M2°w“mm,w.'mme‘.’. # > (is‘s w« k\‘LBERT cCORMICK ALBERT McCORMICK RENA RINK IN THE PARK MOSES SPRINGER < _ JUNIOR ‘B‘ PLAYOFE NOCKET RINK IN THE PARK WATERLOC ARENA . MOSES SPRINGER ARENA Rental ice time is available at the new Rink in the Park on Saturday and Sunday evenings during April & May. For more information call 886â€"1550, Ext. 210. Waterloo Community Services Dept. is now accepting applications for summer employment for the followâ€" ing positions. 1. AQUATICS 2. PLAYGROUND ACTIVITY LEADER 3. ADVENTURE PLAY LEADER 4. YOUTH ACTIVITY LEADER 5. PARTâ€"TIME CONCESSION HELP 6. PARTâ€"TIME FACILITY HELP. If you are interested in an application please call 886â€" 1550 Ext. 214 anytime daily Monday â€" Friday. Deadâ€" line for applications is March 21st/79. â€" Boys & Girls Soccer $8.00 per child â€" Baseball â€" Boys $5.00 per child â€" Boys & Girls Tâ€"Ball $5.00 per child â€" Softball â€" Girls $5.00 per child 1 Saturday March 3rdâ€"9 a. m.â€"1 p.m. Moses Springer Arena Albert McCormick Arena Adult Recreation Centre 2 Saturday March 10thâ€"9 a m.â€"1 p m. Adult Recreation Centre ONLY * Watch next weeks Chronicle for Ages Divisions. etc General meeting & election of officers for the upcomâ€" ing season. TUESDAY. {eb, 27thâ€"6: 30 SHARP All parents, friends and individuals interested in helpâ€" ing with this years program are welcome to attend For more information please call 744â€"9148 & 745â€"3812 RINK IN THE PARK STUDENT SUMMER EMPLOYMENT â€" _ _ OPPORTUNITIES Sunday, March 11th, 2:00 p.m. Waterloo Memorial Arena Tickets available at all Waterloo arenas N.H.L. OLD TIMERS EXHIBITION HNOCKEY GAME WATERLOO MINOR GIRLS SOFTBALL ANNOUNCES SKLATING PARTY ICETIME SUMMER MINOR SPORTS REGISTRATIONS , COMMUNITY , SERVICES ACTIVITIES FRIDAY, FEB. 21stâ€"8 PM SISKINS ‘vs STRATFORD Marsland Centre : 886â€"1550 10â€"11:30 p.m. Thurs. 1:30â€"3:30 p.m. 10â€"11:30 p.m.: Thurs. 1:30â€"3:00 p.m. Wed. 10â€"11:30 a.m. Fri. 10â€"11:30 a.m. Friday 8â€"10 p.m. NO SKATING Parents and Preâ€"Schoolers FRIDAYS 8:30 â€" 10:30 p.m. Mon.â€"2â€"3:30 p.m. ~ *This Week only Schedule for Feb. 21stâ€"28th A â€" PUBLIC SKATING Friday 8:30â€"10:30 p.m. C â€" FREE SKATING B â€" ADULT ONLY Saturdays 8â€"10 p.m. Waterloo Arena General d * C s $8.00 per child $5.00 per child $5.00 per child $5.00 per child I p.m. Tues.â€"Thurs. _ 11:30a.m.â€"1:20p.m Tues.â€"Thurs. 11:30a.m.â€"1:20p.m Tues. â€" Friday 11:30 a.m. â€" 2 p.m. Tues.â€"Friday . 11:30a.m.â€"1:20p.m Adult Noon Hour Skating Saturday 2â€"4 p.m. UNDAYS :30 â€" 5:30 p.m. Family r4¢ Bold, bright images that are idealized, conventional and yet artificial all at once are put together in a complex way to make reality even more real. These are examples of paintings created by ART GREEN, whose oneâ€"man show opened at the UW Arts Centre Gallery on Thursday, Feb. 8 and will run until March 4. The paintings in the show, with only one exception, are all oil on canvas. Admission to the UW Arts Centre Gallery is free of charge and everyone is welcome. sA A Art Green‘s new approach to his work began when he saw an advertisement for soft ice cream cones that made the real thing look tawdry and unfinished â€" and when he saw an old Firestone ad. of the 1930‘s where the tire was covered with a cascading rainbow of colour. ‘"I think that the world is an absolute mystery. We exist within that mystery, proâ€" tected by a warm cocoon of ideas. I am interested in paintâ€" ing images that are mostly idea; complex realities repreâ€" sented in conyentional, idealized ways,""‘ says the artist of his work. * s es nil iveu, wuo is LW icauuj a InoinVcl P int Ianuily UK _ Volunteoers needed the UW Fipe Arts department, began his work in Chicago. ‘‘Volunteers are needed for family planning program. Call He has been in Canada since 1969 and became a Canadian ciâ€" Planned Parenthood now for February training program to tizen in 1975. He studied at the School of the Art Institute of take part in counselling. educational speaking and mall disâ€" phcggo receiving his B‘.c‘helormgl Fine {z‘-u i:.- 1965. HB plays. Phone 743â€"6461." Trained volunteers are now ready to assist Seniors with the completion of their 1978 Income Tax return. This service is given free of charge to those Seniors whose income is dependent upon government or privaâ€" te pension. Seniors with property, rental or investâ€" ment income are advised to seek private professional service. Tickets: $4.00 Mr. Don Cherry, Horticulturist with the City of Waâ€" terloo will present an afternoon of successful plant growing. Bring along your problem plants. Helpful hints on plant maintenance. Thursday February 22 2:00 p.m. GUEST: Mr. Hartman If you cannot get to the library visiting home library volunteers will bring the books to you. Volunteers will bring large print books. talking books and paperbacks. Call: 886â€"1310 Waterloo Public Library Visiting Home Library Services. | SPRING FLOWERSâ€"FASHION SHOW Tickets are now on sale for the annual Senior Lady Fashion Show Fashions by: Helen Anne Shop THURSDAY PAINT GROUP Each Thursday a group of painters get together to share their hobby. Come out and paint with us. Time: 9:30 â€" 11:30 Fee: None Location: Adult Recreation Centre ___ AGCTIVITIES FOR SENIORS _ ABULT RECREATION CENTRE: Art Green‘s one man show â€" _Community Calendar â€" â€" Each Saturday 1:30 p.m. . Cost: 25¢ (Instruction Available) SPECIAL LECTURE SERIES Tuesday February 27, 1979 â€". 1:30 p.m. "FOOD. POISONING â€" SYMPTONS, CAUSES, & PREVENTION®"® "COLOUR YOUR THUMB GREEN®" CORNER KING & ALLEN STS. WATERLOO 579â€"1020 Friday February 23 2:00 PM Guests: Alf & Marietta Holst Present: "A Tour of Waterloo County® DANCE _ "SPRING THAW‘*> Friday March 2, 1979 7:30â€"11:00 p.m. BE A FRIDAY AFTERNOONER Call 579â€"1020 for an appointment INCOME TAX CLINIC _ Health Unit Division of the Health & Social Services Department EVERYONE WELCOME Wednesday April 18. 1979 7 :30 PM Tickets: $2.00 CARPET BOWL Music: Tom Todd Trio apregmemim s 4 04 io n aemark iporens: » c > romw * > 6+ teaching experienceâ€"includes Chicago public schools and City College, Kendall College in Evanston, HIlinois, Nova Scotia College of Art & Design, Uniyversity of Britith Columâ€" bia and UW. His work has been shown in oneâ€"man exhibiâ€" tions in Chicago, New York City, Vancouver and Burnaby, B.C. and Sackville, N.B. He has also been included in a host of group shows in both Canada and the U.S.A. and has work in a wide number of private and public collections. MR recently, one of his paintings was chosen for the Qu Silver Jubilee Collection which was shown at the UW lected group ghow in which Green was included travelled to Canada House, London, England and centre cultural canaâ€" dien in Paris early in 1979. The UW Arts Centre Gallery is open Mondayâ€"Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sundays 2â€"5 p.m. Ientre Gallery in November 1978. "Other Realities‘", a seâ€" lected group show in which Green was included travelled to Art Green, who is currently a member of the faculty of However, according to Prof. Paul Lovejoy, of York University, elaborate forms of slavery existed in Afriâ€" ca, giving rise to the question: Was African slavery originated by Europeans, or fostered by Africans themselves? . * This question will be discussed during the ‘"Slave Stydies‘‘ conference which will be held on the Univerâ€" sity of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University eam‘ puses March 14â€"17. Prof. Lovejoy will be the leadâ€"of: speaker. _ } The conference, sponsored by UW, WLU and the Canada Council, will bring to Waterloo all the top exâ€" perts in the world on the subject of slavery, according to Dr. Gilman Ostrander, UW historiarm and one of the organizers. Anyone familiar with Alex Haley‘s ‘"Roots‘‘ might think Africans were introduced to slavery by Euroâ€" pean slavers. O P s â€" o ‘"‘This will be, to our knowledge, the most distinâ€" guished such conference ever convened anywhere," he says. Approximately 100 persons are expected, from Latin America and Africa as well as from Europe, the United States and Canada. The conferenâ€" ce will review recent research developments dealing with the whole subject of slavery. . Prof. Michael Craton, UW historian and renowned specialist on slavery as it existed in the Caribbean, will direct the conference. Dr. Craton has recently published a new book, ‘‘Search for the Invisible Man," dealing with slavery in Jamaica. & Most of the sessions will be held in room 3006 in Needles Hall, UW. Topics and schedules are as folâ€" lows. Saturday, March 17 â€" Thurs. March 15 â€" Friday, March 16 â€" Mr. Art Drysdale a graduate of Niagara Parks Commussion School of Horticultural will explain why twenty commonly held beliefs are totally inâ€" correct FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1979 8 P.M. ADULT RECREATION CENTRE Lecture on slavery 185 King St. South, Waterloo The Waterloo Horticultural Society OPEN MEETING Examining the influence of protesâ€" tantism on the rise of antiâ€"slave movements in England and Ameâ€" rica and the influence of religion on slaves. . â€" ‘"‘The Slave Family and its Legaâ€" cies in the United States and the Caribbean‘‘ by Prof. Herbert Gutâ€" man, City University of New York. Slave culture and the rise of peaâ€" sant lifestyles among slaves an‘ the revolutionary potential 0 such peasantries throughout the Caribbean and Latin America. â€" Walter Rodney, Guyanese Marxist historian to speak about slavery and underdevelopment. â€" Segsion to move to WLU for dinâ€" ner anhd address on slavery and fascism by Prof. Harry Hoetink. i â€" Conference will close with a plenary session followed by a workshop on the teaching of slave studies. Prof. Philip Curâ€" tin of Johns Hopkins University Baltimore will preside over the plenary session. will be held (corner Allen) «h