The Cadre, Feb. 3, I976, Page 8 Trivia Interesting, Hum-rots " C‘oloimbo’s' alhertamasunnald' the~hookworm This weeks revue will be considerably in a lighter vein than last weeks.~ Colo— mbo's book is a highly uniq- ue collection of Canadian ericks, bumper stickers, malaprops, bloopers, to grr affiti and zany road signs. I wonder how many of us re— member the old sign on the trivia which will tickle your funny bone for hours The collection co— ntains everything from lim— on end. which said: r offered in Toronto: civilization courses enouiries: (418) 92812400 Summer Language Programmes French/ltalian/Latin/English French, English, Italian and Latin—Augustan offered in Saint—Pierre et MiqUelo‘vn: French language courses ' Bursaries, funded by the Department of the Secretary of State, government of Canada, are available in connec- tion with the French and English language courses. University of Toronto School of Continuing‘Studies 158 St. George Street, Toronto M58 .2V8ML ~ va LIVE ii LIFE 1 WITHOUT MEANING? Too many of us are in places we don’t want to be. Doing things we really don’t want to be doing. Sometimes. it’s because we can’t think of anything better to do—but that's no way to live. Since you have only one life to I live, you might as well live it with joy . . . with a feeling of satisfac- tionr’aud‘accomplishment . . . and the knowledge that you are giving, not taking. Why not decide to live for the best . . . for a great purpose . . . for something bigger than you are? If you want to change the di- rection of your life, you might in- vestigate the l’aniist way of living. ing the Gospel of Christ to the North American people. For over 100 years the Paulists have done this through the communication arts— books, publications, television and ‘ radio—on college campuses, in par- ishes, in missions in North America, in downtown centers, in working with young and old. Because we are” flexible, we continually pioneer new approaches. To do this we need dedicated, innovative men to carry on our work. To find out what road God has chosen us to walk is one of the most _ important tasks of our life. Which road will be yours? For more information on the The Panlisls an» a small group of Palllists. fill Out the coupontand Catholic priests (it .igt-ned to preach- mall today. r—‘"'—__’~""M'_—'"_”__ ‘—‘7 A’ .w‘izu/iarirs 10 Canada and (he U.S. I I - l PAULlSlS l l Aim! to: Address I 5 ‘ Rev. Frank De-Sizmo. C.S.P.. . t 7 Room D239 C"), I - - PAULIST l: \ TIIERS « , _ . l H5 \vcszssti.smer Pmm‘“ 2‘9 r ‘ ‘CINEMA‘ 2 J P Nchork \.‘t‘. mow Cone e i r Classof If». ,.-Zl5 "a; . i. . atten ing ‘ «‘ outskirts of Charlottetown "Drive slow and see our city, Drive fa— st and see our iail." See— ‘defenSe'at bridge dave gaHant “CINEMA I, ing this in the book and the fact the author noted its location gives one a pleasant identity with this book. - One aspect of the book I liked so much was the fact that throughout it is a book concerned with-Canada. -Colombo has captured ' Canadian humor at it's best- and at it's worst, the puns are horrible. My own per-” sonal taste was for the gr-\ affiti. "Necrophilia means never having to say your sorry." And Immanuel Kart out Kubla Karn if Shakesp— . eare will should William Tell.» In, a book such as this, one can only appreciate\it, if you read it yourself. So, if you have a good Sen—r se of humor, and would li- ke to look at some good ba— sic Canadian humor read‘ this book. . A In contrast the‘second .book I wish to review is almost the opposite. New vChina's First Quarter Cenf tury. 209pp $2.95 based upon articles in the Hsin- hua News Agency & Chinese newspapers. 3 - ____._'__J, She'sthscalllfl' HG'SIMCOD. f immunnkws} 'is straight—forward in like this book. “ signed for sensationalist re ' ading and could be reasonabh '5 has“fihoWnuyouSafcexmatnxway~ .154 215191; "“I’F‘YOW DON‘t'T STOP IT...YOU'I‘LL’3G l"BLIND; 4 , This book is a series of articles on t'he'progress of Red China after 1949. The articles consist main- 1y of faCts and statictics comparing pre-Mao China to post—Mao China; The book setting out to show the distinct advantages that China has gained. Inter~ spersed with these stat— tistics is the ideology of Mao Tse Tung. I feel the book has ach‘ ieved it's purpbse but it strikes me on the whole as being suited to only cert— ain people. If you want to know specifically what China is doing and are able to stand the repitition of certain ideological though“ which are stated over and over again, then you will ’As a whole though the WT- iting is rather dry. It re- minds me of,Canadian govenh ment publications which are pedantic and ever so boring However this book is not de informative. /V r. ._ When a COunt ofuthé hand to defeat the Contract, you must not.allow whimgto de— flect you into a less cer— tain path. NORTH S AQ72 H 9862 D AK94 C K: WEST S 5 H K1054 D J3 C AJ7642 Bidding South West North East 1 S Pass 3 D Pass 3 S Pass 4 S Pass Pass 5 H Pass 6‘s ‘You make a dubious trmw lead against South's spade slam. Declarer wins and continues with a second round of trumps to which partner follows. Three. rounds of diamonds are wml. by the A, Q, and K, and ruffed by declarer, whoImw exits with the.Queen,0f clubs. 0n winning wighzthe ace, what do you lead? This is-a fairly easy hand to count. Declarer appears to have a 6-3—3‘1' distribution and isceJ-‘tam ly going down in his con‘ tract. In fact, if partner :35"!!- ‘ 5133 Conti d: p399 11