Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 13 Oct 1976, p. 30

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. Page 30 - Waterloo Chronicle, Wednesday, October 13, 1976 Couple required to operate own business. any location from own home. Chemical. nutritional catalogue service. Must be self- starters and ready to earn potential large income. Small investment required. Refundable. Write to Box 623 New Hamburg. QUALIFIED TEACHER of piano and theory; studio 32 musacAL msmucnou 38 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES is central to downtown Kitchener. Phone 743- 5201 Monday - Thursday before '00 p.m. (45) CONDOM IN IUMS __ Cranston's ice show comes to K-W For the le time in decades, a ne and rev- olutionary arena enter- tainment has been devel- oped and will be present- ed at the Kitchener Me- morial Auditorium on Tues Oct. 19. "The Ice Show" will be featured for one performance only, begin- ning at8p.m. "The Ice .7 Show" is a totally new entertainment experience starring Can- yia's "Nureyev of the lee" Taller Cranston with an all-star, professional cast, skating for the first time outside their Olympic and World Championship fipeciall homes in a special place When you drive through the streets of Pioneer Park, you get the feeling you're in a special place. In the distance, you see the gently rolling hills and wooded slopes of this historic area. Nearby is Pioneer Village, the little hamlet of Doon, the leafy footpaths of Cressman Woods, the winding vista of the Grand River. Nowhere else can you find a place to live that offers the quiet serenity, that fresh-air feeling of living in the country. And nowhere else can you find the_special kind of quality that is built into the Vintage Homes collection of designer homes in Pioneer Park. These exciting new designs have been created for people who want quality when they invest in a new home. People who look beneath the surface to see the kind of value they're getting for their money. Vintage Homes in Pioneer Park. S ial homes in a special place. 3 and 4 bedroom models on choice lots 'i','i,2r1',1','i'J1, Pioneer Village and adjacent parkland. Prom $58,000. Grand: open ygetePP, weekend. Grand open house this weekend. Saturday and Sunday, 1-5 pan. Tuesday to Friday, 2-8 pan. Pioneer Park, a full planned community by Major Holdings & Uv'h'l,7i,u,ot'l Limited Master plan provides for shopping facilities, ample parkland and Public, Separate and High Schools. Contact Bob Donald at our Farrier Drive information office or telephone for appointment: 744-631] or 886-2973. Wiebe Realty Ltd., Realtor, Exclusive Sales Agents, 50 Westmount Road North. Waterloo, 744-631] ttre, Preview: Pioneer Park West intage Homes " now building in the next hase in the continued development of teamiful Pioneer Park See our model homes now ready for your inspection on Upper Canada Drive CONDOMINIUMS realm of competitive skat- ing. -- _. A "The Ice Show" is two dazzling hours of skating. It is a new art form, em- bodying the best of theatre, dance. music, mime and free skating into one per- formance. It is a once-in- a-lifetime chance to see a carefully chosen group of the world's top tree ghat- ers. "The lee Show" pre- sents for the first time an opportunity for free skat- ers to liberate their skill from the cliches of the traditional ice world. to fulfill their artistic needs and to thrill audiences CONDOMINIUMS Toller Cranston. _-six times Senior Men's Cham- pion of Canada. three time world free skating eharm pion and Olympic Medal- ist. will be joined by Olym- pic Medalist ice dance champions Colleen O'Con- nor and Jim Mullins; Gordon McKellen. Jr., whom Dick Button calls “The Chaplin of the ice": Barbara Berezowski and David Porter. dance cham- pions of Canada for two years and Olympic final- ists this .year; Candy Jones and, Don Fraser, with the delicate, creative perfection of their talent. a...“ I» St x. q . Pioneer ,__ PM: - _ CONDOMINIUMS than rm“ dance team; Emily Be- Emily a triple gold medii- ist when she was 15. the youngest ever, and Jack a six time world roller skating champion turned to ice sham; Kath Maint- berg. long a top competi- tive skater; Bott Rubens, .. a new look in male skat- ers" according to the Tor- onto _Star: and Elizabeth Russia has hailed Toner Cranston as “The Skater of the Century," Germany calls him a "genius on Freeman, a stunning new- coucommuus dramatic performances. He leads his fellow-cham- pions, garbed in starkly elegant costumes, with the effect of space and illusion created by artis- tie lighting. ice." and in Canada he is a living legend. He has been compared to Nijinsky. Olivier and Marcel Mar- ceau. He makes a stage of unique and A strikingly increased exposure on television and the ever- growing numbers ftt young riached a level of popular- ity which places it in the forefront of entertainment. An increasingly sophisti- cated audience is now de- manding a superior level of skating at all times. Con- stant exposure to the best that the world free skaters have to offerhas resulted in a public qualified to ap- praise critically what they see on the ice, not only technically, but also artistically. "The Ice Show”. for the first time ever. brings all- champion skaters together in the first new arena en- tertainment in many years. Combining virtuosity with beauty, "The Ice Show" will play in Kitchener for one performance only. Tickets are $4.50, $5.50 and $6.50. BALLET COLOGNE (Tan: Forum Ran a virile and exciting dance company from West Germany, opens the UW ARTS CENTRE professional dance series on October 16 in the Human- ities Theatre, to coincide with the Oktoberfest festivi- ties. It is being presented under the auspices of the Goethe Institute, Toronto. This company began as an experimental group and has since the 1971-72 season be- come the official dance com- pany of the City of Cologne. It is, made up of dancers of 12 different nationalities, all trained in both the classi- cal and Martha Graham modem dance techniques. Ballet is performed The two resident choreo- graphers. Jochen Ulrich and Grey Veredon are young men in their early thirties and their considerable tal- ents comhihe with many guest choreographers to give the Company great variety and range, Among the guest choreo- graphers is Kurt Jooss whose masterpiece "The Green Table" is part of the pro'gramme to be presented at the Humanities Theatre. This is a stunning allegory of war -- a modem revival of the medieval “danse macabre". As a delightful change of mood, the pro- gramme also includes "The Ragtime Dance Company" set to the music of Scott Joplin. It is a fun piece set in a New Orleans barrel- house scene. and sweeps the audience along with it in its romp, The third offering is "Sin- fonietta for Two String Orchestras" by Kasimierz Serocki. Tickets are available now at the UW Arts Centre Main Box Office. Modern Lan- guages Bldg. Rm. 254.

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