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Village Squire, 1978-03, Page 48UPDATE Few of us realize when we look at a poster or an advertisement that we're really looking at a work of art. We are at (east when companies like Stratford's Integrated Graphics Ltd. are involved. The company recently won three awards from the Toronto Art Director's Club for work done last year for the Stratford Festival and for Gallery Stratford. Two designs won the award of merit in the poster category: the 25th anniversary season for the Stratford Festival and the poster for Gallery Stratford's summer exhibition, Made Glorious. The third award came for a catalogue design for Made Glorious. The company was also a winner last year for design work for The Church Restaurant and its poster for the 1976 Festival was chosen for an international touring exhibition. LISTOWEL RESIDENTS SEE THEMSELVES IN FILMS Listowel residents saw themselves as stars of a recent film evening presented by the Queen's Bush Historial Society. The event showed films taken in the town in the 1930's and 1940's. One of the films shown was reported to have been taken by German spies who travelled from town to town taking films of local industries. Another film showed local hockey games and one of those said to be taking part was Fred (Cyclone) Taylor, one of the country's Inst famous hockey players of times gone by. The evening was held to increase interest in the preservation of important artifacts from the past of the town. Elwood Smith, one of the local historians told those present: "Don't throw it out, throw it our way." BILL AMOS HEADS HURON COUNTRY PLAYHOUSE BOARD Bill Amos is the new president of the board of the Huron Country Playhouse at Grand Bend. He succeeds Bill Cochrane of Goderich. The board has planned three fundraising events including a Beaux Arts ball on March 4, a rummage sale June 16 and 17 in connection with the Buffalo Burger Fest celebrations in Grand Bend, and an international art auction on Sunday, August b. The theatre is entering its seventh season under an executive of Mr. Amos, Mr. Cochrane, Bert Albertson, vice-chair- man; Dan Corrigall, treasurer; Mary Spieran, secretary; Leo Morningstar and Jill Waters, members at large and Helen Kleinstiver representing the Playhouse Guild. Other members of the board include Douglas Coo, Douglas Cook, Betty Duffield, Len Evans, Bill Heinshohn, June Hill, Barbara Ivey, Jim Kneale, Ed Procunier, Doris Thomas. Benson Tuckev. PG. 46 VILLAGE SQUIRE/MARCH 1978. Virginia Vossler. Gwen Burchill. Betty Gibbs, Linda McKenzie, Dave Sheppard and Josephine Wilcpx. COMPUTERIZED AGE COMES TO THEATRE Actors and playwrights may never be replaced by computers and robots but the computer has become of the theatre world at least at major centres such as Stratford Festival. The computer came to Stratfdrd three years ago to handle payrolls and other accounting chores. It aided box office duties as well as phone and mail orders. This year its taken another step in that it will print all 650.000 tickets for the Festival. Formerly the tickets were printed by a company in Galt but the expense had mounted. So the computer was pressed into service. It prints 24 tickets a minute and ran 24 hours a day during the printing operation. The job was expected to take about two weeks. The projected saving is $20.000. The project was headed by Gerry Corner, the Festival's data processing manager who says even more advances may be coming in the near future. "In a couple of years from now we're hoping to have another computer in the box office to produce tickets for people on the spot. They could come in, select the ticket they wanted, and the computer would print it up while they waited. We're already investigating the potential for doing that." BATTLE ON TO SAVE OLD STATION In recent years old railway stations have been disappearing in Western Ontario at an alarming rate. For some, the loss hasn't been too great since they were ugly buildings in the first place. Others, however had a distinction all their own and one of these, now threatened with extinction is the old St. Marys Junction Station near St. Marys. The station has been unused for many years but now local citizens aided by Perth -Wilmot M.P. Bill Jarvis are out to save the building. Canadian National, which owns the building, isn't arguing that it can't be saved. They'd be happy to turn the building over to the town of St. Marys for restoration. They just want the building moved off their land. The hitch is that it's one of the few solid stone railway stations around and would have to be dismantled stone by stone to be moved. The St. Marys Heritage committee has already looked at that possibility and decided the cost would be just too prohibitive. Mr. Jarvis says that CN should ease off on its insistence that the building must be moved. Now that the St. Marys council has accepted the local heritage committees proposal that the town take over the building and restore it on the present site, Mr. Jarvis has promised to try to work a deal out with the CN officials in Toronto. The 120 -year-old station is more than just another pretty building. Thomas Edison is reported to have once worked there for a short period as a telegraph operator before moving on to inventing such modern wonders as the light bulb, moving pictures. and the phonograph. The station was one of the local stations featured in Elizabeth Wilmot's book Meet Me at the Station. ■■ No running. No walking. No exercise. No effort. Penalty — Ca shorter life. No argument OFitness is fun. CM, Try some. 1 Enar✓nnnarnon$ Stiickland AUTOMOBILES JEEP TOYOTAi� AIERlCV AlST MOTORS STRICKLAND AUTOMOBILES Goderich (519) 524-8841 524-8411 524-9381