[ Apstite hab tss hiikac Lyne Renaud, Roder and Ellie a.m. to 5 flp.m. ee silent films, as Jack? Kids rough August rirgggs Museum continues with 11 a.m. to 5 ‘ateri00. Waterâ€" ival opens at 7 ies, whlc'h"'ii cars, | ng a.m. tou_g%‘m. al wraps up 12 noon to 4 e Vaudeville sents Wine in exploring the of Five Blind a group of 13 of Game from 10 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10:30 a.m. â€" 10:00 p.m. * NEW MOVIE RELEASES * VCR RENTALS * SUPER & REGULAR examinatiOon! Of ‘biodiversity. mr ’w ons M yau © * s i: c3 s 4 1+ s c vigh go 4 feel a little battieâ€"weary from # doomâ€"sayers, 4 this book offers a tightly reasoned call for biolgical : Chuck Erion is a Waterioo bookseller and freeâ€" stewardship. lance writer. Sure to raise controversy will be the January release of Motherâ€"Infant Bonding â€" a Scientific Fiction by Diane Eyer, from Yale U.P. She argues that the concept of bonding was developed when hospitals were losing out to home births and seized on the concept to reassert medical authority over the birthing process. ‘classic‘ status. Yes, I‘ve talked about it before (it is still one of my allâ€":time favorites), but deserves mention again. Robert Redford has completed dlrectingthemvioversionforcinemareleasein October. See August‘s Esquire for a profile of Redford. The Pocketbook edition of the book will soon be out. And Maclean‘s final work, Young Men and Fire, just got a rave front page New York Times What gems are to be found in this fall‘s U.P. catalogues? Fans of Virginia Woolf will find a previously unpublished spoof entitled ‘"A Terrible Tragedy in a Duckpond‘‘ in A Cezanne in the Hedge and Other Memories of Charleston and Bloomsbury, due out in September from U. of Fall releases from the university presses What‘s in store this fall from university presses (U.P.)? Besides the scholarty monographs they are obliged to publish, academic publishers are filling niches for esoteric and often regional Ssubjects that the mainstream publishers ignore. Ignore, that is, until the books have become underground bestsellâ€" ers and then are reâ€"released by one of the mass market publishers. For example, Louisiana State U.P. brought out A Confederacy of Dunces by the late John K. Toole in 1980: It‘s an hilarious farce about a New Orleans hotâ€"dog vendor that was eventually released by Grove Press and is still in print. Similar success by wordâ€"ofâ€"mouth followed the publication of A River Runs Through it from: University of Chicago Press in 1976. With 400,000 copies, Norman Maclean‘s triple novella deserves «* GENESIS SYSTEMS 730 Gien Forrest Bivd., Waterioo 746â€"7322 Harvard‘s lead title this October is Edward O. Tus.Thec Set 10430 Frideys 18 waterLoo trown sauare 747â€"1425 FINAL CLEARANCE 40% {060% OFF ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE ,\ %:IZLAIBORNE m aiyy n nndiilt p it you i 5: diviige 4 AERIEL & While these titles are geared to general interest, | remain on the lookout for the esoteric with the most specialized claim. How ‘bout The Osage â€" an Ethnohistorical Study of Heqemony on the Prairieâ€"Plains from University of Missouri Press this December? Or Roll Me in Your Arms â€" Unprintable‘" Ozark Folksongs and Folklore, vol. 1 from the University of Arkansas Press? As the bishop said to the theological student, Publish or Urban folklore has become a specialty for Alan Dundes and Carl Pagter who delight in collecting the cute and funny cartoons, fake memos and other trivia that flow through office copiers. Wane State U.P. is the publisher of three collections: When You‘re Up to Your Ass in Alligators, Never Teach a Pig to Sing, and to be reissued in October, Work Hard and You Shall Be Rewarded. University of California Press‘s catalogue disâ€" plays a wideâ€"reaching range of topics typical of academic publishers. For instance, A Passion of Polka (November) treats seriously oldâ€"time ethnic music from the Gold Chain Bohemians to Lawrence Welk. On a more sombre note is Who Survives Cancer? (October). And just out in paperback is Women of the Kian a study of 1920‘s racism that points out that males held no exclusive claim on ,';l j FRIDAY FRIDAY WEDNESOAY TUESDAY TUESDAY 10 PIN SCHEDULE WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY 5 PIN SCHEDULE TUESDAY Every Wed. Night is 13 WING NIGHT Lâ€"**Â¥*__| 373 Bridge Street West, Waterioo (Colonial Acres Piaza) 725â€"4611 m:umm.umynmmmqm;mamw eumun(eerrremstemnagene ie cce22 00 000 T §â€"M.r1:00 a.m. Close "BOWLERS OR LEAGUES WANTED" Tired of a long league season? We will help you form a 16â€"week league on prime times. Just call 886â€"2330 and ask for Cathy or Patti 9 a.m.â€"5 p.m. WATERLOO CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26. 1992 â€" PAGE 15 Y _ Your NFL Headquarters Soon Opening Sundays for um footballâ€"on the B1G sthkeem. | "I_=~| MIXED 230 p.m. _ MIXED (4) MIXED 7:00 pm. _ MIXED (5) [[] OPENING FOR FULL LEAGUES 75 King St. S., Waterioo, Ontario 886â€"2330 5 PIN OR 10 PIN TWIN CITY BOWL 6:30 pm. 6:30 p.m. 900 p.m. 6:30 pm 900 p.m 1:30 pm 6:30 p m 9:00 p.m 6:30 p.m 9:00 pm 6:30 am 9:00 p.m 6:45 pm 6.45 pm 6:45 p.m 9:00 p.m 1:00 pm 6:45 p m 9:00 p.m $30 am 6:45 pm $:00 p.m $:00 pm 6:30 p.m 9:00 p.m MEN‘S (4) MIXED (5) MIXED (4) MIXED (5) MIXED (4) MIXED (5) MIXED (4) TRIO (3) MIXED (5) MIXED (4) MIXED 5 FRIDAY FRIED FIVE PINNERS (5) MOM & DAD‘S NIT OUT (4) GOLDEN AGERS (4) KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS (5) ST iERESAS (§) MEN‘S COMMERCIAL (5) MEN‘S FUN LEAGUE (5) EARLY BIRDS (4) TUESOAY FUN BUNCH (5) MIXED (4) TUESDAY NITE LADIES (5) MIXED 5 11:00â€"11:00 SEPT 11th SEPT 11th SEPT 13th SEPT 13th SEPT 3rd SEPT 9th SEPT 2nd SEPT 9th SEPT 14 in SEPT 14th SEPT 8th SEPT 8th SEPT SEPT SEPT 9t SEPT 9th SEPT 2nd SEPT 13m SEPT ath SEPT 1st SEPT &th SEPT 8th SEPT 14 th SEPT 14h 10th 1 0h 11th 10th