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The Rural Voice, 1979-07, Page 13TV can bring us together I don't know about your house, but around our's we've been enjoying the new television series from the B.B.C. that's been on the local channel the last few weeks: "All Creatures Great and Small." The series is based on the books of James Herriot who tells of his adventures as a veterinarian in the hills of Yorkshire, England back in the days before World War II. My wife had already read two of the Herriott books, "All Creatures Great and Small" and "All Things Bright and Beautiful" and she laughed all the way through them (which made me hate James Herriott since she never laughs at a thing I write.) I turned on the first program mostly for her benefit since I've found a lot of British television just isn't to my taste. I soon got chuckling along though and now its one of the few programs on the tube I try not to miss (most programs I spend more time trying to miss). A friend a couple of weeks la ter started telling me about the wonderful show he'd discovered the night before so I guess I'm not alone in my enjoyment. The show is about as opposite to the ordinary television fare as one can get. Instead of people making very unfunny jokes about people's sexuality or lack thereof in rather sterile city settings, we have a vet trudging among the cowbarns of England dealing with everyday, real life situations. There's little fake about the setting. The animals are real and even some of the action is real with the actor who plays Herriot sticking his hand deep inside a cow's posterior. Now that's really getting into a part. I think the thing that's really brought home to me in the series is how much people are alike no matter where they live. I mean here we are seeing farmers halfway around the world in the fells of Yorkshire and yet aside from the accent, they're pretty much like the farmers here in southern Ontario, or at least like the farmers of the same era were here. The series rings true although it's in far off England because many of the scenes shown remind me of growing up in Bruce County and having the vet come on a call. Much the same feeling of people being pretty much the same was experienced recently when the actors of Toronto's Theatre Passe Muraille toured the small towns of the English countryside this spring with The Farm Show, a play about Ontario farm life, particularly as experienced near Clinton back in 1972. The British country people who saw the play said that once they got used to the strange accents of the Canadians, they could see people who reminded them very much of their friends and neighbours on the stage. it is the marvellous power of television and the theatre to promote understanding, to make us see that people are pretty much alike no matter where they live and hopefully, to bring the world a little closer together because of this understanding. Something else that came to mind in the series is how important a role the veterinarian plays in agriculture, and how little credit we so often give him (or her). We tend to take our vets for granted. We never think of them until they are needed then expect them to be there immediately and to work miracles. In a day and age where medical doctors have long since quit making house calls, vets are still at the ready to come running, even at hours they'd prefer to stay in bed, in order to meet an emergency on the farm. Vets have the choices of keeping comfortable hours and making high salaries by working in the cities, looking after pampered city dogs and cats but the farm vets choose instead to really serve. We should be grateful to them a little more often than we are. VANASTRA FACTORY OUTLET Highway 4 - south of Clinton at Vanastra "The Store That Saves You More" • MENS' • BOYS' • LADIES' • GIRLS' • BABY WEAR • YARD GOODS • SEWING MACHINES • POUND GOODS • GPOCERIES NEW STORE HOURS. Monday -Friday 10 a.m.-9p.m. Saturday 10a.m.-6p.m. Sunday 12 noon-6p.m. THE RURAL VOICE/JUNE 1979 PG. 11