HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1983-03-02, Page 28Crossroads—March 2, 1983—Page 15
3...CKVR BARRIE
4...WIVB BUFFALO
4C...WGN CHICAG *'
Movies on Channel 13
. 5..•CBC TORONTO
6...GLOBAL TORONTO
7.<.WKBW BUFFALO
8.•.CKNX WINGHAM
THURSDAY MIDNIGHT—"°CHARLIE AND THE GREAT
BALLOON RACE Stars Jack Albertson, Moosie Drier. A
retired railroad worker and his grandson attempt to fulfill
the old man's dream of crossing the country m a hot-air
balloon.
FRIDAY MIDNIGHT—"ANIMAL HOUSE". Stars John Bel-
lushi, Tom Matheson. In 1962 students thought of college as
a place to howl and not a place for political protests. Their
form of rebellion was to join a fraternity house which be-
came their private playpen where they could indulge in the
most infantile behavior. They hoped that this would allo
them to forget that soon they would have to face life's
havior.
SATURDAY, 8:00 P.M.—"THE SWARM". Starring Michael
Caine and Henry Fonda.
SATURDAY MIDNIGHT` "THE BUNKER". Stars Anthony
Hopkins, Richard Jordan. A drama about the events in and
around Adolph Hitler's bunker during the final harrowing
days of the collapse of the Third Reich. Hitler, unable to ac-
cept the inevitable collapse of the Third. Reich, alternates
between embittered tirades against those he believes to
have betrayed him and irrational delusions of a'possible
last-minute turn of events. Based on the novel by James O'-
Donnell.
SUNDAY, 1:00 P.M.—"ONCE UPON A FAMILY". Stars
Barry Bostwick, Maureen Anderman. A father is left with
the difficult challenge of single parenthood when his wife
suddenly announces That she is leaving him.
SUNDAY, 3:00 P.M.—"CUTTER". Stars Peter DeAnda,
Cameron Mitchell. Hard -Hitting black private eye search-
es for a missing pro quarterback.
MONDAY, 9:00 P.M.—"CADDYSHACK". Chevy Chase,
Rodney Dangerfield, Ted Knight. The story of the hil-
arious antics at a posh golf club. Also starring Bill
Murray.
TUESDAY MIDNIGHT—"THE JOKERS". Two brothers
bitterly resentful that their brilliance and initiative have
not been recognized plan to get even with the "establish-
ment" by stealing the crown jewels from the Tower of
London.
WEDNESDAY MIDNIGHT—"THE ANGEL LEVINE". Zero
Mostel, Harry Belafonte. A black Jewish Angel, on proba-
tion, is assigned to provide a miracle for an elderly, im-
poverished Jew and his seriously ill wife. The old tailor
won't believe in the Angel, making the miracle impossible.
10...CFPL LONDON
11...CHCH HAMILTON
13...CKCO KITCHENER.
79 -..CITY TV TORONTO
WINGHAM TV VIEWERS PLEASE NOTE!
WGN Chicago, listed as 4C, will now
come in on Channel 7. In subsequent
weeks, it will appear as 7C in the TV
listings.
Wed., Mar. 9
AFTERNOON
12:00 Barbara McLeod
Show 5
Jeffersons 79
Leave It to Beaver 3
Cartoons 10, 8
Flintstones 13
Big Valley 4C
News 6, 7
Midday 4
12:25 Agri -News 13
12:30 Agri -News 8
The Young and
Restless 4
Wok with Yan 5
Body Moves 11
Definition 13
Ryan's Hope 7, 79
News 10, 3
12:35 -Noon Report 8
1:00 Alan Thicke Show 13
Here's Lucy 79
Let's Make a Deal 6
You Asked For It 4C
Days of Our Laves 11
All My Children 7, 8,
5, 3, 10
1:30 News 4C
Micro Magic 79
As the World Turns 6,
4
2:00 City Lights 79
Dick Van Dyke 4C
Movie, "Conspiracy
of Terror" 10
Take 30, 8, 5, 3
One Life to Live 7, 11
Another World 13.
2:30 Coronation Street 5
Capitol 4
Andy Griffith 4C
Good Company 3
Wok with Yan 8
Galloping Gourmet 79
Pitfall
3:00 You're Beautiful 79
Capitol 11
General Hospital 13, 7
I Dream of Jeannie
4C
Daytime Challenge 5,
3
Three's Company 8
The Guiding Light 6, 4
3:30 Jeffersons 8
Soapbox 11
Kidsworld 79
Pink Panther 4C
Coming Attractions 5,
3
Take 30, 10
4:00 Daytime Challenge 10
Superfriends 4C
Leave It to Beaver 3
Ski Boy 6
Eight Is Enough 4
Little House on the
Prairie 8, 7
The Young and the
Restless 11
The Bob Newhart
Show 13
Do It for Yourself 5
Rockford Files 79
4:30 Gilligan's Island 6
Tattletales 13
Going Great 5
Three's Company 10
Scooby Doo 4C
•Happy Days 3
5:00 The Price Is Right 79,
8, 10
Happy Days 5
Jeffersons 7
Hogan's Heros 13
Little House on the
Prairie 11
Charlie's Angels 4
Three's Company 3
Starsky and Hutch 6
Incredible Hulk 4C
5:30 News 3
Three's Company 5
The Royal Visit 13
WKRP 7
Muppet Show 4C
EVENING
6:00 News 6, 11, 10, 8, 7; 5,
4
T.J. Hooker 3
Muppet Show 4C
Citypulse 79
6:30 Laverne & Shirley 4C
News 7, 4, 13
7:00 Trapper John M.D. 10
Little House ... A New
Beginning 3
The Facts of Life 5
World Figure Skating
Championships 13
Joker's Wild 4
Barney Miller 4C
That's Incredible 8
Entertainment
Tonight 11
Laverne & Shirley 79
That's Life 6
Lie Detector 7
7:30 You Asked For It 6
Reach for the Top 5
Dance Fever 4
Don Cherry's
Grapevine 11
Jeffersons 4C
Family Feud 7
MASH 79
8:00 NHL (St. Louis at
Toronto) 11
Tales of the Gold
Monkey 13
Movies, "Airport '75"
4C; "Svengali" 79
TS
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Fish. Chicken . Bel Liver (418 o- k%
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NEW LOCATION - 135 INKERMAN ST.
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LISTOWEL, ONT. 291-1082
Extended Hours - OPEN: Fn. nights till 9:00 p.m.
STORE HOURS:
Monday to Thursday - 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Saturday - 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
,TSC The store where knowledgeable, courteous sales people give you
Personalized service.
Use your Chargex
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Billy Graham 4
High Performance 7
Real People 6
Nature of Things 8, 5,
3, 10
9:00 Tommy Hunter Show
10
TBA 5
When Will All the Dy-
ing Stop? 8 .
Fall Guy 13, 7
Movie, "Svengali" 4
SCTV 3
Love Boat 6
10:00 The Tonight Show 6
Dynasty 13, 7
National 8, 5, 3, 10
News 4C
10:20 Journal 8, 5, 3, 10
11:00 News 6, 13, 8, 5, 3, 10,
7, 4, 11
Citypulse Tonight 79
Soap 4C
11:05 Newsfinal 5
11:20 Local News 13
11:30 Sportsline 6
Charlie's Angels 9C
Family Brown 11
Movie, "Beware My
Brethen" 3
Briar Reports 8, 5
Shelley 10
Barney Miller 4
Nightline 7
11:45 Movie, "The Last Pic-
ture Show" 8
Barney Miller 5
12:00 The Last Word 7
Hawaii Five -0 11
Hart to Hart 4
Movies, "The Dark
Angel" 6; "The Angel
Levine" 13; "King of
the Gypsies" 79
Rockford Files 1.,
12:15 Highlights 5
12:30 Movie, "She" 4C
1:00 Movie, "Cover Girls"
4
Dick Van Dyke 11
News 7
2:30 Headline Service 4
3:00 Nightbeat 4C
Night -Watch 4
3:30 All Night Show 4C
4:00 Movie, "Quiet
American" 4C
Playing
for laughs
March 6
Last November Roy
Bonisteel, on skates for the
first time since he was four
years old, played the position
of "sacrificial lamb" against
hockey's most unorthodox
team, The Flying Fathers.
The result? Playing For
Laughs, which will be seen
on CBC Television's Man
Alive, Sunday, March 6 at
10:30 p,m.
The Flying Fathers are a
group of Catholic priests
playing hockey for charity,
and laughs. Since 1962,
they've played more than 650
games and have raised
almost $2 million for various
charitable organizations.
Their antics on the ice range
from nailing an opponent
with a pie in the face to stop-
ping the game to "baptize"
(with a bucket of water) a
member of the opposing
team.
Despite the comic chaos of
the games, they're serious
hockey players, and very
serious about being priests.
Fr. Les Costello is a former
NHL player who played on
the 1947 Stanley Cup team of
the Toronto Maple Leafs. He
left a promising professional
career to join the priesthood.
With Fr. Brian "Buck"
McKee, he founded the Fly-
ing Fathers.
Why? What motivates
these men to leave their par-
ishes, drive hundreds of
miles to play hockey, then
turn around and drive home
again? Is there any connec-
tion between their high-
energy, "high-schticking"
on the ice and their deep
spiritual commitment to the
priesthood? Roy Bonisteel
followed the Flying Fathers
around Northern Ontario to
try to find out and discovered
the inner meaning of a pie in
the face.
Abandon all preconceived
notions of Catholic priests,
all ye who watch Playing For
Laughs.
Known to have become
extinct in the last 150 years
are at least 45 species and 43
subspecies of birds.
SPECIAL EFFECT-Here'sa special effect you get by putting your camera on a
tripod, and holding the shutter open for several successive bursts. The results, if
your timing is right, are usually quite spectacular.
(Photo courtesy Eastman Kodak Co.)
Through
the
Lens
By HOLT CONFER
Trick
photography
The Minolta people —
the ones who bring you
those informative ads in
the camera magazines, the
same ones who introduced
the Cokin filter line to the
world, and the company
that sells more cameras
and lenses in this country
than almost anyone else
(Canon sells more, accord-
ing to a recent Time maga-
zine survey) — recently in-
troduced a series of 10
photo instruction books.
Retailing for $7.95 at
your favorite camera
store, this instructional se-
ries covers the gamut of
photographic situations
form "Photography for Be-
ginners" to "Trick Photog-
raphy."
Profusely illustrated in
both color and black and
white, you'll find a whole
lot more information in
each of these books than
it's possible to use in many
months of concentrated ef-
fort.
The life of the serious
photographer is filled with
daily challenges to record
people, places and things in
attractive and interesting
sometimes unusual ways.
So anytime you • can get
help in the form of tried
and proven information,
don't turn it down — since
it often cuts your need to
experiment by many
project hours.
Let's spend the rest of
this column on trick pho-
tography. Moderation is a
worth consideration. And
while trick photography
certainly has it's place in
the scheme of being a well-
rounded photographer —
making everything you
shoot subject to some type
of manipulation wil lead to
the exact type of boring
sameness that no manipu-
lation generates.
Some trick photography
is done in the darkroom,
while other effects are cre-
ated when the picture is
taken. Where your interest
lies, and what facilities you
have available dictate
which of the two roads you
have to travel. Of course, if
you have your own dark-
room, then there's no rea-
son why you can't enhance
your pictures both on loca-
tion and during processing.
Since personal dark-
rooms are at a premium,
most of the trick photogra-
phy is created by the pho-
tographer when the picture
is taken. Lenses and front
attachments are probably
the most used ingredients
in creating special effects.
You've all seen the
curved distortion of a fish-
eye lens. Perhaps you
haven't noticed that the
center of the lens produces
far less distortion than the
sides — so your main sub-
ject should be well cen-
tered, allowing the curved
distortion along the sides
to act as a frame. Your
first few exposures with a
fish-eye lens will be quite
interesting •— the field of
coverage is so wide, you'll
find it takes some practice
to keep, your own fingers
and feet out of the pictures.
Ah interesting attach-
ment is a split -field lens.
This is a close-up lens that
covers just half your cam-
era's lens... it allows you to
position a subject very
close to the camera and
keep both it and the back-
ground in sharp focus. With
a positive -1 lens, the sub-
ject must' be about 40 inch-
es away from the camera;
with a postitive-2, about 20
inches away; and with a
positive -3, about 13 inches
away.
In order to minimize the
division between the two
zones of sharpness, try to
position your subject in a
place there is not detail to
be lost — such as a very
light or very dark area.
With most special ef-
fects, plan to use -a tripod.
Since you are in many
cases magnifying or dis-
torting your subject, you
want that activity to be
carefully controlled — free
"of any possible' camera
movement. Also plan to
use a cable release .so you
don't jar the camera press-
ing the shutter.
Incidentally, I've just
barely touched the surface
of the special effects you
can generate with your
camera — you can do
tricks with filters, with ex-
posure, with camera move-
ment, lighting, by reflect-
ing and distorting the
image, on table tops and
with unusual films.
This modern photo guide
published by Minolta not
only tells you about trick
photography, in many
cases it describes in detail
exactly how to create the
effect.
Many isles nameless
Indonesia, the world's
largest archilpelago, com-
prises 13,667 islands, only 992
of which are inhabited and
only 6,000 of which are even
named.
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