Monday, October 21, 1985/The Battalion/Page 5 mi hFT ttimt Jc ./ d ie is ablt wty wluii angible a comes (t* itv," be a iginalls ‘a :echessim egamoik blished. E ublished l)le at Bti it Samps Plaza. Adz ig Nov. 5i irofmwi rs Burea. who tn* nd nauot i-M toorp- lorofst'jdc e burtaai ney yet,! likelv »il tore nd tliec® able," Atb edsalson amerato aes.shes! y es mes are e-dlects, lo take : trial pen usual sb"; gned t« a iiibles.'Ct e will be on ; some k lication. I tudentsait u unbiased nts make! 11 V are lie medfi 5 rules of' hand, be® ibjectsbe® jmealcoW 1 varneda!* .m-i 339 What’s up Monday TEXAS A&M MEN’S RUGBY CLUB: practices Tuesday through Thursday at 5:30 p.ra. at East Campus Field be hind the polo field. CLASS OF ’87: will sell Class of ’87 t-shirts for $6 and $10 in the MSC through Oct. 25. DANCE ARTS SOCIETY: will have Aerobics at 7 p in., Be ginning l ap at 8:50 pan. and Beginning Ballet at 9 pan. in 208 E. Kyle. TEXAS STUDENT EDUCATION ASSOCIATION: will meei at 7 pan. in 308 Rudder. AGGIE ALLEMANDERS; will have lessons at 7 pan. in the Pavilion. Club will meet ai 8:30 pan. MSC NOVA: is meeting at 7 pan, in 401 Rudder. PHI THETA KAPPA: is meeting at 7:30 pan. in 409 Rudder. TEXAS STUDENT EDUCATION ASSOCIATION: is meet ing at 7 pan. in 308 Rudder. Ann McDonald, from the Phu emem Center, will speak. THE RELIGIOUS RIGHT AND THE FIRST AMEND MENT: a debate, sponsored by the Political Science Honor Soctety/Pi Sigma Alpha, will be held at 7 pan. in 510 Rud der. looking Antonio is the topic. development Tuesday AGRICULTURAL COMMUNICATORS OF TOMOR ROW: wall meet at 6:45 pan. in MSC Lounge to take pic tures for Aggieland. DEL RIO HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7 pan in 502 Rudder. INTRAMURALS: Entries dose for Bowling Singles and Punt, Pass & Kick at 6 pan. in 159 Read. TAMU FLYING CLUB: will meet at 7:30 pan. at the Flying Clubhouse at Airport. DANCE ARTS SOCIETY: will have Modern Dance at 7 pan. and Aerobics at 9:30 pan. in 268 E. Kyle, BAYTOWN HOMETOWN CLUB: is meeting at 7 pan. at the Flying Tomato. MSC LITERARY ARTS: is meeting at 8:30 pan. in 607 Rud der. PRE-MED/PRE-DENT SOCIETY: is taking a tour of the medical school at 7:30 pan. Students should meet in the Medical Sciences Building. WATER DEBATE: will be'held at 8:30 p.m. in 701 Rudder. The proposed Texas water plan will be debated. AGGIE GOP: Senator J.E. “Buster" Brown will speak at 7:30 pan. in 301 Rudder. SAILING TEAM: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 109 Military Srienee Building. COLLEGIATE FFA: Dr. Horace Van Cleave will speak at 7:30 pan. in 208 Senates. SOCIOLOGY CLUB: is meeting at 6:30 p.m. in 123 Aca demic. TAMU ONE WHEELERS: is meeting at 6 pan. in The Grove. PALEONTOLOGY CLUB: is meeting at 8 pan. m 114 Hal- bouty. Building stone from all over the world and the field trip will be discussed, NAHB: is meeting at 7 pan. in 1 11C Architecture. TEMPLE HOMETOWN CLUB: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 402 Rudder. MEXICAN AMERICAN ENGINEERING SOCIETY: is meeting at 7 pan. in 410 Rudder, DATA PROCESSING AND MANAGEMENT ASSOCIA TION: is meeting at 7 pan. in the Ramada penthouse, in formation on careers in data processing with A&M will be provided Business attire is required. DAIRY SCIENCE CLUB: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 200 Kle berg. ALTERNATIVE CINEMA: is sponsoiing “Kind Hearts and Coronets'' at 8 p.m in the Architecture Auditorium. TAMU HORSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION: Dianne Burns will speak on accounting for the horse industry at 7 p.m, in 115 Kleberg. HISTORY CLUB: Dr. Krammer will speak about “Hitlers List Soldier in America” at 7 pan. in 110 Harrington. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to de sired publication date. A&M to take part in teleconference on drug abuse By TAMMY KIRK Staff Writer The cocaine epidemic and the addiction process are two of the topics to be discussed Wednesday at a teleconference on drug abuse in the workplace. The teleconference will be tele cast live via satellite from the An- nenberg Center for Health Sciences located in Rancho Mirage, Calif, and can be viewed in 201 MSC from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free, but is limited to Texas A&M faculty, staff and students, says Nancy Baker, pro gram coordinator for the office of professional development, which is sponsoring the teleconference. A nationally prominent faculty will discuss, in a five-hour assess ment, crucial and contemporary is sues relating to drug abuse in the workplace, Baker says. The telecon ference will be moderated by Alex Drier, a former correspondent and investigative network anchorman who is now a board member of the Annenberg Center for Health Sci ences. The local moderator at the Me morial Student Center will be Dr. Lee J. Phillips, director of the office of professional development. His introduction will begin at 9:30 a.m. before the teleconference begins at 10 a.m. Other topics to be discussed are corporate drug screening tests, the multiple legal problems that exist, wrongful termination in dealing with the substance-impaired em ployee, and treatments and future trends. Baker says at each viewing site, telephones will piovide an opportu nity for the audience to interact with the faculty. “People can phone in questions which will be passed on to the fac ulty and answered live,” she says. After the question and answer period via the teleconference, three local representatives from the Bryan-College Station will give pre sentations on the local and campus aspects of substance abuse, Baker says. Bill Turner, district attorney; Dr. John Kinross-Wright, psychiatrist; and Dr. Malon Southerland, vice president of student services and chairman of the A&M Alcohol and Drug Awareness Committee, will give overviews of drug abuse from a legal, medical and law enforce ment standpoint, respectively. The local speakers are scheduled to speak at 3 p.m. and a question and answer period will follow at 3:30 p.m. . “I hope the students and faculty will take advantage of the teleconfe rence,” Baker says. To attend the teleconference at a viewing site in one of 15 major cities across the country, a person must pay $225, and groups with two or more must pay $195'. But, Baker says, through Sympo siums International, a company which markets these programs to colleges and universities, A&M paid a special rate of just $225 for the whole campus to view the teleconfe rence. The only stipulation for re ceiving the special rate is that atten dance be limited to the faculty, staff and students. Baker says. KAMU will provide the large screen and receivers for the tele conference, Baker says. MSC Council to discuss Town Hall, master plan By MEG CADIGAN Staff Writer The financial results of MSC Town Hall’s Cheap Trick/Night Ranger concert will be announced tonight at the MSC Council meeting, says President Denis Davis. The Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 216T MSC. Town Hall's plans for the rest of the year also will he discussed, Davis says. She says the Council would hear reports from the various MSC stand ing committees, including the build ing operations, program study and program review committees. Davis says the Council will hold sessions before the Council meeting to rank items which will become part of MSC master plan. The plan is an outline of the long term goals of the MSC organization. she says. It is designed help the MSC meet the needs of the Student body for the next five years. Davis says this process also helps the Council to decide what types of resources will be needed. The items listed for ranking were suggested by Council members and other MSC organizations during a master planning session at MSC Fall Retreat. 2 TIME TONY AWARD WINNER JOHN CULLUM as The passionate / tale off adventure and romance MSC-TOWN-FT ATT. w October 21,1985 8 p.m. Rudder Auditorium 845-1234 Visa/MC C ° me ^ It at ^ffer evrv f x Pires Oct. 31, 1985. 2321 So. Texas Ave. 693-4438 msm Alcohol Aware Ness \\j. EK °CTOBER 21-27 D ° you know h takes to ow much alcohol it make you legally drunk? Do you know the state DWI laws? How many drinking myths do you know ? For answers to these questions and more come by the alcohol awareness table alt week in the MSC. P.S. Be sure to get NABBed at Rudder Fountain Oct.. 22&23. ALCOHOL AWARENESS PROGRAM DEPARTMENT of STUDENT AFFAIRS 345-5026