Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 26 Mar 1986, p. 7

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CKMS appreciates community support Well after 8 days of mid March mayhem it‘s over! The CKMS FM spring funding drive wrapped up on Fri. March 14. When all was said and done we reached $2,350. This represents over 90% of our goal. Thanks go out to all of you who participatâ€" ed in this successful drive. LETTERS Your pledges will certainly be put to good use. We are currently negotiating to purchase those new Technics turntables that you heard so much about the week of March 7â€"14. The old & creaking McCurdy turntables are looking forward to their diminished duties. _ Extra thanks goes out to all dedicated volunteers who did what they had to do to The human body is made of materials that cannot be artificially improved upon. It is so well designed it can stand up to abuse and unecessary wear year after year, decade after decade. It produces motion as a joint cooperaâ€" tion between every living cell encomâ€" passed in its skeletal framework. The same hand that gently carasses a baby can manipulate a racquet that savagely attacks a ball. _Sâ€"[;ei"lfivc _muscles and bones work united to produce different movements numbering millions. _ Sure, we know that the muscles and structure of the arm allows us to throw a ball. The leg and its muscles and framework is responsible for our ability to kick a ball. But which muscles, and which bones? Your poor performance is specific activities as well as your success in others is largely determined by your coordination and degree of muscle strength and endurance. Knowing which particular muscles need work in order to gain success is most beneficial in attaining success to any given activity or sport. I‘d like to test your knowledge of various muscles and bones found through our body, as well as their prime function. Read the following words (I dare you to say them out loud), and guess whether they are muscle or bone, and at what part of the body would they be located. If this appears too easy, determine what function they perform. -â€"â€"â€"mâ€"â€"â€"--â€"â€"-._._,.._._ -â€"â€"-â€",â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"-â€"--â€" § . .clis * -â€"-â€"a-nuâ€"---â€"-â€"wâ€"-â€"- | 4 Jo Enanse aaee ow in o Joe So: gam. nozm Soms ues tage woans: uessel vames wowm ampm smy\ J Rags: <o ce n l4A CC _IEL_E_C _T b [ es uon im mo â€"â€"â€"mâ€"â€"-â€"â€" m* ¢ eia * * sun s Takk wat â€"c4 _ . Pumex CT_ T "â€" 1 * «* C& Dexx uax s 2 â€" ~ as mss m w h â€" . n i 4 % Suen suc e â€" =p ue on ~~~ 1 BODE We »â€" 2A f "~ i «2 A y on /_â€"â€"â€"otf oL 501 SO# 3 â€"Lrâ€""* A * & gh 28 â€" C une & :[ N io se t‘ * ‘-_ "â€" & { * i’ '-‘ “ & * &\ & o sim,"" J¢ * , ‘-f ‘ p oys yorrh wares â€" _â€" _ ESP"" 7 Cnnman omenen CHi Can you identify the people, places or dates in this photo? If you can, call Waterloo public library‘s historical collection department at 886â€"1310. Fitness Forum Office Staff at Joseph E. Seagram â€" 1929? Who? When? Kathy Hammond Fitness Instructor 1) metatarsals 2) front tibial 3) pbalianges 4) biceps 5) carpals 6) clavicle 1) triceps 8) glueteus maximus 9) tarsal 10) deltoid 11) gastrocnemius 12) frontal 13) patella 14) femur 15) external oblique 16) fibula 17) sternocleidomastoid _ 18) rectus abdoninis 19) trapezius â€" I‘ll give you a hint to this last one. It‘s primary function is to allow for a common gesture. In fact, one you‘re probably doing to some of these words you know nothing about. If you were able to answer 50 per cent correctly, consider yourself fairly knowledgeable about your body. If under 50 percent you should better acquaint yourself with the more comâ€" mon parts of our body in order to understand it better. If you score above 50 per cent, you should be wriling UMS column. ANSWERS: 1) bones in the foot 2) shin bone 3) toe bones 4) muscle in the front section of the arm between the elbow and the shoulder 5) wrist bones 6) collarbone 7) muscles along the back section of the arm between the elbow and the shoulder 8) muscle encompassâ€" ing buttocks 9) ankle bone 10) muscle on top of shoulder 11) calf muscle 12) muscle to raise eyebrow 13) kneecap 14) thigh bone 15) muscles along side of midâ€"section (abdominal area) 16) front bone between knee and ankle 17) muscle along sides of neck (used to pull head toward shoulder 18) muscle at top of abdominal area (below chest) 19) muscle at the back above shoulder blades (used for shrugging shoulders). raise the cash. The hard work & general silliness is not altogether natural for many of them. They did a great job and deserve that vacation that we can‘t give them. Even as the funding drive was unfolding CKMS was at work getting more great programming for your pleasure. We had an interview with Billy Duffy of The Cult and aired part 1 of Jane Siberry live at Humanities theatre. We were also out recording Vektor & Thin Men for upcomâ€" ing Live in Concert broadcasts (Weds. 6â€"7 Once again thanks to all those who supported us during this funding drive, keep up the good work and don‘t forget to get us a call at 884â€"2567 where the request lines are always open. The Staff CKMS FM ydu should be writing this Picture This It was inevitable, I suppose, in a world racked by terrorism, that the bobbies at London‘s Heathrow Airport would one day wind up festooned with subâ€"machine guns. But I can‘t think that good will come of it. I say that as someone who knows soething aout guns, enjoys target shooting, and understands the limitations of firearms as weapons. I say it as someone who has no sympathy for the kind of murdering lunatics who blew innocent women and children away in the Christmas massaâ€" cres at Rome and Vienna. Shooting is too good for them. But will arming the bobbies put an end to that sort of thing? Or will it merely suggest to terrorist suicide squads that they change their tactics, and find ways to kill more people instantly. I can‘t think the sight of policemen carrying nine millimetre Heckler and Koch subâ€"machine guns will gladden the bearts of the British public, or reassure them. Carrying a gun is not a simple solution to anything. They unâ€" derstood very well in the old West that carrying a gun was not in itself security. In fact the only guarantee you got from being armed was that conflict, almost any conflict, would automaticalâ€" ly be escalated. If there was a code of the West, it was not the one suggested Tâ€"aRn ampul Wakbk 1. o% WATERLOO CHRONICLE. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1986 â€" PAGE 7 Guest column Peter Trueman Letters welcome Chronicle Editor Rick Campbell is away by Gary Cooper in "High Noon". It was: Shoot first, in the back, if necessary, and ask questions later. _ Once, many years ago in New York, 1 met oneâ€"time law man Virgil Earp, Wyatt‘s brother. Virgil was a wisenedâ€" up little old man by the time I met him, but he was still a killer. He‘d carved the first notch in his pistol butt when he was still a teenager, and he talked about it the way that some men speak of their first drink. The Associated Press, in a story from Heathrow, carried an interview with a passenger from York, Pennsylvania. Her name was Anne Lodof, 32 years old, and a lawyer by trade. Asked about the armed police at the airport, she had this to say: "I hate to see it happen, but 1 realize that security precautions are necessary because people didn‘t used to open fire on children at airports. I lived in Israel for a while where everyone carried a machine gun, so J got used to it. But I think it encourages people to use them, perhaps unnecessarily, and I think it would be more sensible to have the people carrying the guns far less conspicuous."‘ I think I will be tempted to say something like that the first time I see airport police with automatic weapons.

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