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The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 40

Location:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
40
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Saturday, June 19, 1976 Ottawa Journal 40 The Outcasts by Ben Wicks Tell me why rTl AAE. You and your handwriting P.V.' John James Audubon famous bird painter V. AND XL I I RL.BA.S- I'LL Rt TUB. WAY TO TEST the American scene THE" BEST POLLUTION YWR UNDERSTATING OFAVORO ISTOUSE IT IN A SENTENCE. InM UCT5C By 1)1 ANN Bl KKAl Sit down and write Dlann Bureau a letter, care of 'Your Ottawa Journal, PO Box 280, Station London, Onl.

WRITE ON WHITE, UNLINED PAPER WITH BLACK OR RED INK, and be sure to Include your age, signature and a code number (pick any number, or number-letter combination) for identification in the column. Mrs. Bureau is a certified graphoanalyst skilled in determining character and personality through analysis of handwriting. You may be surprised at her reply. yf-A.

fOrJs ftvwv AMj! CODE K2C 026, OTTAWA, Your handwriting definitely shows some very basic emotional insecurities. It is not a natural thing for you to be able to respond emotionally to people, but you have the added handicap of being terribly insecure in any situation. When you write, try to slow down and steady your hand. You have a lot of difficulty accomplishing goals which you might wish to attain. Even the very practical things, the every day desires, can fall through, because of lack of drive to work for them.

It would probably be a good idea for you to talk out your problems with someone who is trusted and reliable. Good luck to you. Stamp corner Canadian Centennial Stamps By A. LEOKUM Win the New Book of Knowledge (20 volumes). Send your questions, name, age, address to TELL ME WHY! care of The Journal.

Include Postal Code. In case of duplicate questions the author will decide the winner. Probably the world's best-known ornithologist, or student of birds, is John James Audubon. His beautiful paintings of birds are seen everywhere. Audubon's drawings were different from any that were ever done before because he drew from live or freshly killed birds instead of from museum specimens.

He also had the birds in natural positions and put plants and other living creatures in the paintings. Many people have copies of Audubon's pictures on their walls. Audubon was born in Haiti in 1785, the son of a French naval officer. He was sent to school in France, but he spent all his time outdoors collecting specimens, watching birds and animals, and drawing birds. Later he lived and married in the United States.

He kept failing In business because he spent most of his time wandering in the woods, collecting and painting. By 1828 he had painted several hundred life-sized pictures of birds. When his "Birds of America" was published, there were 435 pages with life-size drawings of 1,055 birds. The pages were engraved and then colored by hand. Today these volumes are very valuable and are owned mostly by libraries and museums.

JC HAVE. THE. PM. AMP pewANC rra 66 Re--ASe-v ffc TO Don Q. More By JONATHAN BERRY For the dedicated chess addict, summer is the time to play in a big chess tournament.

Today the Paul Keres Memorial tournament starts in Vancouver; the organizers expect over 300 players and $15,000 in prizes. June 23-25 the "Congres d'echecs dc la Saint-Jean" takes place in Montreal, with an expected turnout of 500 players and $6,000 In prizes. And to top it all, the Canadian Open will be held in Toronto from July 31-August 8, with hopes of 700 players and $24,000 in prizes. But for most of Canada's 3,000,000 chess players, summer is the time when the chessmen stay in their box. After all, who wants to engage in a life-and-death struggle in a dark and dingy room when summer is waiting outside? Only a dedicated chess addict.

However, there is more to chess than competition. You can, for instance, relax in the sun with a chess book. Chess has by far the larg T. 1 'l- 7WEL6APWEPALL ABOUT to chess than competition LI HIT, i flT I i Father Bressani had amazing life Radio highlights for In 1901, 50 years after Audubon died, the National Audubon Society was formed to try to protect the birds that were being rapidly destroyed. Today the Audubon Society works to save all animals and plants.

FUN TIME The Chuckle Box Mother: Johnny, you'd better take care of that cold. Johnny: Take care of it? I want to get rid of it! Jerry: My uncle plays the piano by car. Harry: Well, my grandfather fiddles with his whiskers. DID YOU KNOW? Nowadays, big hit records sell a million copies or more. But no record ever Issued has equalled one that first came out in 1941.

It's "White Christmas," by Irving Berlin, and more than 100,000,000 records of that song have been sold! Answer to yesterday's Puzzle Box: 3 socks. If he took out a red one the first time, a green one the next, the third must be red or green. Win the New Book of Knowledge Yearbook. Send your riddles, jokes, to: Riddles, Jokes; TELL ME WHY! CO The Journal Include Postal Code. Flashback on Canada escaped.

Then he helped the surviving Hurons to get established on Ho Saint-Joseph (Christian Island) and went to Quebec to get aid for them. Father Bressani returned to Italy later and died in Florence. Other events June 19: 1610 Champlain helped Hurons defeat Iroquois on Richelieu River. 1816 Governor Semple and 20 others were killed by Nor'Westers and Metis at Seven Oaks (Manitoba). 1882 Last spike was driven of CPR Thunder Bay-Winnipeg section.

1903 Regina was incorporated. 191.1 High level bridge at Edmonton was completed. 1914 Canada's worst mine disaster at Hillcrest, Alberta, killed 189 men. 1917 Sir Arthur Currie scc-ceeded Lord Byng as commanding officer of Canadian Corps. 1921 Postal Workers went on strike until June 29.

1930 United Farmers won Alberta election with J. E. Brownlee, premier. 1931 Conservatives lost every scat in Saskatchewan. by JO OUELLET Solution: 10 letters 619 CAME HOME POLLUTED LAST NIGHT "Chess Fundamentals" by former World Champion Jose Raul Capablanca.

But the best book at the Ottawa Library, for both entertainment and instruction, is "The tactics of the endgame," by Jeno Ban. The book contains 240 beautiful examples of the chess endgame, grouped into chapters on a common theme. Today's diagram is in the chapter: Closing of lines. White is to move and win. This difficult endgame was composed by A.A.

Troitsky in 1897. Try to solve it. Solution: White is far ahead in material, but black threatens both g2 and Rbl White can, however, take advantage of the self-restricting effect of Black's forces: 1. Bc6 Rbl (If 1 Rb2 2. Bg2 Rg2 3.

Nf4 and white wins) 2. Ke2 Rhl 3. Bg2 Kg2 4. Nf4 Kgl 5. Kel The self-blockade of black's King is completed by the advance of his pawn there was no other move! 6.

Ne2 checkmate! week 1.03 CBO Themes ond variations. Part 1: Feature on guitarist Laurlndo Almeida. Sandra Watts, oboe; Paul Armln, viola; Monica Gavlord, piano. Works bv Loeff ler. Part 3: The Paradox of America's Music.

I. 30 CBOF-FM Orchestra Synv pnontque. 9.00 CBOFM Montreal International Piano Competition. Goto concert featuring the winners with the Montreal Symohony Orchestra. 10.30 CBO Jazz Rodfo-Canada.

Nimmons 'n' Nine Plus Six ond the Wayne Kozak Trio. Also, an item on the Canadian stoge band finols in Toronto. II. 03 CBOFM A Little Night Musk. Works by Luiglni, Rachmaninoff ond Mendelssohn.

Friday, June 25 1.30 p.m. CBO Conodion Concert Holt. Lois Marshall, soprano, and Stuart Hamilton, piano. Songs by Beethoven, Faure and Schumann. 3.30 CBO The Max Ferguson Show.

Finol broodcost of the show. I. 03 CBO-FM Ideas. Beethoven Sonatas, with pianist Anton Kuertl. I S3 CBO Between Ourselves.

Program about the Irish in Newfoundland. 9.00 CBO-FM RodM Children and Words In this Work), a production from Nippon Hoso Kyokal (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) which won the Itolio Prize. N.30 CBO Moior Progression. Rock show. II.

03 CBOFM A Little Night Music. Works by Haydn, Chopin and Delius. 45 H'l HUM GENUINE dies, plates and papers. The booklet panes are most complicated. In fact the amount of detail work is almost staggering.

This remarkable book contains one section of three pages with the heading, The Denominations In Simplified Detail. For example the 5-cent stamp description is under nine different headings describing panes of 100 and the same tagged for use in Winnipeg, pre-cancelled panes, the Ccllc-pav of 20 stamps in two types, regular and pre-cancelled coil stamps, and two booklet panes in different formats. And that is merely the simplified list proving that people who devour philatelic details must have this book to help satisfy their hunger for research guidance. The counterfeit section of the book is priceless. To date two values of the issue have been forged: the 4 and 6-ccnt stamps.

In Laval a Montreal suburb the RCMP seized 750,000 counterfeits of the 4-cent value, and one of the culprits was dealt with sternly by the heavy hand of Canadian justice one day in jail and $1,000 fine. David Verity, Box 849, Burlington, Ont. distributes this book which is available from stamp dealers everywhere in Canada at $7.50. BRIDGE entertainment, I recommend "The Chess Companion," "Chessboard Magic," "The Fireside Book of Chess," "101 Chess Problems for Beginners," and "Fields of Force." Fortunately, it is almost impossible to write a bad chess book if your goal is to entertain, though many attempts have been made! To improve your game the most entertaining of ail I recommend "Chess Made Easy" (the only book in the Ottawa Library in our modern Algebraic "A Guide to the Chess Endings," and especially I. JO CBOF-FM Concert Inline.

9.03 CBOFM Musk of Mozart. Ruben Gorevlch Is host. 10.00 CBO-FM Canadian Concert Hall. Marta Hkty, violin; Arthur Ozollns, piano; Tsuyoshl Tsutsuml, cello. Works by Dvorak and Perroult.

10.30 CBO Touch the Earth. Program includes Interviews with singer-humorist Jim Bennet, singer Clarv Croft ond Brooks Diamond, organizer of the Atlantic Folk Festival. II. 03 CBOFM A Little Night Musk. Works by Faure, Haydn and Mozart.

Wednesday, June 13 00 CKCU-FM Hot Wax. Recent lazz albums. 1.03 CBO Montreal lirtermtMnal Piano Com petition. Gala concert featuring the winners with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra. I.

03 CBOFM Ideas. The poetry of paradise. 9.03 CBOFM Themes ond Variations. Pari 1: Feature on guitarist Lourln-do Almeida. Part 2: Sandra Watts, oboe; Paul Armln, viola; Monica Govlord.

piano. Works by Loettler. Part 3: The Parodox of America's Music, a documentary by Tony Thomas. 10.30 CBO Country Road. An Interview with Buck Owen.

II. 03 CBO-FM A Little Night Music. Works by Faure, Britten and Debussy. Thursday, June 24 1.03 CBOFM Ideas. The rabbit In fable ond fairy tale, mythology, poetry ond song.

est literature of any game. Over 300,000 separate titles exist, including probably the first book ever printed in the English language, Caxton's The Game and Playe of the Ches.se. There are good chess books, and, unfortunately, there are bad chess books. Under the latter heading fall books that claim to teach something deep, like "chess but really don't teach anything, because the author couldn't recognize chess strategy even if you hit him over the head with it! There are many kinds of bad chess books, but let's concentrate on the many good ones. For the intermediate and advanced player, the best books are available from the Chess Federation of Canada, Box 7339, Ottawa.

You can get their book catalogue by writing to them. Every bookstore has chess books. But if you don't know exactly which book you want, I suggest you go to the Ottawa Public Library and sample their collection. For and Haydn. (On CBO-FM Monday af 1.03 p.m.

4.03 CBOFM Musk of Our People. Greek songs from a Greek coffee house in Toronto. (On CBO Monday at 8.03 p.m.) 5.10 CBO Cross-country Checkup. Open-line program. 5.30 CBOFM Touch the Earth.

Interviews with singer-humorist Jim Ben-net, singer Clary Croft ond Brooks Diamond, organizer of the Atlantic Folk Festival. 7.00 CKCU-FM Behind IM Covers. Program about Canadian literature. 7.03 CBO Variety Intematlonol. Program Includes an episode in the Louis Armstrong Story.

7.03 CBOFM Opera Theatre. Don McGill Is host. I. 03 CBOFM and CBOF-FM Montreal International Piano Competition. 1 Live broadcast of the finals.

9.03 CBO Folk Circle. Recorded folk music. 10.30 CBO CBC PkjyhMne.K you Don't See What You Want, bv Ernesto Cueva. II. 00 CBOFM Music of Today.

Program includes electronic music and a piano work by Derek Healey. 11.03 CBO Recycling the Blues. Rhythm and blues. 12.00 CBOFM That Midnight Jan. Recordings by Duke Ellington are featured.

Monday, June 21 4.30 p.m. CBO As II Happens. Magazine program with Alan Moitland ond Barbara Frum as hosts. (Monday to Friday) 1.30 CBOFM Listen to the Musk. Recorded concert music introduced by Morgoret Pacsu.

(Monday to Friday.) 1.03 CBOFM Ideas. Food the Body Politic. 1.03 CBOF-FM Soiree de Gala. Recltol bv pianist Walter Gieseklng, recorded In 1952. I.

03 CBO Identities. Program from Winnipeg about Canada's cultural minorities. 9.00 CBOFM CBC Monday Eve-nina. Port 1: The Art of Conducting, with the late Ernest Ansermet. Part 2: Judith Forst, mezzo-soprano, and pianist Denise Gaudry.

Songs by Chausson, Hahn ond Warlock. 9.30 CBOF-FM Recltol d'Orgue. 10.30 CBO The Great Canadian Gold Rush. The Quebec rock group Contraction, and Nazareth. II.

03-CBOFMALrttle Night Musk. Works by Glozunov, Shostokovich, and Rachmaninoff. Tuesday, June 22 7.00 CKCU-FM Artlstk License. The arts scene In Ottawa 1.03 CBO CBC Tuesday night. Part 1: A profile of Isaoc Bashevis Singer, famous Ylddlsh-lonouaoe writer.

Part 2: Leonard Isaocs talks with composer Aaron Copland. Theodore Oien plays Cooeland's Clorlnet Concerto. 1.03 CBOFM Ideas. The New Facts of Life. By BOB BOWMAN The early missionaries taught the Indians that the way to heaven was through suffering.

Occasionally the Indians would "help" the missionaries get to heaven by torturing them unmercifully taunting them as they did so. One of the victims was Father Fransesco Giuseppe Bressani, a Jesuit who came to Canada in 1642. He was captured by Iroquois in 1644 when he was travelling up (he Richelieu River, and tortured severely. He did not die and on June 19, 1644, the Mohawk council decided to let him go. They even gave him an old squaw to look after him but he was so crippled from the torture that she decided he was useless and deserted.

Father Bressani managed lo find some Dutch fur-traders who helped him get to France by way of New Amsterdam (New York). Pierre Radisson had a somewhat similar experience about the same time but lie was not tortured. Bressani returned to Canada in 1645 and took part in a conference between the French and Iroquois which was held at Trois Rivieres, lie must have had a tremendous spirit of forgiveness. Four years later Bressani was serving Huron missions in the Georgian Bay area when they were destroyed by Iroquois. Fathers Brebeuf and Lalemant were tortured to death but Bressani By DOUGLAS PATRICK The Canadian Centennial Issue consisting of 15 stamps between 1967-73 has created more serious study than any previous series of Canadian stamps.

Specialists have written scores of articles and several books on the subject. Earlier this year George Wegg a professional philatelist in Toronto published the most comprehensive book about these popular stamps ever produced to the present time. It contains 84 pages in a large format the size of business letterhead paper. F. W.

L. Keane and J. Paul Hughes wrote the first part, The Basic Stamps while eight other specialists produced the second part, The Supplementary Categories. During an interview, Mr. Wegg explained how he became involved with the good friend, Ed Haus-mann editor of BNA Topics, journal of the British North America Philatelic Society told me about this wonderful book that had been finished by Fred Keane and Paul Hughes in Victoria.

Mr. Hausmann did all the hard work designing the book and doing the layout. He labored countless hours building the book from the manuscript. "The book starts with the one-cent 1967 stamps in the definitive issue, and that's one point they brought to our attention that a lot of people call this the centenary issue. It's the regular series of 1967, the whole thing from one cent to one dollar.

"The authors describe each stamp individually in considerable detail, the stamps, booklets, coils. One interesting fact is that both bank note companies were involved, the Canadian Bank Note Co. and the British American Bank Note Co. That made a difference in the Q.l As South, vulnerable, you hold: 6 OQ9843 AI0732 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West Pass 1 0 Pass 1 Pass INT Pass Pass 2 Pass What action do vou Q.2 As South, vulnerable, you hold: K872 WAQ1072 0 95 84 The bidding has proceeded: East South West North Pass Pass I Dble. 3 0 What do you hid? Q.

3 Neither vulnerable, as South you hold: 83 'C7J9852 0 10952 74 The bidding has proceeded: West North East South 1 NT Dble. Rdble. What action do you take? Q.4 As South, vulnerable, you hold: VAQ872 0 10943 Q72 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West 1 Pass 1 NT Dble. Pass Pass Wh.it action do you take? tl.5 Both vulnerable, as South you hold: 95 AQ1071. 0 AQ10 K98 The bidding has proceeded: Saturday- June 19 1.03 p.m.

CBO Opera by Reauest. Bill Howes Is host. JJB CBOF-FM L'Opera du Same. 01. CBO-FM ion RnUfrConoda.

The Eric Frledenberg Quintet and the Gavin Walker Trio. 4.00 CBO-FM Boston Symphony Orchestra. Works by Wagner and Sibelius. 4.03 I CBO-FM the Arts in Review. Bruce Rogers Is host.

7.00 CBO Music de Chei Nous. Le trio a Cordes du Quebec in works by Mozart, Beethoven and Dohonvi. (On CBO-FM Sunday at 12 noon.) 7.03 CBO-FM Gllmours Albums. Records introduced by Clyde Gllmour. (On CBO Sunday at 11.03 o.m.) I.

03 CBO-FM and CBOF-FM Montreal International Piano Competition. Live broadcast of the finals. JO CBO CBC Stage. Voices in the Wind by Calgary writer Sandra Jones. Leading roles ore played by Robert Koons and Douglas Rlske.

9.30 CBO Regional Orchestra. Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, with Janice Taylor, contralto. Kindertotenlieder, Mahler. 10.03 CBO Anthology. A story by Nairn Kaftan at the Canada Council and a literary profile of poet Archibald Lomp-man try Carol Bishop.

II. 03 CBO Musk Alive. Hortuloni Musicae In music from the time ol CBO-FM Sunday at 3.03 p.m.) 11.03 CBO-FM The Great Canadian Gold Rush. Celebration, a show featuring west coast musical talent. Sunday, June JO 0.05 a.m.

CBO FM Choral Concert. Works by Dvorak. 0.03 CBOF-FM OrcMstres Can-adfens. O.OS CBO Sunday Mooailrw. A detailed look at major news stories of the past week.

(On CBO-FM at 11.05 a.m.) 10.03 CBO FM Music Hi the Home. Leonard Isoacs Introduces music bv Dvorok, Elgor, Brahms and Franck. 10.30 CBOF-FM Recital. 11.03 CBOF-FM Les Orgues His-tongues. Antoine Boucard plays music by Peraia, Andrea, Vila and Heredla on 17 century organ in Spain.

13.03 p.m. CBO Capital Report. News commentary. (On CBO-FM at 2.05 P.m.) 1.03 CBO The Royal Canadian Air Farce. Comedy ond satire, with Roger Abbott, Dave Broodfoot, Don Ferguson, Luba Gov ond John Morgan.

1.30 CBO The Entertainers. Music from the years 1944 and 1964. 1.30 CBOFM Organists In Recital. From Caloory, Terrance Fullerto plays Vlerne's Symphony No. 1.

3.03 CBO The Bush ond the Satan. Once I Was a Warrior, adopted from a book by C. Frank Turner. 4.03 CBO CBC Vancouver Chamber Orchestra. Works by Boccherini, Dellus Charles Goren HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backwards.

Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS. The leftover letter' spell the Wonderword. SUMMER RESORTS 'J. i i I hIcTa Ye TbTg 1 1 jc O.ILJLJL xjnt A JL.fLJLiLM.jLL JL LJLJL 5LJLJL L. LILiliii )L-L-LJLJL 9 A JL JL JL JL JlJ JLJL-LJLLJLir LiLJLIi AL.JLJL JL A.

JL )L JL JL JL JL JL iQ EjC A I I A LA LX LA-JLiLA-A-s jT j2L ycJLiL AJL LL Ly JTI LJ srj LJLJLJL EiLL--JLJLJL A. tLJLILJLJJL 1 JL SJL LL 'y Aft I I LY gS South West I Pass North East 1 2 0 What do you bid now? Q.6 As South, vulnerable, you hold: VQ982 0AK3 4A10542 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West 1 Pass 2 Pass 2 Pass What do you bid now? Q.7-East-West vulnerable, as South you hold: Q98 VA72 OJ8732 108 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East Pass Pass 1 NT Pass What action do you take? Q.8 As South, vulnerable, you hold: 10854 7KQ763 08 QIO The bidding has proceeded: West North East South Pass 10 IV 1 Pas 2 Pass What action do you take? (Is your hand not good enough for a two-over-one response? Strong enough for a jump shift? Find out in an instant with Charles Gorcn's "Shortcut to Expert Bridge" --Instant answers for all point counts. For a copy, send $1.50 to "Goren Short-cuts," co this newspaper, P.O. Box 259 Norwood, N.J. 07648.

Makechecks payable I to NEWSPAPERBOOK8.) SOLUTION Those who feel lucky to be who they are, jue always the luckiest people by far. TV Program Changes i9teioAnesT- ho a 5o ij CITE E. 3 sno xJ5 e. tor tU ETC eIIt" ME Tllf OOf ki a a Bg o)m Eti eKIt SN(MA pjl tA SIP 1MB 1 AjL f-1-Pr''r-1 JJofi rk BmP' a Ep oa a rF e. ait til t-ElSiS EpMTiA EJPjFjuiRjlAipjT BO SMhTE --lARpfoBfTe TtUp i IE.

RBnEVJI EjS sTE'A'fT ci-! p.m. Ch. 12 Billy Graham in Asia. Sunday m. Ch.

12 Rolf Harris. p.m. Ch. 12(0) We re Still Only Young. Comedy special by Ottawa's Dole Brothers, p.m.

Ch 6(G) Master's Touch. p.m. Ch. 12 Billy Graham in Asia Saturday 2.00 p.m. Ch.

IH(PBS) Piccadilly Circus. 3.00 p.m. Ch. 12 Sports Beat '76. 3.30 p.m.

Ch. 12 World Championship Tennis. 1.00 p.m. Ch. 5 News.

4.30 p.m. Ch. 5 U.S. Golf Open- 5.00 p.m. Ch.

6(G) George Anthony. 5.30 p.m. Ch. 6(G) Sports Special. (i.00 1.00 2 00 2 30 6 00 CLUES R-Beaches.

Busy: C-Cabins, Qamping, Catchy Cheap, Children. Club, Cost, Cottages, Country, E- Expensive. Extravagant; F--Facilities, Farrtily, Fast, Fish, Forest: H--Holidays, Hotels, Hunt; -Lakes, Leisure; Mountains; -Ocean: Q--Quiet; -Rain, Reasonable, Reel, Relaxing, Rely, Rpst, Rivers; S-Stflp, Suit, 'Surf: T-Tcnts; V--Vacations; W--Water i Yesterday's Answer: EXPECTATIONS.

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About The Ottawa Journal Archive

Pages Available:
843,608
Years Available:
1885-1980