Date rape Continued from Page 1 when they start drinking and so cializing, McCrae said. “Watch your drink, don’t set it down, ” he said. It only takes a sec ond for a drink to be drugged. Drinks can be also be drugged while they are being held. “If you’re drinking from a plas tic cup it’s a lot easier to dose your drink,” McCrae said. Drinks with smaller openings, such as bottled or canned beer, prevent people from putting any thing in your drink. Other preventions include go ing out with a friend or peer group and then looking out for each oth er. If you go together, leave togeth er, he said. “College students need to real ize that alcohol was the original date rape drug,” McCrae said. Area bars are aware of the po tential dangers of the date rape drug and take steps to prevent drinks being spiked. “Be aware of where a drink is coming from,” said Justin Walk er, a manager at Taylor’s Bar and Grille on 13th Avenue. “It should come directly from the bar tender.” “We encourage people to keep an eye on their drinks when they go and dance,” he said. Rohypnol isn’t the only date rape drug to be aware of. Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB), known also as Grievous Bodily Harm or Liquid Ecstasy, is a central ner vous system depressant. It can cause dizziness, nausea, confu sion, seizures, respiratory depres sion, intense drowsiness, uncon sciousness and coma, McCrae said. According to a July, 1998 arti cle in the Chronicle of Higher Ed The Date Rape Drug Whatyou can do to protect your self: Don’t leave your drink unattended at the table or bar while you are dancing, talking with friends or in the bathroom. Only drink from unopened bottles and cans, or drinks that you’ve seen poured. Avoid "group” drinks. Punch bowls or containers that are passed around are easiest to drug. What you can do to protect your friends: Watch each other’s drinks. If someone gets up and leaves and can’t take their drink, keep an eye on it for them. If your friend looks drunk or ready to pass out, don’t assume “every thing will be okay." Check to see if they are OK. If you came together, leave togeth er. Don’t leave a friend behind. If you see someone dosing some one’s drink or hear about a “drugged" punch bowl, confront the behavior. SOURCE: The Bacchus & Gamma Peer Education Network. www.bacchusgamma.org. ucation, GHB can be used as a cheap quick high. It played a role in the deaths of at least five col lege students across the country since 1996. It was also found in the blood of hundreds of students who arrived in hospitals in a coma. “It’s helpful to know that these drugs are in our culture,” Dochnahl said. “It’s a good warn ing and reminder that we should be careful what we drink and who we hang out with.” Fines Continued from Pagel ants and landlords to keep social gatherings under control. Kate Ray, a sophomore romance languages major, said there is a lot of police action around her apart ment in Duck’s Village on Friday and Saturday nights. "It seems [the ordinance] would crack down on parties,” Ray said. “We throw parties at our apart ment, and if we got busted it would suck to have to pay for the police response.” Hill said he hopes the ordi nance will also relieve the finan cial strain disorderly parties put on the community. “Tax payers are burdening the cost for [breaking up disorderly parties] and not the tenants or landlords who are responsible,” Hill said. “I don’t think the com munity should pay for continuous responses to parties.” Hill said he supports charging peo ple responsible for raucous parties, but is uncertain about exactly who should be held financially liable. “The tenants are absolutely re sponsible,” he said. “I do think there is a responsibility for landlords, but to what degree is up for discussion. ” Property manager Benise Poplin, who works for Steward ship Property Management, said the proposed ordinance is “ab solutely absurd.” Because the eviction process is long and diffi cult, she said, landlords could be fined multiple times.before they could kick out a rowdy tenant. “I don’t want my tenants to be rowdy,” Poplin said. “I’m pretty strict, but I don’t think I should be held financially responsible.” Jaylene Hulsey, who manages Four Seasons Green Tree Apart ments, said she worries that the ordi nance would endanger landlords by compelling them to break up out-of control parties without the police. “It’s part of our job to run a com fortable community for our ten ants, but landlords shouldn’t have to be put in life-threatening posi tions,” Hulsey said. “The police get paid to put their life on the line. They’re packing a gun. I’m not.” The City Council will discuss the ordinance within two weeks and will hold a public forum on the is sue, Councilman Gary Rayor said. The Rental Owners Association of Lane County will work with the city to revise the ordinance to fit the needs of both police and landlords, said Norton Cabell, who serves on the association’s board of directors. Cabell said disorderly partying is a legitimate problem that needs to be addressed, but feels that the ordi nance is an overly-simplistic solu tion because landlords don’t have much legal power over tenants. ASUO Legal Services Director Ilona Koleszar said she worries that the ordinance “is a way to force own ers to evict people...and could make the neighbor judge and jury. ” Koleszar pointed out that police respond to parties after receiving complaints. She said that neigh bors holding grudges against ten ants could call police every time the renter hosts a party, whether or not it is disorderly. The effect could be costly fines or even evic tion for the tenant. Gilliam said the ordinance would be strong deterrent and rarely en forced. He said that police have visit ed less than 10 houses and only a few taverns more than twice within 60 days this year. Both Gilliam and Hill said the ordinance would act in tandem with EPD’s projects aimed at pre venting disorderly parties. Hill said that the EPD will contin ue to plan with the University “alter native events for people to attend rather than going to parties and us ing alcohol for entertainment. ” “We need to decouple fun and alcohol,” Hill said. ASUO President Wylie Chen has a Pulse. Do you have one? Check your Pulse, the Oregon Daily Emerald's entertainment section, every Thursday. Oregon Daily