B6é For some weeks now, News/Mirror readers have noticed the phrase “Closed Captioned” in some of the listings in TV Week and have wondered what the words mean, Closed Captioned is a system whereby deaf view- ers, who own a_ special decoder, can have subtitles made visible on their TV sets. They watch the same program a viewer with hear- ing does, but they can read subtitles on their sets while the viewer without a hearing problem isn't distracted by subtitles on his screen. The following article describes the process in more detail. . * . By HENRY KISOR Chicago Sun-Times “Baby, how's about you and me making a little whoopee?" asks the man on the TV screen, and that's what you hear, “Let's make love" is what I see — and you don't. For the last month I've been watching television — and, for the first time ever, with nearly complete under- standing. Thanks to a little brown box now sitting atop my portable color set, I — and other deaf viewers — don’t have to depend upon lipreading, a vastly imperfect method of communication, to make sense of isi CASTLEGAR NEWS, August 13, 1980 Closed-captioning Decoder opens TV to the deaf away in front of their TV sets. i Since mid-March, 18 hours each week of closed- captioned programming on PBS, ABA and NBC have been available to deaf view- ers — and I've become a faithful watcher of a few of them, Even among closed-cap- tioned shows there’s a vast wasteland: “Vegas,” Bight Is Enough,” “Three's Com- pany,” “Diffrent Strokes" and inane and jejune, and “Real People” is appalling.. But ABC's "Sunday Night Movies” and NBC's “Monday Night at the Movies" have been mostly first-class. Bar- ney Miller” turned out to be surprisingly warm, intelli. gent and human. Yes, you knew all this, but I didn't — until now. To my surprise, PBS’ programming is highly enter- taining as well as educa- tional. “Nova” and “Odyssey” are hardly dry academic lec- tures; they're rousing intel- lectual adventures. I'm no longer a “Masterpiece The- atre” widower between 9 and 10 Sunday nights, but have joined my wife in connubial fandom. And was I hooked on “Mystery!" Tuesday nights the way a soaper fan clings.to “As the World Turns.” Of course nothing’s per- fect. The captions themselves leave something to be de- sired, As in that example at the beginning of this story, dialogue often must be tight- ly condensed to get its sense across in the short time al- lotted, The spices and subtleties. of language thus are lost; all teo often on the British Broadcasting Corp. imports, the locations of upper-class British English give way to d Bland: (It's general drift, the details are easy.) As in any fledgling en- terprise, a few gremlins have made mischief. Not long ago NBC aired the lovely movie “Breaking Away.” Only be- cause I'd seen a promotion © commercial for it the night before did I know it was ‘captioned. The network had- n't informed the newspaper TV listings, which indicate shows that are captioned. But it. turned out that only the first half of the movie was captioned. Some glitch had obliterated the rest. What frustration, what waste! And compared to pro- gramming as a whole, 18 hours of captioned TV per week seems niggardly. Cap- tioning costs only about $2,000 per program hour; in fun, however, to try to match . the captions to the dialogue. Once a lipreader knows the that’s wee pota- toes. It’s a bit irritating, too, that these few captioned hours air early in the week; there's a drought on Friday and nights. “Never a dull moment” sang Rod Stewart a couple of albums back. He may’ have had an eye cocked on the Called a “decoder,” that little box — available from Sears for $260 — works by transforming encoded elec- ‘ tronic signals from TV trans- mitters into captions on the TV screen, much like sub- titles on foreign films. With- out the decoder, unneeded captions don't clutter up the bottom of the TV screen: Thus the system is called “closed-captioning.” It could be the greatest boom to the deaf since the hearing aid. Every since I was a kid, I'd had a hard time puzzling out what the small screen's tiny talking heads were saying. Voice-over nar- fation made it even more baffling. Thus I'd watch very little TV, usually only simple- minded shows such as sports events. Movies were tough, too, unless I'd read the books on which they were based and knew what to expect. Talky British drawing-room dramas like “Masterpiece Theatre" might as well have been in Urdu, for all I could under- stand of them. Only programs with a lot of action were halfway com- prehensible, and I'd have to fill in the gaps with my own imagination, inventing plot and dialogue to match the silent movements. The re- , sulting “scenarios” often merely lampooned the genu- ine versions, as I would learn later. {Occasionally I'd prefer my fantasies to the real ones; that's no tribute to my imag- ination, but a measure of the Pacific i when he sat down to write those lyrics. “Fun For All” is the slo- gan for this year's fair and a look at the lineup of free attractions being offered con- firms that PNE '80 will be one of the largest, most action-packed big shows, the West Coast has ever known. For openers, rock and blues fans will be treated to nightly free concerts by one of Vancouver's hottest bands, the Rhythm-and-Blues All- Stars.\The All-Stars are, as their name implies, an all- star collection of players from the “golden age of rhythm and blues” in Vancou- ver — the 60's. | Other acts performing regularly on the outdoor stage include Gillian Camp- bell, long a PNE- favorite; the Diaz Brothers, a multi-tal- ented Filippino vocal-instru-. mental group currently mak- ing an impact on the local lounge circuit; the Evergreen Harmonies of the Vancouver Chapter of the Sweet- Adelines; the Glad Tidings Temple Choir; and Bobby -Hales Big Band. Both the Fun Fest Fea- ture Bowl and the Dairyland Petting Zoo will provide con- tinuous enjoyment while, throughout the day, other acts will take to the stage and the skies. The Ski Labatt Acro- batts, freestyle “hotdog” ski jumpers, perform three times a day; for color and historical impact Frank Cald- well, a Native Indian dancer, will perform his spectacular quality of television.) In the end, books communicated to me much more efficiently, and with them I'd spend the long hours most people while 'y; the Swaying Bil- ros and the Sky Cycle Trio offer death-defying aerial stunts high in the sky; and renowned hypnotist-mental- $77,000 grant for crafts council The awarding of an annual sustaining grant to the Canadian Crafts Council (CCC) in -the amount of $77,000 in order to facilitate 30,000 crafts people across Canada. The CCC also serves as the Canadian representa- tive on the board of the World _Grafts Council and its ongoing has been announced by Secretary of State Francis Fox. Established in 1974, the CCC is a federation of pro- vincial, territorial and sec- toral associations, represent- ing the interests of almost on-going consult. tions with the following fed- eral departments: Secretary of State, External Affairs, Industry, Trade and Com- merce, Finance, Employment and Immigration, Revenue Canada, Public Works and Indian and Northern Affairs, Everything for your {SU S =e: % OND DAY INSTALLATION, SAME DAYUSE FOR FREE ESTIMATE WITHOUT OBLIGATION CASTLE VINYLDECK - : 365-7086 ed Is your sundeck leaking? —Are you tired of repainting? —Do you peed maintenance. . free PNE offers many free attractions ist Romane will amaze fair- goers with his astonishing ability to hypnotize “almost anyone” with his remarkable psychic powers and velvet voice. Add to this the peren- nially popular sounds of gospel-rock performed with sincerity, soul and talent at the Sunbeam Children's The- atre; dancing More, there's no caj tioning of live television. The networks must send video- tapes to the National Cap- tioning it (N.G.1) in See us for... APPLIANCE REPAIRS and Brand Name Appliances * SPEED QUEEN JAY : TAG * GENERAL ELECTRIC CASTLEGAI EGAR PLUMBING & HEATING 1008 Columbia Avenue Phone 365-3388 ~_ WESTKO CONCRETE +L Foundations LI Retaining Walls LI. Floors RALPH BIRD ; Box 3203, Castlegar, B.C, Phone 365-5071 TRUK STO, COMMERCIAL & ADVERTISING ART —Creative Design —Hand Lettering: POSTERS. SIGNS AUTOMOBILES : OGOS Holiday & Seasonal Advertising —Cartooning —lillustration 365-7078 Falls Church, Va. There the captions are encoded on magnetic discs, which are re- turned to the where they are inserted electronically into the tele- vision picture, then trans- mitted along with the normal video and audio portions of. the programs. g All this takes time. (N.C.L is at work on a system - to caption live material; it di as staged by local dance or- ganizations; strolling perfor- mers such as High Pockets . the Clown; J.W. McCune, an organ grinder with his own monkey; all-time favorite Lance (Mr. Dixieland) Har- rison and his band; large, furry Animal Friends; The side-splitting com- edy of Dr. Lovetraft’s Mag- ical Medicine Show; the love- ly Pamela Carr Drum Maj- orettes; and two major daily events — the Timber Show and the World's Largest Demolition Derby, plus much more, PNE ‘80, Aug. 16 to Sept. 1, just might turn out to be the entertainment bargain of the decade. | may be early as 1981, it says.) Of the networks, only CBS has not joined the captioning scheme. It’s hold- ing out while it tests a decoding system of its own, one that receives many dif- ferent electronic signals rather than one limited to captions only. That means deaf viewers may’ have to wait a long time to enjoy "60 Minutes,” and it's unlikely -that the CBS system will be compatible with Sears’ $250 unit. é That seems a stiff price for a bundle of electronics no bigger than a breadbox, but Sears avers that it earns no profit from the decoders, -called TeleCaption units. Ist ANNIVERSARY _ .Our Gift To You For Your --=--Support During-Our First Year — With Every T-Shirt Purchased Get a TRANSFER for ~~ NO see CHARGE With Every Pair of Jeans Purchased Get a T-SHIRT or PANTY HOSE for ee er JEANS Children’s. To size 6X, Youth's. Size 8-16, from...... vee | OPEN MONDAYS regular hours THURS. & FRI. TiL9 p.m, CASTLE TIRE (1977) Ltd. SALES & SERVICE Commercial & Industrial Tire Specialists Passenger and Off Highway Tires WHEEL BALANCING ce, 1050 Columbia Avenue “You build | or let us” See us also for: ° Excavations © Hauling. ¢ Form Rentals Castlegar 365-3401. 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MARTIN’S TV REPAIRS Falrview Sub. 365-5349 _ aE ent J&N Upholstery Studio For all your upholstery needs. 514 Front St., Nelson 352-9419 now co-host of Canada AM, ee _ > Christine Hearn, Ottawa corres- pondent for BCTV, is looking out for her province's best interests.’ She's one of the Hill People, but a one-woman band, Written by Jane O'Hara and reprinted with the permission of City Woman. Once every two weeks Christine Hearn bites her fire-red fingernails down to the quick. Andonce every two weeks she pays $20 to an awa to have In ‘Ottawa, the Peace Tower had barely tolled 11 this particular morning, when Hearn remarked: ‘It’s going to be a particularly bad day."” fated, that jackhammer, Jack ‘Webster, with whom Hearn has a weekly on-air gossip. And still, there were two more - stories — one on B.C. fishing, another on the recent Gallup Hl results — which Hearn Rad to tape, film, write and volce, : Compared to her network counterparts with their large support staffs, Hearn js like a one-woman band, Later, she would have to make. the in- evitable daily $8 cab trip to a them replaced. It reminds her of. her childhood when she would bite her real nails so severely she wouldn't be able to eat Popcorn for the stinging. On the positive side, it would occasionally excuse her from peeling potatoes, But Christine Hearn is no longer a child, She is 31, and for the past five years has been the Ottawa. correspon- dent for British Columbia's, CTV, a private television station that spends more than $100,000 yearly covering Par- lament Hill, Hearn has been earning about $20,000 of that, which is $6,000 short of what a starting network reporter would.make for the same job. (She was recently elected sec- a meant it would be a nail- biting day. A day in which the tension would become so ex- treme that Hearn would stop to wonder, “Why am I in this job?"” Half an hour later her prediction would prove to be accurate, It was then that she boldly stopped.a press con- ference with the plea: ''Wait for me, Art!" And to the chagrin of her assembled col- leagues she convinced Van- couver MP Art Phillips to keep his statement to himself until her free-lance caniera- man showed up. Phillips was convinced, Her cameraman. finally arrived. 7 But that was just the be- ginning. Next there was a call to Vancouver's right-wing Ottawa TV station to process, edit, find approp- nate file footage and send the package via microwave feed to Vancouver. It's ‘tittle wonder that Hearn is ‘‘usually a wreck at the end of.a bad day."’ Even less surprising is that after their for agreements, There is, fur- ther, the suspicion (this time within the media itself) that the TV types are the rea! stars of the news, Me Already apocryphal is the' anecdote from: last year's federal election campaign, which had ‘it that CTV's silverhaired bureau chief, Bruce Phillips, was stopped more frequently for his auto- graph than was the eventual prime minister. Equally ‘daunting is the story of an- other network heavyweight who swears his wife left him because ‘‘she couldn't stand living with a star.” And then there is Hearn, own land. It is « feeling com- monly and poljtically shared by her Quebec collegues, but that Hearn considers herself a B.C.er first and a Canadian second has more to do with her West Kootenays roots thon a mad slap at Confed- eration, ~ Nonetheless, her region- al consciousness starts cook- ing when her home province is being tither slighted or ig- nored by central Canada’s media machine, And, invari- ably, it is, “I€ I don't do B.C. stor- jes, you can be' sure the net- works won't,” said Hearn, adding, “If it weren't for the vi who by all has every right to consider herself part of the gallery galaxy. She doesn’t, however, and will admit; ‘I'm no ‘the past five years on TV, Hearn’s parents: tell her: "You look too tense.”* Thete is, of course, the sneaking suspicion among the public that TV news from Parliament Hill is gathered as effortlessly as nuts in May, that politicians really do speak in 30-second clips and that all TV reporters ‘in the press gallery were born with deep voices and an innate sensitivity to oil pricing star. I’m a nobody.’’ Hearn’s admission comes as some- thing of a shock considering | that in Ottawa egos grow as wild as strawberries. But it has more to do with her isolati which artive two days late in Ottawa, I'd never know what was going on in B.C." Hearn’s mendate for BCTV is to cover national ‘stories from a B.C. angle, no matter how oblique that angle may sometimes be. According to Hearn, it can get pretty lonely being one of the few than with any press gallety reality. For in many.ways — separated by 3,000 miles and a three-hour time difference sfrom her Vancouver base — Hearn feels that she is a foreign correspondent in her awa in such: issues as offshore fish- ing rights, West Coast tanker traffic and gas pipelines. , “One of the main prob- lems,”’ Hearn, ‘‘is ~ TOOT ipe = a8 cael pon selmet doing B.C. stories. I get yawns and I find myself apologizing for the stuff I do, But these stories are impor- tant. I guess I'm a bit of a crusader, I'm like the MPs, I'm here ‘looking out for B.C.’s interests," Cultural idealism aside, there is another element to ithe loneliness of a long-dis- tance journalist. It is both personal and professional. Professional because Hearn's Teports aren't seen outside B.C. unless picked up by BCTV's affiliate network, . And in Ottawa, where Peer praise is often as‘ im- portant as a weekly pay- cheque, Hearn is ‘somewhat out of the picture. “I’m cer- tainly not in. this for the ego feedback,"” she says, ‘‘bc- cause I don't get any. Nobody here sees, let alone talks about my stories.”’ Personally, Hearn has made the biggest concession to loneliness since breaking up with her live-in boyfriend of eight years (and former Vancouver Sun reporter) John Sawatsky. The parting was amicable and very 70s: they sold their jointly-owned con- in Ottawa, kiddes, that I don’t get any Brownie points around the gallery for and “‘finally stopped pretend- ing." CASTLEGAR NEWS, August 19,1980 Sho's’c one-woman band on Parliament Hill But their beginning was very 60s: Hearn followed Sawatsky when he was trans- ferred to Ottawa for the Sun. Since the breakup, Hearn has been learning that living unattached in Ottawa has its problems, Especially as a member of the press Lh for gossip is as central to the gallery as graffiti is to wash- rooms,.and relationships tend to demand either cautious treading down a dark alley or a bold march down a blind one. : “If I get bored,” says Hearn, ‘1 know I can always 80 to the press club and not get harassed, But I'm afraid the sad truth is that an old. face in Ottawa is a really old face."" Hearn spends much of her free time these days in the third-floor flat she rents in Ottawa's trendy Glebe dis- trict, There Joan Baez sings softly of the 60s and candles burn in the corners. There, in her book-lined living room — a modern Homes and Gar- dens monument to her. life- : long passion for literature — Hearn sits curled up with a book. She may be happier here, but for her, success now means being one of the Hill people. retary of the Parli ry Press Gallery.) At present, there are no women covering Ottawa for the networks and in the four years that Trina McQueen has been executive producer of CBS's The National, she says she has received very few job applications from women for Parliament Hill, CTV's Gail Scott was the last woman net- work reporter to work the Hill. She quit in 1976 and is but she recalfs: “You ‘really eam your money up there slogging around and waiting for interviews." Christine Hearn is the first to agree, but one day she would like to work for the big boys of TV journalism. And if her background is any bar- ometer, she will probably do it. Born in Salmo, B.C. - (pop. 900), a hamlet. hewn from the woods of the West Kootenays, Hearn has always shown an instinct for success. ~- Had it not: been for this instinct she might easily have followed the cultura! road rib- boning before her and “ended up marrying a logger and teaching in Salmo.’’ Re- gardless that as a teenager she was ‘‘painfully shy,”” in her own words, “‘fat and ugly. I wore Harlequin glasses, braces, and I always kept my head in a book.”” Hearn escaped her com- munity by enrolling at Simon Fraser University and gradu- ating with an MA wrenched from the study of an obscure British poet named Charles Williams. While at university she took a summer job at The Vancouver Sun — partly be- cause she ‘‘never wanted to be poor again’’ — and her career in journalism had be- gun. ‘ But perhaps the words of the nine-year-old girl to her mother’— ‘I'm going to have a cleaning lady when I grow up" — revealed much earlier on that Hearn was bound for better than the main streets of Salmo. Possibilty of wipeout of pot.record Cabinet could be con- sidering next year a recom- mendation that persons con- vieted of marijuana posses- sion have their police records “destroyed within six to 12 months, Solicivor-General Robert Kaplan said recently. “I think most Canadians believe that such ¢riminal records should be effectively extinguished after a reason- able period," the solicitor- general told an international convention of police identifi- cation experts. If such records are des- troyed, more than 200,000 offenders will be able to tell prospective employers they have never been convicted of: an offence, he told the Inter- national Association for Idén- tification. : * However, present - pen- alties have proved to be no deterrent and the govern- ment is looking at other means to discourage its use _ since niany young people stay clear of the criminal justice process except for marijuana possession charges. _ Fanasonic ZO color television 499. Fram now ‘til August 23, I'm able to offer you this Panasonic color tele- vision at Eaton’s guaranteed lowest price. Of course, money isn’t the only factor to consider. Quality is important too. And | believe the Panasonic featured here to be one of the finest quality color TV's around. Here's why: Let's start with 's latest ad sgn the’ one or F ColorPilot Electronic Col lor Control System. 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