The Message -- for Catholics of Southwestern Indiana
i llu i
Entertainment
September 6, 1991
i
On the Becord
By CHARLIE
MARTIN
NC News
Smwicc Columnist
to
9
LOVE AND UNDERSTANDING
Here, here in this world/Where do we go/Where
can we turn/When we need some love?/It seems,
Sung by: Cher
Copyright {c} 1991 by the David Geffen Co.
It is easy to agree with CheFs latest hit. "Love
spend far less on the instruments of death and
more on extending the quality of life for all citi-
zens.
Finally, the power of the human heart to
race that we are in/We got enough cars to drive
sound the world/Enough planes to take us any-
where/We have more than enough/There is one
.tiling that/There,s just not enough of
REFRAIN: Not. enough love and understanding/We a whole world bright E erywhere in creahon we are, daughters or sons of the Father. Conse uent-
• could use some love/To ease these trou. find an abundance of what we need, q
bled times/Not enough love and under- Unfortunately, only within human hearts is a person acts.
standing/Why, O why? deficiency found.
How would our world on is as a human being, would be
We spend all of our time/Building buildings up to had an abundance of love and understanding
the skyfReachingeverywhere but where/We need to The differences would be many. Let's use our . Mistakes would still occur, but they would
reach most/Our hem'ts can never win/Fhis race, the imaginations to bring the dream closer to reality, be used as opportunities to learn and find differ-
REPEAT REFRAIN TWICE.
hearts to
REPEAT REFRAIN.
First, the use of violence would be significant-
ly reduced. One cannot simultaneously be loving
and violent toward another.
The lessening of violence does not mean that
individuals or nations would n
flicts. Rather, given more love and
conflict would not lead to the physical or emotion-
al harm of others. Instead, our society would insist and understanding in your life, in our world? I
on finding a non- violent resolution to
Second,
more generousl
Our priority would become the reduction of
human suffering, no matter where it is
ent ways of behaving.
Surely, what I write here has been said marly
times before, and perhaps said best in the words
)irits and our world to
restate the dream.
- Now it is our turn. Do you want more love
What will you do?
(Your comments, are always
Chimp, dinosaurs focus of two cable programs
Catholic News Service
reviewers recommend the
following cable TV programs.
"People of the Forest,"
Sept. 8, Discovery.
For over 20 years, Hugo
van Lawick has been i)bo-
tographing a chimpanzee
family living in the jungles of
Tanzania.
The results mav be seen in
"People of the Forest: The
Chimps of Gombe," airing
Sunday, Sept. 8, 9-11 p.m.
EDT on the Discovery cable
channel.
The focus is on a 5-year-old
female chimp who over the
course of the documentary
grows up to become the
mother of three.
She is called Fifi by Van
Lawick, who has given names
to all of the chimps in the
group that make up her ex-
tended family.
Van Lawick's narration de-
scribes the chimps in hunmn
terms, perfectly understand-
al)le for someone who has
spent so much time in their
company. And, indeed, some
of the chimps prove more
personable than others.
What is more impressive,
however, is the wildlife pho-
tography that has recorded
the behavioral patterns of
(:himps in their natural habi-
tat over the years.
How fragile that environ-
ment is is brought home
when a polio epidemic deci-
mates the group and, at the
end of the fihn, when settlers
begin moving into the area.
One doesn't have to be a
naturalist to appreciate these
pictures showing the wild
beauty of the jungle and the
harmony of predator and
prey.
It is a program for anyone
with the slightest interest in
nature, though small children
may be unprepared for the
scene of a chimp killing and
eating a baboon.
"The Tale of a Tooth,"
Sept. 8, A&E.
Walter Cronkite serves as
host/narrator of the four-part
series "Dinosaur!" The first
part, "The Tale of a Tooth,"
premieres Sunday, Sept. 8, 8-
9 p.m. EDT on the Arts and
Entertainment cable channel.
Parts 2, 3 and 4, "The Tale
of a Bone," "The Tale of an
Egg," and "The Tale of a
Feather," air 8-9 p.m. EDT
Monday- Wednesday, rc, spec-
tively.
The first program is
devoted to "the small band of
brilliant detectives" who in.
the early 19th century first
discovered the existence of
the dinosaurs.
Indeed, the story begins
with the discovery of a gigan-
tic tooth in England in 1817.
From a comparison of the
tooth to that of existing
species of lizards, scientists
were able to deduce the body
size and frame of a creature
they had never seen.
How accurate they were
was shown when the first
complete dinosaur skeleton
was discovered in a Belgian
coal mine in 1878.
For example, we meet spe-
cial-effects expert Ray Harry-
hausen, who explains how
his models are based upon
scientific research.
Perhaps most distinctive
are the realistic life-size di-
nosaur models, some of
which are fully animated to
depict how the various
species of dinosaurs liwM.
This series looks interest-
ing, informative and, because
of the vivid dramatizations,
entertaining. The result is un-
usually fine family fare.
St. Mary's Church -- Ireland, Ind.
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