OCR Text |
Show :-:!THEg:-: Page 9 On v H H H E. & You will be left completely befuddled in the daze ahead. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) For you, the virtue of common sense is an uncommon un-common occurence. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You should be the star of a great soap opera if you keeps hitting the suds. PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20) You are not the best at keeping secrets. Everything goes in one ear and out your mouth. ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19) People will flatter you this week. You'll be flat on your back and they'll walk all over you, making you flatter on your back. TAURUA (Apr. 20-May 20) Your conceit extends even into your self acclaimed ac-claimed ability to predict snow. You're not only egomaniacal, you're weather vain. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Heartbreak is in store. This is especially sad since your heart is no longer under warranty. CANCER (June 21-July 22) You're about as dependable as a Liberian tanker. LEO(July23-Aug.22) Whenever others are in need of words of wisdom, they can count on you for paragraphs of prattle. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.22) You will soon disprove the theory that nobody's perfect. You'll make a perfect ass of yourself. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) This will not be your most pleasant week ever. When it's over, you'll feel like the bottoms of a pair of rental skis that were used on Prospector for seven straight days. SCORPIO ( Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You will be physically drained this week. Your swine flu shot is being recalled. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Don't expect to become president just because you have a peanut brain. PUZZLE Twelve fruits are hidden in this block. They may be spelled forward or backward and may run horizontally, vertically or diagonally. Can you find the twelve? aeyr R 1 E H c gJ! AJlJLJLJLjl LAjL0-RJLJLJ R R E L PEAA JLJLJLLJ RPJ JLiLJLJ-iLJLJLJL wcAL-L-hpp AHNPCLGAL REGAyRJE XjREZNLAJ)-S XjREZNLAJ)-S P A N 1 A N j A b Last Week's Puzzle Solution Ml SID IF LJT Jf SI o w t N E I, U w m rkxu t M z c 'iffir no tt. !. JL ill 9 AjtRjFjnliJjjy ( i4 , P. Hilotfes by Tubular Wells U, " C ?6 J by Quicksilver Monday night past was played the final football foot-ball of what has become a dragging six-month, we'll-get-your-money-long-as-we-can season. Too long for even the most strung out blocking and tackling dummy junkie. But let us not dwell on things past. Say you are an Alex antic addict. Say you do like hearing it like it is from the upbeat voice below the rug of contro-Cosell. Say you do sing to the smoothness of the Giffer. Why not for the half-year Monday and other night off-season take a half-sabbatical to the educational offerings of KUED. Features to be aired this week by the Public Broadcasting System : Wednesday, January 19, 6:30 p.m. -Survival: Fire Building and Hypothermia. Third program in the series. Brief discussion about hypothermia. hypother-mia. How to build fire from native materials. Thursday, January 20, 9:00 p.m.-Special: The Inauguration of Jimmy Carter. Saturday, January 22, 7:30 p.m.-Davtd Cop-perfield. Cop-perfield. Episode Three. Saturday, January 22, 8:30 p.m. The Way It Was: 1948 World Series, Indians-Braves. Monday, January 24, 8:00 p.m.-Meeting of Minds.Ulysses S. Grant, Karl Marx, Marie Antoinette An-toinette and Sir Thomas Moore debate their historic achievements. Written and moderated by Steve Allen. ,( Tuesday, Janaury 25, 7:00 p.m. -How To. ..To Play Billiards. Karl Ward acts as guide. Tuesday, January 25, 9:00 p.m.-Voyage To the Ends of The Earth.Story of the Norwegian explorer, ex-plorer, Fridtjof Nansen, who almost reached North Pole. Kimball Art Center Faculty Display Their Many Talents With the release of Francois Truffaut's Small Change, film goers once again are treated to One of this fine director's favorite subjects-children. Few other directors have much interest in depicting depic-ting children honestly. Rather, children are usually used as a plot device, or worse, as exploitive ex-ploitive mini adults. Truiiaufs previous films that dealt with children. The loo Blows and The Wild Child, both tried to portray children in a realistic and sympathetic sym-pathetic manner. Small Change continues this outlook while providing the audience with a delightfully entertaining flick. Perhaps the reason Truffaut is so successful with his films about children is that he never looks down upon them. The children in his films are autonomous individuals who are alreadv displaying their own distinct character traits. Because they are individuals with personalities that are not dictated by plot or what is commercially commer-cially viable this year, the children's actions are not only believable but touching. It almost seems like eavesdropping when we watch the kids move about in their own microcosrnic society. One smiles when one sees a young boy's giggly attempt to tell a "dirty" joke, remembering how the forbidden subject would always command attention from one's peers. Simple events, such as literally being "saved by the bell" in school, elicit a strange reaction in adults because it is an almost universal univer-sal experience. Truffaut also makes a strong statement about child beating in Small Change. This unfortunately unfor-tunately fairly common practice is described as an abomination. But more effectively, Truffaut shows the personality disintegration that results from this practice. When Small Change is finally over, one realizes that Truffaut is expressing his optimism in the resiliency of the human race. The children's slow development as they push back boundaries and start to rely upon themselves, the growing awareness of the opposite sex, and the " crushing" (to them) setbacks in love have been repeated for many generations, and will be repeated by future generations. One leaves the film with a greater respect for the individuality of children. Small Change seems to make a convincing argument? in a very subtle manner; that children are one of humanity's most important resources. Photos and Design By Pat McDowell If 50 off Children's Ski Outfits j 580 Main Street OPEN DAILY 1 0 to 6 Telephone 649-8338 J'0 Faf :r I SAVE UP 10 50 cuisine ftoI',X- t ON OVERSTOCKED J m client but casual SE?S?SN ITFMQ ' I atmosphere Catering and Banquets f I LnllflO FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIAL 1 1 Vegetable, (garlic $rea& fi j t j - l NEXT TO THE GONDOLA AT THE RESORT CENTER I |