - BEWITCHED 8:00 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF GRIZZLY ADAMS 9:00 C.P.O. SHARKEY 9:30 McLEAN STEVENSON SHOW 10:00 DEAN MARTIN CELEBRITY ROAS1 11:00 NEWS 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW 1:00 TOMORROW rr Sl IS? tl Llik .33,...._..�..,..,..�..�..,..�.._..�..�..._.._..�..r..�..,..,...�..�..,...-tel See news happening? Call The SIGNAL -STAR' 524-8331 MAYJTAG • AUTOMATIC WASHERS & DRYERS • PORTABLE WASHERS & DRYERS • WRINGER WASHERS • PORTABLE & BUILT-IN DISHWASHER • IN SINK- FOOD WASTE DISPOSERS From the Dependability People at:- HUTCHINSON APPLIANCES TRADE INS ACCEPTED 308 HURON RD. 524-7831 Hanover Holiday Tours Ltd. FLORIDA CIRCLE - 15 days, departs March 12. Visit Silver Springs, Cypress Gardens, St. Petes, Fort Lauderdale, Or- mond Beach, Disney World. DELUXE FLORIDA CIRCLE - 15 or 21 days, departs March 5. Includes Washington, Myrtle Beach, Jekyll Island, Cypress Gardens, St. Petes, Sarasota, Fort Lauderdale. ORMOND BEACH, FLORIDA - 15 or 21 days, departs March 5. By coach to Florida; air or coach home. Efficiency units available. TEXAS CIRCLE - 21 days, departs Feb. 26. Includes Dallas, San Antonio, L.B.J. Ranch, Padre Island, King Ranch Houston, Galveston. MID-TERM TOURS MID-TERM TEXAS - by air, depart March 19, 8 days. See Houston a Galveston MID-TERM ORMOND BEACH - by motorcoach - departs March 18, 9 days. MID-TERM FORT LAUDERDALE - by air - departs March 19, 9 days. MID-TERM ORMOND BEACH - by air - Departs March 19, 9 days, 2 flights to choose from. MID-TERM ORLANDO - by air - Departs March 19, 7 days. CALIFORNIA ARIZONA - NEVADA - CALIFORNIA - 15 days, departs April 16, 1977. Includes Phoenix, Grand Canyon, Las Vegas, 'Sand Diego, Hollywood, Monterey a San Francisco. By air. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: HANOVER TRAVEL SERVICE 290 - 10th Street Hanover 364-3270 or 1-800-265-3007 (toll free in 519 area/ OWEN SOUND TRAVEL SERVICE it, „ - 8th Street East OwenSound 371-0310 (Coifed) COACH. HOUSE TRAVEL SERVICE 39 Hamif eel Street f 4' While most drivers in Huron County had to contend with mounds of snow during this winter few faced the miles of blocked roads that Robert Machan of Blyth did. Mr. Machan operates a huge Michigan loader owned by Rad - ford Construction of Blyth and was busy last week o this mile and a quarter stretch of road in Colborne ship. (Staff -photo) - Rural Learning Assp. hears of Hur�n county's land use pi Ontario's urgent land use problems were attacked this week at a seminar sponsored by the Rural Learning Association at Geneva Park, Orillia. Participants from farm organizations, co- operatives, the Consumers Association of Canada, Indian bands, several universities, municipal councils and the provincial governmen,-- shared their concerns and identified ways to promote more effective land use in the province. The preservation of prime agricultural land was iden- tified as the first essential. Government announcement of a freeze on 3,000 acres of prime fruitland in the Niagara peninsula was received by delegates as "a step in the right direction." The new planning guidelines were also viewed as a positive tool for putting Ontario's most valuable natural resource to its best use. Dr. E.G. Pleva of the department of geography, University of Western Ontario, had already warned seminar participants that the disappearance of good agricultural land in Ontario was reaching crisis proportions. Good local planning, and a broad provincial land use plan, are needed to keep a proper balance between the demands for growth and the need to protect people's rights. Delegates challenged the government and the op- position - parties for more leadership in the land use problem ' in a free -wheeling session with Bob Eaton, Middlesex, parliamentary assistant to the minister of agriculture, and the agriculture critics of the opposition parties, Donald C. MacDonald (NDP - East York), and Jack Riddell (Lib. - Huron -Middlesex). Eaton said the government --"had confidence in local planning boards, and was strongly committed to land use policies that enabled the agricultural community to survive. MacDonald criticized the government for not going far enough to protect prime foodlands. He said such lands should be reserved for agricultural use, with decisions made at the local level within a policy framework created by the province. Riddell said the Liberals oppose a blanket land freeze policy, but want urban and industrial growth steered away from class 1 and 2 farmland. The party also advocates a pool to com- pensate farmers for keeping farmland in production in areas of urban sprawl where developers offer thousands of dollars an acre more than the agricultural value of the land. Spokesmen for O-ntario's three farm organizations also discussed their land use policies. Bill Benson of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture said that delegates to the OFA annual meeting had not abandoned their land use policy - to preserve farmlands - but -decided their emphasis should -.;bei. on .,saving the farmer.;,. When agriculture provides a decent return, you can keep -farm families on their land, and keep the land producing food for everyone, he emphasized. Elbert van Donkersgoed of the Christian Farmers Federation . criticized the agriculture code of practice, which he said was basically designed to make it possible for urban people to move into agricultural areas. He said there ' were important decisions to be made on the land to be preserved, and who should bear the cost. His own °members, he commented; were dedicated farmers, and if they were squeezed out of farms in one area, they were likely to relocate in another, even though farmi might be higher. Joe, Casey of the Farmers' Union to meeting that preser the family farm unit organization's prime cern, and developmen be public planned for of the whole commune A graphic descri how land use planning implemented- at the level was provided b Davidson, director o ning for Huron county years, Huron has deve county -wide plan for _and organized deve of its agricultural, mercial and recre resources, The right municipalities to reta independent control respected, he warned. Doug Hoffman, di the centre for re development at University of G described the land up in British Columb other measures to Prince Edward 1 Alberta and Saskatche examples of the concern -for the prese of land for its best use. Clarence Rau atten representatives from Twp. " Mark {The Sind) Fidroo'kile -pitch sensation' of 'the Detroit tigers; stralghtens Steven " rnmy" Fitz- • patrick's tie at, the recent Sporti Celebrities Dinner in Toronto . Watching is one -legged athlete Arnold Boldt whose 6' IW' hilgh 16. won him a gold medal at last <• year's Olympiad;' ine'Disabled` :, a feat that lm - pressed both limey'.'dilul ';Tidrych, Organized by the Ontario Sportswriter's and Sportscasters Association, • over the "pant 26 years these diiilners have raised more than half a' rryilliarr' a�olldlrs frir Tlmmy''and his friends. In addition to introduclngl'lmniy as good will, ambassador.. for physically haPltllcapped yOun i's, the dinner helps \1�op, p,;feoecas tortlic nfing Easter Seal - l whe t February 2Sth and runs until Easter Sunday, A�' I lid. �H' e�tt„ e Ortitlrzlo l�ocietyis for m C`r cilftalire'rr s x g` fold if ' it tib ,11 • i fly Q. What are the requirements regarding keeping my business records after'I-have filed my income tax return? A. Records must be kept until, written permission to destroy them is received from the Taxation department. This would involve writing to your District Taxation Office stating what records you wish to destroy, the years in- volved, and your reason for wishing to destroy them. Q. I am employed in the U.S.A. What information do I file with Revenue Canada, Taxation when claiming a foreign tax credit? A. For a commuter to the U.S.A., you need, along with your Canadian tax -return, copies of yaitf%' 1040NR or 1040, W-2, and City and State tax returns, and proof of foreign taxes paid above the amount withheld at source. Q. I rent the top floor in my house. What expenses can I claim? A. Schedule 7 of your Income Tax Return package outlines some of the allowable ex- penses, You Must first in- clude the att't antof rent. you receive,:, a1 nd then yott rimy ; claire e»expenses yo rat:;! the building as a whole. taxes, insurance) ma be claimed in the p that the rented part is whole building. See i 14 and 15 of your 19 Guide for'further deal Q. I operate a restau buy fish directly f fisherman. Am I req deduct ,and remit ployment Insur premiums on his beh A. A fisherman is surable for any sale of sells directly to resta ;Therefore, no emplo employer premia required. Q. flow do you determ earnings from which buyer will establish surable earnings of a owner, for purpo calculating his " ployment Inso premiums? A. The earnings fisherman who owns or gear used in m catch and who is a m the crew, is . for considered to be the of, ,returns of Arnoualts lilt B of t„ f X11 K1 ult. KI The A mpi non 1