) SMILE FOR YOUR FAMILY’S GENERAL DENTAL CARE $ 29 00 CLEANING, EXAM & X-RAYS ‘Call For Appointment • Dental Insurance Accepted • Emergency Walk Ins Welcome • Evening Appointments Available • Nitrous Oxide Available • Complete Family Dental Care • On Shuttle Bus Route (Anderson Bus) ^{Anoerson bus) CarePlus^fti MEDICAL/DENTAL CENTER 696-9578 Dan Lawson, D.D.S., 171 , 2 S.W Parkway M-F 10 a.m.-8 p.m (across from Kroger Center) Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m Page 8/The Battalion/Tuesday, October 28, 1986 Freshmen & Sophomores HAVE PRIORITY FOR AGGIELAND PICTURES OCT. 20 — 31 A R Photography Studio Hours: 8 to 4:30 M-F Get In The Book! 693-8183 Suite 120-B Texas 707 (across from A&M Polo Field) David Kessler is... An American Werewolf In London Wed., Oct. 29 7:30 and 9:45 Rudder Theatre Presented by MSC Cepheid Variable $2.00 The toughest job you’ll ever love We admit it. It takes a dif ferent kind of person to be a Peace Corps volunteer. We won’t mislead you with glowing pictures of exotic lands. The hours as a volunteer are long. The pay is modest. And the frustrations sometimes seem overwhelming. But the satisfaction and rewards are im mense. You’ll be immersed in a new culture, become fluent in a new language, and learn far more about the third world — and yourself — than you ever expected. You’ll also discover that prog ress brought about by Peace Corps volunteers is visible and measurable: Such as health clinics established in the Philippines; Fresh-water fish ponds constructed in Kenya; roads and schools and irrigation systems built in Upper Volta; tens of thou sands of people given essential skills in farming, nutrition, the skilled ' trades, business, forestry, and other specialties throughout the develop ing world. Being a volunteer isn’t for everyone, and it isn’t easy, but to the people of the developing nations who have never before had basic'* health care or enough to eat, the Peace Corps brings a message of hope and change. We invite you to look into the volunteer opportunities beginning in the next 3-12 months in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Pa cific. Our representatives will be pleased to provide you with details. PEACE CORPS INFORMATION TABLE Wed., Oct. 29; 8:30am-5:00pm Thurs., Oct. 30; 8:30am-5:00pm 1st Floor Memorial Student Center FILM SEMINAR Wed., Oct. 29 6:30pm-8:30pm Rudder Tower, Room 510 TANK MCNAMARA* by Jeff Millar & BIIIHimtl Ai TOM £NO0IE i £| TrOP JAIL : ATATi4£AT£R MQKW 10-28 teamt MAYBE NEXT TIME SHOULD JUST SEND THE* MOB/ RC throuf Studei dp |98fe IRVIN figuies lit coming in Walker Generals i Arbitrator rules drug-testing pla clashes with NFL players 1 accord with the York Giai Meadowh the Gene! In a 37- Cardinals WASHINGTON (AP) —An arbi trator on Monday struck down NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle’s plan to randomly test all players twice for drugs during the regular season. Arbitrator Richard Kasher of Philadelphia ruled that Rozelle’s plan conflicted with the league’s bar gaining agreement with the NFL Players Association. Rozelle’s edict last July, following the cocaine-related deaths of Cleve land Browns safety Don Rogers and University of Maryland basketball star Len Bias, would have made the NFL the only professional sports league to require mandatory ran dom drug testing for all players. But Kasher noted that the 1982 collective bargaining agreement with the players addressed the drug issue by calling for a preseason test of all players as well as individual tests when club physicians suspect a par ticular player of drug dependency. “Accordingly,” Kasher wrote in his 78-page ruling, “we conclude that the part of Commissioner Ro zelle’s augmented drug program, which establishes unscheduled test- “We’re not trying to pro tect drug users. The play ers recognize they have a responsibility both on the field and off. ” —Gene Upshaw, president NFL Flayers Association lw m i)c mao union agrees to them. Uoshaw added, We his | first Walker, Tom Dor and scorec Walkei recognize they have a both on the field and also have rights, and it tion to protect those ns Kasher upheld othe Rozelle’s anti-dr Ge pi Dy ing, is in conflict with the specific provisions” of the contract “and is therefore superceded’’ by the agreement. Rozelle’s plan had been held in abeyance for Kasher’s ruling, the second victory on the drug issue for the players association within a week. Another arbitrator ruled last week that nearly 200 players were improperly Fined for refusing drug tests last season. Gene Upshaw, executive director of the players association, called Kasher’s decision "a victory for col lective bargaining. It reaffirms the agreement we made in 1982 and drive within the league ! tor also ruled that the N conduct urinalysis tests o( gihle players in the annual tryouts of tollcge seniors.- at e not covered by ihecoiit gaining agreement. Kasher reached hisdeu heai mgs in New York Cm phia and Washington- involving 17 witnesses ?* and 1,500 pages of transenj In a statement issuedbi Ro/.elle said he was "coik minimal unscheduleddrut a necessary part ofanyfulli league-wide anti-drugproj ROME Geot ge Ge Die fo Assoi iatiot day night Italian pro With 21 time, and team trail Milan hy st Palenr pel and other ( r MEI SATI EVE SUN EVE learn how you could put The Eliminator to work for you. See the AT&T Campus Rep Date: Wed., Thurs. & Fri., Oct. 29, 30, 31 Time: 10am-4pm AT&T Place: MSC pjg^ c h 0 jce,