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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1981-02-18, Page 20PAGE 4A --GODERICH SIGNAL -TAR, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1981 WED TIIRU TUES MORNING PROGRAM SCHEDULE February 18 to February 24 EXCLUSIVE TO SIGNAL -STAR PUBLISHING 8:00 DAY OF DISCOVERY 8:30 REX HUMBARD 5:15 VARIOUS 9:00 ORAL ROBERTS 00 MASS PROGRAMMING (Exc. Mon 9: lGV 0: 00 G1LLdGAN'S ISLAND 5:45 U.OF M PRESENTS 19:30 LAUREL AND HARDY 6:15 VARIOUS PROGRAMMING 6:30 SCOPE (Fri.) 5:45 NEWS 7:00TODAY 9:00 MQVIE: "THE GREAT WALDO PEPPER" (Wed.) "THE HOF K" (Thurs.) - `Ji-ERE.M A.I._....._J-OHNSO.N" (Fri.) "WHAT'S UP DOC?" (MBn.).' "LOVE STORY" (Tues.) 11:00 HOUR MAGAZINE AFTERNOON 12:00 NEWS 12:30 DOCTORS 1:00 DAYS OF OUR LIVES 2:00 ANOTHER WORLD 3:00 TEXAS 4:00 MOVIE: "THE ERRAND . BOY" (Wed. ) "DON'T GINE UP THE SHIP" (Thurs.) "WAY, WAY OUT" (Fri.) PAINT YOUR WAGON" Part II (Tues.) 4:00 MOVIE: "TH ERRAND BOY" (Wed. "DON'T GIVE UP . THE SHIP" (Thurs.) "WAY, WAY OUT" (Fri.) "PAINT YOUR WAGON ," Part I (Mon) "PAINT YOUR WAGON" Part•U (Tues.) 5:30 M.A.S.H. WEDNESDAY FEB.18,1981 EVENING 6: 00 NEWS 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:00 PM MAGAZINE 7:30 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN 8:00 REAL PEOPLE 9:00 STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS 9:30 THE FACTS OF LIFE 10:00 QUINCY 11:00 NEWS 11:30 THE TONIGHT SHOW 12:30 TOMORROW COAST- TO-COAST THURSDAY FEB.19,1981 EVENING 6:AO NEWS 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:60 PM MAGAZINE 7:30 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN 8:00 BUCK ROGERS 11:OONEWS 11:30 THE TONIGHT SHOW 12:30 TOMORROW COAST- TO=r^:wax FRIDAY FEB. 20,1981 EVENING 6.00 NEWS 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:00 PM MAGAZINE 7: 30 MUPPET SHOW 8: 00 HARPER VALLEY PTA 8:30 THE BRADY GIRLS GET MARRIED 9:OONERO WOLFE 10:00 NBC MAGAZINE 11:00 NEWS 11:30 THE TONIGHT SHOW 12:30 THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL 2:00 HOLLYWOOD HEARTBEAT 2:30ROCK CONCERT 4:00 MOVIE: "HITLER: THE LAST TEN DAYS". Alec Guinness -Simon Ward SATURDAY FEB.21,-1981 MORNING 6:00 BEWITCHED 6:30 NEW ZOO RE VUE 7: 00 JONNY QUEST 7:30 DRAWING POWER 8:00 GODZILL.A-HONG KONG PHOOEY HOUR 9:00 FLINTSTONES COMEDY SHOW 10:30 DAFFY DUCK SHOW 11:00 BATMAN AND THE SUPER SEVEN AFTERNOON 12:00 SOUL TRAIN 1:00 BIONIC WOMAN 2:00 MOVIE: "LACEY AND THE MISSISSIPPI QUEEN". Kathleen Lloyd -Debra Feuer. 3:30. MOVIE: "DAY THEY HANGED KID CURRY". Robert Morris. 5: OO SHA N A NA" 5:30 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN EVENING 6:00 NEWS 6:30 HEE HAW 7: 30 PINK PANTHER 8:00 BARBARA MANDRELL AND THE MANDRELL SISTERS 9:00 WALKING TALL 10:00 HiLL STREET BLUES 11:00 NEWS 11 :30 SATURDANA NiGHT LIVE 1:00BENVYI L,SHOW 1:30 MOVIE: "OWL AND THE PUSSYCAT". Barbra' Strisand-George Segal SUNDAY FEB.22,1981 MORNING 6:45DAVEYAND GOLIATH 7:00OPEN CAMERA 7:30 TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL 11:00 MOVIE: "DANGEROUS MONEY-. Sidney Toler -Gloria Warren AFTERNOON 12: 30MEET THE PRESS 1:00OPEN CAMERA 2 t • 30 A,fA.M 2:00 COLLEGE BASKET- BALL '81 4:00 SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN 5:00 LIFE AND TIMES OF GRIZZLY ADAMS EVENING 6:00NEWS 6:30 WILD WILD WORLD OF ANIMALS 7:00 DISNEY'S WON- DERFUL WORLD 8:00 CHIPS 9:00 THE BIG EVENT: "PROM NIGHT".' Jaimie Lee Curtis -Leslie Nielsen 11:OONEWS 11130 MOV.ire : "WALKJNG ti B TALL"_ Joe Doaker- • Elizabe4h Harmsan MONDAY FEB.23,1981 EVENING OFA wants protection • for rarnung community George Kloster, chairman of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture's (OFA) en- vironment committee, warn- ed 40 area fanners "if farmers of all people can't support the preservation of good 'agricultural land, who -can?". The Oxford County fanner was addressing Huron County Federation of 6:00 NEWS Agriculture members m 6:30 NBC NEWS Brucefield, Thursday, 7;00 PM MAGAZINE February 5 as part of the 7:30*LAPPY DAYS AGAIN OFA's push for new legisla- 8:00 LITTLE HOUSE ON tion to protect the farming THE PRAIRIE' community from urban en - 9:00 MONDAY NIGHT AT. croachment. THE MOVIES:' EVITA PERON". Faye Dunaway- The chairman said his -James Farentino committee concluded "the 11:00 NEWS thrust of the policy must be 11:30 THE TONIGHT SHOW . the . preservation of good. 3:3n TOMOR_ROW COAST- TO-COAST agricultural land." He said unfortunately, there's divi- ' sion within the farming com- munity, some farmers feel the provincial government won't accept a strong land use policy, and many farmers want farm severances and the option of selling their land for non- farm uses. He pointed out full-time farmers are now in the minority among those who TUESDAY FEB. 24.'1981 EVENING 6:M NEWS 6:30 NBC NEWS 7:00 PM MAGAZINE 7:30HAPPY DAYS AGAIN 8:00 LOBO 9:00 TUESDAY NIGHT AT THE. MOVIES: "EVITA PERON". Faye Dunaway - James Farentino farm and have been replac- 11:00 NEWS • edaby part-timer farmers, 11s 30•TY.E TONIGHT' SHOW- tbb f rate .12:30 TOMORROW COAST- y. s`ale`s, . corpo TO -COAST • farmers and speculative in- Stratf ord to mount eight productions The Stratford Festival will mount eight productions in a 22 -week season from June 4 to October 31, Consulting Artistic • Director John Hirsch announced today.. Two weeks of preview performances will precede the official 1981 Opening on June 15. Shakespeare's Coriolanus and ' The Taming of the Shrew, together with The Misanthrope by Moliere will be the three Festival Theatre openings.: H.M.S. Pinafore will mark the return of Gilbert and Sullivan • to the Avon Theatre. • The Comedy of Errors will join the Festival Theatre repertory mid-season, together • with three productions ' at the Avon Theatre: The Rivals, by Richard 13rin'iey Sheridan The Visit by Friederich Durrenmatt and Wild Oats by John O'Keeffe. The schedule of openings will be as follows: H.M.S. Pinafore, June 15 (previews start June 4); The Misan- thrope, June 15 ' (previews start June 10);- Coriolanus, June 16 (previews start June 5); . The Taming of the Shrew, June 17 (previews start June 6); The Rivals, August 9 (previews , start August 4); The Comedy of Errors, August 14 (previews start August 12); The Visit, August 15 (previews start August 13); Wild Oats, September 25 (previews start September 23). Brian Bedford, Len Cariou, Danielle Darrieux and William Hutt will head the .acting company, with Mr. Bedford appearing as Alceste in The Misanthrope, Mr. Cariou as Corialanus in Coriolanus and as'Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew, Miss Darrieux as Claire in The Visit and Mr. Hutt as 111 in The Visit. lir: Bedford -who glade his debut as a director with a highly praised " Titus Andronicus" in 1978 and 1980, will direct two productions in the new season: Coriolanus and The Rivals. The 1981 season will also QUEEN'S HOTEL Seaforth Appearing Thurs., Fri., & Sat. Feb. 19-21 4\ BULLY': J NOTICE THE 102 nd ANNUAL MEETING OF THE WEST WAWANOSH MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Notice is hereby given, the Annual Meeting of the Company will be held at the Agricultural Hall, Dungan- non, on Friday, February 27th 1111 at 2:00 P.M. 1) To receive and dispose of the Financial Statement and Auditors Report 2) To Appoint Auditors 3) To elect two (2) Directors 4) To transact any other business that may properly corse before the Mooting Th. retiring Directors aro Austin Martin and John Nixon, both of whom are eligible for r.-.Isctlon forgo throe year term. A policy holder wishing to seele election or r.-.Ioceloo as a Director must fps his or her nomination In writing with the Secretary of the Corporotlon'at least five (5) days In advance ofh. Annual Meeting or any Special General Meeting called for the purp*s of electing Directors. The Company Ry.laws are available for in- spectlon al the Head Office of the Corporation. By Order of the Board of Directors Stephen B. Whitney Secretary -Manager mark the return to Stratford of ` one of Canada's most eminent men of the theatre, Jean Gascon who will direct The. Misanthrope and The Visit.Opera and stage director Leon Major will direct H.M.S. Pinafore, which will have sets designed by Murray Laufer and costumes by Astrid Janson. Musical direction will be by Berthold Carriere and choreography by Judith Marcuse.. Noted . British ' director Peter Dews, last in Stratford for "King John" in 1974, will retirn to direcf The Taming of the Shrew and The Comedy of Errors. The Shrew will be designed by Susan' Benson who has been appointed Head of Design at the Stratford Festival. Nursery may fold SEAFORTH - Seaforth's nursery_school, a parent run. co-op, will not be able to operate next year unless it can purchase, . move and equip a portable classroom. Nursery school president, Pat Rodney approached the town council recently, ex- plaining that it would cost an estimated $10,000 to con- tinue. The 63 children using the nursery school service have been offered a site on Seaforth Public School grounds for a portable. The nursery has until this summer to move .out of the local library basement premises it now occupies. vestors buying up farmland. He advised farmers to start selling the need for pro- tection of farmland on an economic basis. He said agriculture must be a per- manent, secure and economically viable in- dustry since Ontario's farmers "have a respon- sibility, not just to Cana- dians, but tp millions of peo- ple less fortunate than us". That responsibility, accor- ding to Kloster, is togrow food for world markets. He warned one of Canada's natural resources, good agricultural land is getting scarcer. He added, in solving world problems, would rather see the use•: of food power -than bullet pone,-." The environment commit- tee chairman warned the au- dience problems between fanners and their urban, in- dustrialized neighbours won't diminish in the future and that peaceful co- existence between the two groups must be established. He said .the province's five-year-old agricultural code of practice has failed to come to grips with the clash' between farmers and their urban neighbours. For ex ample,' ti -e sail; many ap- pications to -expand existing farm livestock operations are denied, if non-farm residents are living nearby. When problems arise, Mr. Kloster said, the onus is always on the farmer to change' his practises, rather than urbanneighbours to ac- cept the . noise and odours which inevitably result from farm operations. Mr. Kloster said tougher land use guidelines to preserve farmland would remove the existing problem of land use guidelines being policed' by urban -oriented municipal councils and give farmers more input into planning decisions. Some of the solutions the environmental- committee recommended to the OFA were improved and uniform agricultural land zoning, distinction's' between agricultural land and buffer areas, adequate .compensa- tion when a farmer is refus- ed permission to expand and thus zoned out of business,.,;., and planning guidelines which allow farmers to plan for theiroperations on a long-term basis. TRYUANITY Also Mr. Kloster said, "a farmer must be able to keep any, kind and quantity of livestock he wants in an agriculturally -zoned area." He told the audience his committee recommended it was high time the govern- ment defined what con- stituted a farm, the im- plementation of a Farmers' 'Bill of Rights, written guidelinesifor siting, renova- tion and expansion of farm buildings and a farmers' committee which could deal with harassment of farmers and complaints (TOM, non- farm encroachment into agricultural areas. He said his committee's recommendations were replaced by the Agricultural Development and Protection Act, drawn up by an OFA staff member. Mr. Kloster said, "to me, that document leaves a lot to be desired." He said farmers, in cam- paigning for better land use guidelines, must capitalize on their economic position. Also, he warned, "the big argument is going to be amongst us, since we are so different." He said OFA must come out with a strong land use policy to present to the provincial government. In the discussion following Klosler's speech, Lucknow area farmer Tony McQuail asked how a farmer could be defined. The speaker said the problem is the Ontariio Municipal Board has its idea of what a farmer is; the On- tario Miinstry of Apiculture hashas another, the Ministry of - Housing yet another and "well, the tax people, they're off by themselves when it conies to what a farmer is." Mr. McQuail replied it was his suspicion it is easier to "say we need a definition of a fanner than to have one." Mr. Kloster responded his environment committee felt "we need a uniform defini- tion of a farmer" which couldbe used by all govern- ment ministries. Adrian Vtis of Blyth asked if the environinent commit tee had given any thought to the rights of animals in drawing up guidelines for a Farmers' Bill of Rights. Mr. Klosler said there's no question farmers today are getting criticizedfortheir livestock practices. He said the technology ,of the livestock industry is "put- ting animals under tremen- dous pressure to get produc- tion out of them." Before discussion on the OFA's working paper con- cluded, Mr. Kloster again recommended working .with Discover our resort, where the beach has more sea gulls' and pelicans than people Escape to Our Island Golf -Tennis • Heated Pools Oceanfront Hotel Apartments Fishing - Sailing.- Beautiful Beaches • Restaurant • 'Lounge For more information. call or write: Indian River Plantation Resort. Hutchinson Island 385 N.E Plantation Road. Stuart. Fl. 33494 (305) 225.3700 145 miles north of Palm Beach Complete Hotel Services e the government and their Strategy for the Preserva- tion of Agricultural Land paper - "take' what we already have in existence, take the government's com- mitment." He ' told Huron federation members he sees a long time refinement period before the federa- tion's working paper is ready to be presented to the provincial government: 'FIRE INSURANCE Following the discussion on the paper, ' a Hulled Township farmer, Larry Damon,: raised the issue of fire insurance. for farm buildings. Mr. Dillon Said he believes - farmers' are presently being discouraged from safe management practices to avoid barn fires by insurance companies. He said in the Western pro- vinces, insurance companies offer lower rates for farm buildings which are less like- ly to burn, a' policy that doesn't seem to be followed here. The farmer said he has approached insurance com- panies about the hatter as an individual, but felt perhaps 'the ,federation would like to investigate the matter. On the suggestion of . John Van Beers, who was chairing the meeting, Larry Dillon agreed to meet with John Nesbitt and his insurance committee to investigate the matter of fire insurance fur- ther and draw up a resolu- tion for presentation at a future meeting. Federation members were informed the members 'of parliament dinner, schedul- ed for Feb. 21 in Clinton will be re -scheduled for a date following the March 19 pro- vincial election. THE COACH HOUSE TRAVEL Srs��yAs�� ir lifer S9 HAMILTON SY.® GODEIHCH Prearrata a TRAVEL FILM SHOW Professional tants on some beautiful ALL PIIOCIRDS 00 TO CHARITY. - WED• MARCH 1E th SP.M. at 111. GODERICH LEGION Tickets 61.110 Available at... COACH HOUSE TRAVEL OR AT THE DOOR Plan to attend ---Everyone welcome p DINNER SPEW_ 3 -pc. Dinner - Regular Price $2.90 Etas kc :Iti9Assa1Ig4,uss;a .Raie:01114044.ustf•s DLELi0 RESTAURANT AO! I A.swAFav LICENSED UNDER L.L.B.O. BAYFIELD RD. GODERICH 524-7711 APPEARING THIS WEEKEND FRI. & SAT., FEB. 20 & 21 THE. DESJA RDINES �l l $9 30 4111/ TUESDAY ONLY %srTWIMS Col Sunders Recipe entacky Fried 94 Elgin Ave. GO DERICH A CANADIAN CO?/PANV GODEIICH RECREATION BOARD Presents FOUR GREAT SHOWS FOR CHILDREN 1. PEPI PUPPET THEATRE Sunday, February 22nd, 1951 2. LAMPOON PUPPET THEATRE Sunday, March 1Sth,1981 - 3. MICHAELL ROSS MAGICIAN Sunday, April 26th, 1981 4. ERIC NAGLER MUSICIAN Sunday, May 31st, 1981 CHILDRENS' SERIES TICKETS $6."e ADULT SERIESTICKETS 18.00 • All Performances at VICTORIA PUBLIC SCII@c 2:00 PM For more information Goderidi Recreation Beard 1141 McDonald Street 524-2125 Co -Sponsored by (c5,: -:el" D <�f i�'7rt. A 1711 r, li Wif 11,