‘I’m disappointed’

Page 4

Get entertainment atSunday:piano

fecital

_L

will appreciate this music as art as well as good entertainment. Gifford is a four&year honours physics student of this university who has been studying piano for 18 of his 22 years. He stopped formal instruction three years ago and h& given five complete solo recitals in the past four years. His home isin Waterloo.

Gifford Toole hopes to stimulate intellectually as well ‘as to entertain those who attend + piano recital in the Theater of the Arts on Sunday. Although he will present a.program of easily recognizable romantic

Jazz concert

plus

music of the nineteenth ten-

Gifford

Chevron

(with one exception--the Moonlight Sonata), he hopes his audience

tury

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reviewed

by Dale

If one were this book, one that there are ence-fiction.

ON -STUDENT

744-4782 MEAL

CARD

to believe the tQ.le of would be led to believe people who hate sciIf this is the case, it

It is apparentthattheeditor,Terry Carr has attempted to, present the reader with a broad range of story types. In doing so he has

HOUSE

Faclaris Waterloo

missed some obvious choices and made some n&takes. Sciewe-ficti& a in order to appeal to the general reader, has to sound sensible. Th& science-fictionwriter posits an idea, such as ‘timetravel. In this particular case, the author may belong to one of two schools.

Martin

staff

is probably because people have been reading collections like this.

HW &

- tricky parts yet still pretended to hently gone into their arrangements. use his feet,. ,Tsk, tsk. There was quite a bit more from a The audience seemed bored with technical aspect than a steady 4/4 their long tunes (Ifeelasleepduring beat or a blues progression. ‘Call me’). After all,. you can only As exhibited especially in ‘Martake so much swing. Examples of h’4 one found that Greg is not a their numbers were: ‘Hard day’s ’ drummer but. a percussionist. Davilight’, ‘Shadow of your smile’, id certainly is developing technique, ‘Mr. Sandman’ and ‘Winchester Cayet I &ink those present wouldhave thedral’, preferred more meoldic improviThe Greg Herring Trio,featuring ZadoIl. Dave McCallen on piano, Roman As for. Roman, he filled in well, Orenchuk on bass guitar and Greg yet I am sure at times thatIdetect.on drums, played fairly light jazz ed some rasp from his strings. All reminiscent of the Ahmad Jamal three members are in courses at style. It was obvious thatthis group theUof W. has just taken the initial plunge The group needs plenty of pracinto jazz. Otherwise they wouldn’t tice. but they have the feeling for what jazz is all about. Above all, have made the mistakes they did. However, a lot of work had evithey weren’t noisy.

You might hate scienceltiction’ after reading this collection

service

I’ w the &mm

I

will present

Chevron

and

RESTAURANT

staff

arts theater might have been called “You too can have fun on a Hammond organ*‘. The George Kadwell Trio (George sure looks like a Hammond dealer) leaned noi towards jazz but towards loud, up-tempo, bouncy pop music. Did you ever notice how a good trombone (Larry Crawford’s)’ could be drowned out by someone’s heavy foot on an organ? Furthermore, all that fancy footwork you saw on thepedals was fake half of the time. He switched from pPda.ls to the lower manual for the

a series of blues workshops cornmencing Thursday at 12:l5 inP150. There will be five tiorkshops in all, tracing the development of blue5 from their earliest origins to the present. Such fields as- gospel, bluegrass, rhythm-and-blues and rock-androll will be presented. Chairm& of the workshops will be Frank Bialystok, history 2, who has done extensive research in the

Toole

For

club

McNicol

Despite the hlling as a &zz concert, Sunday’s performance in, the

Blues woikshous at folksong &b The folksong

, by Barry

The first

says that travellers

to the

may affect. the future by the ilightest action. The secondschaol past

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Edna Staebler’s book ‘Sauerkraut and eaterprise’is beingpublishedas the Centennial project: of the Kitchener-W aterloo University Women’s Club. In the book, which tells the story of Waterloo County, the author has reviewed and expanded five articles about the area which wereoriginally published in Ma&an’s magazine. Kitchener and Waterloo consider themselves the finest twin cities ever raised on sauerkraut andenterprise. K-W boasts that it is one of the most highly industrialized communities inCanada,withtwouniversities and the head offices of six insurance companies.

N.

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Mon. - Thurs. 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Fri. 8 Sat. 11 a.m. - 2 am. Sun, - 12 noon - midnight NCw Waterloo location THE DUGOUT University at King Phone 744-4446 Free delivery to students 744-4322 252 King St. E.

at the Theatre

starting

Adult

YOUR

4:15

says that travellers to thepast could not affect the future without cone siderable effort (a nuclear weapon for instanCe). In choosing a story from the first school (Ray Bradbury’s ‘A iound of thunder*) the editor has chosen a story designed not to appeal the non-scientific. Only two stories come close to having that certain emotional appeal that has been present in muchof the best science-fiction. The first is Arthur C. Clarke% ?t’he star’, one of the most beautiful science-fiction stories ever written and a deserved Hugo winner. The second is ‘In hiding*, the moving story of a mutated boy with a fantastic IQ who is all alone. The only fault of including this story is that it is far too long for a collecdon of this size. The editor also wastes space by including two stories too short to have any impact. Neither ‘The weapon’ or ‘Not with a bang’ are of outstanding literary merit. The story by He&in ‘The year of the @ckpo? is not one of his better pieces. The collection is marred by the absence of such authors as Simak, deCamp, Laumer and Mack Reynolds. I certainly would not recommend this collection of ten-year-old storm ies.

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