Page! member 4, state official that rate in re utrage over jisproportionati ax offenders, ily 25 fewer se since then, am ident to reside- illy gone up sins ,hen 163 offer: ant County ar has been an numbers ha. 1 he truth is, Ta aarticularly ft have a dispr lumber of ty council mei The Battalion osby straddles ijiorse to Garden NEW YORK (AP) — If it takes aractice to get to Carnegie Hall, ow do you get to Madison uare Gar- thes 1 i cos 3l offenders in sday, 128 in another pa- 125 committejn according the Texas al Justice, ith high percerle ffenders incluoja 41 percent, percent cent and nt. Daia ft Bexa in, s & Lows ■xpected Hi th , 75°F morrows ;cted High 80°F rmw Night's (u ted Low 64°F Entertainment Briefs owl -9 pm pm eel Throwing 30-7:30 pm Tied Tlirowing 45-9:45 pm -5 pm ►tore .£5 op! j James ; v Charts j; ware lS ship 2-31-96 is 3q fen? Horse back, if you’re I Cosby. Cosby was perfect aomedic if not De equestrian [ orm as he ntered the rena at the Cosby E National lorse Show for a salute to retir- ig racing great Cigar. With a dour, immobile ex pression and his hands at his sides, Cosby bobbed along Sat urday as he was led into the ring aboard his straight man — a very patient horse. He man aged a couple of brief waves to e crowd before the horse am- aled to a stop. With the crowd egging him on, losby slowly leaned forward and painstakingly raised his leg over the horse's back to dismount. “That was the longest moment of my life," Cosby said when he fi nally reached the ground. Then, like a trouper, he intro duced his co-star: “My horse — Jello Pudding.” Seinfeld co-star 1 inds key to humor LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jerry Stiller doesn’t need skills —just ring a bell, sit back and wait for his comedic genius to emerge. Stiller, who plays the hot-tem pered, bellowing Frank Costanza on NBC’s Seinfeld,' says he never knows what to expect from the show’s writers. “I felt like Pavlov’s dog every time I get a call from them," the 69-year-old actor said. “I find out another part of the character five minutes before I go on the set” — idiosyncrasies ike Costanza’s foot odor, obses sion with TV Guide and ability to speak fluent Korean. Before the hit series, Stiller old hot dogs in New York City nd made 36 appearances on he Ed Sullivan Show with his eara. He Iso acted on Broadway. never learned anything else, my skills, like typing,” he said. “I stupidity, or call it my dogged- ss, that I learned one skill and tie things broke here and there.” ateman blames ulimia on fame NEW YORK (AP) — Justine ateman says teen-age fame lade her become a bulimic. The former Family Ties star aid she made a lot of rules )r herself. “I can have one more cookie ater,” she said in the Nov. 9 edi- ion of TV Guide. “I’m talking ainly about doing stuff like not ating when I’m hungry. Or eat- ng more than I really want to nd then trying to get rid of it.” Bateman said she was sure ceople knew. "In fact, when Jiey’d say, ‘You look anorexic,’ ’d take it as a compliment.” The 30-year-old actress, now 3 years to Starring on NBC’s Men Behaving who died in 3ad/y, said she hit bottom three their two /ears ago and sought help in a Sheridan, a 12-step program. “One day the light went on, County, and . /ou ^ now -p'- she sgjcp uate student : s >oap star runs xas L.B.J. s in Austin. ctively of his com- or another Emmy YORK (AP) — Forget d with young; about pulling a Candice Bergen ^ue Coach .and bowing out of the next Day- n Assistant | time Emmy race — Erika Slezak rved as beck Lions r of both the Chambers of so a trustee hool Board Ruling Bidet cher at the ch of Mexia. says if nominated, she WILL run. “I think Candy was wrong," the five-time Emmy-winning soap star said in Sunday’s Parade magazine. That’s not the way this country is run. If you have one Pulitzer Prize, you deserve to try to achieve an other. The way we recognize good ork is giving out awards.” iress award for ABC’s One Life to 16-time nominee Susan Lucci. Page 3 Monday • November 4, 1996 Absolute Image Problem There ore many traditions at Texas A&M, and drinking heavily may be one of them. Statistics leave the supposed image of a drunken Aggie in question. I By Kimber Huff and John LeBas The Battalion Mi A any colleges have a reputa tion for heavy alcohol consumption, but Texas A&M seems to top the list. Rumors about drinking at A&M circulate: Harvey Road has the most DW1 ar rests for that stretch of road in the county, possibly the state; Hurricane Harry’s is one of the top 90 alcohol sellers in Texas; more al cohol is consumed per square foot at the Dixie Chicken than at any other place in the country. Many people accept the rumors as fact, even if they may not be. But does A&M deserve its image? Do stu dents here really drink more than those at other universities? Surveys and statistics on student drinking at A&M indicate yes. Designate a Bus Transit, designed to de crease drunken driving in Bryan and College Station, was hailed at its start earlier this se mester as an innovative step toward solving this problem. This alternative to driving while drunk would seemingly appeal to droves of party going Aggies, but it has not. Students have not stopped drinking and driving. A 1994 survey by the Harvard School of Public Health*, which compared drinking statistics for 46 public colleges with more than 10,000 students, indicated that Aggies may drink and drive drunk more than oth er students. Almost 42 percent of Aggies drive after drinking, compared with 30 percent of stu dents at other large public colleges. The survey found that almost twice as many Aggies also drive after having more than five drinks. Designating a driver is also less popular at A&M — almost 30 percent of Aggies have ridden with a driver they knew was drunk or high. Twenty-two percent of other students do the same. One rumor that would seem to support these findings is that Harvey Road has the highest DWI rate in Texas. But Lt. Scott Mc Collum, commander of information services for the College Station Police Department, said he doesn’t believe this rumor is true. “I’ve heard the rumor, but I’ve not seen any hard facts or statistics that would sup port it,” McCollum said. “When you com pare it to cities like Houston, Dallas, Austin and the like, if it turned out to be true I’d find it highly unusual.” McCollum said DWI rates in those cities would probably be higher because they have more people and bars. “I know that places in Dallas and Houston have areas with more bars than Harvey Road,” he said. But Matthew Kenyon, executive director of DAB, said he believes at least one in six Bryan-College Station drivers are drunk at night. One in three, he said, have had some thing to sip on. Although Kenyon does not know of any statistics to back up these figures, he said he believes there is some truth in them. “I challenge everyone to go out at about 1 a.m., Thursday through Sunday,” Kenyon said. “Almost every fourth car you’ll see swerving.” Kenyon said drinking and driving is a bigger problem at A&M than at most other colleges. “I think that every school is a party school,” Kenyon said, “but I think the driving after drinking is much larger here.” The Harvard survey also indi cates that Aggies appear to drink more often than their peers. Although the survey shows about 40 percent of all students at large colleges drink to get drunk, A&M students tend to binge more three times in the past two cent higher than students Even when not getting drunk,. other schools in drinking. Twenty-three per cent of A&M students probably drank at least 10 times in the past month, compared with 20 percent of students at other college This drinking can result in negative con sequences. More than 35 percent of Aggies drank so much they forgot where they were and what they did, compared to 27 percent at other colleges. Almost 30 percent of Ag gies said drinking caused them to engage in unplanned sex. Nationwide, the average was 20 percent. Of those who had sex, over 13 percent did not use protection because they were dr Nearly one out of four Aggies said drinkii caused them to get behind in school work, and more than 6 percent said drinking caused them to get into trouble with local or campus police. But the consequences of drinking reach past the Aggies who choose to get drunk. Almost 60 percent of Aggies questionec said they had to "babysit” a drunken stu dent. Half of the students at other colleges had to take care of drunken friends. And while the rate of unwanted sexual advance due to drunkenness is about the same one-fourth of students here and at other col leges —- less than 1 percent of Aggie women reported being sexually assaulted or raped because of alcohol. Almost 2 percent of women at other colleges said they had been victims of sexual assault. Sherry Hostetter, assistant director of the Brazos County Rape Crisis Center, said she believes most date rapes involving alcohol are not reported. She said the Rape Crisis Center sees alcohol involved in such cases “more often than not.” “We see alcohol involved in about 90 per cent of date and acquaintance rapes here,” Hostetter said. She said according to the Uniform Crime Reports Division of the U.S. Depart ment of Justice, about 75 percent of date and acquaintance rapes in the nation in volve alcohol. Beyond the problems that alcohol caus es, the question remains: Are Aggies a bunch of drunks? Not according to them. Of those surveyed, 0.0 percent admitted to being a problem drinker. However, almost 16 percent said they had had a drinking problem at some time. *All statistics in this story come from the 1994 Harvard School of Public Health survey.