Page? April 12,1981 Bill Hinds dkj't you fAK£ Mg ACKANP IOOT 1£ ?! ? aves ! loss. Righetti ing three runs rs3 r continued to Wells pitched career, as To ld White went sO .trong innings e runs. », walked I mcy it the change, to be a 11,1 ore, it's pi y," said Torin on the s ’ used to and everyone ?at job to rep- ?ody. le person, radition mber, d. junior m) seems r the student ic of the 1 that it is a e opportunih’ ;ame. ! to devote for ishop said, stification for , because they last year. s a big sacrii- i the motives ■ep up in coi- u don't have at every pos- •adition, bull gs come to an Friday, April 12,1991 The Battalion What’s Up Friday ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: General discussion at noon. Call C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. TAMU COUNSELING AND ASSESSMENT CLINIC: Open registration for hypnosis clinic for smoking, weight and other habit-control problems in 701 Harrington Tower. Call 845- 8021 for more information. STAGECENTER COMMUNITY THEATRE: Live theater - 'The Nerd’ at 8 p.m. at 3715 E. 29th Street, Bryan. Call 846-0287 for more information. PRE MED/PRE DENT SOCIETY: Tour and presentation of University of Texas Medical branch at Galveston, leave at 6:15 a.m. from Oisen Field. Lunch following. Call Dan at 823- 6900 for more information. DEPARTMENT OF STUDENT ACTIVITIES: Dates for the summer semester calendar are due at 5 p.m. in 208 Pavilion. Call Sabrina at 845-1133 for more information. STUDENTS OVER TRADITIONAL AGE: Dinner club and Constitution meeting at 6 p.m. at the AnNam Teahouse. Call Donielle at 846-1471 for more information. BETA ALPHA PSI: Officer applications are due by 5 p.m. in 501 Blocker. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: Peanut Butter Fellowship from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in front of the Academic Buiidina by Sul Ross. Weekly Bible study at 6 p.m. at the A&M Pres byterian Church office. Call Stacy at 847-5300 for more information. BRAZOS MUSIC ASSOCIATION’S MUSIC SHOWCASE: Five local talents will be showcased in this second presentation at 8 p.m. in Kay’s Cabaret. 21 and over admitted, S3 admis sion. Call Christy at 846-6981 for more information. BRAZOS MUSIC ASSOCIATION: Benefit concert from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Kay’s Cabaret. Call Stacy at 764-1809 for more information. HILLEL: Services at 8 p.m. at the Hillel Jewish Students Center, 800 George Bush Drive. Call 696-7313 for more information. HART HALL: Bike auction in front of Sbisa. Call Will at 847-3997 for more information. COLOMBIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Will have a wonderful party with lots of music and lots of fun at 8 p.m. at Wellborn Community Center. Donation of $3 requested. Call Monico for more information. BRAZILIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Children's movie at 2 p.m. in 604 D Evans Library. Call Fabiana at 846-1331 for more information. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF*BLACK JOURNALISTS: Elections at 6 p.m. in 214 RDMC. Call Pamela at 847-0529 for more information. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: International Radio Hour: Music from the Ivory Coast at 9 p.m. on KAMU-FM 90.9 FM. Sunday TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB: Autocross No. 5, $8 members, $10 nonmembers, regis tration from 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. at the Riverside Annex. Call Terry at 846-6099 for more information. LUTHERAN STUDENT FELLOWSHIP: Fellowship Supper at 6 p.m. at the Lutheran Student Center. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: Weekly Sunday study groups and dinner at 5:30 p.m. Dis ciples of Christ in 145 MSC and Presbyterians at A&M Presbyterian Church. Call Stacy at 847-5300 for more information, METHODIST STUDENT CENTER: 5 p.m. choir, 6 p.m. dinner, 7 p.m. Vespers, 8 p.m. recre ation. Call Max at 846-4701 for more information. Monday Saturday STAGECENTER COMMUNITY THEATRE: Live theater - ‘The Nerd” at 8 p.m. at 3715 E. 29th Street, Bryan. Call 846-0287 for more information. DIE AGGIE KOMOEDIANTEN: A tragic comedy by Friedrich Duerrenmatt called ’The Visit’ at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater. Tickets can be bought at the door. Call Theresa at 847- 8431 for more information. TEXAS A&M SPORTS CAR CLUB: Practice Autocross, free, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Riverside Annex. Call Terry at 846-6099 for more information. BRAZOS ANIMAL SHELTER: Fifth annual walk for the Animals and Pet Show (prizes available) from 10a.m. to 2 p.m. at Central Park in College Station. Call Michelle at 775-5755 for more information. AUDUBON FIELD TRIP: Lick Creek Park. Call Bert at 764-3999 or 693-3214 for more infor mation. 4IID-JEFFERSON COUNTY HOMETOWN CLUB: Picnic, officer elections at 1 p.m. in Bee Creek Park. Call Ben at 847-1105 or Amy at 847-2328 for more information. TAIWANESE STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Invited lecture with Lou E.S. speaking at 1:30 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center. EARTH FIRST! OUT THERE: Thinking Like A Mountain: A Council of All Beings facilitated by Mariah Wentworth of the Rainbow Hearth Sanctuary, Austin, all day, place to be an nounced. Call Dwight at 693-7383 for more information. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: General discussion at noon. Call C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID AND RACISM: Guest speaker and elections at 8:30 p.m. in Rudder. Call Syed at 693-6185 for more information. TAMU CANCER SOCIETY: Will have a meeting with elections and talk about the dunking booth at 7 p.m. in 230 MSC. Call Laura at 847-2141 for more information. ASME TECH: Guest speaker: Dr. Tim Coppinger, ‘Internal Ballistics,” at 6:30 p.m. in 121 Thompson. Membership dues and petition. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: All students, faculty, staff and former students wel come in 507 Rudder. Call Beau at 846-6115 for more information. ALPHA PHI OMEGA: Special Olympics Track and Field meet orientation meeting from 7 to 9 p.m. in 101 HEEP. Call Steve at 847-5439 for more information. THE LEBANESE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: Elections for 1991-1992 officers at 8:30 p.m. in 508 Rudder. Call Nabil at 693-0424 for more information. BETA ALPHA PSI: General meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 165 Blocker. TEXAS STUDENT EDUCATION ASSOCIATION: General meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 601 Rudder. Call Amy at 696-3368 for more information. RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROGRAM: Guest lecture at 7:30 p.m. in 105 HECC. Call Dr. Steven Oberheiman at 845-0841 for more information. SOCIETY FOR CREATIVE ANACHRONISM: Heraldry meeting, research and commenting on names and personal coats of arms at 8:30 p.m. in Roy Heath’s House of Heraldry, 4108 Aspen. Call Ernesto at 847-0993 or Roy at 846-0880 for more information. AGGIE BLOOD DRIVE: At the Commons, Sbisa, Academic Plaza, Medical Science Lab. Call Dawn at 847-1808 for more information. Items 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 publish the name and phone number of the contact only if you ask us to do so. What’s Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. if you have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3316. Welkin: Science needs press for public support Continued from page 1 by warnings of potential threats. For example, NeWdn said early reports of tne benefits of geneti cally created "bugs" to eat oil spills also questioned what would happen if the bugs got into petroleum storage units. But Nelkin said now the press is more concerned with the ap plication of biotechnology, not safety. "Techniques of gene splicing once represented as extremely dangerous became in the press a 'mundane tool/ and headlines began to tell the potential appli cations of research," she said. By the early 1980s, the press promoted developments in bi otechnology, Nelkin said. Nelkin said scientists were de scribed in the press as pioneers unlocking nature, but claims of miracles were still reported side by side with fears of an apoca lypse because of genetic engi neering. Nellan said this ambivalence is reflected in the controversy over animal patenting. "The genetic engineering of animals has been given exten sive and often very positive treatment in the press as a means to make medically useful chemicals, such as human blood proteins, " Nelkin said. Despite the value of these "liv ing inventions," Nelkin said heavy debate oyer genetically al tering animals has been "smol dering" since 1980, when the Su preme Court ruled in favor of patenting living organisms. Nelkin said researchers are in favor of patent protection for an imals as medical inventions that promise medical and agricultural benefits. But Nelkin said small farmers, animal rights activists, religious leaders and environmentalists raise other concerns. These groups are strongly opposed to animal patenting. Small farmers are concerned with the cost of raising, breeding and owning genetically altered livestock. The farmers say this is the most recent trend in wiping out small farmers. Nelkin said other groups be lieve patenting animals violates their sense of the natural by defi ning living organisms as "mo ney-making" machines. Nelkin said these issues reached the public in 1987 dur ing Congressional hearings that discussed legislation on animal patenting. Both the press and the hear ings raised questions of animal patenting in agriculture, re search and moral obligations to preserve nature, Nelkin said. Nelkin quoted one newspaper editor as saying, "The public we are trying to reach in the daily press is in a cultural stage when three-headed cows, Siamese twins and bearded ladies draw the crowd." The relationship between the science world and the press suf fered partly because scientists accused journalists of sensatio nalizing their work, Nelkin said. But then, she said, scientists saw they were dependent on the press to build public support for their work. Nelkin said, during the 1980s, science needed money for their research while the press raised questions of money and moral ity. So today, scientists are try ing to influence the press, she said. "Scientists sometimes describe Nelkin said pressure for jour nalists to find a story makes them more vulnerable to what scientists have to say. "The fundamental ambiva lence between the value of tech nology and its role in our society makes controversy inevitable. And sensitivity to this ambiva lence must be considered in de velopment, application and es pecially public communication about science," she said. Cineplex Odeon Theatres S3.50 BARGAIN MATINEES ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 P.M. ON SAT.SUN & HOLIDAYS POST OAK THREE 1S00 Harvey Road Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II (PG) Sat. &Sun. 5:00, 7:00 and 9:00 CINEMA THREE 315 College Ave. Home Alone (PG) Sat. & Sun. 7:30 and 9:30 Class Action (R) Sat. & Sun. 7:15 and 9:20 Defending Your Life (PG) No Passes Sat. & Sun. 2:20, 4:20, 7:20 and 9:20 The Five Heartbeats (R) Sat. & Sun. 2:00, 4:30, 7:00 and 9:30 Silence of the Lambs (R) Sat. & Sun. 2:10, 4:40, 7:10 and 9:40 TEXAS I1AIX OF FAME Your # I Live Country Night Spot! I Thurs. Night - Any single shot bar drink, longncck, or margarita $1.25. Music by Special Effect. .25 Bar Drinks & Draft Beer. Music by Country New Notes. Frl. Night Sat. Night Any single shot bar drink, longncck or margarita $1.25. Mundo Earwood. College A. Faculty I.D. Discount B22-2222 2309 FM 2«18 South, Hey Freshmen, Be one of the few, the proud the MSC Council Assistants sophomore Leadership development. MSC Council Assistants: - work as assistants to the MSC President and Vice-Presidents - work in the Student Development, Student Programs, Finance, Operations, Public Relations, and Development areas of the MSC Council - develop leadership skills through group dynamics Applications available in the Student Programs Office MSC 216 & 223. Applications due Friday, April 12, at 5 PM. Asthma Study Wanted: Individuals 18-50 years of age with asthma to participate in a short clinical research study involving an investigational medication in capsule form. Pauli Research International® 776-0400 $zoo V$»oo BRING TOUR MEMORIES OF TENTS A&M TO FIFE To complement the fond memories found within the pages of the Aggieland, you now can purchase AggieVlsion, Texas A&M's annual video yearbook -- 60 minutes of the places, faces and events of the school year on videotape. To order: □ 1990-91 AggieVlsion, stop by the Student Publications business office, room 230 Reed McDonald Building, between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. □ 1991-92 AggieVlsion, choose fee option 23 during fall '91 touch-tone telephone registration. their work in terms that might embarrass the National Enqui rer," Nelkin said. Research is de scribed as creating a "new era of youth," and promises to pro duce ideal medical care, she said. Nelkin said scientists think the media is "dirty business," but that is only a misunderstanding. Scientists don't want the press to report problems with research but its benefits to society. "But science, like any other product, thrives because of mar keting," Nelkin said. "The press becomes a means of promotion." WEEKEND SPEC!A LS! ^ .= Sale ends Saturday, April 1 ~ :?• MHTWOIY -'' ITMICMT touNso* wmsxiv | WA* qj .750 ml 80 proof KEYSTONE 8i KEYSTONE LIGHT <1>"799 m a Case $3.99 -12 Pack 0 * RON CARLOS W2WTWW 1.75 L 80 proof GOOD . 2402 Texas Ave. - Chopping Center) i irti irm * College Station^ UUUUH 693-5428 /f \ACCIE\^^|t INEMA / \ACG,y N EMA/ \aGGIE^S^ nema / MEL GIBSON GLENN CLOSE HAMLET Fri./Sat., April 12/13 7:30/9:45PM (fealitmv Fri./Sat., April 12/13 Midnight Admission to all shows~$2.00 All shows on Fri. in-Rudder Theatre All shows on Sat. in-Rudder Auditorium TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE NOW IN THE MSC BOX OFFICE.