Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, December 02, 1993, Page 5, Image 5

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    Pizza strippers offend patrons
MOSES LAKE. Wash. (AP) — A popular pizza
parlor has been fined for exposing parents and chil
dren in its main dining room to strippers perform
ing at a bachelor party in back.
Chico's Pizza Parlor has made alterations to
ensure there are no further incidents, manager Mitch
Zomes said Wednesday
The Washington State Liquor Control Boon! fined
the restaurant $1,750 for allowing suggestive, lewd
or obscene conduct and for failing to control the
conduct of patrons in the July 31 incident.
The Ephrata man who filed the complaint said
he was speechless with shock when a window
less door to the back room opened and revealed a
woman clad only in a G-string, according to the
board's report
"That girl didn't have any clothes on. daddy."
the complainant quoted his H-year-old son as saying
Zomes said he heard a commotion during the
hour-long bachelor party, but did not realize fam
ily diners wore being exposed to goings-on in the
back room
The man who booked the room did not make dear
strippors were expected at the party, and Zomes
said the restaurant would not have agreed to their
performing on the premises
A window has lieen installed on the back-room
door so management can monitor parties, he said.
"We've nevor had a problem for 30 years." Zomes
said. "They caught us a little off guard."
FUND
Continued from Page 1
center itself, or the Incidental
Fee Committee.
The fund was instigated after
Jolone Sieinsen. a nurse practi
tioner at the health center, and a
few others went before the task
force last spring to explain that a
number of students had been in
the office who had been assault
ed but didn't want to report the
crime.
Sieinsen said it was extremely
important that these students get
tested and treated, otherwise
they leave themselves open to
serious manifestations of STDs,
such as infertility, cancer or
death.
Annie Dochnahl. peer health
advising coordinator at the
health center, said that because
these students don’t want to
report the assault, they can’t
receive insurance money to pay
the approximate $145 testing
fee. That’s why the fund was
instigated — to help students
who couldn’t afford testing any
other way.
A student who uses the fund
doesn’t have to file an official
report in any way- The testing
information, with the exception
of HIV test results, will go into
the student's medical file, which
is confidential. HIV results are
pseudo-anonymous, meaning
the student talks to a counselor
who sees the name and test
result. but the information does
not go into the student's perma
nent record.
There are myriad reasons why
students won't report a sexual
assault. Dochnahl said. Some
are stored or ashamed, believing
perhaps it was their fault, she
said As a result, they don't want
others to find out about it. Oth
ers are in a constant state of
denial; they don't want to admit
it could happen to them, she
said.
There is a formal rape proto
col, wherein the victim goes to
the Sacred Heart General Hospi
tal emergency room to be exam
ined for forensic evidence of
sexual assault, Dochnahl said.
She said this can be intimidat
ing. and that the assault fund is
set up to offer a caring, human
alternative where the victim
doesn't have to report anything.
Many victims of a sexual
assault tend to think the only
damage they incur is mental.
Dochnahl said. Physical issues
are also important, because stu
dents who contract a sexually
transmitted disease should
know as soon as possible for the
sake of themselves and their
partners, she said.
In addition, some STDs are
curable, Fleischli said. Chlamy
dia, gonorrhea, syphilis and
Human Pappiloma Virus can all
be cured, whereas hepatitis B,
herpes and HIV cannot, though
treatment may be available.
Things
are
different
here.
During finals: Why cook when you can order out?
• Fresh bread made daily from scratch
• Soup, salads, baked goods
• Free delivery after 5 p.m. & all day weekends
• Wide variety of hfll sandwiches
I
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Any Large Sandwich
Expires 12/1CV93
Hours Mon-Sat 10:30am-8pm • Sun 11am-7pm
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.750 OFF
Any Small Sandwich
Expires 12/1IV93
L
Hours: Mon-Sat 10.30am-8pm • Sun 11am-7pm
880 E. 13th. Across from the U of 0 Bookstore • 344-1949
Discussion on Judaism
and Feminism
Brown bag lunch at the Center for the
Study of Women In Society at Hendricks
Hall: Jane Grant's room, V of O.
Friday, Dec. 3 — 10:30 am to 1:00 pm
Women and Rituals at the
University of Oregon.
Rabbi Renter will lead a workshop on
Women’s Lifecycle ceremonies. Ben Linder
room at the EMU. Students and friends
may take Rabbi Berner to lunch.
Sunday, Dec. S — 11:00 am to 1:00 pm
RIGHT ON TARGE!
^ -Emerald
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DEPARTMENT: 344-3712
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Dec 6-9 / Dec 10
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