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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1983-02-02, Page 18Page 6 -Crossroads -Feb. 2, 1983 96 below in Siberia Residents of Oymyakon, Siberia, claim that their vil- lage is the coldest perma- nently inhabited place in the world. In 1964 they recorded a low of 96 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. dime itSp Hot Tubs 8Spas Inc. Buildh g tubs for 109 Years ROUND AND OVAL SHAPES HEALTHY SOCIABLE RELAXING also Whirlpool Bath Tubs From $1 295.00 Kitchener Showroom - 408 Gage St. (Largest Showroom in the area) LprER Loo I{ITCHENE f To 6erELPN OPEN 6 DAYS MON.-SAT 9:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. Call 746-1651or Toll Free 1-800-265-6335 - your baby's growing. up... From first step to first day of school, remember the special limes with professional por- traits taken regu- larly al Sears. 3-5x7 895 includes 15 -wallet size total 950 deposit Sears studios specialize in photographic portraits of • - babies, children. adults and family groups., No appointment is necessary. There is a 95C charge for each additional subject in a portrait package, but no limit to the number of packages' you may purchase. We present only finished portraits of the best poses. Offer good for portraits taken through Saturday, February 5 Studios In most larger Sears retail stores. Portrait Studio BABIES • CHILDREN • ADULTS • FAMILY GROUPS Also Available: Instant Passport Photos your money's Worth . , . and more Sears • • ,R•p, , t• 0 0 •a • 0 T I-tLt rs S I-ICW 111 • • a`o _. a s *lig 00000•� 0 *0 070ft 00.0. Halfway through its s' week run, "Empire, Inc." i becoming one of. the mos ambitious and exciting projects the CBC an National Film Board ha ever undertaken. This stu - of the rich and powerful i Montreal and Ottawa before during and after the war years, is a contrast m per sone lit les, motives and desires. We learn what makes these people tick and what they will do to obtain what they want. We also learn how to achieve basic happiness, wealth and material possessions providing small comfort for a man who has shut his loved ones out of his life. The man who ties this entire story together for us is James Munroe, played magnificently by Kenneth Welsh. In the first episode, he is only a rich man, James Munroe. But Welsh has helped this character, grow and mature and develop to the point where he is such a complex human being and multi -faceted personality that your feelings about him encompass the entire spectrum. Though one minute you despise him, you may feel sympathy and even affection for him the next. He's losing his children before your very eyes. When he tries to help them, it is with the impersonal, businesslike approach he uses with a corporation because the man has never learned to deal with other people on a human level. When daughter Amy becomes involved in a pro - Nazi organization, however, he resigns a. high political position and this is a revelation - - he actually is willing' to sacrifice something for someone else. When she returns to the home fires, you expect her to be banished but no, he welcomes her with open arms. The man has learned something about love and forgiveness - - but how long will it last? • ' . - Kenneth Welsh . was per:. forming • On -the Broadway stage in the play based on the life of Edith Piaf, when producer Mark Blandford went to New York to test him for the role of James Munroe. A few days later, he was told he had the job. He was excited about winning the part, but also intimidated by, such a huge commitment. He was impressed by the multi -sided Munroe and most moved by his fighting spirit. "He presents a great example to people, because no matter how hard the economic times, Munroe m- survived," Welsh says. s Kenneth Welsh is a native t of Edmonton and has ap- peared in theatres around d the world. He has worked ve seven seasons at .the stud • Stratford Festival, done • several CBC dramas and starred in some feature films. New York is now home base when he's not working m seasonal theatre but while working on "Empire, Inc." in Montreal for nine months, he grew to love the city and would like to have a home there. Welsh admits to feeling sad when the filming ended and says it was very hard to walk away from James Munroe. "Munroe per- meated my life while I was doing it," he explains, "and when it was over, I was a wreck." Since finishing "Empire,Inc." in August, he has appeared in another CBC drama, made a film in Canada and went to Israel in December to appear in a film there.' Next week a look at some of the fantastic supporting players who make Welsh's job easier. ONTARIO FARM ASSISTANCE PROGRAM EXTENDED - r rr`__._ OFAAP/ 83 We've extended the Ontario Farm Adjustment Assistance Program into 1983 so we can help more farmers, Details available from your local Agricultural Representative or from OFAAP Ministry of Agriculture and Food Ministry of Agriculture and Food {� ��pp ONTARIO Queen's Park, Toronto, Cent, M7A 2B2 Dennis Timbre,' Minister imrelnister Your Ha ndwriti n g Tells BY DOROTHY ST. JOHN JACKSON Dear Dorothy: Our son is soon to be married. Our other two children are di- vorced, ,so I'm worried about .hen. I'm sending his writing and would like to know if he will be compati- ble with his wife. - L2. Dear L.Z.: It takes the writings of two persons to determine compatibility, 'just as it takes -two persons to marry. Graphoanalysis must take a good look at both sides before drawing up any hopeful happiness re- ports. Since I have only your • son's writing, I can tell you only about him. It is indi- cated that he was raised in a strictly disciplined envi- ronment. This causes a good deal of restraint in every area of his personali- ty, seen in the closely spaced letters. He's slow to give, emotionally and phys- ically. His feelings are very easily hurt by anything that, he might consider as •atvra0t�;wt�•wu ra.:.3rz",.i=<v> •.:i:-°. f�4f .a:5•.<+t. ;':'t^ There are things happen- ing in the television industry which are not only going to turn the industry upside down, but are going to niake a difference to the pictures Canadians get on their home screens. Much of the report- ing about what's happening has been confused because most of the principals are as confused as you are and neither the journalists nor the ticket -takers have access to the crystal ball. Some things are known. Pay TV will come to Canadians soon. But no one can say how long it will last. Three Pay TV services have been licensed and the cost to subscribers for all three of them could be as high as $40 a month. One of them will be a movie channel, primarily, and you'll be able to get that alone for about $16 a month. The movies that stick in my mind from the schedule that was released a few weeks back are "On Golden Pond" and "American Werewolf in London". They're hardly first run even now, and they'll be less so when Pay TV gets off the ground. Both have been available, uncut, on cassette from home video rental libraries. And I sus- pect they've both been seen uncut by anyone in this country who has 'put out the money for a dish antenna. Such movies cost you nothing but the annoyance of commercials on standard broadcast channels, and only $3.50 per night from the video libraries. How many of us, under the circumstances, are going to put out $16 a month for the dubious ad- vantage of having them re- peated over and over again on Pay TV? But the Pay TV licensees are not only look- ing over their shoulders at the competition I've just des- cribed, they're understand- ably unnerved by what is likely to come next. Namely, additional tiers of special interest channels made available by the cable com- panies, and for a good deal less than $40 or even $16 a month. As more and more Canadian homes are wired, the cable industry becomes stymied. The only way cable can grow is if it can sell new services and so the pressure is enormous. The CRTC is MOO 0000 MEM MOO mom MUM 0d0 DOOM MUOM MOO DD©OC19 M Orno . MVO Oof1n MOMM 000 mnno©n auris ORO MOM 00 1110 EEIDU MOUE ©uI f9ufti Oowfti MOM 0000 iiiOf`l OB00 BOOM MOM MOM OOMM MOO now : considering a cable application which would en- visage a new three -channel tier, which would be made available to subscribers for four or five dollars a `month. It might -include an all -news channel, as' i i �sporls efian- nel, an all iin' :, , ahlc? HlH-en-' tertainmedt -i hahnel. Clear- ly, the CRTC *ill beopposed to another tier of pro- gramming if "the content is going to be all-American. But it could well decide to go ahead with an all -news, all - sports, all -music tier if the content is primarily Cana- dian. We're running wild. That's not news but that too is reality. Cheetah hunters Men leve been hunting with cheetahs for centuries. Nearly 3,000 years ago, Egyptians and Assyrians trained them to hunt, and the practice continued until modern times. , disapproval or rejection of any kind, seen in the large t anidd loops. This gives him a helpless kind of feeling. The high point on the y, too, bares bis ' self-con- sciousness, which only adds to his feelings of inadequa- cy. ,. These two ego fears strongly influence his so- cial relationships. He's, reaching out for some kind of security, seen in the be- ginning hooks. So, in a quiet sort of way, he's demanding and wants C R O s S w 0 R D 5 ACROSS 1. gun by rope t Use the molars 8. Exchange 12. Ram's mate 13. Unusual 14. Window division 15. •= in, very tired 16. Verbal 17. Ceremony 18. Disembark 20. Dawdle 22. Movie immortal 24. Self-satisfied 25. Site of the Taj Mahal 26. "I haven't a thing to -!" 27. Spider's trap to be in command, seen in the slanted t crossings. This is a defense, and gives him a way of gaining a feeling of importance. If his wife has the strength to understand him as be really is and can help him build his self-esteem, she could win. If not, he could explode right in her hands. Marriage is always a gamble unless some diag- nostic tool, such as gra- phoanalysis, can probe the depths to detect the inner - person. • It's after all "impression • and co1npetition trips" cease that the "real" per- son comes to the surface. 30. Trevino and Marvin 81. Conclusion 32. Listen to 33. Do sums 34. Otherwise 35. "Born Free" lioness 86. Fable 37. - Wills Moody, tennis great 88. ,Inn; roadhouse 41. Fashion accessory 42. Persia 43. Heathen deity 45. Antique 48. Minus 49. Destination 50. 24 hours 51. Overdue 52. Villain's foe 53. Heats poem 1 12 2 ■ 3 4 5 ®�■■ 6 - 7 e 9 10 11 17 S■■. 1s ■. 16 s■20 ■■■ 22 25 ■■.� 19 �. 24 ■■. 21 ■■■� 25 ■.■■ 26 ■■.. 27 2e 29 DO ■'■a ill ■■■ 36 ■.® 37 ■■■■ 36 99 40 41 42 �.. 43 44 ■. 45 46 47 4e iRi 49 50 11 52 ■■i 5' Ra GOWN 1. Orange pekoe, for one 2. "Wise" bird 3. Genteel: hyph. wd. 4. Ugly old woman 5. Difpcult 6. Period in history 7. Skillfully constructed: hyph. wd. 8. Little twig 9. Cool one's heels 10. Poker stake 11. Equal 19. Woe is me! 21. Possessive pronoun 22. Festive 23. Old ' 24. Mother wit 26. Almost: hyph. wd. 27. Prosperous: 3 wde, 28. Facility 29. Grain husk 32. "Ritter" 34. Hearing organ 36. "Up -tight" 37. Hi! 38. Money drawer 39. Region 40. Extensive 41. Wild hog 44. Female deer 46. Boy 47. 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N2G 1 K6 YOUNGDRIVERS /zr OF CANADA Canada's Most Comprehensive Driver Training Course Your course fee is income tax deduct- ible and you may save up to 40% in insurance premiums by presenting our course certificate. MONDAY FEBRUARY 1 8:30-11:30 a.m. MON. thra TOURS. TUESDAY FEBRUARY 8 6:30-9:30 p.m. TUES. and TOURS. MONDAY FEBRUARY 28 6:30-9:30 MON. and WEB. For Information on next course phone • Kitchener Centre 579-4800 miiMm • Cambridge Centre 623-6730 • Waterloo Centre 579-4800 AP I O. the c or.x ertatct 323.1550 Let us sort out your office supply problems It's Coming .. . NEXT WEEK Facts about woodburning stoves. In No. 9 c -Burn dry and well -seasoned hardwood. Season wood prefer- ably a year to eighteen months. Woodburners who ignore tli ad- vice are likely to have dirty chimneys and inadequate heat from their stoves. Please feel free to contact any of the member companies listed below for your free copy of "Guide to Installation and Safety of Wood Stoves". 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NOK I WO, 1-519-527-0400 Mrs. Margaret Sharp West Wawanosh Mutual Fire Insurance Company Dungannon, Om. 1.519-529.7961 Bill Duncan ENTER THE KAWASAKI RED HOT SWEEPSTAKES 83' now arrivin CY-JO CYCLE 1190 Wallace Ave. N., 380 King St. N., Listowel, Ontario., Waterloo, Ontario. Nothing to buy. Get your entry form and details from us. 1ST PRIZE: YOU COULD WIN, ONE OF 3 - • KAWASAKI GPz 550s. Retail value approxi- mately $3699 each. Magazine after magazine has described the GPz 550 as the outstand- ing bike in its class. 2ND PRIZE: YOU COULD WIN 1 OF 10 CUSTOM LEATHER JACKETS BY TREEN. Racing champ Lang Hindle wears a custom- made Treen. So can you. Win one of these jackets, retail value up to $320.00, and 'Preen will custom -tailor it to you. 83's now arriving 3RD PRIZE: YOU COULD WIN 1 OF 40 SHOEI ER5 HELMETS. Irs worth approximately $139.95 retail. And Superbike racing cham- pion Rueben McMurter wears one. Shoei helmets are renowned for style and protection.