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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1987)
Problem Pregnancy? we listen, we care, we help Free pregnancy tests concerned counselors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We’re local! 1301 Memorial Dr. 24 hr. Hotline 823-CARE SHORT ON CASH??? Sell your books at University Book Stores V- ' i - .• ' , Northgate & Culpepper Plaza SCHULMAN THEATRES 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Before 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current ID s 4. Thur - KORA ’'Over 30 Nite" •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO PLAZA 3 lllSilll | 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 I *TIN MEN r 7:15 9:35 | 'MANNEQUIN pg 7:35 9:55 1 'LETHAL WEAPON r 7:25 9:45 MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 'PLATOON r 7:10 9:40 SOME KINO OF WONDERFUL pg-is POLICE ACADEMY IV pg 7:20 9:50 SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 ANGEL HEART r 7:20 9:50 BEYOND THERAPY r 7:10 9:55 $ DOLLAR DAYS $ This Week's Features Are: CRITICAL CONDITION r 7:20 9:45 'CROCODILE DUNDEE pg-13 all OVER THE TOP pg JONI QO STAR TREK IV pg 7:15 9:45 “he i op Act In Tuxedos Select from styles from Pierre Cardin, After Six, Bill Blass and Miami Vice. Rental prices be gin at only $39.95, and we offer a I0% discount or one free rental with group rentals of six or more. We also rent formal shirts and ties for Corps members. Let us help dress you for that special evening. 2501 S. Texas Ave. College Station (next to Winn Dixie) 693-0709 NEED MONEY??? Page lOAThe Battalion/Tuesday, April 7, 1987 Sell your BOOKS at Testing (Continued from page 1) University Book Stores Northgate & Culpepper Plaza Putt THEATRES ★ TODAY★ AND EVERY TUESDAY ALL FILMS" ALL DAY SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS NOT INCLUDED POST OAK THRE E-A-v: .• Br'i'y, •’ BLACK WIDOW (R) 7:05 9:05 H00SIERS (PG) 7:00 9:20 ROOM WITH A VIEW (R) 7:10 9:25 CINEMA THREE 315 College Av?. €93-1271 y’.a ; I as* 1 BLIND DATE (PG-is) 7:00 9:30 NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET lll(R) 7:15 9:15 BURGLAR (R) 7:10 9:20 the current effect a drug is having on the athlete tested.” He said athletes are forced to uri nate in the full view of what the NCAA calls a “urinator monitor vali dator.” He said this is done to make sure athletes don’t cheat by using someone else’s specimen. He also said the traces of the drugs the athletes are being tested for may be detectable in the body for days, weeks, even months after their use. He added that football players participating in this year’s bowl games were tested a full one or two weeks before the games were played. Toner responded by saying that the NCAA is interested in all perfor mance-enhancing drugs taken in preparation for and used during an athletic event. He said this would in clude the use of anabolic steroids. Toner said that the United States has cut production of steroids from seven or eight different types down to two or three different types while the world has increased its varieties from about 30 types to about 70 or 80 types. Laseter said although the many varieties are a little harder to iden tify, today’s Lirine-testing equipment is complex and accurate enough to do so. Chen said that drug testing is a vi olation of an athlete’s or any individ ual’s constitutional rights. He said that because people are tested without having proved proba ble cause of drug use, drug testing presumes that everyone is guilty un til proven innocent. But Toner maintains that partici pation in NCAA athletic events is voluntary. Toner said it is the NCAA’s re sponsibility to regulate the collegiate athletics of its member st:h(x>ls. Chen said that the NCAA needs to invest more resources in drug ed ucation and drug awareness. “A recent study showed that less than 60 percent of collegiate athletes had participated in any type of drug awareness class,” he said. Toner, however, said the NCAA considers drug testing to he part of drug education and drug awareness. Court to forcel Texaco to pos $11 billion y WASHINGTON (AP)-TI Supreme Court, in a decision^ could bankrupt Texaco Inc,i vived on Monday an ordert}J ihe giant oil corporation | $ 1 1 billion bond in itscourtluEil with PennzoilCo. iVol. 8 T he justices voted, Hi throw out a federal judge’s mini that Texaco need put only}!Ifl In >n in security while theoitjf pending in the courts. b Assault p (Continued from page 1) The Battalion Number One in Aggieland have multiple sex partners, the vic tim may have been exposed to any number of sexually transmitted dis eases, she says. Aside from this, Dr. Claude Gos- wick, director of the A.P. Beutel Health Center, says the victim may be physically injured. “At the hospital, the victim will have a physical exam,” Goswick says. “This will allow for the treatment of any scratches or injuries she may have gotten. A vaginal exam is nec essary to check for any internal inju ries and the presence of semen. “If a student is raped, we try to have a female counselor present at the hospital. These women (victims) are pretty upset at that time. An emotional exam helps determine if they need any medication to help them calm down.” With a date-rape situation, Casio- ria says, the two parties may have the same friends. There is a lot of pres sure to “give ‘ Joe’ a break." sation program to financiallyaidi| tims >>! violent crime, such as ie) Victims may be eligible'forbetti il they are l exas residentsandtj assaulted on or after Ian. 1,1 in Victims attacked by people they know will suffer as much or more than the individual attacked by a stranger, Castoria says. Date (or acquaintance) rape re sults from the same motivation as rape by a stranger. It is an express ion of anger, power, dominance and control — not sexual frustration. “There is a lot of pressure from a sides,” she says. “It’s understanc able, but unfortunate.” Sexual assault victims are often in flicted with another problem, that of finances. Castoria says some victims have to spend years in therapy — a consider able financial burden. These benefits indude compel lion for loss of earnings, and^ suitable medical, drug, counifi| and rehabilitation expenses The Texas Legislature approved the Violent Crime Victim Com pen- A single, brief attack and calls alter an individual’s life,C ria says, and unfortunatelyt ists don't feel they've done anvil wrong — sex is sex. Theynevetn i/e the terror thev vecaused, QUESTION #4. 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