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The Gazette from Montreal, Quebec, Canada • 46

Publication:
The Gazettei
Location:
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
46
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE GAZETTE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1963 46 Airwaves Previews Weekend SATURDAY SATURDAY 8.00 a.m. (CBM-FM) Satur. day Serenade: Russ Carrier introduces Beethoven's Sonata No. 9 in A Major, Op. 47 and No.

1 in Major, Op. 12, No. 1 played by violinist Joseph Fuchs and pianist Artur Balsam. The Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by Eugene Ormandy, plays the music of Bach. Fantasia and Fugue in Minor, Air for the String, Prelude and Fugue in Minor, Arioso, Ach, Gott Von Himmel Sieh Darein, Fugue in Minor and Fantasia and Fugue in Minor, 9.10 a.m.

(CBM-AM) Young World: Program of quizzes, music and special features with hosts Frank and Dorothy Heron, and Sheridan Nelson. 10.00 a.m. (CBM-FM) The Music of Haydn: Cassation in Major; Divertimento No. 3 in Major for Flute, Violin and Cello; Nocturne in Major; Divertimento in Major, No. Zingarese (Gypsy Dances), No.

1, 6, Divertimento No. 3 in Major, Op. 31. 1.10 p.m. (CBMAM) Agenda: Doug Sanders reports on the Canadian Bar Association meeting held in Vancouver.

2.03 p.m. (CBM-AM) Opera Time: Excerpts from Salome by Richard Strauss. 2.03 p.m. (CBM-FM) BBC Concert: Part I London Chamber Concert. A concert given by distinguished soloists and ensemble in short items from works by Purcell, Villa Lobos, Mozart, Scarlatti, Haydn, Bach and Handel.

Soloists include: soprano Heather Harper; harpist Enid Simon; pianist Viola Tunnard; with The Allegri String Quartet. Part II Gustav Mahler Symphony No. 2- in Minor performed by the Philhar-monia Orchestra and chorus conducted by Otto Klemperer, with soloists soprano Heather Harper and contralto Janet Bcikcr 4.00 (CBM-FM) New Records: Edgar Fruitier, actor, radio and television personality, reviews: Ave Maris Stella, Titelouze; Scher-heazade, Ravel; Tel jour, telle- nuit, Poulenc; Cantata No. 1, Webern. 6.30 p.m.

(CBM-AM) Air-borne: Alec Bollini is host for program about flying and the people who fly. 8.00 p.m. (CJMS-FM) Great Classics: Paganini's Concerto No. 1 for violin and orchestra, and Saint Saens' Concerto No. 3 in Minor, Op.

61, with Alfredo Campoli, violin, and the London Symphony cond. Pierino a a Mendelssohn's Symphony No. 3 in A 'Minor with the London Symphony cond. Peter Maag; extracts from Puccini's Tosca with Renata Tebaldi, Mario del Monaco, and the chorus and orchestra of St. Cecilia's Academy in Rome, cond.

Rough Riders vs. B.C. Lions. 11.00 (8M) Movie. Love with the Proper Stranger (1963 comedy-drama) Natalie Wood and Steve McQueen in the story about a pregnant salesgirl and her shy musician friend.

11.10 (10) Movie. Le troisieme (German drama) Christian Wolff, Friedrich Joloff. 11.40 (12) Movie. 8V2. (1963 Italian drama) Frederico Fel-lini's Oscar-winning portrait of a successful film director plagued by self-doubts.

Mar-cello Mastroianni, Claudia Cardinale, Anouk Aimee, An-nabale Ninchi. 11.55 (3) Movie. The L-shaped Room. (1962 English drama) A pregnant French girl moves into a London apartment, and becomes involved in the lives of her fellow lodgers. Leslie Caron, Verity Edmett, Tom Bell.

7.30 (xH) Ella Fitzgerald. Special with Ella and Duke Ellington. 8.00 (x2) Movie. Seuls les anges ont des ailes. (1939 American drama).

In South America, Cary Grant and Joan Arthur in a drama about jungle pilots. 8.00 (xlO) Movie. Sous le plus grand chapiteau du monde. (American drama). Barbara Hutton, Dorothy La-mour, Tony Curtis and Charlton Heston.

8.30 (6) Movie. Seance on a Wet Afternoon. (1964 English drama). About a frustrated medium who plans to kidnap a child and then divine her whereabouts. Kim Stanley won a New York Critics' Award for her role.

Richard Attenborough and Patrick Magee also star. Music by John Barry; screenplay and direction by Bryan Forbes. 8.30 (12) Movie. Roman 2.00 (xS) Baseball. Oakland Athletics vs.

Detroit Tigers. 2.00 (x8M) Baseball. Minnesota Twins vs. Boston Red Sox. 2.15 (x2) Baseball.

Oakland Athletics vs. Detroit Tigers. 2.30 (12) Movie. The Blue Dahlia. Veronica Lake and Alan Ladd in the story of a pilot who returns after the war to find that his wife has been unfaithful.

4.30 Sports Hot Seat. Ottawa quarterback Jackson answers questions. 5.00 (x3) Auto Racing. Films of the Indy 500 qualifying runs. 5.00 World of Sports.

Films of last fall's World Figure-Eight Stock Car Race; the Id Lumberjacks Championships; US Olympic track and field. 6.00 (xi) Audubon Theatre. Red Deer Valley, a film about the wildlife of central Alberta. Francesco 8.00 p.m. (CBM-FM) Satur-day Evening: Eroica.

The disputed new recording of Beethoven's symphony with Sir John Barbirolli conducting the BBC Symphony Orchestra is discussedby Trevor Harvey of The Gramaphone. The program includes a complete performance of the work. 9.30 p.m. (CBM-AM) Prairie Chamber Orchestras: Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Claude Kenneson: Variations a Theme of Tchaikovsky (for strings), Arensky; Five Miniatures for Flute and Strings, McCauley. Soloist is flutist Harlan Green.

10.03 p.m. (CBM-AM) Hermit's Choice: Henry Comor's guest is Michael Valenti, songwriter for a new revue. 12.07 a.m. (CBM-AM) Let's Talk It Over: From Charlie Brown's Restaurant, program of after-dinner conversation 7.30 p.m. (CBM-AM) Coney-beare and Rod' Coney beare is host for a half-hour of mirth and music.

fx 8.00 p.m. (CKVL-FM) Bos-ton Sym. Music" of Franck and Ravel with Charles Munch James Stagliano, horn. 10.30 p.m. (CBM-AM) vMy Word: Jack Longland is host for a literary quiz produced by BBC.

11.03 p.m. (CBM-AM) La Ronde: Bonnie Dobson arid Chantal Beauregard present a program of recorded musicV 12.07 a.m. (CBM-AM) Midnight Coffee From Ben's Restaurant, guests are feature writer Keitha McLean, land Janet Vermandel, author of the recently-published So Long At The Fair, a mystery novel with an Expo setting. Both girls are Montrealers. 11.30 p.m.

(CKVL-FM Chamber Music: Music of Dvorak; with the Janacek Quartet. SUNDAY Holiday. (1953) William Wyler's story about a young princess who scampers incognito around Rome with an A i can newspaperman. Audrey Hepburn, Gregory Peck. 9.00 (x5) Movie.

The Outsider (1967 crime drama). The pilot film for a series on this season.1 A Hollywood private eye is supposed to find out if a young girl is embezzling company funds; but she is killed. Sean Garrison, Darren McGavin, Shirley Knight, Ed-mond O'Brien, Ann Southern, Ossie Davis. 9.30 (x8M) Hollywood Palace. Jack Benny is host to Liza Minelli, Sammy Davis Peter and Chris Allen, and many more.

10.00 (x3) Model of the Year. Thirty girls vie for top honors in a modelling contest. Judges include Veruschka. 11.00 (2,6) Football. Ottawa 7.00 (x5) Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

Debut of a new series based on the Mark Twain classic. 7.00 (x6) Television Is Barry Morse is host for this CBC special about the new season. 7.30 (x2) Zoom. Variety show featuring Claude Valade, Louise Forrestier, Les Alex-andrins and more. 7.30 National Geo.

graphic. Dr. Leakey and the Dawn of Man. Study of a British anthropologist's forty-year search for the origins of man. 8.00 (x3) Study of the famed Green Bay coach, Vince Lombardi.

8.00 (x6) Barbra Streisand. Barbra in one-woman show. 8.30 (x2) Beaux Dimanches. The National Youth Orchestra concert this year with Franz-Paul Decker conducting. 9.00 (x3) Barbra Streisand.

SUNDAY 12.45 it) Music In Mini. ature. The Hungarian String Quartet performs works by Bartok, Brahms and Beeth- oven. 1.00 (x8M) Issues and Answers. Scheduled guest is Sen.

Edmund Muskie. 1.15 (x3) Football. New York Giants vs. Pittsburgh Steelers. 1.30 (x5) Football.

Oakland Raiders vs. Buffalo Bills, 2.00 (2,6) Football. San Francisco 49ers vs. Baltimore Colts. 2.00 (8) Movies.

All This and Heaven Too. (1940 drama). Bette. Davis and Charles Boy-er in a drama about a governess and her employer. 2.00 (8M) Movies.

(1) Green Light. (1937 drama). Drama about doctors and dead patients. Errol Flyiuij Cedric Hardwicke, Anita Louise. (2) Dark.

Passage. (1947 mystery). Humphrey Bogart, Sir William Stephenson, a Canadian now retired to Bermuda. He became one of the greatest spymasters of the Second World War. He was knighted for his services to Britain, and became the subject of a biography by H.

Montgomery Hyde. (The Quiet Canadian). 3.03 p.m. (CBM-AM) Karel Ancerl Conducts: Ancerl conducts the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra in: Sarka Third Tone-Poem from the Cycle, My Country, Symphony No. 9 in Major, first and second movements, Mahler.

4.03 p.m. (CBM-AM) Battle of Britain Memorial Service: Memorial service from Westminster Abbey, London, held earlier today, commemorating the Battle of Britain and the 50th Anniversary of the Royal Air Force. 5.03 p.m. (CBM-FM) Concern: Born to Trouble. An extraordinary biography of a Tedi ious can psychopath, Harry Howard, told through the words of his friends, relatives and himself.

5.03 p.m. (CBM-AM) CBC Showcase: Part I Folk Songs For A Summer Sunday: Folksingers Tom Kines, Jean Price and Jacques LaBrecque, in a concert recorded at the CBC Ottawa Festival. Part 2 One More Time: A program featuring the Dave Woods Orchestra and singer Bobby Arvon.Produced Doug Field in Halifax. 6.20 p.m. (CBM-FM) Opera Theatre: Sarka Fibich with the chorus, soloists and orchestra of the Prague National Theatre conducted by Zdenek Chalabala.

Trasas' Family by Dmitri Kabalevsky with the chorus and Orchestra of the Kirov Theatre in Leningrad. 7.30 p.m. (CKVL-FM) Artur Ruomstein Plays: Liszt's Sonata in Schubert's Wanderer Fantasy in op. 15 (part). dor least of English-speaking Canada, because there are only two French-Canadian contributors.

Here is a sample: Farley Mowat; Irving Lay ton; George Grant, J. M. S. Careless; Desmond Pacey; George Woodcock: Laurier LaPierre and Hugh Garner. Most of them are respected in their own fields poetry, history, literary criticism and so on.

But on the subject of the United States and its relation to Canada, their opinions are as worthwhile and skills of a playwright, and has painted a compelling and readable scenario. SAMUEL CLEMENT THE NEW ROMANS: Candid Canadian Opinions of M.G. Hurtag Ltd. $2.95. In pursuit of MORNING, NOON AND NIGHT.

By James Gould Cozzens. Longmans, Canada; 408 pages. $6.95. Eminently, and above all, James Gould Cozzens is an explorer, intrepid and untiring. Here, with indefatigable zeal, he pursues the ubiquitous but elusive from its primordial beginnings to such ending as it is humanly possible for him to attain to.

Even he cannot penetrate the vast unknown. The title is a most fitting one, for neither the first blush of early dawn, the glare of noon nor the blackness of night will deter him from his implacable pursuit. This is a depressing book. You pick it with a groan and after 30 minutes (if you last that long) you put it down with a groan. "We intended it to be a elite" 'of this country at Book I a -ir Mr 1 11 -m 1 in ss Miririirfcii wtiwwssiiwiwtwWiTri iihiwhww itf iXIM wmfinv Ml wumu iifcl ijrTiTtWft if riitirf tilwtri Vi 1 nm I.

00 a.m. (CKVL-FM) Songs of Synagogue: Larry Fredericks is host for a program for the Jewish High Holidays. A recording of Kol Nidre from the Central Synagogue in Moscow with Tuvya Schiff; and Warsaw cantor Gershon Sorota sings a holiday service. 10.30 a.m. (CBM-FM) Distinguished Artists: Maurice Brown, baritone; John New-mark, piano: The Grenadier, Morawetz; Four Serious Songs, Op.

121, Brahms. II. 00 a.m. (CBM-FM) Con-certs from Europe: Piano Concerto by Benjamin Britten: National Orchestra of Hungary conducted by Janos Ferencsik, with pianist Svia-toslav Richter. Concerto for Orchestra by Zoltan Kodaly: National Orchestra of Hungary conducted by Janos Ferencsik.

2.30 p.m. (CBM-FM) En-core: The Great Canadian Spy: The Life and Times of room before Canadian Stewart; 128 pages, $4.95. some interesting illustrations of the type of newspaper and magazine advertisements that appeared during wartime, and there's a section of the gung-ho recruiting posters from the First World War. The book, however, is not absolutely flawless, which is a shame considering the overall attractiveness of the 9 by 11-inch pages. There are a few typographical errors that have managed to elude the proofreaders, and most gunners will be annoyed with one picture that was printed in reverse.

But the beauty of the book will not be detracted from. Mr. Hannon, who spent his war as one of Montgomery's "Desert Rats" in North Africa from 1939 to 1944, states at the outset that his is a composite history of "the record of a fighting people" and, because of obvious space limitations, omits many campaigns that might be to the annoyance of some. It shouldn't be. lie has chosen well.

LARRY MclNNIS Barbra in a one-woman show. 9.Q0 (12) Special. The Battle of Britain, a chronicle of the 1940 air fight that saved the world from the Nazis. Guests include generals, pilots and commanders from both sides. 11.15 (3) Movie.

Claudelle Inglish. (1961 drama). Personal drama down on the farm. Diane McBain, Arthur Kennedy. 11.30 (2) Movie.

Le plaisir. (1951 French). Three-part movie with Gaby Morlay, Claude Dauphin and Danielle Darrieux. 11.30 (5) Movie. Buck Benny Rides Again.

(1940 comedy). Jack Benny plays a cowboy pretending to own a ranch to impress a girl. 11.30 (6) Movie. Charlie Chan in City in Darkness. (1940 mystery).

The inscrutable Mr. Chan, spies and con-men. Sidney Toler, Lynn Bari and Lon Chaney Jr. tions are interesting in that many of them have not had popular distribution and the color reproductions of the many paintings depicting Canadians at war are outstanding. Front pages of newspapers are reproduced, and there are heroes peace is restored following the attempted coup d'etat in the House of Commons and the resulting chaos in the provinces.

"The Traitor Game" is a highly entertaining book. Mr. McLeish has constructed an original plot within the conventional framework of the thriller. The descriptive glimpses of the Northern Ontario autumn with its rocky hills, giant pines, and rainy woods create an ominous atmosphere. BARBARA NAIR Lauren Bacall and Agnes Moorehead in a story about an Innocent escaped con.

2.00 (12) Spectrum. Economist Barbara Ward talks about the economic gaps between nations. 4.00 (x5) Football. New York Jets vs. Kansas City Chiefs.

5.00 Untamed World. Debut of a series about animals and their struggles to survive. Today, gazelles and lions in Africa. 5.30 (x6) Faces of India. An expatriate" Englishman talks about his years in India.

5.30 (12) Movie. College Confidential. (1960 drama). Steve Allen and Jayne Meadows in the story of a professor who studies his students sex habits. 6.00 (x3) 21st Century.

Walter Cronkite and Scottish scientist Richard Gregory talk about and look at robots. gives the impression of being entirely without illusions, of being able to reduce matters to their lowest common denominator and of attributing to them a sceptical interpretation, there is yet, in the utter honesty of his observations, an artistic and a poetic understanding of life. His revelations lay bare the chances, and mischances which beset life; the problems which man is called upon to face; the decisions he must make and on which may rest his fate and his destiny. But he offers no solutions, no glib answers to any of the riddles by which mankind is plagued. Mr.

Cozzens has a peculiarly parenthetical method of writing which sometimes makes his meaning obscure. It may well be that the reader will have to go back over a sentence a second, or even a third, time. But that matters little, for a thorough comprehension of the whole is necessary to its complete enjoyment. HELEN GUITON TRAITOR CAME. By Dougal John Lane, an ex-convict who was unjustly sentenced, returns to Port Arthur to join his friend, Max Gervais in his Northern Ontario lodge.

After several years of independent investigation, Max Gervais had discovered that certain po.werful forces in Canada posed a much deeper threat to national unity than the French Canadian separatists. Gervais had learned that his neighbor, Premier Nicholas Moncrieff of Ontario exploited every opportunity to poison Canadian book unlike any other previously unpublished," Mr. Purdy says in the introduction. "Other books have discussed trade and diplomatic relations and the various territorial "adjustments" of the lamentably undefended American-Canadian border." There it is right away "lamentably undefended" the theme of the book. Then you look down the list of contributors, all 49 of them, yes, 49! and they makeup what sociologist John Porter called tne "intellectual i the U.S.

Edited by Al Purdy. as interesting as any you have heard at a cocktail party in Dorval, or a Bar-B-Q in New Westminster; We must become independent of the United States. Independent what way? Economically, say somef cirt; turally say others. But with a few exceptions the rhetoric is the same we have read from the Confederatioij Debates to the last Couch-iching Conference. There is some new vocai bularly to express the same feelings.

George Woodcock, for example, says: "It is high time we asserted our moral independence. I mean to say! Reviews of books of this sort usually end up by saying; "There is still room for i definitive book on Canadian attitudes towards the United States." Well, after, glancing through this compendium oneismor convinced than ever, that there is no more room -for books of this type The contributors individual ly have much to say on othet subjects, in other books anj articles, but to give them the benefit of the doubt, onS suspects they didn't know whaf they were getting into here. In a word: tiresome. J.R The pursuit is interpreted in narrative form; the protagonist is Henry Worthington, founder and head of a management firm, which has proved to be a highly successful and lucrative enterprise. Henry analyses the reasons for its success, weighing his own attitudes and behavior against those of his clients.

Ua 10 Arvmlnf olw rfKianfma in this, as he is in the assessment of all other aspects of existence. "He achieves a detachment that renders his observations comprehensive and unbiased. The same critical analysis which he applies to his business enterprises, is used when he recounts incidents of his early life; when he reveals the kind of people he comes from and what has been their effect and their influence on his own attitudes and behavior. He applies his critical acuity to the rise and fall of his first marriage; to the second marriage; to his daughter's venture into matrimony and its results. While he Unreal against the real THE BURNING GLASS.

By S. N. Behrman. Little, Brown; 396 pages, $3.50. SET IN THE SUPERFICIAL glamor of the late 1930's, this novel follows the progress of Stanley Grant, a young American playwright, as he moves across the stages of Europe and the United States.

The bulk of the characters are members of the arts, actors, writers, composers: people often found basking in the spotlights of the unreal world of public adulation. "ZERO HOUR" by William Dring in the briefing pilots take off on a mission. CANADA AT WAR. By Leslie F. Hannon.

McClelland and This excellent book, which contains 120 illustrations (including .32 color plates) is the latest in Canadian Illustrated Library scences and tells the history of Canadians as fighting men in, more or less, capsule form. The black-and-white illustra Plotting treason against Canada The complete guide for the amateur wine maker introduces a fascinating and practical hobby with full information on ingredients and equipment. Hardcover $5.95 Paperback $1.50 THE ART OF MAKING WINE i by Stanley Anderson with Raymond Hull at your bookseller from cLeish. Macmillan; 212 pages, $5.95. This, perhaps, is where the depth of the story becomes apparent as we see this unreal fantasy world played against the real, sick world, that contains the growing Nazi horror.

We have, in fact, the lights of Hitler's Berchtesgaden superimposed on the lights of the stage. We follow Grant as he tries to escape from his background and heritage as a Jew, on his travels, through his hopeless, useless affairs, and to a marriage without af-f i 0 We follow him through repeated success, through sudden shock the death of a close friend and finally, to the threshold of the establishment of his identity. Grant is symbolic, whether he succeeds or fails, of a lost and tortured generation that attempted to find itself, while the horror It denied was stamping out its innocence. Behrman Is best known as a playwright, but in this, his first novel, he has taken the LONGMANS THE Using the standard ingredients of a thriller heroes, suspense, action, and violence, Dougal McLeish has produced a treasonous plot within the Canadian context. The assassination of the Prime Minister by a fanatical French Canadian university student triggers the events which ulti-.

mately lead the country to the brink of civil war. Capitalizing on the regional loyalties that exist in Canada, "The Traitor Game" is frighteningly racial relations in his paper, the Toronto Daily News, while at the same time pouring dollars into the two extremist factions, the Patriot League of Canada and the Quebec Liberation Front. Thus, John, Max, and Max's sister, Mary embark on the perilous task of determining the truth. Realizing that internal racial tensions had ripened Canada for the plucking, Premier Moncrieff's assistant, the mysterious Captain Mis-selhorn, schemes to "shake the tree." With the help of iff TOIrTii linn 111 I In Mill 1 ifT.

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About The Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
2,183,085
Years Available:
1857-2024