Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 30 Sep 1981, p. 16

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PAGE 16 â€" WATERLOO CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1981 Lecture to pose bioethics question Faber over Homo Saâ€" piens and the thrust of a major lecture at Wilâ€" frid Laurier University Oct. 1 will deal with man using his wisdom in the face of new An exciting new, complete entertainment section . . . yours with The Record every Thursday! . | ‘‘‘Record Agnes St. it pays to have The Record delivered to your home. Call 894â€"2231 The Granite Club Open to the Public Thurs. Oct. 1st 12â€"9 p.m. at medical techniques. Speaker is Dr. David J. Roy, director of the centre of bioethics at the Clinical Research Institute of Montreal, who is a researcher, philosopher and theoloâ€" Kitchener He speaks at 8 p.m. in the main auditorium of the Frank C. Peters building, at University Avenue and Albert Street. Dr. Roy‘s lecture will pose this key question: Do we run the risk of becoming enslaved by biomedical technoloâ€" gies or will we find the wisdom to direct these new powers toward the enhancement of the human condition? The major WLU event is the eighth anâ€" nual Eastonâ€"McCarney Memorial Lecture, named in memory of two .social work stuâ€" dents. It is a free lecâ€" ture sponsored by the trustees of the .Eastonâ€" McCarney Memorial Fund and the WLU Dr. Roy was coâ€" author of the Law Reâ€" form Commission reâ€" port on the definition of deathâ€"euthanasia. He is a popular speaker on the ethical issues conâ€" fronting today‘s mediâ€" cal and health care professionals. social work faculty. There will be coffee and conversation with Dr. Roy following his talk. representative for Burger King. Laurier student Greg Weston receives a $15 certificate from Kinsman Gerry Taylor during a fundâ€"raising drive for cystic fibrosis at the Burger King last Thursday. Burger King gave prizes to attract customers, and gave 50 cents for every whopper burger sold, raising $615 for their efforts. Looking on is Dianne Schaun, the community Kitchener. Ontamo 7426951 or 742â€"6581 33 Main St (Gait) Cambridge. Ontarro b53â€"2835 3 Charles NAD Record a standard $5 tape on the new NAD 6040 cassette deck with Dolby HX. And an $18 metal tape on a conventional tape deck. Any conventional deck. Now compare! The NAD 6040 tape deck with Dolby HX will give you substantially befter performance from the standard tape. More dynamic headroom. And better signalâ€"toâ€" noise ratio. ‘ Yet the recording made on our NAD deck costs about a third as much, which can save you a fortune if you plan a tape library of any size. Of course the NAD 6040 tape deck is metal capable, too. So you can use Dolby HX and metal tape for performance that can‘t be topped by anything less than a professional quality open reel deck. _ But Dolby HX is only part of the pertormance story . St West at Queen Open dulr 104 Ontamo Thurs & tr 10 Here‘s how to make a standard ‘5 tape outperform a‘18 metal tape with Doliby HX and metal tape ready 6040 STEREO CASSETTE DECK Thurs & in 10â€"9 Cambridge stote closed on Monday HE‘S A WINNER * 14 SAE 11 Technics § sve NAD heads cost more. And they deliver more. The heads used in a cassette deck dictate the performance you‘ll get. That‘s why NAD spent a lot of time and money on head design. They start with hardâ€"polished Sendust, manutactured to incredibly precise tolerances and align them with equal care. Obviously, this process takes more time and costs more money. But it results in frequency response unheard of in a cassette deck at any price. Come in to Wesseling‘s and audition the new NAD cassette decks today, and hear what a difference a NAD can make. s3 20

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