PAGE 4 THE BELLES FEBRUARY 3, 1984 GRAND OPENING ANNOUNCEMENT STEVE’S ICE CREAM 2010 HILLSBOROUGH STREET RALEIGH, NC We are pleased to announce the grand opening of Steves Ice Cream at 2010 Hillsborough Street In Raleigh, North Carolina. Steve’s, started in the Boston area in 1973, is dedicated to serving the best and most fun ice cream in the world. We make all the ice cream in old-fashion machines located right in the store for you to see. We fanatically adhere to the Steve’s tradition of the highest quality all natural ingredients to produce small quantities of fresh, rich and creamy ice cream every day. We are aiso unique in that we offer a wide variety of del icious mix-ins ranging from crushed oreos and heath bars to fresh almonds. Cur servers will expertly knead your choice of mix-ins into the ice cream whiie you watch, in order to create a wide variety of wonderful ice cream delights. Come see us! I CITY SEEKS VCLUNTEERS The Raleigh Parks and Recreation Department’s Special Populations Program is seeking volunteers to assist their staff, with structured recreational and swim programs for mentally and physically handicapped people. Volunteers are needed on a daily basis as ciasses for the handicapped of all ages - infants to adults - are ongoing from now until March 30. If you have a genuine desire to enhance the lives of the men tally or physically handicapped of Wake County, call the Special Populations Program Cffice at 756-6832 today and voiunteer. C(W^as THE NEW AGE BOWS: FRESHMEN AT TWO SCHOOLS ARE THE FIRST IN THE COUNTRY REQUIRED TO BUY COMPUTERS IN ORDER TO ENROLL. Entering freshmen at Stevens Institute of Technology in New Jersey and Clarkson College of Technology in New York are the first in the U.S. who have to buy microcom puters from their schools as a condition of enrollment. Clarkson students, who registered Aug. 25th & 26th, pay $200 a term extra for the computers, which the/ll own after four years. If they drop out or transfer before that, they lose the machines. Five hundred Stevens frosh will pay a total of $1800 extra for their DEC Professional 325 micros. They picked them up Sept. 1st and 2nd. COLLEGES WILL SPEND ABOUT $89 BILLION THIS SCHOOL YEAR, THE DEPT. OF EDUCATION REPORTS. In its annual “back to school” report, the department predicted public colleges and universities will have total budgets of $59 billion. Private campus budgets amount to $30 billion, the department said. “TEACHING IS IN CRISIS IN THIS COUNTRY," SAYS CARNEGIE FOUNDATION PRESIDENT ERNEST BOYER. to 4 Stndents Permitted Per i^tertment Keepi Tonr Monthly Bent Per Person Beasonahlel Located adjacent to Wake County Medical Center and 1-64! Just 10 minutes from St. Mary’s College. Year round In door swimming pool, exercise room and clubhouse. TVmnin courts and outdoor pool, too! One and two bedroom plans offer modern kitchen, air condlUonlng, and carpeting. Cablevlslon and HBO available. Direct Bus service. For complete Information and a complimentary indoor pool pass, visit us 9-6;00 pjn. dally, Saturday 10-6:00 pjn. 9 MOHTH LBA8M AVATT.aht.tb Wakefield ARdRTMENTS 3108 Holston iMnm Phone 838-8eS9 Itodayl MMf r(m»rv ri Mti ft MuseonouaH The foundation’s study - released last week - said education majors typically had lower S.A.T. scores than average students. Average teacher salary, moreover, dropped from $10,164 to $8926 from 1973 to 1983, when inflation is figured in. A MALE PROF WINS SEX BIAS SUIT AGAINST BROWN BY ARGUING FEMALE PROF’S “MERIT PAY" RAISE WAS UNFAIR. Brown wanted to stop Art History Prof. Catherine Wilkinson-Zemer from jumping to Northwestern, which wanted to increase its ratio of female professors. A $9700 pay raise convinced her to stay at Brown, but colleague Rudolf Winkes said the raise constituted sex discrimination against him. Last week a federal court agreed, awarding Winkes $23,800 in back pay for doing the same work as Zerner,adding Brown had used no“objective standards” in determining Zem- er’s work merit. Campus rape rate higher than reported AUBURN, AL (CPS) - The real number of campus rapes and sexual assault cases may be many times higher than of ficials have traditionally believed, according to a new Auburn University study on sexual attitudes. Nearly one out of every six male students questioned ad mitted to forcing women to have sex with them, the study of over 200 sophonnores found. Moreover, 20 percent of the female students surveyed said they had been forced to have sex even though they objected. Surprisingly, “very few of the women defined such situ ations as rape,” notes Auburn psychologist Barry Burkhart, who helped direct the study. “None of these men were ever arrested or charged with rape, and as far as I know none of the women had reported what happended to them,” he says. The reason, it seems, is because all of the incidents involved what experts are now calling “acquaintance rape.” “We’re finding the acquain tance rape is a very frequent type of incident that takes place on campuses,” says Dan Keller, director of public safety at the University of Louisville and president of Campus Crime Prevention Programs, an inde pendent campus law enforce ment association. “It could typically involve a girl and guy who meet at a party, then the guy invites the girl home and physically forces her to have sex. The guy just won’t take no for an answer, even if it means using force.” The Auburn study shows that most of the time neither male nor female considers that rape has occurred, Keller con tinues, “because of the tradi tional concept of rape as a situ ation where somebody grabs you off the sidewalk and attacks you.” Burkhart calls the results of his study both, “surprising and distressing” because “they indicate that there’s still a great deal of rape sentiment among males in our society.” Keller believes that for every case of reported student rape by a stranger, “there are dozens of cases of acquain tance rape that weren’t reported.” Burkhart agrees, saying that despite the 40 rape cases disclosed by his study, “campus police have had only two rape cases reported in the last several years.” mETMCKSFORTHE BESTEmm AROUND! ThenexttimeyoustopbyfortheBestEatin7 bring along tNs money-savin’ coupon. mUUUEJUUXSlJB h pf*8#nt this coupon boforo ordorinp. Ono coupon por nmnnici pof vicrt. piMM. Cuatomor muM pay any talaa tax dua. Thia coupon not poM in combination with any othar offara. Offar good during ragutar braakfaat heura only at participating Hardia'a Raatauranta through May 31.1884. c 1963, Hardaaa Food Systems. Inc HaidBe^ I I Ks^touTaoFsaamenumju naanmm SOFT amm $1.7$ .?*?“■ P'***? Ona coupon par cuaiomar. par Cuatomar muat pay any aalaa tax dua. Thia coupon not good m combi^ion with any othar offara. Offar good aftar IwS^ o^ m partMSipating Hardaa’a Raatauranta through ~s. oory at May 31.1984. H 1®63, HirdMt Food Sytttmt. Inc Handeer I I ''I WOULDN'T TREAT MY BIKE THE WAT YOU YOUR BODY." —Jody LoHerty When Judy Lafferty prepares for a race, she checks every port of her bike. Because she checks her body the some way, she discovered a lump in her breast a few years ago. Sne discovered it early. And these days, 85% of early breast cancers can be treated successfully. Judy has since hod reconstructive surgery, too. And she feels like herself again. Alive, vibront, ready to get on her bike and take on the workf. Judy Lafferty is liv ing proof of the pro gress we're making agoinst concer. The American Cancer Society takes some credit for that progress. But credit won't finance our work. We need your money to help us win THE COST OF UYING. GIVI TO THf AMniCAN CANCER SOCIITY. «aca coratuM ■ a pubic MTvica.

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