The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, December 23, 1985, Image 14

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    14
ISSUES
STOP IN
8:30 to 5:00
OR MAIL TO:
AUTO
AUTO
AUTO
85 Plymouth
Turismo Duster, 2.2
engine, 8,700 miles, 5
spd. front wheel drive.
Exc. cond. asking $6.900.
Call 675-4041 after 5
Thunderbird
Charcoal gray, 3.8 liter v-
6, auto., p.s., p.b., air.
AM-FM cassette, cruise,
tilt wheel, rear window
defroster. Velour inte-
rior. Very good cond.
Must sell! 639-1441 after
1979.
Good cond. $1300. Call
477-3655. 48-4-P
CHEVY, '80
MONZA
2 Door, radio, heat, rear
window defroster, 4 new
tires. Very good cond.
Asking $2100. Call 828-
8532. 48-4-P
CHEVY 76
CAMARO COUPE
305 V-8, 4 new radials.
Good running cond. Left
rear needs work, $1,000.
Call 675-3393. 48-4-P
1975 PLYMOUTH ROAD-
RUNNER-fully equipped
w-sun roof. All new
radial tires. Good cond.
$1150. Call 477-5143. 48-
4-P
1973 BMW 2002A, dark
blue, AM-FM. cassette.
Interior in exc. cond.
$1800. Call after 3 p.m.
825-9253. 48-4-P
82 Camaro 228
Avuto., 26,000 miles, T
tops, air, tilt, cruise, PW,
PL, rear defroster, gold
w-black interior. Show-
room cond. Best offer
after $8700. Call 696-
4907 after noon. 48-4-P
MUSTANG, 81, One
owner, 4 speed, 6 cyl,
rear louvers. American
racing wheels. Jenson
Kenwood. Looks sharp.
$3200 or best offer. Call
388-6121 after 5 p.m.
333-4247. 48-4-P
Toyota 80
Cressida
4 dr., 6 cyl., auto., a-c, all
luxury options, low mile-
age. Replacement cost
‘now at $19,000. Must
sell. $5395 or best offer.
696-3923. 48-4-P
1963 Austin Healey 3000,
good engine new brakes
and tires, some new
parts. Needs to be com-
pleted. $3300, 696-4698.
49-4-P
cassette, leather inte-
rior, new snow tires.
$1400 or any reasonable
offer. 675-4155 after 6
p.m. 49-2-P
1974 GTO CLASSIC,
Shaker hood, low mile-
age, A-title, $1250. 825-
6139 after 5:30. 49-4-P
Pontiac ‘74
Grand Prix. 1 owner. All
power, high mileage.
Needs some work. $500
or best offer. 675-1868.
49-4-P
Ford '76
T-Bird
Clean, most power
options, runs exc., needs
minor body work. $1000
firm. Call 823-8520.
'74 VW Karmann-Ghia
Classic, super auto.,
inter. exc. cond., exte-
rior good cond., 2
mounted snowtires
$1500. 287-2564. 49-4-P
Chrysler
5] New Yorker
46,000 orig. miles. Origi-
nal Hemi motor, $2000 or
best offer. Call 655-9119.
VW BEETLE-71. New
engine, new front end,
new brakes, mags, AM-
FM cassette stereo. New
paint. Must sell! $1495.
Price neq. 824-9674. °
CHEVY, '66 CHEVELLE SS,
350, 4 speed, 12 bolt
posi, Cragers, many new
parts. Runs exc. Looks
nice. Asking $2000. For
more information call
675-5070. 50-4-P
Liftback. Asking $4000.
Call 696-4600 days, 9-
4:30. 50-4-P
Mazda 85
RX7
Power windows and
brakes, cruise control,
air, 5 spd., leather inte-
rior, sun roof, AM-FM
cassette with built in
equalizer. Low mileage.
$14,500. Call 654-4268
after 4 p.m. 49-4-P
PONTIAC 1983 TRans Am.
V-8, auto., 25th Anniver-
sary Daytona 500 Edition.
Every available option.
$10,800. Call 655-9852 or
654-4972 after 5 p.m. 49-
4-P
MERCURY 1981 Lynx, front
wheel drive, air cond.,
auto $1400. Call 825-
3803. 49-4-P
VOLKSWAGEN, 1978
Rabbit, new tires. recline
seat, AM-FM, standard.
Gas engine. Exc. cond.
Must sell $1750 or best
offer. 822-0200. 50-4-P
A national survey
involving food shop-
pers in the northeast-
ern United States
shows more men are
doing more of the
food shopping than
ever before and they
like it. In the north-
east, male major food
shoppers use more
money-saving cou-
pons, do major food
shopping in super-
markets and prefer
shopping in the morn-
ing during the week.
The in-depth look at
how men are chang-
ing food shopping in
America was spon-
sored by Campbell
Soup Company and
“People’” magazine.
The survey, con-
ducted in June by
Lieberman Research,
Inc. of New York City
in a dozen large,
medium and small
cities of four geo-
graphic regions, iden-
tified distinctive char-
acteristics of men
food shoppers.
Men of the north-
east are more apt to
redeem coupons (71
percent vs. 64 per-
‘cent) and use more of
them on average (14.3
vs. 11.3) in supermar-
kets than male major
shoppers in other
parts of the country.
Across the nation,
93 percent of all the
men surveyed (787)
said they shopped for
food in the past four
weeks (June, 1985).
Major food shopping
was done by 77 per-
cent and an even
greater 83 percent did
fill-in shopping in
neighborhood stores
from supermarkets to
convenience outlets
close to their homes.
The men spent an
average of $72.40 per
major shopping trip,
made an average of
3.6 such trips in the
four week period and
spent more than one
hour in the supermar-
ket during each visit.
Women shoppers sur-
veyed (176) took
longer and spent
more.
Dr. J. O. Eastlack,
Jr., Group Research
Manager for Camp-
bell Soup Company,
says the results of the
survey confirm
Campbell’s market-
ing strategy but also
go a long way toward
drawing a new and
more sharply defined
portrait of the men
who are increasingly
pushing the shopping
carts, alone or with
wives and children,
up and down the
aisles of supermar-
kets in America.
‘“‘Demographically,
male shoppers and
non-shoppers are
pretty much the same
in terms of age, edu-
cation and income,”
. Eastlack explained.
+ “Psychographically”’,
there is a sharp con-
trast between the
two. Men who shop
for food have a more
contemporary image
of themselves. They
are more achieve-
ment-oriented. They
are more involved
with food. They like
to eat and they like to
cook,” he continued.
Analysis of the
study shows men who
do major food shop-
ping see themselves
as more considerate,
up-to-date, liberated,
well-organized, ambi-
tious, intelligent,
energetic and suc-
cessful. Women quer-
ied in the survey
agree with that self-
appraisal by the men
major shoppers.
These men also are
far more likely to
help with household
chores beyond shop-
ping, babysitting and
taking out the gar-
bage.
Analysts say the
survey strongly sug-
gests even greater
future involvement in
food shopping by
men. Only 31 percent
of those surveyed
remember their
father being involved
in food shopping but
77 percent say their
sons will be in those
supermarkets using
coupons, comparing
prices, looking at
labels and studying
shopping lists.
matter that the
woman clips the cou-
pons, prepares the
shopping list and
pays more attention
to labels. -
& Autos
Luzerne
% STORAGE
% REAL ESTATE
+ LOANS |
POOL
Kingsto
REALTOR-
ASSOCIATE
REALTY CO.
n, Pennsylvania
18704
King's gets
$700 grant
The Office of Student Activities at
King’s College has been awarded a
$700 grant by the Presser Founda-
tion to support the college’s Cultural
Events Series.
Monies from the grant will be
combined with budgeted college
funds for a variety of musical cul-
tural performances for the campus
population and the general public,
according to Brother John Zick,
C.S.C., director of student activities
at King’s.
Headquartered in Bryn Mawr and
established by the late Theodore
Presser in 1916, the Presser Foun-
dation promotes music education
and music philanthropy by provid-
ing scholarships and grants to
promising music students and pro-
grams.
In addition to musical perform-
ances, the King’s Cultural Events
Series also includes art exhibits and
lectures by prominent speakers.
DR..DONALD I. BUZINKAI
Buzinkai
promoted
Dr. Donald I. Buzinkai, professor.
and chairperson of the government
and politics department at King’s
College, was recently elected to a
one-year term as president of the
Northeastern Political Science Asso-
ciation.
A resident of Shavertown, Buzin-
kai recently completed a term as
first vice president of the organiza-
tion and served as program chair-
man for the group’s annual meeting
in Philadelphia this fall.
Buzinkai currently holds the John
H.A. Whitman Distinguished Serv-
ice Professorship of the Social Sci-
ences at King’s and serves as the
college’s pre-law advisor.
Established in 1969, the Northeast-
ern Political Science Association is
composed of the Political Science
Associations from New England,
New Jersey, New York and Penn-
sylvania.
Subscribe to
The Post
‘Peacemakers’
Yin Re oo:
S.0.B.E.R. car
Through a special technique
called bonding, dentists are rebuild-
ing teeth and restoring patients’
confidence in their appearance.
Bonding uses plastic materials to
correct broken, chipped, malformed
and widely-spaced teeth which may
cause a person to be uncomfortable
about his smile. In addition, bonding
treats teeth that are badly stained
from certain antibiotics, such as
tetracycline.
First, the dentist washes the teeth
with a weak acid solution that
etches a microscopic, rough surface
in the enamel. A liquid plastic,
called resin, is painted onto the
tooth.
The next step depends upon the
patient’s individual oral problem. In
some cases, the dentist affixes a
thicker plastic substance, called
composite resin, to the tooth. The
composite resin is shaped and
molded to form, rebuild or replace
parts of the tooth. Exposure to a
chemical process or special light
hardens the material, and the sur-
face is polished.
In other cases, the dentist may
bond acrylic or porcelain veneers to
the tooth surface. Dentists can
match veneers and bonding plastic
almost flawlessly to the patient’s
natural enamel color.
Bonding is used primarily on front
teeth; the treatment is not designed
for heavy chewing teeth or teeth
with extensive decay and large fill-
ings. This technique, in comparison
with conventional crowns, requires
fewer office visits and little or no
life, however, of a bonded restora-
tion is three to five years, somewhat
less than crown.
Bonding is only one of the meth-
ods used in improving the appear-
ance of teeth. Your dentist can
after examining your mouth and
teeth and considering your individ-
ual needs.
.