CASTLEGAR N SEMA RANN ANE YOUR STARS THIS WEEK By Stella Wildor roriteesiiirertr rs tt The coming week demands that every individ- ual pay the greatest atten- tion to duty. To shirk respon- sibility over the next six days |s tantamount to fail- ure and loss of reputation. Opportunities for gain are many -- but so are the risks involved in Bras ing them. For those who do manage the concentration of energy and talent required to achieve success this week, there is compounded inter- est in store. Friends are impressed; loved ones are grateful; business associates are respectful. : A sense of the dramatic is a boon to those in search of new directions. Partnerships may suffer from confusion when too many cooks threat- en to spoil the broth. On the other hand, those acting alone may require help to make promised gains. ARIES:(March 21-April 4) - Express your appreciation for the help you receive at midweek. Not to do so is to forfeit further aid. (April 5- April 19) -- Decide on a pace that will enable you to keep to your schedule of activities -- and don't deviate._Gains are made. TAURUS:{April 20-May 5) -- You can put new talents to good use this week. Take care not to surprise co- - workers with new demands. (May 6-May 20) -- Affairs at a distance make this an exceptionally good week for you. Repairs are in order; see to them now. GEMINI:(May 21-June 6) = This is a good week to return favors of some time ago. Children are ready to cooperate at home and abroad. (June 7-June 20) -- Business contacts may not be conducive to real prog- ress at this time. Look to old laurels for new goals. CANCER:June 21-July 7) -- Cut through red tape - early in the week and you should have a clear read to success by week's end. (July 8-July 22) -- Refuse to be rushed. These are days that require both care and patience if success is to be attained. LEO:(July 23-Aug. 7) - An exciting relationship has the possibility of changing your life for the good. Carry through with it. (Aug. 8:Aug. 22). -- You should be in a good position this week to complete projects that have lately become complex and cumbersome. VIRGO:(Aug. 23-Sept. 7) ~ You can gain professional prestige if you will go about your business with special care this week. (Sept. 8-Sept. 22) -- Errors made early in the week can be eliminated by week's end, Don't allow yourself to be discouraged. : LIBRA:(Sept. 23-Oct. 7) - Issues important to your success are the subjects of general discussion this week. Argue points well. (Oct. 8- Oct. 22) -- A relationship with a loved one may be somewhat storm-tossed ear- ly in the week. Keep-emo- tions under control! SCORPIO:(Oct. 23-Nov. 7) -- You should uncover clues to your future early. Apply them to circum- stances presently at hand! (Nov. 8-Nov. 21} -- Demon- Strate new talents as well as those already known. You can open up new avenues of activity at this time. SAGITTARIUS:(Nov. 22- Dec. 7) -- Make an effort to return favors. You can endear yourself to another simply by being supportive. (Dee, 8-Dec. 21) -- Independ- ent action early in the week may lead to argument later on. Nevertheless, it’s time to try your wings, CAPRICORN:(Dec. 22- Jan. 6) - Don’t allow superi- ors to get the wrong impres- sion about you. State your case -- and your opinion. (Jan. 7-Jan. 19) -- If you are resourceful before midweek, you should have little need for resourcefulness at week’s end. Be quick! AQUARIUS:(Jan. 20-Feb. 3) - Take co-workers into your confidence this week and you have a much better chance of making changes. (Feb, 4-Feb. 18) -- This is a good time for renewing old school ties. Friends of long ago may be eager to support you in a new project. PISCES:Feb 19-March 5) -- Don't hesitate to ask co- workers for support. It will be to the advantage of all concerned ta do so. (March 6-March 20) ~ If you would win the respect and admira- tion of the young, meet them on their own ground. Learn new wavs, EWS, April 16, 1980 Johnson's Baby Shampoo 850ml. each: Head & Should Gillette Atra Shaving Cartridges _ Pkg. of 10. each: Shampoo : 175ml. Lotion or 100ml. Tube. Your Choice, each: Woolco.m™ Shampoo, Bath Oil or Conditioner All types (except Baby Shampoo). 1.5 litre jug. Your Choice, each: Revlon Flex Shampoo or Conditioner 450ml. Your Cholce, each: 189 Maybelline Great Lash Mascara Black or Brown. Your Choice, each: Reach Toothbrush All types. Your Choice: 2/1°° Aqua Fresh Toothpaste 100ml. each: 83 189 LTH -& BEAUTY AIDS. Rave Soft Perm Kit Contains one application plus 40 curlers. each: Arrid Extra Dry Anti-Perspirant Regular, unscented or light powder. 200ml. Your Cholca. each: Mitchum Anti-Perspirant Skip a Day Formula. Regular or unscented, 1.5 oz. roll-on. Your Choice, ea.: Johnson's Baby Oil 450ml. each: 2 39 QW Johnson's Baby Powder ; 919 680g. each: Vaseline Intensive Care Lotion Regular or Herbal, 500ml. Your Choice, each: A 4 * Woolco. Bandages Box of 100. each: Solaray Deluxe : 1200 watt Blower/Dryer Contoured handle and side mounted controls; concentra- for attachment for spot drying; hang-up hook and thermostatically controlled, 19. each: Q-Tips Cotton Swab Pkg. of 400. each: Playtex Maxi Pads Non-deodorant Pkg. of 30. each: . 229 Care Bath Beads Regular or Herbal. 450g. Your Choice, each: Vaseline Petroleum Jelly 500g. each: 1° Cutex Nail Polish Remover All types. 6 oz. Your Choice, each: 16 02. Ae iasgaie Lato bess ot sin ka carte Grecian Formula 16 or Lady Grecian Formula 8 oz. Your Choice, each: Woolco.m Rubbing Compound 2/1498 4.6 for your shopping convenience WATCH FOR OUR IN-STORE SPECIALS EVERY WEEK. “PRICES EFFECTIVE TILL APRIL 26TH OR WHILE SALE QUANTITIES Last” Wa PARTMENT STORES ‘A DIVISION OF F.W.ROOLWORTR C9, LTD. WANETA uray SHOPPING CENTRE Woolco Store Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 6: Thursday & Friday: _ HWY. 3, TRAIL 00 p.m. 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. 0 8 ENJOY THE RED GRILLE FROM LIGHT SNACKS wns nonomszasee CASTLEGAR NEWS, April 16, 1980 (From DONAHUE, MY OWN STORY by Phil Donahue. Reprinted by permission of Simon & Schuster. Distributed by - the ‘Los Angeles Times Syndicate.) : By PHIL DONAHUE | am Phillip John Donahue. .| was born to Phillip and Catherine Donahue (nee McClory) on Dec, 21, 1935, at St. John’s Hospital. on Detroit ' Street in Cleveland, Ohio. Through my fir- st eight years of life, | grew Physically at about the same pace as America’s climb. out: of The Great Depression. i I was enrolled in Our Lady of the Angels School, where George O'Donnell beat the hell out of me. He said I had pushed him down the stairs. In retaliation, he pin- ned me on the sidewalk alongside the Rocky River Drive. A bus stopped, the driv- er opened the passenger door and, with authority, ordered George off me. Why I pushed George O'Donnell, who was more than twice my size, is any analyst's guess. STILL. NOT. clear why I was so combative - as a kid. It certainly wasn't because I was tough. I have successfully repressed most of the details, but I know that of the many fights I had, I lost most of them. Some were very traumatic, like the time Bobby Keats washed my face with snow. I will never forget the humiliation of being left in the snow. with a chapped face, gasping for air and watching helplessly as a larger, overpowering adver- sary laughed and walked away. Today, I confess that I am still thinking about Bobby Keats and wondering what happened to him. I am ashamed to acknowledge that wherever he is and whatever he is doing, I hope he is miserable. ‘ The all-male St. Edward High School was founded in *1949, just in time for young Philly, who did not have the scholarship to attend the more prestigious and more challenging Jesuit high school, St. Ignatius. About one, hundred young West Cleveland boys were to form the first class. I TOOK ZITA MULLEN to our first dance, but be- cause my dad drove us to and from the affair I was not able to transact my first kiss during that memorable eve- ning. (That was to come later, on Jane Halloran’s front porch. I actually asked her permission. She sighed, as in resignation, and then with some impatience she closed her eyes, puckered her lips and then opened them only long enough to say, “Okay, but make it quick,” whereupon we engaged in the briefest and driest mo- ment in all erotica.) I was falling in love with a new girl every week. I was ,quite fascinated ‘by girls and usually dated the most popu- lar ones about twice before being replaced by a football JAHUE CIRCA 1953: St. Edward High School, Cleveland, Ohio. the most sinister reputation of any of Notre . Dame's residence-lall priest/police- men, Fryberger mythology included a report that he ‘often ran down the hall late raduation from player or some guy with a D.A. haircut and his own car. Saturday nights were usually spent at the St. Christopher’ Canteen. The girls wore angora sweaters and rolled-down bobby sox with penny loafers. They always carried oversize wal- lets containing photo port- folios an inch and a half thick. Guy Mitchell was hot then (“One of the Roving Kind,” “My Heart Cries for You"). THE SATURDAY- night -dances-were the best ~ thing-that-ever-happened to horny _ boys, ‘could move in, dance close, then closer and then, if you got lucky, cheek to cheek — without saying anything. All you had to do was sense it. Each little move closer was as subtle as a glance in church, and a girl could just as subtly avoid the escala- tion. This meant you could communicate intentions with- out anyone else knowing. and without even acknowledging the little drama to each other. When you got re- jected, you and she were the only ones who knew. Sometimes you got real lucky and suddenly there you were dancing to “My Heart because you - highly regarded Donna Rae.) During the drive she said she had something to tell me, but that she wanted to wait till that evening, “be- cause if I tell you now you won't want to go out with me tonight.” Naturally I stopped the car immediately and de- manded the information “right now.” You can imagine what was going through my mind. After much hesitation she haltingly said, “I'm join- ing the convent.” . We went out that night anyway, and I remember it as one of the more depressing evenings of my social calen- dar. Here I was, trying to dance cheek to cheek with a girl who at the same time was one of the cutest coeds on the West Side, was wear- ing a soft bra and was joining the convent, for God's sake! My guilt was overwhelming! In my quest for girls’ favor, I was accustomed to vying with quarterbacks, auto own- ers and guys with “duck’s- ass” haircuts, but competing with Jesus was more than I could handle. * IN 1953 THERE WERE two ways for an Irish Catho- lic boy, to impress his par- ents, his neighb and his Cries for You," d by the white spots of the revolving mirrored ball, and you could feel her breasts against your chest — and you knew right away whether she was wearing ‘a stiff- wire-reinforced bra or a plain soft one. The plain ones gave . me the most bad thoughts. A “bad thought" was what you got in 1953 when you saw a girl on a bus wearing a tight sweater. It was also any of a lot of other erotic images conjured up by bored adolescent boys jin geometry class, or any other class, * DONNA RAE BROUGH- am ‘was one of my most intense. heartthrobs. One eventful Easter, I bought her a corsage and we went for a ride in the afternoon in, advance of the big dance at the Columbia Ballroom that evening. : (Unlike the St. Chris- topher Canteen, Columbia was for adults and had real live music. After all, it was Easter and my date was the girlfriend: become a priest or attend Notre Dame. When my letter of acceptance to N.D. arrived, I framed it and hung it on my bedroom wall. In spite of my largely mediocre report card from St. Edward High School, the power brokers within the Holy Cross community ‘of priests and brothers chose to accept all the first graduates from St. Ed’s who expressed interest in Notre Dame. Both schools are operated by the Holy Cross religious com: munity. I knew I was lucky then, and as the years pass, and. the required S.A.T. scores get higher, and the tuition approaches $7,000 per year, Ino longer think of it as luck — rather as: divine intervention. Arriving in South Bend, Ind., with a suitease and a metal box for mailing dirty laundry home, I moved into my abode for the coming year, 115 Zahm Hall, My dorm rector was Father Fryberger, who had Edith Bunker to be stifled but she’s not going to help Edith. Bunker, who drove husband Archie crazy for years in the hit television series All in the Family, is finally going to be stifled. A production source says the character, one of the most beloved on the small * screen, probably will die ina show next fall. Edith, as played by Jean Stapleton since 1971, was a shrill ding- bat'to bigoted Archie, but displayed an open-hearted common sense to millions of viewers. Edith has made only sporadic appearance since the. show became Archie - Bunker's Place this season. Stapleton’s desire to leave the comedy series was the prime factor in the decision . to move the show from the Bunker home to Archie's tavern. Carroll O'Connor, who plays Archie, and incidental- ly owns half the show through his production com- pany, wants to kill Edith off, but details on her demise haven't been worked out. at hight wearing one shoe — thus giving the impression he was. walking, and enabling this super-sleuth to catch frolocking freshmen in acts of disobedience. f MY ROOMMATE AT Notre Dame was George O'Donnell, my sparring part- ner from Cleveland. Time had healed the emotional It’s Your Paper {f you don't recelve your p ’ Nelson toll-free 352-9900 Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. : Trail toll-free 368-9800 ... and we want you fo get it. } , call our Circul: Department Castlegar 365-72 I settled in for studies, ‘exams, off-campus pizza and football weekends complete _ with loudspeakers which fill- ed the campus with the . “Notre Dame Victory March” and ‘out-of-town girls who filled angora sweaters, Nowhere was the de- ficiency of unisex education more apparent than in Zahm Hall on football weekends. The “men” of Notre Dame were reduced to “Animal House” characters by the presence of young women who, ,it must be said, never wounds I ined on the sidewalk beside Rocky River Drive, and our plan to room together: had. been agreed upon before we went to South Bend. . prep more ly than when visiting South Bend for the big game. They were all i “(She) puckered her lips and then , opened them only long enough to say, ‘Okay, but make it quick,’ whereupon we engaged in the briefest and driest moment in all erotica." (On his first kiss.) bon. Living all week with George O'Donnell and being constantly surrounded by male students at The Huddle coffee shop and in Cost Accounting class — every- where — did more for week- end lust than any low-budget porn film. Z By spring of my fresh- man year it had become apparent that I could indeed meet the academic ch right down to the pompon with the blue-and-gold rib- of Notre Dame. But the chal- lenge of surviving the sus- picious review of Father Fry- berger was quite another matter. Several incidents, including walking on the grass, making loud noise at night and planting a phony note in Louie Mark's mailbox informing him that he was ‘s Donahue: adolescence and formative years Mac") — in his office. Raising his head, exposing a bright red Irish face that reminded : me of all my uncles, and,: peering at me. from across a: large mahogany desk and: from behind " wire-rimmed? glasses, he delivered a line: that had all the polish of years of practice: “I want you back here in two weeks, at> which time we'll make a: decision." He waited gravely: for a response. : “A decision with regard to what, Father?” I asked, : not sur 5 " for a Kk brought both George and me + to the brink of explusion. I CAN STILL SEE Father McCarragher —Notre Dame's Prefect of Discipline (his nickname was “Black {With relish) “A decision: with regard to whether or. not you will remain at this: university,” he said. : NEXT: Marriage, par-: enthood — and separation. — NIVEA GREME 120m! CARE LOTION - BABY SCOTT ‘Super 26's & Reg. 30's ROYALE FACIAL TISSUE orgs . 1.49 ‘VASELINE INTENSIVE DISPOSABLE DIAPERS +++ 2.49 KLEENEX MAN SIZE FACIAL TISSUE .... .79 ROYALE BATHROOM TISSUE 4'swhite...... 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