The Goderich Signal-Star, 1976-12-09, Page 4PAGE 4A-- ODERI(H SIGNAL -STAR, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1976..
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+'', TV Channel 5 ., Saginaw Schedule for December 9 to December 15-.
(Exclusive to Signal -Slur Publishing)
MORNINGS MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY
_7:00 - TODAY SHOW
7:30 , TODAY SHOW
9:00 - IRQNSIDE
• 10:00 - SANFORD AND SON
c 10:30 - HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
11:00 - WHEEL OF FORTUNE
11:30.- THE STUMPERS
12:00 - NEWS
AFTERNAONS - MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAYS
12:30 p.m. to 4:11.9,, p.m.
• 12:30 - THE GONG SHOW
C 1:00 - 50 GRAND SLAM
1:30 - DAYS OF OUR LIVES
2:30 - THE DOCTORS
7 3:00 - ANOTHER WORLD
4:00 - DARK SHADOWS
Thursday, December 9
4:'30 STUDIO FIVE: "THE GREAT NORTHFIELD,
MINNESOTA RAID" Cliff Robertson, Robert
Duvall '72. -V
EVENING
•
1
6:00 -NEWS
7;00 -ADAM -12
7:30 = MICHIGAN,STATE LOTTERY SHOW
8:00 VAN DYKE AND COMPANY
9:00 BEST SELLER "ONCE AN EAGLE" (Part 3)
10:00 MARCUS WELBY M.D.
11:00 - NEWS
11:30 - TONIGHT SHOW
'1:00 - TOMORROW
Friday, December 10
4:30 STUDIO FIVE'S FAMILY FESTIVAL:
"BRIGHTY OF THE GRAND CANYON" Joseph
_ Cotton, Pat Convay. Brighty, a freedom -loving
burro, finds his adventures lead him into perilous
encounters with mountain lions, . the raging
Colorado River, and a murderer. ,
EVENING
6:00 -NEWS
•7:00 - WILD KINGDOM
7:30 - THE MUPPETS
8:00 - SANFORD AND SON
. 8:30 CHICO AND THE. MAN
I. 9:00 ROCKFORD FILES
10:00 SERPICO
11:00 -NEWS
% 11:30 - TONIGHT SHOW
T 1:00 -.TOMORROW
Saturday, December 11
MORNING
i 7:00 - KIDS FROM C.A.P.E.R.
7:30 - MUGGSY•
WOODPECKER 8:00 - WOODY SHOW
i 8:30. - PINK PANJHER •
10:00 - McDUFF THE TALKING DOG
10:30 - THE MONSTER SQUAD '
11:00 - LAND OF THE LOST
11:30 - HOT FUDGE
1. 12:00 - SOUL TRAIN
1 AFTERNOON '
• 1 00,,SATURDAY AFTERNOON MOVIE: '`THOSE t
MAGNI.FICENT MEN IN THEIR FLYING
MACHINES" Stuart Whitman, Sarah Miles, Terry-.
Thomas '65. 1910: Wealthy 'British newspaper
publisher is persuaded to sponsor an air race from.
London to Paris. Contestants from all over the
Iworld come.
% 4:00 N.F.L. FOOTBALL (Pittsburg at Houston)
EVENING'
6:00 - NEWS
1 7:00 HEE HAW
8:00 ALL -DISNEY SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE
MOVIES: "NATUR'E'S HALF -ACRE" (8-8:30
�S '. p.m.) "LT. ROBIN. CRUSOE, U.S.N." (8:30-11
( p.m.)
11:00 NEWS
f 11:30 MILLION DOLLAR MOVIE: "THE DARK AT
1 THE TOP OF THE STAIRS" Robert Preston,
Dorothy McGuire - Oklahoma family life in the
.? 1920's - with each member having a problem.
1:00 FIVE STAR THEATRE: "SHOOT LOUD. .
LOUDER" Marcello Mastroiani, Raquel Welch '66 -.
I Zany comedy about the wild goings :on in a strange
' household inhabited by Marcello Mastroiani and his
eccentric uncle. Add a murder, a disappearance,
underworld hoods, missing money and Raquel
Welch.
Suiday, December 12.
MORNING
6:45 - DAVEY AND GOLIATH
7:Q0 - CAMERA
7:30 - REVIVAL FIRES
8:00 REX HUMBARD
!' 9:00 - ORAL ROBERTS
/ 9:30 = TELEVISED MASS
j 10:15 - ABBOTT & COSTELLO-
11:45 —LAUREL & HARDY'
} AFTERNOON
12:30= MEET THE PRESS
1:00 N.F.L. FOOTBALL (Cincinnati at New York)
4:00 SUNDAY SPECTACULAR: "STALAG 17" -
William Holden, Peter Graves B&W '53 - Much-
(' awarded story of POW camp during World War II
confinement frustration, and hope for escape.
Holden won the Academy Award for -hill portrayal of
the cynical sergeant.
EVENING
7:00 THE TINY TREE: An animated "Bell System
Family Theater" presentation.
7:30 THE BIG EVENT: ''PETER PAN"
9:30 THE BIG EVENT: "THF,. MONEYCHANGERS
(Part 3)
- 11:30 MOVIE: "THE GAME" Simone Segnoret, James
Caan. •
Monday, December 13
4i30 STUDIO FIVE: "SAIL A CROOKED SHIP"
Robert Wagner, Delores Hart B&W - Young man
I gets tangled with a gang of ctoplr4ortio intend to use
an old Liberty ship to pull off a bank robbery in
Boston.
1.40
Y.'T.M'1Y• •
1
EVENING
6:00 - NEWS
7:00 ADAM -12
7:30 BEWITCHED
8:00MOV1E,.:;'LITTLE DRUMMER BOY"
8:30 BOB HOPE CHRISTMAS SHOW•
11:00 - NEWS
11:30. - TONIGHT SHOW
Tuesday, December 14
4:30 STUDIO FIVE: "THE LADY WANTS MINK"
Ruth Hussey, Dennis O'Keefe '53 - Wife sets up a
mink ranch in her backyard - almost.ruins her -
marriage.
EVENING
6:00 -. NEWS
7:00 - ADAM - 12,
7:30 - BEWITCHED0
8:00 WAYNE NEWTON CHRISTMAS SPECIAL'
9:00 THE LUNDSTROM FAMILY
10:00 - POLICE STORY
11:30 - TONIGHT SHOW
Wednessay, December 15
4:3Q STUDIO FIVE: "DR. GOLDFOOT & THE
BIKINI MACHINE" Vincent Price, Frankie Avalon
'65 - Scheming doctor devises a plan to acquire the
fortunes of susceptible men by manufacturing.
alluring robots.'
EVENING
6:00 - NEWS
7..00 -ADAM -12
7:30 BEWITCHED
8:00 JOHN DAVIDSON SHOW
9:00 DEAN MARTIN CELEBRITY ROAST +
DANNY THOMAS
10:00 MacDAVIS CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
11:00 - NEWS
11:30 - TONIGHT SHOW
Entertainment
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
December 10th & 1 lth
BITTER SWEET
Treat yourself and
your friends
for your convenience
our Hot Buffet' i5 served
THURS., & FRI.
12 noon - 2 p.m.
Casual Dress
Dine by Candlelight
SUNDAY
SMORGASBORD'
5 p.m. to 8 p.m..
-BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEON SPECIALS EVERY DAY
Q = y Candlelight
Restaurant & Tavern
Visit the. KEG ROOM
+•.Colour TV
+ Relaxing atmosphere
Licensed under L.C.B.O.,
BAYFIELD RD., GODERICH
524-7711
Attention
All
`Goderich ` Community
CREDIT UNION
Members
23rd Annual Dinner
,t.
MEETING and DANCE
SALTFORD VALLEY HALL
December llth, 1976
OPEN - 6:30 P.M.
DINNER - 7:00 -P.M.
MEETING - 8:00 P.M.
DANCE - 9:30 P.M.
'5.00 - DINNER & DANCE
53.00 - DANCE
r
Tickets Available at your Credit Union Office
39 St. David St, 524-7931
Declining domestic m�rkel;
more competition abroad
A -declining domestic
market and increasing
competitionrbroad have put
the Ontario white bean in-
dustry ' in a vulnerable
position, Huron County bean .
producers were told Friday.
"The market for beans isn't
increasing so if production
goes up we're going to have to
go :for a larger share of the
present market," Ontario
Bean Producers' Marketing
Board manager Charles
Broadwell told the annual
meeting of • Huron County
producers in Vanastra.
Mr. Broadwell . said that
more money has to be put into
research and into developing,
new products in order to keep
Ontario farmers competitive.
He 'also outlined a, five year.
.marketing strategy aimed at
gaining a larger share of the
European market from
Ontario's chief competitor,
Michigan.
Huron producers approved
the plan, agreeing to up the
grower's license fee from six
cents per hundredweight bag
to 16 cents to help cover the
costs. The increase, which
must' be approved by other
bean growing counties. as
well, will also cover the
present operating deficit the
board is faced with.
The election of directors to
the board saw two directors
voted :off the board and two
retained:'
Joe Miller and Phil Durand
were elected to another one
year term while Richard Erb
and John Hazlitt failed to hold
onto their seats.
Replacing the two directors
are Murray Cardiff who will
be a director for the first time
and Robert Allen, who had
been a director before but lost
,in last year's election.
' Named as committeemen
to the board were Victor
Hartman, Bev' Hill, Nick
Whyte, Don Moylan, Glen
Miller, Jake Van Wonderen,
Glen Hayter, John Paul Rau,
Murray Dennis, Glen Ribey
and Ken McConan.
Director Phil Durand
voiced sharp criticism of the
Bean Board telling the
packed meeting that "if the
Board of Directors were not
prepared to change the
marketing system, you are
not going to have it very
long.,'
-Mr. Durand said that the
Bean Board was much top '
lenient- - in-, dealing with the,'
dealers and VA's willing "to
bail them out" when the
dealers accepted lower grade
beans than they • were sup-
posed to. Mr. Durand also
cited figures froma con-
fidential consultant's study of
the Boards operation which
he said showed that Michigan
producers were getting a
higher price for their beans.
"If this niar eting system
is not returning at least equal
to Michigan we had better be
prepared to .improve it or
dissolve it," he:sal:d.
Lloyd Taylor, chief
executive officer of the Bean
Board, said that the figures
used by the consultants did
not tell what the actual return
Was to the farmer' and
therefore were not valid.
Several farmers demanded
that the report presented to
the Board last spring be made
public. '
Glen Miller was the most
persistent telling the Board
officials that "it really makes
me mad to vote for, a report
and then can't see it."
Lloyd Taylor replied that
the report contained con-
fidential information that
could not be made public and
that a person could not un-
derstand the full meaning of
the report -unless he sat down
two days with a consultant
and went over it.
Mr. Miller asked if the
board of Directors un-
derstood the report and when
Mr. Taylor said he did, asked
if he could see the report if he
sat down with a director and
went over it with him for two
day's.
"That would have to be a
'decision by the Board," Mr.
Taylor' said.
Board officials were also
questioned about a story in
the Huron Expositor which
quoted market analyst, Allan
New agreement ratified
by board and teachers
In a joint release last week
the Huron County Board of
Education and its teachers,
who are members of either
the Ontario jublie School
Men Teachers' Federation or -
the Federation of Women
Teachers' Associations of
Ontario, announced final -
ratification by both parties of
a new collective agreement
for the 1976-77 school year.
Terms of the agreement
include an eight per cent
increase in salaries and
allowances plus a folding in of
the current- • Cost of ' Living
Allowance of 1.7 per cent.
In addition to the necessary
clauses to conform with
recent provincial legislation,
the agreement contains the
following major changes:
There will be a reduction of
one per cent" of total salary
cost in the Staff Improvement
Fund.
Principals .of Schools for
the Trainable Retarded are to
receive an allowance of
$4,250, up $250 from the last
contract, over and above
their basic salary as
teachers.
Vice -principals will also be
receiving an allowance over
and above their basic salaries
as teachers. For such prin-
cipals in their first year that
allowance will • be $2,800,,,
representing an increase of
$200 over the last contract.
For those with one year ex-
perience the rate will be'
$3,000, an increase of $200.
For principals with two years
experience; $3,200 or an in-
crease of $200 and for those
with three or more there will
be another $200 increase
bringing the allowance to
$3400.
Co-ordinators will receive
an allowance over and above
their' basic salaries as
teachers of $4,400, up $400, for
Co-ordinators of Student
Services and $3,400, up $400,
for Co-ordinators of Media
Centre Services.
Under the new agreement
the teachers' basic salary
grid will now range from
$9,182 to $12,452 for category
D, from $9,727 to $14,630 in
Category C, ..frbm $10,290 to
$17,657 in Category B.-
In Category Al, salaries
will range from $11,300 to
$18,767, in Category A2, from
McGrath, as saying that
farmers who smuggled beans
to the United States were
"lousy farmers".
One Board official
suggested that '- the story,
:might, have misquoted Mr:
McGrath,, but the chairman of`
the " meeting, Gordon Hill,
interjected saying "I think
any farmer who sells beans
over the border to the States
is a lousy farmer. The
question is are we -in an
Ontario systein or not.
Producers were informed
that 66 percent of the 1976
crop had already been sold at
an estimated net return of
approximately $17 per cwt.
Mr. Broadwell said that the
1975 crop should be all sold by
the end of January with the
final payment top producers
about 30 to 40 cents per cwt.'
Relaxed
DINING
in a
PLEASANT ATMOSPHERE
TASTY DISHES
THE WAY YOU
LIKE THEM. '
Reservations Preferred
for groups.
HWY. 21 BAYFIELD
565-2843
BOOK' NOW FOR
CHRISTMAS PARTIES
SQU-ARE..MEAL
SQUARE DEAL
TRY - NOW
NOW FULLY
LICENSED -
GODERICH RESTAURANT
STEAKHOUSE & TAVERN Ltd.
LICENSED ENSED UNDER THE LIQUOR LICENSE ACT
.42 WEST S
TREE'T
$11,704 to $20,180, from $13,117
to $22,700 in Category A3 and
from . $13,520 to $24,014 in
Category A4.
The principals' basic salary
grid now ranges from $12,410
to $14,430 in Category D, from
$14,025 to $18,870 in Category
C, from $19,575 to $24,420 in
Category -B, from $25,125 to ,
$29,970 in Categories Al and.
A2 and from $25,830 to $30,675
in Categories A3 and A4.
BEAR [OMR
Dear Editor,
Your photographer Dave
Sykes takes some -beautiful
scenery shots in and around
Goderich.
Why doesn't hegive the
location? It would be so much
more interesting. I am not
alone on this. A number of
people have mentioned it.
Thank you for very ex-
cellent reading. I love my
hometown pap.er.
Sincerely,
Evelyn Boulger,
Mississauga.
Dear Editor:
On behalf of the children of
%the Goderich Municipal Day
Nursery, I would like to ex-
press their thanks to the
members of the 'Float
Committee:" These parents
made it possible.
A special thanks to Conklin
Lumber whose truck wrs
driven as a part of the float by
Bob Wain. Without -this kind
gesture it would have been
necessary to limit the par-
ticipants to the-- number of
children that the Parks Dept.
truck and wagon could ac-
comodate.
Sincere appreciation is
expressed to Town Foreman
Stan Merriam; Parks
Foreman Peter Spain; Cecil
Bruinsma; The Goderich;
Buildall, and Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority for their assistance.
Merry Cristmas and thank
you one and all.
Sincerely,
Pat Hamilton
Member Goderich Day,
Nursery Committee
Fora Tasty Treat Try
f
Mon.-Thurs.
Fri. -Sat.
Sun.
Phone 524-2242
Eat In or Take out
NEW -
HOURS:
10 a.m.-10 p.m..
10 a.m.-12 p.m..
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Closed Wednesday
Esquire -Restaurant
The SgLare
Goderich
00 0 000 0
J00J0000000000JJJJJJJ,J,J
J J ..).+ J 00000000000000000000 .,..S..Iza)I$
Appearing. This Week
WED. DEC.8 TO SAT. DEC. 11
AARON
T THE BEDFORD COURT LOUNGE
COMINGNEXTWEEK .
ROCK FALLS. BAND
WED: DEC. 15 TO SAT. DEC. 24
MATINEE DEC. 18 &.DEC. 24
PLANNING DINNER .OUT
TRY OUR. DELICIOUS SMORGASBORD
TUES. 12 - 1:30 p.m.
WED. b p
SUN. 5 & 77:30 p.m..m.
Make your Christmas Party Reservations Today.
Bedford Hotel
Goderich - .524-7337
sees so seeeO0e00
00 0 0 0000
Recreational
SWIMMING
Sunday Afternoons
2-6 p.m.
Benmiller Inn -
•
4,4
$1.00 per person
or
$4.00 family rate
PROCEEDS TO: MINOR 'HOCKEY
Further Information
5,244373'