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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1978-02-16, Page 21(I) central huron chronicle Philip street, editor secondary school news Your weekly horrorscope ARIES - RAM March 20 to April 20 Rules the Head and Face. ..ucky day Thursday - Unlucky day Monday. Most successful in June and July. Persons born under the sign of Aries are noted .for their energy, push and executive ability. They are imaginative builders of air castles, thinkers, leaders; are obstinate and independent. MARS. TAURUS - BULL April 20 to May 21. Rules the Neck. Lucky day Monday - unlucky day Sunday. Most successful in November and December. Persons born under the sign of Taurus are fearless, kind, gentle. strong of mind and body. determined, shrewd, have keen insight. emotional and dangerous VENUS. • GEMINI - TWINS May 21 to June 21. Rules the Arms. Lucky day Friday - unlucky day Sunday. Most successful in April and August. Persons born under the sign of Gemini are usually dual personal- ities. Skilled with hands. kind, creative. generous, and unselfish. Make excellent teachers and speakers. MERCURY. CANCER - CRAB June 21 to July 22. Rules the Breast. Lucky day Wednesday - unlucky day Saturday. Most successful in February and September. Persons born under the sign of Cancer are endowed with strong. determination, intuition and pur- pose. Restless and ambitious. Fond of travel.,,realistic, percep- tive and should never marry early. MOON. LEO - LION July 22 to August 23 Rules the Heart. Lucky day Sunday - unlucky day Tuesday. Most successful in January and October. Persons born under the sign of Leo are dignified, zealous, faithful, courteous, brave, sym- pathetic. honest, enthusiastic and generally have executive ability. SUN. VIRGO - VIRGIN August 23 to September 23. Rules the Bowels. Lucky day Monday - Unlucky day Wednesday. Most successful in February and November. Persons born under the sign of Virgo are orderly, methodical and systematic, active, proud, and intolerant of ignorance. Loyal; generous, good scholars, affect- tioiiate, clever, and successful in business. MERCURY. LIBRA - BALANCE September 23 to October 23. Rules the Loins. Lucky day Monday - unlucky day Thursday. Most successful in August and December. Persons born under the sign of Libra are well-balanced, hand- some, graceful, tasteful, discrim- inating, peace lovers, self-reliant. ave good sense of humour. Dislike hard work and careless in money matters. VENUS. SCORPIO - SCORPION October 23 to November 22. Rules the Secrets. Lucky day Tuesday - unlucky day Monday. Most successful in' January and July. Persons born Under the sign of Scorpio are self-controlled, cour- ageous, ambitious, eloquent in speech. Polite, courteous, pract- ical and sensible. Love praise and flattery. MARS. SAGITTARIUS - ARCHER November 22 to December 21. Rules the Thighs. Lucky day Sunday - unlucky day Friday. Most successful in Feb- ruary and June. Persons born under the sign of Sagittarius are impulsive. honest, quick, confident, fond of sports. Women are good housekeepers. fond of children and tender hearted. JUPITER. CAPRICORNUS - GOAT December 21 to January 20. Rules the.Knees. • Lucky day Wednesday - unlucky day Saturday. Most successful in March and November. Persons born under the sign of Capricornus are economical. care- ful, secretive, sympathetic. con- siderate. self-controlled. re- sourceful. Hard workers. they usually succeed in business. Musically inclined. SATURN. AQUARIUS - WATERMAN January 20 to February 18. Rules the Legs. Lucky day Thursday - unlucky day Wednesday. Most successful in April and August. Persons born under the sign of Aquarius are restless. indolent. economical, pleasing and agree- able. Usually calm. quiet and seldom ill-tempered. Greatest fault is procrastination. URANUS PISCES - FISHES February 18 to March 20. Rules the Feet. Lucky day Wednesday - unlucky day Friday. Most successful in May and November. Persons born under the sign of Pisces are natural lovers. fickle, fruitful, easily led. honest, sensitive. cultured, fond of beauty in Nature and Art. Generous, pure in mind and trustworthy. NEPTUNE. Studentof the week by Ken McBride If Mike Denomme had longer hair 'and considerably less class, he could probably be mistaken for me. I'd never wish that on him, Lord knows; but in starting this feature, I feel the necessity to whittle him down to my level. Mike and I were at one time known by identical, less -than - flattering nicknames, though gf different origins. It's nice to know that his early days at CRSS were not excessively dignified. Be that as it may, student council president Michael Anthony Denomme has proven that he can handle his inherited duties. He .does admit, "At first the little things bothered me." One would surely have found difficulty in detecting this however, Displeasure is usually expressed in Mike in the form of some tranquil variation on the maxim, "that's the way it goes." If he's really upset, he might venture an exclamatio:t of "shoot." Mike is generally pleased with the school year to this point, although he says, "There's always a few people who don't want to par- ticipate." He is happy with the hard work of his council associates in making efforts such as monthly dances so financially successful. The magazine subscription campaign, a brand new fund- raising approach for CHSS is also, quite successful. Mike says, "Student council was looking for something dif- ferent. We didn't want to sell chocolate bars." The subscription sales have bettered the original goal by over 30 per cent and Mike expects a,revenue of at least $2,500. This money could go towards football field bleachers and possibly a scoreboard. Mike is also interested in dressing up CHSS's sometimes dreary halls with more murals and that can't hurt (uh, well...) Mike notes that in his spare time, he likes to get involved with sports, primarily of the "body contact" variety. (I'm not sure what he meant by that.) He hopes to continue his studies at V(estern or McMaster next year in natural science's. (Oh,•"'now I get it.) As if he didn't have enough to keep him busy. CLINTON NEWS -RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16,1878—PAGE 21 Big .. rot er 's wa tch ing kw cyto) N1165 'MASS - PLEASE LET ME Go Dowt – TOWN FOR FARTI C1PACTIOIs Taking the plunge by Patil Westlake --in which the author, the newest addition to the Chronicle staff proves once and for all that the only requirement for getting published is guts, not talent. For the first time in my life I find myself actually sitting down and writing some constructive propaganda that might be published (fat chance)as a newspaper ar- ticle. The chain of events that brought this great turn of fortune are very painful (right P and K) and are better left alone. Never- theless, I must convey to you some organization of thought, which in my case, with an IQ of almost nil, is an impossible task altogether. To be a writer in any way, shape or form I believe you must possess the mind of a genius, the patience of a teacher, the suave tactics of a politician and of course, the forehand of Jimmy Connors. These qualities I must con- fess, do not overflow out of that maze upstairs called the brain, that we are so gifted to have. Let it be said, that if I can conglomerate anything that makes the least bit of sense, anyone can. New chairman for Conestoga Dr. Kenneth R. Fisk of Harriston was elected chairman of the board of governors of Conestoga College of Applied Arts and Technology at the inaugural meeting held January 23, 1978 at the College's Guelph campus. Vice chairman of Operations is Mrs. Dorothy Worden of Wellesley, and vice chairman of administration is Walter C. Gerth of Milverton. A charter member of the College's Board of Gover- nors, Dr. Fisk has been ac- tively involved with the growth and development of the Collage and is well equipped to serve .as Chairman of the Board. A graduate of The Ontario Veterinary College, Dr. Fisk until recently practised in Harriston and is now em- ployed by the Ministry of Agriculture and Food as Chief Inspector of Sale Barns of Ontario. He served as 44,441.0,000. Goderich Little Theatre "MY THREE ANGELS" A Comedy In Three Acts by Sam & Bella Spewack - Directed by: Jennifer Black at MacKAY HALL WED. THURS. FRI. SAT. MARCH ls}, 2nd, 3rd, 4th. Curtain 8:30 BOX OFFICE AT R.W. BELL OPTOMETRIST Thurs., Feb. 231-3 Tues., Feb. 23 1-5 Fri, Feb. 241-5 Wed., Mar. 1 closed Sat., Feb. 231-4 Thurs., Mar. 21-5 Mari., Fab. 1-3 Fri., Mar. 31-5 No telephone reservations please Reeve of Harriston for many years and is presently in his second year as Mayor of Harriston. There are three new members of the board of governors of Conestoga College. Arthur Paul Dilks. a Smile Smile A local man telephoned a police station one night and excitedly reported that the steering wheel, brake pedal, accelerator, clutch pedal and dashboard had been stolen • lawyer from Stratford; William R. Clifford, a real estate broker from Goderich; and Allan J. Campbell, a retired farmer from Seaforth. The addition of these three new members gives the College its full complement of 12 board members,. tru;ii ills cal. 1 he policeman promised to investigate. But soon the telephone rang again. "Don't bother," said the man -- this time with a hic-cup. "I got into the back seat by mistake." As the weeks roll by I can't help but think that the antics of the students are getting better and better. Actually I find it unbelievably im- possible for so many things to happen to a student body of approximately 1,000 in only one week. This week I have to admit that Saturday night was the best time for the big Brother. Poor ' C.W. spent all Saturday night in a relentless and fruitless search for an unknown admirer. Pretty frustrated were you? Why? Think how Kim must have felt. Saturday night was also a good time for S.M. who decided to build a castle of glass from his empties. It was really too bad when someone blew on it and knocked it Sports roundup Basketball results On February 9 the midget basketball team lost another close game, this one to the Norwell Redmen. The midgets this season have won two and lost four, with three of the four losses being close games. Jim McClure and Phil Cornish were high scorers for the tears with 11 points each in the teams 40 - 33 loss. Keep it up team! Last Thursday the Junior Redmen lost a close decision to Norwell. Although the juniors outplayed their op- position, they fell to a 46-30 defeat. Dave Williscraft led the team in the scoring department with 12 points. On February 9 the Senior Redmen lost to Norwell by a score of 53-42.. At the end of the first quarter the score was tied at 8. By the end of the half our boys were ahead by 4 points, 21 - 17. In the third quarter the team fell victim to Norwells full court press and change in defence. They were outscored in this quarter 22 - 4. In the final quarter the team recovered and outscored the opposition 19 - 14, but it was not enough to , overtake Norwell. High scorers for the team were Joe Verburne with 23 points, followed by_ Mike Thompson with 14. Volleyball results Last Wednesday, February 8, the CHSS junior and senior girls' volleyball teams travelled to Exeter for a tournament. The junior Redwomen were defeated in two matches by Seaforth. They also lost to Wingham in two matches. The senior Redwomen came away from the tour- nament with two easy vic- tories. In their first game the mighty Redwomen downed Seaforth in two matches with scores of 15 - 0 and 15 - 9. The Wingham Mustangs were also beaten by the Redwomen in two matches. Scores of that game were 15 - l and 15 - 10. Keep it up girls! down -on top of you! M.D.. has been seen falling from high office as he tripped down the steps. Pretty em- barrassing eh, Pres ? J.A. has been seen doing really strange things again. I thought it was bad, enough when you ran your snowmobile into a parked truck, but when 1 caught you "screwing" around under the table in the lounge I really lost all faith. Finally, this week J.H. was seen sneaking up to Mr. Phillips' dressed as a vam- pire. Really Julie I didn't think you to be that kind of a person. The Church 1 RESTAURANT Hours 12:00-2:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. onward Closed Mondays Only Corner Waterloo/Brunswick Sts.. Stratford Reservations 273-3424 Lmcenced by L L 8 0 i"nter Special dinner menu offered throughout the winter for only 3 complete co,urses; soup or hors d'oeuvres, choice of main course, vegetables, rolls and butter; selection of desserts; tea and coffee. this special Church Dinner Menu is available everyday except Sunday / closed Mondays. / 3.25 per person children $7.50 Sunday Brunch: an outstanding value for Sunday Evening Buffet: a restaurant tradition $5.75/ 2.25 per person children $7.75/ 3.25 per person children Parties up to 140 persons; call for details of special prices. ES . rAMZig�MingiMnnli;PMrenri a�n.F2FAaM1 dirPMr- GRAND OLE OPRY SHOW \ • • QEQ QSpN Ps CALL MURPHY BUS LINES CLINTON 482-3493 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22nd. ONLY 11.1 "ANTI-INFLATION BUCKET A special offer from the 0 Colonel to fight inflation- feeds 5 to 7 hungry people. Col. Sancho.' RKlpo entucky rk • ANAOIAN COMPANY $ 94 Elgin Ave. Goderich, Ont. A MOO 0 Colonel Sanders' boys and girls make it finger lickiin' good• •