)n for re: meet intwi nsecutivf I most pert; I title u# )nd, then' leadership Student leaders encouraged ■0 enhance decision-making nto the m theyi h and Iy Bryan Blanton >p upou- ws Battalion we wereripuring the next four weeks, students will be able to attend rd game. (Series of student leadership workshops sponsored by the de- i matteroi wtinent of Student Activities. The workshops focus on pro- aat firstpi'Bng student leaders with the skills needed to manage their tourpaS'organizations more effectively. egantoiraSln the past, Student Activities held a series of leadership bsonled Votrkshops called the Student Leadership Institute. Student • w hils' eaders were required to attend six weeks of workshops. Now, ’l e leh Jtudent Activities has moved to a more open workshop that tudents are not required to attend. ■Five topics will be presented during the next few weeks. The first workshop has already taken place and dealt with as- 0 llu 1 Ssment and effective decision-making. The goal of this par- ;jcular topic was to help students determine their organiza- :ions’ missions and help create a decision making-process within that structure. ■ “Typically, we have many different organizations with !many different purposes,” said Ryan Williams, employee at • Student Activities and graduate student. “So helping the stu- i ; ^ dents define what exactly their mission is, serving to their , ’ niche, we are trying help further their mission along.” sday AM management, a new directive from the office of the dorado,: v * ce president for Student Affairs, will also be covered. The i the ba objective of the workshop is to help students make effec- ies dele; W Q decisions by utilizing a thought-process model for risk core. Ki management. Here, the students learn how risk manage ment goes hand-in-hand with their organizations’ mission statements. Jl “Ifyou ask yourself a question about what your organiza- is doing, and if it goes along with your mission state- npMBent. if the answer is no, then maybe it is something the or- "““•^pinization doesn’t need to be doing to further their process,” illiams said. At this workshop, students are encouraged to take a look all areas of their organization and find ways to make ac- ities safer. The third workshop will discuss safe travel and entails de- loping a plan for student trips. The travel workshop is de- ned to help students realize what variables are involved in anning a trip, such as how many students are going, what ie weather conditions will be and length of the trip. “There will always be that one variable that you will not able to foresee,” Williams said. “So this workshop is try- Jg to help students be deliberate and reduce the factors they ) see.” The other workshops will deal with event planning and nflict resolution. The event-planning workshop is intend- to give students a grasp of all the situations that may take ace during the course of an event. An example used is al- hol being brought to an organizational function. The work- op will tell students how to handle the situation and make |ire it does not happen again. The conflict resolution workshop is intended to help stu nts by establishing a mechanism for overcoming conflict ithin the organization. Currently, Student Activities is offering the workshops a training opportunity for students to gain a better See Workshops on Page 6. ■m STUART VILLANUEVA/The Battalion 1 Left: David Bosmans, a sophomore speech communication major, crawls from the end of a chain being pulled by Melinda West, a freshman business administration major, in the torture chamber room at the Hotard from Hell haunted house on Sunday. Top right: First-year veterinary medicine students Kim Saunders and Shelly Rike get into costume at the for participation in the Night of Terror haunted house held at the Vet School. Bottom right: Schuyler Hauser, a senior industrial engineering major, and Melissa Videtto, a senior applied mathematical sciences major, hit the road in the Halloween Fun Run on Sunday. UPD, Red Cross offer safety tips By Elizabeth Raines The Battalion Beware: Creatures of the night, goblins and ghouls will be wandering the streets along with witches, ghosts and Teletubbies. To ensure a safe Halloween, the Red Cross and University Police Department (UPD) have issued lists of Halloween safety tips for students throwing or attending parties and young trick-or-treaters. UPD compiled the list of safety tips from the National Confectioners Association and the Choco late Manufacturers Association list of Halloween Safety Recommendations. Copies can be picked up in the University Apartments main office and pro grams office. “I think the list will be effective as long as the par ents read it,” said Sgt. H. Allen Baron, certified crime prevention specialist. “It seems that, in the past cou ple years, parents have become more aware of the safety issues regarding their children and Halloween, and action has been taken to keep them safe.” The tips for children include using face paint in stead of masks, choosing costumes that are marked flame-retardant, adding reflective tape to dark-col ored costumes, giving and accepting only wrapped or packaged candy, having children bring treats home for adult inspection and making sure cloth ing is short enough to prevent tripping. For students throwing parties, the Red Cross lists fire safety as one of the most important fac tors. Electrical outlets should not be overloaded with holiday lights or special effects, paper and cloth yard decorations should be placed where they cannot be blown into flaming candles and jack-o’- lanterns and hot lamps should not be placed near drapes or decorations. For partiers, the Red Cross recommends having a designated driver and remaining cautious and dri ving slowly through residential areas. The Red Cross also reminds students that pets can get frightened and recommends that pets be confined or segregated during the evening of fright ful sights and sounds. For those who decide to go trick or treating, See Halloween on Page 6. s $20 /our t! f one? 0 . or two P 6 ] nly- I lolfCfi )r a serial ices suN^ j Oct. 31 - Risk Management. Effective decision making utilizing a thought-process model for risk : management and the mission of -the recognized student organization f I *T.-»‘ . ‘>1? mb. W. Nov. 7 - Travel with Safety in Mind Developing a protocol when Panning recognized student Tp organization travel I riendsl Locrt hery ■nberthy 1 NatatoJJ i Drill/ 1 ist Ca^f | Nov. 14 - Event Planning. 5 ! ^ lcoh oI Policy (and other factors) ; | Planning for a recognized ; j student organization event lov. 28 - Conflict Resolution' ,e ^K? g J hrou ^ h Aether: .stabhshing a mechanism for E overcoming conflict within the scognized student organization RUBEN DELUNA/The Battaij Professors forecast Gore victory KiSfc.. By Rolando Garcia The Battalion Polls show a race that will go down to the wire, but for a handful of political scientists, the 2000 presidential elec tion was over months ago, and the winner is Vice Presi dent A1 Gore. At an August meeting of the American Political Science Association, seven forecasts by academic analysts project ed Gore winning between 53 and 60 percent of the vote cast for the two major-party candidates. The mathematical for mulas, based primarily on economic factors, assumed that campaign tactics and candidate personalities make no dif ference and voters will reward the Democratic Party for the country’s economic prosperity. But Patricia Hurley, a political science professor at Texas A&M, cautioned that the accuracy of such forecasts can be limited because votes are influenced by more than just a pocketbook assessment. For most voters, candidate preference is preordained by party identification, Hurley said. Although fewer and few er Americans voluntarily identify themselves as Republi cans or Democrats, their voting patterns and political lean ings tend to align them with one of the two parties. Despite candidates’ aggressive courting of voters and the media’s extensive coverage of issues and personalities, campaigns serve mostly to reinforce voters’ latent political tendencies, Hurley said. I See Politics on Page 2. Student organizations stifle campaigning, predict Bush victory By Richard Bray The Battalion While the experts are predicting the closest presidential election in decades between Republican candidate Gov. George W. Bush and Democratic candi date Vice President A1 Gore, few organi zations are campaigning on campus be cause they think the Texas vote is already wrapped up in Bush’s favor. Jack Long, president of the Texas A&M College Republicans and a junior political science major, said the organiza tion’s first goal this semester was to reg ister as many people to vote as possible. “The county voter registrar has depu tized a lot of the members of the club so they can go out and actually register people to vote,” he said. “We’ve had about 115 people deputized and they’ve gone to their apartments and dorms and stuff and registered people there, so the main thing that we’ve been doing is registering any voters who weren’t registered, so they could vote in College Station.” Long said members registered any voters who were willing and did not screen voters according to party affiliation. Ac ademlc an aJ ys ts pred icI: A! Gore will win by S3 to 60 pe re e n t., H owev er, w i th <>n e week before the election, it is anyone's race Texas A&M political science professors gave some reasons for the close race: Influence of party affiliation Candidates’ public: image | Skepticism toward politics Use of campaign resources —j RUBEN DELUNA/The Battalion Next weekend the College Republicans will trav el to Arkansas and Louisiana to campaign for Bush. “We are getting ready to go on a bus trip to Texarkana and Shreveport to campaign for the governor Nov. 3-5,” Long said. “Arkansas and Louisiana are battleground states where Gov. Bush and Vice President Gore are polling really close right now. Since we don’t really need to campaign See Organizations on Page 6.