rpsc SPRINGFIELD SCIENTIFIC SUPPLIES Scales Chemicals Lab Equipment 9-6 Mon-Frl • 10-5 Sat 726-9176 H lain St. J ZXZZZJZZXXZZZXX& MOOSE records BUY • SILL • TRAD! NBW B (IBID SMCIAL ORDIRI €D'I*IR'S*TARII HARD TO BIND BBB ■. 13th RUOINR, OB 0T401 342-TOTS BAX 344-7243 by YVillum Stakccpearr Kobin%on Tbratrr t'mvrnily o( Orrgon IvminR mtfornuitacs—8tB p m Mjy 21. 22. 27, 2*. 29. jitv.1 |um- 4, 5 KING LEAR Matirnt-s 1010 4 m May 2f* *nd June 1 Hm olfiit* (503) Hf> 4 Wl A!ftenti°n CatnPuS CaWPuS GaWPuS Radvo'* Plan PM. Butler bjtte TREK Continued torm Page 7 Now, Star Trek fan c.Iubs are just as serious as the conventions Every town is railed a starbase. so it's the Portland Starbase. Every club in Portland is a starship Portland's first club is called the U.S.S. Phoenix Kathryn Braeme-Burr. co founder of the first Portland club and member for 10 and a half years, describes the club as a lot more than a bunch of people get ting together to watch Star Trek "It's set up like the military on a starship." Braeme-Burr said “You start out at the bottom and make points bv doing things for the club like writing in the newsletter, setting up speakers and working on the conventions Then you get promoted I pist made commander Braeme-Burr met her husband in the club while other members have grown to become each other’s le-st friends There is a lot more going on than just Star Trek Braeme-Burr said. Two auctions of rare Star Trek stuff, two blooper films. « cos tume contest and a trivia game later, the lights dimmed We watched a video of Q s scenes from various Star Trek episodes to the tune of "Bod to the Bones" by (ieorge Thorogood before John de Uncie came on Mage lo answer questions. A 25-year acting veteran, de Unde devotes hi* time to movie* and guest starring postitions. whic h he calls freelancing.' and teaching acting. Star struck fans asked de Uncie questions about being on the show, playing Q and working with the cast He added a sense of reality to ideas he believed the audience had "For you. I'm sure it would be the greatest thing to happen to you. to be on Star Trek.'' de Un cie said "But for me it's just work We all get paid to wait, not ac t Everyone has their own rou tine and I'm not a part of it When questions turned to act ing. de Uncie started sharing act ing techniques as if he were teaching a ( lass, using his work as Q as an example. The secret is to keep a win dow in the character where the audience < an do the other half ol the work.' de Uncie said. "It's like running a marathon, if 1 pass the baton just right, you'll run the rest of tile race and usually run further than i ever intended you go You all have your own per ioptions of (J as a result." After an hour on stage, de Un cie answered the last question— how he came to play Q, the bad boy of the continuum. A few years back, one of the producers of The Next Generation was in the hospital with quadru ple bypass surgery when de l.an cie was a regular on Days of Our Lives. ' At one o'clock the hospital slowed to a stop." de t,ancie said. ''He watched every day and told me You made me laugh when I thought I was going to die. I swore that if there was any way 1 could get that actor back for that gift. I would.' So he asked me to audi tion for Q.” A Star Trek convention is an experience. It's place where you meet new people, catch up on gossip about your favorite science fiction shows, not just Star Irek. see everyone s costumes, meet an actor or actress and maybe learn a thing or two about getting into the business yourself. Star Trek conventions are put on by private companies separate from Paramount Studios and the producers ol Star Trek Pamela Rimington and her company Infinite Visions put together this month's show, her first show on the West Coast. "Turn out is low on vour first visit to a region.” Rimington said. "It will be belter next time after 1 get a mailing list together of everyone who attended this time." GRUNGIES Continued from Page 8 Bathtub ('.in 11 starting to get n lot of outside hell) where marketing and management are concerned. Martinez said. But they're not giving up creative < ontrol. or their willingness to n rub. chop and shovel in the daytime to make intisii that matters to them. "We re trying to do things our way instead of let ting other people dictate our course, Martinez said. Pocket Full of Kmptv, which also was featured in the NAMA showcases, subs* ribes to the same blue i ollur ethic Guitarist and lead singer Theron Stevenson works days in the Starlnn k s coffee-roasting plant Steven son moved from Spokane to attend the University of Washington in Seattle then started getting more into playing music and decided I couldn't do both of them." Lead guitarist Steve Faucher. who attended Spokane's Lewis and Clark High School with Stevenson, joined him in Seattle, where he now works at Kinko's copies Bassist Timm Shere works as a delivery driver for Pizza Hut. and drummer Tony Learner here it is works in investments for Safeco Insurance Cm “He's the guv that wears a suit." Stevenson said Thu group plays a housewine style of grunge that 's hard enough for most any Seattle audience and var ied enough, with Stevenson and Faucher trading gui tar licks, to keep the moshers interested. Pocket Full of Empty is taking about a month off from playing live to write songs and develop the act, then hopes to he able to develop a strong local fol lowing. Stevenson said. Four-piece group Thinkfeed had a bit of a dilem ma in their NAMA show. Singer Rafe Pearlman missed his ferry after a weekend of reflection across Puget Sound from Seattle, and the band had to put on an unaccustomed instrumental show . They acquitted themselves well In fact, the crowd's response to guitarist Scott Ralston s strong arm barre-t nord slice and drummer Kent Rountree's frustration-fueled pounding was perhaps the most enthusiastic for any band that night. They especial ly liked it when Rountree beat an expensive splash cymbal into shapeless submission. Ralston works in construction by day. Pearlman sells his arts-and-cralts creations, bassist Tim Devine works at a Kidd Valley fast-food restaurant and Rountree "spends his time playing his drums and beating the hell out of them," Ralston said. "We want to take it as far as it will go,” Ralston said. "If it will get big and go big then we’d love to do that." LATE NIGHT with Track Town Pizza All Medium Pizzas Discounted After 10:00 pm Daily and All Day Wednesday MEDIUM ONE ITEM PIZZA *6.95 Additional toppings $1.00 each TRACK TOWN PIZZA Two convenient locations to serve you CAMPUS 484-2799 1809 Franklin Blvd. WEST 484-4262 2511 W 11th & Wilson BP I I SPRINGFIELD SMOKE SHOP coco Tobacco • Pipes • Lighters • incense • Knives • Gifts • Candy j 1124 Mam St . Spnngfietd, OR 97477 503-747-8529 ■* Mon S* iMSoJ '2-e 800-782-9495 j 726-6969 OPEN'24 HOURS CUad in Am a Him Mm. 12m it Am 1166 S. 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