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FREE DELIVERY: 4S4 2790 £“»* TRACK TOWN PIZZA IHW Kr.uvkhn • Ku^jrnr < • \K\ .• /'f t Myths about AIDS still persist By Tammy Batey t rr»<»fa!d Hoponw Kdilor* Note: This is thr fifth of ii six purl srrtrs on AIDS /'.iff six, •ihout thr six i.il issues sin rounding thr disease, will run next Wislnrsduy Peggy 'Mild stir (tin t understand wliv more poo pin still hold onto myths about AIDS Hi r son I (i(i> dird .it 41. two years aftrr being diagnosed .is HIV posttivr Peggy. 70, said Tom's friends >iml family wore* supportive and, to her knowledge, didn't believe the myths about the disease However; Peggy has met people who fyeheve a person (an gel AIDS In sitting on a toilet seal that someone with has used or by drinking from u glass an AIDS patient has used 1 i an t understand anyone who has ears or run read ,i little bit who doesn't know what's going on,' Peggy said 'll they pay attention', listen and read, they'd find out that is not trie i here’s so much free information out there People should take it upon themselves to ediu ale th' tnselves Some people think it s a nasty disease that only homo-ova,o- arid A drag usei ■. have Me-.; people don't believe it tan happen to them T hough MDS still c lanes live .. man\ tors agree knowledge is power So; ,r 0 ng the tnvlhs from the fat is about the disease is one of the best 'arms of .protection against ttontr.ii I,.';g tin' HIV virus Myth get AIDS from casual kissing, p hlit toilets shaking hands, sharing foot) or oth er forms of < a sun I contact. I ai t 'I fa ..'dv way thi H i\' v ,ru s is transmitted is through till tod, semen and vaginal set ref tons, at tording to a San I rant 1st u AIDS Inundation statement Phe virus tan also he transmitted through the placenta Irum mothers to their un horn I iuldren The vimis t annul he transmitted through teats er s.civ.i or from (usual contact with an HIV in fected person, said Heather Penmate a former inirsi and t urrent coordinator of tin- Atom (Tub, a rcireation.h < Tub for people who art- HIV posi tive Mvlh AIDS is .( gav disease f ail About f>8 percent of people who are HIV positive (ontraited the virus fiv having sr\ with another man according to a statement from the American Red t loss However, tins means 1m pert enl of people with the HIV virus contracted the virus in other ways from using IV drug use. having sex with .in infer ted person of the oppo site sex or from a bhxxl transfusion Although tiie HIV virus first showed up in the guv community, guy men are no longer the group most at risk for the v irus, Heilhrun said Myth Men can't get the HIV virus from wom en Fad it is easier for men to give the virus to women than for women to give it to men, said Clarence Spignor. assistant professor in school and community health However, il a woman is HIV positive her vaginal secretions will contain the virus and she can transmit it to a male sexual partner Myth If you get the HIV virus, you re going to die Fact There is no cure lor AIDS However, drugs suc h as AZT and ddl are now available to prolong the lives of people who contract the HIV v mis, said Dr John Wilson, a specialist in mice tious diseases at the. Kugrno Clime Some people eve idyars or more without having any" symp toms of-the virus It's not too percent positive it you are HIV positive that you will heroine symptomatic arid it - riot mo percent positive if von arc symptoms utii that-you're going to die," said Jim .Shoemak - While Hire!-Clinic < oordinator Myth If you t,ike an HIV antibody lest and test negative, you-'re safe from the disease Fact The test is only good lor the day it is per formed done, Penman said The presence o( anti bodies to the HIV v irus, which the test is used to determine, may not appear lor three to six months after a person's first exposure to the virus In the meantime, a person may he unintentionally spreading the virus on to other people1 I.v i'ii il people test negative lor the Hl\ virus after not participating in at-risk activities for six months, they'll be at risk il they resume unsafe behaviors Mvtli II you test HIV positive you have AIDS Fac t When people test HIV positive it means their blood contains the antibodies that light the HIV virus, said Doug Dewitt. Willamette AIDS Council education and outreach AIDS occurs in the later stages ol tile disease when the immune system is compromised and opportunistic infec icons set in by tU' .«»fh*ir i»< \\ illi.im I rogtlon, sslu at .unc <•! W ilham l *\ot H i: vs .1- horn ,.{ i npiidi I* ' ( )s . u' v s s'.J v ;. K afvs.V' . IN M in !*> "1 l h' tu1. is a ii.K l>'? .»u- i:: I nphvh and a has. helot’s decree in phoiojout nahsm Irom tin* t : its M NMUlf I PrairyErth By William Least Heat-Moon Author of lllttc Highways nun I ith is .1 s igorous and evalicd evocation o! the American land, it' people. ils past, its ho[xrs The vers word "prairyerth," an old geologic term lor the soils ol oui central grasslands, captures the essence ol the American tall grass countrs ()nl\ a writer ol William l east Ilea! Moon's gilts could 11ml m a single Kansas countrs the narrative ol an epic, the nonliclion equivalent ol the great American novel I'r.tinl ilh is rich with Chase Counts's voices past and present, and is filled with anecdotes, gossip Iron) the bars and t ales. Native \mencari lore, and ruelul tales ol man 's inhumanits to man and nature anil ot nature s inuitlerence to humanity Heal Moon recounts the slor> o! a larm couple swept alolt by a tornado; a1 veals and Indian recipe to avert lightning: unearths a century old unsolved murder, interviews a retired postmistress, a cowboy a quarryman, a coyote hunter, a young leminisi rancher I’t.iinl rth sels the store ol a nineteenth century tycoon, who dreamed ol building a rail line to China through the county, against the memories ol a retired Mexican railroad worker who can still recall every tie he spiked lor the \tchison, I'opeka, and Santa l e It speaks ol the passion ol the slavery wars ol Bleeding Kansas and the sad late ol the Kaw tribe. and gives us a hundred new ways to see stones, creeks, grasses, birds, Iv.ists ,md weather UO BOOKSTORE 13th & Kincaid M-F 7:30-6 Sat. 10:00<6 rwaraiOMrAsaf 04U* »0* § 5th STREET c video PUBLIC MARKET^ GAMES DOWWTOWVl tl/UtNt 6834464 rs. VIDEO ADVENTURE mV?\. B3 VALLFT RfYEH PU2A 3iisSs» nrrrr tov*u uu rr NtAA N \r:\W\ \, * V***' '«tl f, MO Ea« 131ft A** M4 ’MM i 31H 4 WttwniM 344 MftS kinko's liu- CUpH rtilll f HELP HEAL THE EARTH! The Survival Center is look mg tor dedicated individuals with leadership capabilities and creative problem solv mg strategies Positions are available tor co-coordina tors Opportunity tor organ ising locally, regionally or nationally Stipend avail able For more into stop by suite one in the EMU or phone 346 4356 Survivals^ Centeraial,