Newspapers / Fayetteville State University Student … / Dec. 22, 1982, edition 1 / Page 6
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Page 6 IIMtllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIII The Voice V ariety iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiitiiiMiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Test Your English Knowledge Answer These 10 Trivia Questions 1. What is the period of I485-I660 known as? 2. When you use the ideas or words of another person without giving him proper credit is called? 3. How many cantos are in Dante’s Inferno? 4. Who is the Greek Sun god? 5. When two independent statements are joined by a comma only, the error is called? 6. Who wrote The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus* 7. What were Homer’s greatest epics? 8. That, Which, and Who in gramma tical structure are known as? 9. Who wrote the Canterbury Tales? 10. What English poet wrote/7om«o and Juliet? What I Think You are always thought of in a warm and loving way ar.d sft vfry best especially today! You are always soft and kind so if you would please be mine! By (Pooh Bear) Kenneth McNeill RECIPES Drop Cookies-Chocolate Chip(original toll^ house) COMBINE ‘/i C softened butter or shortening 6 T granulated sugar 6 T firmly packed brown sugar '/i T vanilla Vi T water Beal until creamy, stir in 1 egg, slir together I V% c sifted flour, and blend in 'A T baking soda and '/5 T salt. Mix well and stir in 1-6 oz pks chocolate chips and c nuts. Drop by well rounded teaspoonsfuls onto greased cookie sheets. Bake at 375° time. Bake 10 to 12 minutes. Makes 50 cookies. Garlic may lengthen life Campus Digest News Service It may not do much for your social life, but eating a lot of garlic could help lengthen your lifespan. Research has shown that garlic, along with ginger and barley, can help reduce atherosclerosis, which are fatty deposits in the arteries that lead to heart diseases. Three nutritionists from the University of Wisconsin have found that garlic, ginger and barley added to diets reduced the amount of cholesterol buildup in animals. If the same theory can be applied towards humans, it may be easier to control cholesterol levels, thereby reducing the risk of heart disease. Counterfeit proofing jeans Campus Digest. News Service Levi Strauss is making a move to crack down on counterfeit Levis jeans. A r»ew tagging program will allow manufacturers to check goods in stores to see if they are authentic name-brand merchandise. The tags contain invisible fibers that can be checked against a central computer bank. The tag cannot be duplicated by counterfeiters. Levi Strauss is hoping the new-system will help crack down on the huge name brand counterfeiting industry. I Was A sked of A ppearance / was looked upon andasked of appearance. Shall I begin with what one see's or with what one displays? On seeing, it is known that good can be seen as evil and evil seen as good through the eye of many. Some things are seen and still not believed to be so and altered in order to display what one wants to be seen. So, what of the display? At times it does not matter what I decide to appear as. My true being always comes through. But when this being is displayed, my appearance is said to be the other. When I’m asked of appearance, I wonder what is hoped to be seen. Then, I look, I smile, and I say, appear ance is what one wants to see and what one needs things to be. Imani Know Me ’ Know me. I’ve come and I’ve gone; Know me. I’ve laughed. I’ve mourned; Know me, I was taught, I was scorned; Know me. I’m life. Therefore I’m capable. “Bogart” Anthony Humphrey IIIIIMIIIIMIIMlliil|jijjjjijjijjjiih\'ni!i;!iilliiiliiiiiiii{M|jiMj;i SEEK & FIND See if you can find the names of the FSU women's basketball team! Names Concetta Smith Sheryl Drayton Rose Toval Annette Springfield Veronica Stewart Aniska Butler Delphine Hudson Devette McGhee Sharon Jones Joyce Vaughn Victoria Warren Lisa Turner Annetta Faubcon Stacy Hayes Monica Bryant Mary Lamb Ronald Vaughn Carolyn Rice E G M I G C R 0 S E T 0 V A U H N N C H N N S M N N 0 S D U H E N I H P L E D T 0 T I E - E A M U E A N N . E A W s R E I H E T R N T E Y E J I N M W M 0 R W U R M U E E U A B M I R 0 S A E E C I R N Y L 0 R A C R V T N N N A N N E T T E S P R I N G F I E L D M N A M For A Special Lady A special word of praise is due For A young lady who's as fine as you So this is written io say I "yell done, ” May your holiday be A happy one! By (Pooh Bear) Kenneth McNeill u iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiii Buy Now And Later Something new has been added to the retail shelves of America. You can walk into a Safeway supermarket and leave with not only milk, carrots and a can of soup, but also with a home computer. Or you can buy your unit at Macys or K-Mart or Bloomingdales. Home computers can be found just about everywhere. Computer manufacturers, however, are hoping they will be found by the millions under Christmas trees their year. That is what they were planning on when several of the big home- computer makers started cutting prices on their least, expensive models this fall. Texas Instruments, which has 23 percent of the home computer market, initiated the price war as early as August when it offered a $100 rebate on its TI- 99/4A. Other companies quickly followed the example and cut at their price tags, such as Commodore, Timex, Radio Shack and even Atari. As a result, more than 1.5 million computers are expected to be sold this year. That is far leap from the 35,000 sold in 1980. Of course, the prices this year have been the market booster. Two years ago the Texas Instruments TI-99/4A was listed at $1,000. It now sells for $299. Home-computer makers are stressing the low price in retail stores and in advertising. Their message is: why buy just a video game whea you can get a home computer for about the same price? The Voice staff wishes you a safe and happy holiday. The sales pitch had been effective and may mean a sharp drop off in home video games which soared to their peak last Christmas. Those games now retail for anywhere between SI25 and $300. Home computers can provide the games plus practical uses such as bookkeeping, investment, language learning and more. Some predict that computers will eventually let consumers bank and shop at home. That means more money for the home-computer manufacturer. Many of those companies were able to slash the prices on their home units because they know once people have the basic unit they will be back to buy more. The basic unit is usually just a computer keyboard console. Of course, a special video screen or television set is needed to show what the keyboard is doing. And software programs are a necessity. Then there are the accessories-printers, power cords, memory boosters or telephone links. Accessory and additional component sales are what the computer companies are banking on. They have just set out their bait of an inexpensively-priced unit. For every $1 a consumer spends on an inexpensive keyboard console, he could spend another $1 on all the extras. Next year he will have more to choose from and software accessories could cost him $2 or $3 for every $1 he spends on a basic unit. Answers to November Crossword Answers to November Seek & Find 0 D\H\C 0 Shoplifting survey Campus Digest News Service Subtle security apparently is more effective in deterring shoplifters, according to a study conducted by a marketing professor. Dr. Michael Mills, of the University of Southern California. Dr. Mills surveyed shoppers and stores in Pittsburgh. His findings show shoppers to be greatly offened by blatant security measures. Those stores which utilized uniformed detectives, chains linking expensive garments, or electronic tags on items, reported the highest incidence of shoplifting. Mills believes that shoppers are angered by the obvious trust that the blatant security devices imply. They also may feel challenged by the greater risk involved. He advises shopowners to use more subtle security measures to help deter theft. itmtiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiHWHiitumwuwHmuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SPRING REGISTRATION JAN. 3-10, 1983 Rudolph Jones Student Center
Fayetteville State University Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 22, 1982, edition 1
6
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