Monday, September 21, 1987AThe Battalion/Page 5 Him )Qlsl Whafs up that the pushfoif las consequentlyq ts to dropout, ivv the fastest way j ne out on top ini! f test comparisonil dropout rate t "hea >1 being usedasail ests have becomeal i problem of s s that the results, i to help thes seen by thera.liesi est should notbej stilts are thoroup areas of imp u rigan said. that whatever tel it reforms, their a o rigan said,“ac:| h a present and [ •ss the needs ofta are addressed.’ Monday COLLEGIATE 4-H CLUB: will meet and elect officers in 200 Kleberg at 8 p.m. TEXAS A&M TRAP 8c SKEET CLUB: will meet in 504 Rud der at 8:30 p.m. LGGIE SPACE DEVELOPMENT SOCIETY: will meet in 601 Rudder at 8:30 p.m. [ONORS STUDENT COUNCIL: will meet in 410 Rudder at 7:30 p.m. CLASS OF ’88: is taking applications for Class Gift Commit tee until Oct. 2 in 216 MSC. TAMU JAZZ BAND: will rehearse in Commons West piano room at 7:30 p.m. Also, a drummer is needed. ISC WILEY LECTURE SERIES: Applicat ions for mem bership are due today in 216 MSC at 5 p.m. LTHEISTS, AGNOSTICS AND FREETHINKERS SOCIETY: will meet in 305A-B Rudder at 7 p.m. TAU BETA PI ENGINEERING HONOR SOCIETY: Dean Chenoweth will speak on “Life After College” and “Engi neering in the Real World” in 102 Zachry at 7:05 p.m. INTRAMURAL SPORTS: Entries open for golf doubles, ul timate frisbee and long drive contest in 159 Read. Tuesday RITING OUTREACH: Paul Meyer will discuss “Becoming a Better Writer Through Reading” in 110 Blocker at 6:30 p.m. ATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN: will meet in 305A-B Rudder at 8:30 p.m. AVARRO HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet in 302 Rudder at 8:30 p.m. AMU HORSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION: will meet and ride at the Dick Freeman Arena at 7 p.m. EXAS STUDENT EDUCATION ASSOCIATION: will have a constitution meeting and ice-cream social in 302 Rudder at 7 p.m. GGIES FOR JACK KEMP: will meet in 501 Rudder at 7 p.m. KRISTIAN FACULTY FORUM PRESENTATION: Dr. Walter Bradley will speak in 308 Rudder at 12:30 p.m. OCIOLOGY CLUB: Dr. Jon Alston will speak in 125 Aca demic at 7 p.m. AGGIE ALLEMANDERS: will meet at the Pavilion at 7:30 p.m. and have square dance lessons. AMU AQUATIANS: will teach synchronized swimming at the indoor pool at 8 p.m. NTRAMURAL SPORTS: Entries close for innertube water basketball and tennis singles in 159 Read. STUDENT GOVERNMENT: will have a informational meet ing in 601 Rudder at 8:30 p.m. Everyone is welcome. OLLEGIATE FFA: will meet in 208 Scoates at 7:30 p.m. L PASO HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet in 401 Rudder at 7:30 p.m. SPANISH CLUB: will meet at the Flying Tomato at 9 p.m. AMU SCUBA CLUB: will meet in 402 Rudder at 7 p.m. EXICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: will meet in 607 ■ Rudder at 7 p.m. DATA PROCESSING MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION: will present information on careers in data processing at the Ramada Inn penthouse AMU SAILING TEAM: will meet in 109 Military Sciences at 7 p.m. DLLEGE BOWL: will have demonstration games at Rudder Fountain at noon. AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION: Dr. Mary Leigh Wolfe will speak in 110 Civil Engineering . BAPTIST STUDENT UNION: will have a hullabaloo meet ing in 201 MSC at 7 p.m. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, ! 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working days be fore desired publication date. rate cos t patteiP iquests, a Is say ; (AP> - a rate case of ngevity likely td future rate volving nuclear inis said, les acknowledjt nical Gulf Stale, ver Bend case cl because it ra Texas utility ? costs of a i in its rate base m't be unusual ii Gulf States Vl(Murray said 1 ly be the norms nuke cases are f States rate castl ■ River Bend m ped up last ■r an exhaustin; lys, longer thai e Texas Public l: u. Eighty-four e than half of» the utility,testif# m occasions, den of proof wnj Kim McMurrav nplexities and he case warn# presentation b) :es wants a Sift rr ease to begini ers for its $4.3b in the River •SU gets the f«l : tverage residenB' 1 pay about att hours ofelei the current I Gay, acting M ice of Public • ■ » t^Dollos area becomes did contribute * lop market in nation it 0 J or cellulcir cor phones Dallas (AP) — Dallas is the na tion’s top market for car phones with the highest percentage of cellular telephones in any major U.S. metro- said the Hip poliian area, an industry analyst ly because the ^ ted by the DeplU^s of March 31, there t he of ficer’s vhile officials $ F011 id die Air T 38,000 car phone subscribers in Dai ly for the Sai up from 22,000 in January, ing heads of s' 1 economist Herschel Shosteck said. .The 64 percent increase happened pyyW'iiyvviili two of cellular phones’ largest m.. ,f ’ user g rou p S — construction and real estate — and in areas such as busi- nefc sales, he said. “It proves what people have al ways thought — that Dallas would be cellular’s ideal city,” said Shosteck, whose Silver Spring, Md., firm trafcks the cellular phone industry. Cellular service is offered in 129 U.S. cities, and its customer base ac counts for about I percent of the population. But the base could grow as nigh as 7 percent, analysts say. Dallas’ cellular penetration rate is l.Op percent, making it the only top lOjmarket to break the 1 percent barrier, Shosteck told the Dallas Times Herald. Cellular phones pass radio signals Jetjveen transmitter “cells” as a car noves through the city. Car phones icepunt for the bulk of sales, but land-held portables and portables toted in briefcases are gaining pop- tlarity as they are made smaller and ighter, Shosteck said. Nationwide, the cellular industry xpects to have more than 1 million ustomers by the end of the year, up fom 655,000 a year ago, he said. Ifhe two companies that provide he cellular network for Dallas say hey’ve only scratched the surface of arket. e could triple our size in the text five years,” said Dan Yost, pres- ient of MetroCel Cellular Tele phone Co., which activated its net work in March 1986. Sales professionals, construction crew chiefs and service company ex ecutives are obvious target markets, but companies also want to attract casual users. “We’re in the unusual position of trying to downscale our image,” John Stupka, chief executive officer for Southwestern Bell Mobile Sys tems, which began providing cellular service to Dallas in mid-1984, said. “We’ve got to persuade people they don’t have to be affluent to have a cellular phone.” The lowest-priced phones sell for an average of $1,071, down from $2,628 in 1983, Shosteck said. By 1990, technology advances and com petition among more than 15 phone manufacturers are expected to force phone prices below $500, he said. Both companies in Dallas lease car phones at less than $30 a month. Air-time fees are 38 cents per min ute during prime time, which is 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Casual users can keep their monthly bill around $50, Stupka said. The average monthly rate among all Southwestern Bell cellular customers is $130, he said. But some professionals pay much more. Kay Flynn, a real estate agent, said she spends nearly $300 a month for air time. “I couldn’t live without it now,” Flynn said. “I show three times the number of houses, and one commis sion pays the cost for the whole year.” Neither MetroCel nor Southwes tern Bell releases data about its cus tomer base, but Shosteck said South western Bell had 23,700 Dallas-area customers through March 31, com pared to 14,300 for MetroCel. NEW 3'C Restaurant TONIGHTS SPECIAL 5-9 pm, ALL YOU CAN EAT Catfish & 2 Vegetables $6.95 "Lunch Specials M-F" —ALL DAY- 500 Draft Beer $2 Pitchers Banquet room available Harvey & Texas Ave. - Culpepper Plaza - 693-4054 CASINO ’88 Applications for staff positions are now available. Co-chairmen: Due October 2 Sub-chairmen: Due October 9 RHA Office - 215 Pavilion 845-0689 Last Year We Went To Rome... Join Us To See Where We Go This ^ Year! ^ GO FROM COLLEGE TO THE ARMY WITHOUT MISSING A BEAT. The hardest thing about break ing into professional music is —well, break ing into professional music. So if you’re looking for an oppor tunity,to turn your musical talent into a full-time perform ing career, take a good look at the Army. It’s not all parades and John Philip Sousa. Army bands rock, waltz and boogie as well as march, and they perform before concert au diences as well as spectators. 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