ie wi ?cktosee )re going •as where f nded in |[ I that the i 1987 red! 'arkedin Schuh- wo other as being ater bal- of the icidenu, her re- >ws had t kind of I hat five | area be- | irchitec- - officer he stop of Lub | : driver leer but oetween ind 708 Wednesday PRE-MBA ASSOCIATION: Stan Madden, associate dean of admissions of the saylor graduate MBA program will speak at 7 p.m. in 156 Blocker. STUDENTS HELPING AGGIE RESIDENTS EVERYWHERE (SHARE): will neet at 8 p.m. in the Off Campus Center. RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION CASINO: will have a mandatory meeting or casino dealers at 7:30 p.m. and a meeting for casino girls at 8:30 p.m., both in 107 Harrington. COLLEGE STATION PARKS AND RECREATION DEPARTMENT: Registra- pon closes for the spring adult-soccer league (recreational division). For more nformation, call David at 764-3737. STUDY ABROAD OFFICE: will have information on studying in Denmark, Mex- co, West Germany and Scotland at 2 p.m. in 251 Bizzell West. RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION: will have a general meeting at 8:30 p.m. in ftoi Rudder. 5FF-CAMPUS AGGIES: will meet at 7 p.m. in 103 Zachry. /ISC JORDAN INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL AWARENESS: Applica- lionsforthe Gotlingen exchange program are due by noon in 223G MSC. FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES: will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Letter- nan's Lounge. JSC PAGEANT: The men of Texas A&M will compete for the title of Mr. Aggie htnoon in the MSC flag room to promote the 1988 Miss TAMU Pageant. TRAZOS VALLEY AIDS FOUNDATION: will have its first general meeting of [I988 at 7:30 p.m. in room 101 of the College Station Community Center. I/ESLEY FOUNDATION: The Rev. Picasso will continue leading a study on the Hispanic church at noon in the fellowship hall of the Wesley Foundation. kGGIE SPELEOLOGICAL SOCIETY: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 404 Rudder. kGGIE GOP/COLLEGE REPUBLICANS: will have spring elections at 7 p.m. in |302 Rudder. 7ATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will have a mini course on the book of Hevelation at 6 p.m. at St. Mary's Student Center. There will be a midweek study break at 7:30 p.m., also at the student center. There also will be a discussion on [History of the Rosary” at 9 p.m. in Lounge B on the quad. \MNESTY INTERNATIONAL: will have its first general meeting at 8:30 p.m. in fl07 Rudder. TAMU AMATEUR RADIO CLUB: will have a monthly club meeting at 7 p.m. in [the MSC. Check the monitor screen for the room number. d that ugh the )nHai, wall by l her to i 5 re- ■ed sev- etweeD was ad- ibtaina ■ported uilding mdera nd ir edtheir- ie forma! Hieve ttal trenesitol y feel a I The Res on cam-1 editorial! I >f WTSl I Thursday y ALPHA EPSILON DELTA: Dr. Busbee will speak on genetic/cancer research at Pp.m. in 308 Rudder. INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT FORUM: Dr. Otto Helweg of the civil engi neering and agricultural engineering deptartments will speak on “Cross Cultural Transfer of Engineering Technology” at 7 p.m. in 601 Rudder. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: will have a lecture on “Relationships ^nd Careers: Finding Their Divine Basis,” at 7 p.m. in 103 Zachry. AGGIE DEMOCRATS: Jim Carter, 5th Senatorial District representative to the [Texas Democratic Party executive committee, will have a workshop on the dele gate selection process at 8:30 p.m. in 402 Rudder. JEXICAN-AMERICAN ENGINEERING SOCIETY: Marina Carrol from the His panic Business Times will speak at 7 p.m. in 228 Rudder. Bring resumes to the [lecture ECUADORIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m. in 203 Rudder to idiscuss International Week and the Popular Art Exposition. |AMA MARKETING SOCIETY: will pass out registration forms for the Piedmont picket giveaway and answer questions about Piedmont all day in the MSC hall way. DATA PROCESSING MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION: will have a general [business meeting at 7 p.m. in 150 Blocker. MSC PAGEANT: will have a final preview of the pageant contestants at the [MSC Talent Preview at noon in the MSC flag room. [SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS: will have a speaker and a meeting at 6 Ip.m. in 105C Zachry. |WRITING OUTREACH MINI COURSE: Cindy Stevenson will speak on good [business correspondence at 6:30 p.m. in 131 Blocker. [ODESSA HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 8 p.m. in 146 MSC. Midland stu- [dents are welcome. iTAMECT: will have a general meeting at 7 p.m. in 301 Rudder. [UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: will have an Aggie supper at 6 p.m. at A&M iPresbyterian Church. IlNTRAMURALS: will have a softball captain’s meeting at 5 p.m. in 224 MSC. [There will be a corps softball-captain’s meeting at 7 p.m. at Mama’s Pizza. [/ferns for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, [no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish I (he name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run Ion a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. If you \ have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. n Advance •—ilSmoke-free campus to be discussed The Student Senate will meet lonightat 7:30 in 204 Harrington lodiscuss the senate’s response to Ihe smoke-free environment res- plution passed by the Faculty Sen ate last December. The Student Services Commit- lee of the Student Senate has been working on a response to [the Faculty Senate for the past nonth and will present a resolu- jtion to the senators agreeing wit h aspects of the faculty’s propo- Isal except for those eliminating [smoking from dormatories and at [Kyle and Olsen Fields. Melinda Moore, chairman of jthe Student Services Committee, said that the committee members went out and gathered informa- [tion on smoking before they [made any kind of decision. She [said they talked to legal services. doctors, students and staff to get both sides of the story. “The idea of ‘Dorm Police’ going around and enforcing this ban is absurd,” said Jay Hays, speaker of the Student Senate. “They (the faculty) are trying to impose their views on the stu dents.” If passed, the revised smoking resolution will be considered with the original resolution by Presi dent Vandiver and he will make the final decision. The meeting also will hear committee reports on current ac tivities and upcoming events such as student election, for which fil ing begins on Feb. 25, and the eighth annual Conference on Student Government Associa tions which will be held from Feb. 27 through Mar. 1. Wednesday, February 24, 1988/The Battalion/Page 5 20 contestants set to compete in A&M pageant By Joe Segovia Reporter The MSC Pageant Committee is making final preparations for the 9th Annual Miss Texas A&M Schol arship Pageant. This year’s pageant, entitled “Some Enchantea Evening,” will be held at Rudder Auditorium Satur day at 7 p.m. Tickets, which are $4 for students and $7.50 and $10 for the general public, are available at the MSC Box Office and through Ticketron outlets. The special guest will be Natalie Evetts. The 20 contestants have been pre paring for the pageant — a local pre liminary to both the Miss Texas and Miss America pageant systems — by attending workshops and seminars in poise, walking, makeup and over all appearance, executive director Lauri Progreba said. In addition, contestants have been working out, refining their talents and preparing for vigorous ques tions on campus, national and world events through mock interviews, she said. Sherry Ryman, Miss Texas A&M and Miss Texas in 1982, and Cindy Green-Weber, Miss Texas A&M and first runner-up to Miss Texas in 1983, will judge the contest, Pro greba said. The competition is broken into a talent score that counts for 50 per cent of the total and contests in swimsuit, evening gown and inter view for another 50 percent. Awards for this year’s winner will include a $1,000 scholarship to A&M, a $1,000 wardrobe allowance for the Miss Texas Pageant, a one- year membership for ShapeWay and TANU, a Cadillac from Allen Olds Cadillac for official pageant use, the official Miss Texas A&M pendant, which is worth $5,000, and the offi cial trophy and crown. Pageant funds in the past have been generated by committee staff members through the sale of sponsorships to local organizations and businesses for $275, one for each contestant. In addition, this year the commit tee is receiving $5,000 in student service fees, which- are given to the MSC and divided among several committees. Promotions for the pageant began Feb. 13th at Post Oak Mall with con testants handing out Hershey’s Kisses. Contestants performed their talents Friday in the MSC Flag Koom for Focus On the Performing Arts week. Contestants again gave pre views of their talents at Post Oak Mall on Saturday. Balloons were given out in the MSC Flag Room by contestants Monday at noon. They also modeled new spring fashions at the MSC Hospsitality Fashion Show on Tues day. The men of Texas A&M will com pete for the title of Mr. Aggie, a fa vorite promotion in the past, today at 11 a.m. in the MSC. Promotions will conclude Thurs day with the MSC Talent Preview at noon. Promotions director Jodie Ogle said she thinks promotions play an important part in attracting atten tion to the pageant. “I feel promotions help in getting the word out to the public,” Ogle said. “They get the community more involved and more aware of what’s going on.” The preparation and hard work began last October, with the fall se mester devoted mostly to obtaining funds and the spring semester to getting final production details set, Progreba said. She said the staff had worked hard to put together a good pro gram. “Pageant staff has some really dedicated people, and it takes a whole team working together,” Pro greba said. Primary may draw record numbers AUSTIN (AP) — More than 500.000 Texas voters have been added to the rolls in advance of the March 8 Super Tuesday primary and Secretary of State Jack Rains predicted the state may see a record primary election turnout. "I think it's safe to say we expect record turnout for primary vote and we expect near or approaching par- ity on the turnout between the two parties,” Rains said Tuesday. Texas is the largest state partici pating in the 20-state Super Tuesday primary and will send the third-larg- est delegation to the Republican and Democratic national conventions this summer. Rains, a Republican, predicted that between 750,000 and 1 million voters will participate in the Demo cratic primary and a like number in the COP election. “The Texas Poll . . . predicted that as manv people would vote in the Republican primary as in the Demo cratic primary," Rains said. "If that were to occur, it would be a historic first." He said the actual sole could go higher in either party, possibly to a total March 8 turnout ol 2.5 million. The highest primary election turnout in past years was 1.97 mil lion in 1978, a spokesman for the secretary of state's of fice said. Texans don’t register by party, so it is impossible to know for sure how many voters identify with each, offi cials noted. Rains said the first phase of his of fice's voter registration drive, which ended earlier this month, signed up 528,817 additional voters for a total of 7.87 million. That’s 64.3 percent of the 12.23 million eligible. Rains said. The 7.87 million total is a 7.2 per cent increase over March 1987 regis- tration, which totaled 7.34 million. Rains said. The registration drive will con tinue through October, and Rains said he remains confident his goal of 1 million new registered voters can be reached by then. “We’re halfway to our goal,” he said. “The big show is yet to come.” Four counties — Harris, Dallas, Bexar and Travis — are still count ing registrations, officials said. When done, those may add as many as 25,000 voters to the rolls. Rains said many groups deserve credit for the voter registration drive — which saw more than 5 million registration cards distributed — in cluding the Democratic and Repub lican parties, the AFL-CIO, League of Women Voters and others. in- Legislator-citizen committee works on handling juveniles I I AUSTIN (AP) — A legislator-citi- ftn committee started work Tuesday fchow to handle juveniles who com- |it crimes, with a co-chairman tell- Ig members that development of a gjood system could save Texas bil- Wnsof dollars. Sen. Bill Sarpalius also said he hoped the Senate Select Committee on the Juvenile Justice System would focus on other juvenile issues, such as child abuse, teen-age pregnancies and AIDS, acquired immune defi ciency syndrome. Sarpalius, D-Canyon, and co- chairman Susan Bush of Athens ad dressed the 12-member committee at the first of a series of monthly meetings scheduled to end in Au gust. Texas’ prison population has grown by 137 percent since 1972 and is the third largest in the world, Sarpalius said. Other states with growing prison populations have concentrated “a lot of efforts at the heart of the problem and that’s deal ing with juvenile reform,” he said. TAMU SCUBA CLUB Multimedia Australian Reef Show & Photo Gear Display WED, FEB 24 7=00 PM FREE RUDDER 410 UPA University Pediatric Association 1328 Memorial Dr. • Bryan Full Range of Medical Service for College Students including Gynecological Services (Dr Kathleen Rollins) Call for appointment 776-4440 7 a.m.-7 p.m. extended hours for illnesses only Williams. Conkling, M.D .F.A.A.P. Kenneth E. Matthews, M.D.,F.A.A.P. Jesse W. Parr, M.D.,F.A.A.P. Kathleen H. Rollins, M.D.,F.A.A.P. Robert H. Moore, M. D.,F. A. A.P. THIRD GENERAL MEETING OF THE SPRING SEMESTER WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 24 7:00 p™ ZACHRY Would you like to travel to Germany this summer? ... as an cultural exchange student in coordination with the University of Gottingen. Trip is from mid May to mid June. Approximate cost is $750.00 (airfare).* Fluency in German is not required. Program is primarily a cultural exchange. ** Room and board will be provided by host families Will be staying in the city of Gottingen. Field trips to other locations in Germany. * personal spending money not included. ** classes are an option Extended Deadline Applications available in room 223G MSC Due - February 24, 1988 5:OOp.m. MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness ©et m&m mm© Emm a m 509 WEST UNIVERSITY 846-3336 WILL PRESENT m Yin m&mm aaaa DON’T MISS THE PRESENTATION BY THURSDAY, FEB. 25, 10:30 p.m. YOU DESERVE IT !!!