»" c>y t; iu I Mt= t>A I TAlIUN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1979 2818 STUDIO 2818 I- U) STUDIO 2818 FORMERLY THE MANSARD HOUSE NOW STUDIO 2818 (A Infected repeaters plague clinic O 5 00 CM o 5 3 H K> 00 tSCfi O VD’s no treat, get it treated free -I Th to H presents FROZEN MARGARITA NIGHT o 5 ro oo to C o - NO COVER HAPPY HOUR DAILY 5-7 ® 1401 FM 2818 behind K-Mart in the Doux Chene Apts. ^ 693-2200 C ■ - O oionjis ei-83 omnxs si-ssomnxs 81-83 5 By SEAN PETTY Battalion Staff So you think you may have ven ereal disease. What do you do, who can you turn to, where will you go, what will you do. WHAT WILL YOU DO? The answer is not a TV jingle for travelers checks, but the Brazos County Health Department, which diagnoses and treats VD. The best part is, the service is both free and confidential. Unlike travelers checks or the American Express card, you can t leave home without VD if you have it. And the only way to lose it is by treatment and medical care. That is available at three separate one-hour VD clinics at the Brazos County Health Department. Approximately 45 persons a week DUC XIC ENJOY A TASTE OF THEATRE Aggie Players and MSC Arts Committee present Curtains & Curse You, Jack Dalton (Two plays plus dinner — only $3.00) March 22 & 24 go to the clinic, where the entire procedure from doctor to inves tigator takes less than 30 minutes. The Brazos County Health De partment, which operates the VD clinics, is funded mostly by city and county taxes. It is staffed by one doc tor, three registered nurses, an in vestigator, two secretaries and sev eral lab workers. Although the clinic treats about 15 people a session. Dr. George R. Mcllhaney believes the clinic is treating only a small portion of the people infected with VD in Brazos County. “Our population seems pretty stable,” Mcllhaney said in reference to the number of patients treated. ‘T think we re seeing only the tip of the iceberg here. Most people are still not coming in for a million difierent reasons. “Some think their problem is gone because the obvious signs are gone, such as a sore or discomfort, but that’s when the disease gets worse. Others are too embarrassed and ashamed because of the stigma at tached to VD. ’ The workers at the VD clinic face many problems that they cannot overcome, such as embarrassment, patients telling lies about their sex ual partners names, and the prob lem of return cases. Because there is no charge for treatment, there are a Room 201 MSC Foodline Opens at 7:00 p.m. Curtain at 8:00 p.m. Tickets at MSC Box Office - call 845-2916 Reservations Close 24 hrs. in advance THE WARRIORS ^ *7:20 »:45£ 1 HALLOWEEN * ■f 7:25 7:40 % 2 HEAVEN CAN WAIT * *7:30 9:50 * *■1 * BRAVES DESIRE ? 2=«i rxxc rxFc zxx: IX KC IX XI IX XI IX XI due What movies do YOU want to see next Fall? CALIFORNIA DREAMIN & „ SIX-PACK ANNIE ^ EVERY WHICH WAY J EVERY WHICH WAY J * BUT LOOSE *! 846-6714 & 846T15V UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTI The MSC AGGIE CINEMA movie are available at these locations: polls Ends Thurs. Memorial Student Center (next to staircase) Commons Lounge Zachry Lobby Academic Building Sbisa Cafeteria Stairing ROBBY BENSON incflh traducing LYNN-HOLLY JOHNSON as 'LEXIE* Please come by and give us your input. Thank you. Famolare. Who else could offer you the style you want with the comfort you need? / You mean you haven't seen our new shoe store? You mean you haven *t seen our new shoe store? LOFiS New Shipment Just Arrived! Famolare. You'll want to wear them right out of the store! You'll want a pair for every day of the week! Feeling good. That's what Famolare and Lewis Shoes is all about. We have a huge assortment of styles. Just for you. Come see. £koe Sto~ i Culpepper Plaza Open 10 to 8, and until 6 on Saturday Mastercharge and VISA ‘old number of what Mcllhaney calls regulars.” The relaxed, helpful attitude ot the clinic may account for many re turnees, but it also makes it easier for the person going for the first time who is truly concerned about his or her health. Upon entering the clinic, a person fills out a card with his name, age, race, and address. The card also asks whether he has been to the clinic before and how many times, why he came in and who, if anyone, referred him to the clinic. He returns the card and is given a number to insure anonymity and waits to be called in the outer office. Once he is called in, he goes to the doctor who first asks why the patient came in and finds out if there are any obvious signs of VD such as a rash, chancre or sore of some kind. “We get a pretty standard re sponse when people come in. That is, most people know they have VD when they come in,” Mcllhaney said. “Most people come in here in side of a week after they think they have contracted VD. “I spend very little time with the patient, actually. I check the males and our (female) nurses check the females for obvious signs and if there are none, I send them on to the nurses for some tests.” After talking with the doctor, the patient goes to the nurses who take a blood sample. If the test shows a pos itive reading, the person is given penicillin pills and sent on to the in vestigator, who tries to find out who the patient’s contact was so that he may get in touch with him or her. “Everyone who has a positive reading is supposed to come back for a recheck to make sure the medicine worked and they are cured,” said nurse Betty Strength. “Some people don’t come back because they feel fine. A lot of these people that don’t come back could still have VD and are spreading it because they have been in so many times that the penicillin has no efiect on the VD. This is where the investigator jail,” said Margaret Pi Won L just refuse to come in untiltl, warrant out for their arJl brings ‘em in.” But getting the names ofc, is not always easy. Mostp unwilling to give us the The actually don t know. “We’ve had guys give ^[jyde lots as addresses for girls ” SS] Vrizoi Mills. “You wouldn’t believejioon, cuses we’ve heard. People ising here and think we don’t kn In ' we’re dealing with. But all th ihowe have been here at least lOujVfark “Girls will come in hereof th e they’ve been raped or someth Jlmrir guys have told us that they rouple from lifting heavy objects. 0,fll had guys say they just picked J enters the picture. Once someone . . , has come into the clinic and named a girl in a bar and don’t evenknoiM""^ contact, the investigator either goes or got it when they wereinHi^H to the contact’s house or calls him or Dallas. They are so rebel and tells him he may have VD. The contact is asked to come to the clinic for a checkup. Most people do not know that it is against the law to knowledgably spread a communicable disease. The investigator can ask the police to ar rest pick up a known VD carrier who refuses to come to the clinic. The police can pick up the infected per son and quarentine him or her in jail until the Health Department can treat the patient. “We’ve had a few people put in Supreme Court to hear appeal in military case United Press International WASHINGTON — In 1974, Frank Huff and several Marine Corps buddies at an air station in Iwakuni, Japan, decided to circulate a petition to protest U.S. involvement in South Korea. Standing outside the base’s main gate. Huff, then 20, and several other Marines, gathered signatures on a letter to then Sen. J. William Fulbright protesting U.S. support for the Seoul government. They were arrested for unauthorized distribution of petitions. Huff was court-martialed and sentenced to 60 days at hard labor, forfeit of half his pay, and demotion to the lowest enlisted rank. Monday, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the government’s ap peal from lower court rulings holding unconstitutional Navy and Marine Corps regulations requiring all petitions to be cleared in advance by the commanding officer. The high court also will review a case involving an Air Force officer who distributed a petition protesting military hair-length standards. Huff, who was discharged and works as a repairman, said he was excited. “All I was trying to do was to get the most out of the civil rights that I did have” in the Marines, he said. David Addlestone, lawyer for the National Veterans Law Center, said the court’s action indicated it “is interested in giving a narrow interpretation to the (1951) statute.” “The Supreme Court has erased First Amendment rights for serv icemen, Addlestone said, noting that in the last eight years the court has sided with the government in every case challenging such mili tary rules. The government took the case to the Supreme Court when three lower courts held unconstitutional prior approval rules and found they violated a 1951 law ensuring military personnel unrestricted communication with their congressmen. The District Court barred military officials from enforcing the rules noting that the ‘very system of prior restraints” for distribution of materials on-base during off hours “is unconstitutionally restrictive of First Amendment freedoms.” An appeals court agreed and held the prior approval requirement invalid under the 1951 law The government argues that the right to review petitions in ad- """ essentia! to the discipline, readiness, and and to the nation s security. tell the truth. The most discouraging ||jl seeing the same people ovj over. We think that a person■ be allowed to come here oil many times and then havetopj many people come in herean* even care because they kno»! can come back whenever thevl to. They’re not embarrassed | According to Mcllhaney, J the people being treated arel but more white student-age J are coming in recently. “The reason that we are prJ nantly treating blacks couldiJ most other people may be go* their regular physician orjustJ being treated, he said. “I don’t treat very manycail VD in my private practice. Tlel see it, VD is a fact of life andweiB can’t wipe it out. Theonlytlii| can do here at the clinic is treat! try and educate people about! they will tell others andnotbfj themselves. “There has been an increase^ education at the Bryan and( Station schools and forthelkl there was a decrease in thee of patients we treated in theH age group last year. “A lot of people we treatj very well educated so when* them they have syphilis mean much,” Strength saidj when we tell them they haia blood it really scares them ani| get it taken care of. Once an infected contact hai identified, his or her nameiss^^^ Austin where all contacts naiX-— kept in order to aid other healB partments around the state, fl Priscilla didn marry for his money — Cui United Press International FORT WORTH — Million Cullen Davis testified Tuesi estranged wife, Priscilla, derstood the contractual M agreement she signed and, time, said she didn’t care ho* money Davis had. vance of circulation is morale of the armed forces Sun Theatres 333 University 846-9808 The only movie in town Double-Feature Every Week Open 10 a.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Sat. 12 Noon - 12 Midnight Sun No one under 18 Escorted Ladies Free BOOK STORE & 25c PEEP SHOWS Davis said he and his secf| Fern Frost, explained the! ment to the then-Mrs. Will)®I motel room. He said shea®! what he would do ifshedid®! and Davis testified he told if would not marry her. He said she then sign® agreement and began crying “I don’t care if you ve god B dollars, I want to marry l 01 quoted her as saying. _ Mrs. Davis has testified st i tricked into signing the aM and that the document shorn J considered in the curr ® n l.j suit. Mrs. Davis has testified^L trials that Davis told " er> p document would do is give li: | break. Fantastic Animation Festival flill March 23 8:00 p.m. Rudder Theatre MSC ARTS *1 -b! r 14 Short Masterpiece 0 f Animate