8 The Daily Tar Heel Thursday, March 19, 1987 WERE FIGHTING FOR VOUR LIFE . American Heart Association ijv,ij;ivu(Kirir RESTAURANT W FRANKLIN CHAPEL HILL 929-0297 " ::We NEW LATE NITE MENU! served nightly after the dinner hour MONIEEYK2UA burger char-grilled to order with melted Monterey Jock and crisp bacon on a fresh roll. 3.75 cmUED Cli'.CZXi SMiDVil&i-Tender, boneless chicken , breast, marinated, charbroiied and served on a fresh roll with lettuce, tomato and mayonnaise. 3.75 with bacon and cheese 4.25 CZEFFAJITAS CAJZOU-lender pieces of skirt steak or boneless chicken breast, marinated, charbroiied, thinly sliced and wrapped in warm flour tortillas with melted cheese, guacamole and salsa. 6.50 Sn.thCHMtGAS (beef or chicken) Basket of Six 4.25 Basket of Nine 6.25 Basket of Twelve 8.25 other items such as mexican pizza, cheese nachos, stuffed jalapenos, chips and sauces, and dessert. Located in NCNB Plaza Chapel Hill 967-7145 MCVisa CASH ' ' " ft , ' Of I f ' 5 ' I f J A1i--.-.x:V, I U'?', ',,: I-.!.-., 'T- I iff--',, .J" . ,,., 1 ''"!!,"';'' i 'f,;,.," "", ' hZ,' ''?'', wf" W'-t VS I ' ' ' " ;, t p. '-7Z' ,y&ttsx--''i'J" Wi&t&AtM 4SMAiWwA . wtwcwtft jfirjftr a ; . ;- ''f ;,.-i I -Feature DTH Charlotte Cannon Daphne Wilson, from Denver, N.C., shows off her own unique chic BAUM DIAMONDS FINE JEWELRY l(K VV'M Tranklin St.. ( h.iwl Mill .' OJHh : 0 : 10 ( Mimmf pari ml umtfr I runkhn A t hurt h Sn By SHARON KESSLER Staff Writer There's something inescapable on college campuses. It's not the classes or the protests it's the chic. College chic. Those certain clo thing articles and accessories that every college student owns. They may not be admired or understood by the fashion deacons of Fashion Avenue in New York, or Bond Street in London, or Rue St, Faubourg in Paris, but they are understood by millions of college students on campuses across the country. Perhaps some of them ignored college chic while they were just naive high school students, and some will probably try to forget it after they join the mature, working masses. But there's no need to despair - college chic will endure on cam pus, varying with the times, but immutable in essence. How did a frivolity like fashion ever come to occupy a space of importance in The University an institution of life's higher aspirations towards philosophy, art, literature, music and, yes, basketball? The college experience, including college cjothing styles, has affected many of our cultures' artists deeply enough to be represented in their art. Their altered visions have been reflected back to the' community through their work! The character izations of college men and women in literature, for example, are profuse. In "Joy in the Morning," author Betty Smith (who once lived in Chapel Hill) wrote about the exper iences of a college girl in 1927: "Most wore what was almost a uniform: dark pleated skirts, loose pullover sweaters, a string of 'pearls,' saddle shoes and socks. Annie felt out of place in her city clothes. Ill never be one of them, she thought sadly. Ill never belong." And in F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story, "Winter Dreams," at an "older and more famous university in the East," (did someone mention Prince ton?) the men wore knickerbockers, Shetland socks and sweaters. . f You no longer have to imagine that the finest bookstore you've ever seen m e i f is open on Sunday, it is: yt From 10 until 10. 4 S-y From 10 until 10. Jpf'V "j , rv - - v. 929-6222 300 E. Main St. .vCarrbproft,