The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 01, 1981, Image 10

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    Page 10 THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1981
National
<
Early forecasts
will continue
United Press International
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California voters had better get used
to TV networks calling presidential elections before they even get a
chance to go to the polls, state lawmakers say.
A California House of Representatives subcommittee hearing
looking into the impact of NBC’s early forecast of President Reagan’s
victory over Jimmy Carter last November, said Monday a ban on
forecasts would violate the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment.
State officials claim hundreds of thousands of Californians skip
ped voting after hearing the network forecasts of a Reagan win
around 5:15 PST on the 1980 election day. California polls did not
close until 8 p.m. PST.
Foreign countries like Canada, Australia and France bar election
day forecasts by broadcasters until the polls close.
The House panel heard several suggestions for dealing with the
problem, including a uniform nation-wide closing time for voting
booths in presidential elections and pleas to networks to refrain from
election forecasts until polls have closed in all states.
In the end, most agreed with California Secretary of State March
Fong Eu, who said, “We may have to learn to live with media
projections, just as we do with the common cold.”
Youth rescued from storm sewc*
HOf
United Press International
IOWA CITY, Iowa — While authorities were preparing
to drag the Iowa River for his body, 11-year-old Steve
Schmitz was holding on to ladder rungs in a storm sewer
awaiting his rescue.
The Cedar Rapids youngster escaped death after he fell
into a drainage ditch and was swept several hundred feet
through a rain-choked storm sewer late Monday.
“I thought I was a goner,” the boy said.
Steve, who lives with his mother, Connie Schmitz, was
walking along the side of Rocky Shore Drive with his
13-year-old cousin. Brad Sedlacek of Hills, Iowa, when he
stumbled into the flooded ditch and was pulled into the
storm sewer.
“There’s no way he could have survived that current,’
Iowa City Fire Lt. Ronald G. Whittaker said — just mi
nutes before the boy was discovered alive.
Steve said he dog-paddled to keep his head in an air
pocket on top of the storm sewer while he was sucked
through the swirling current.
He saw a shaft of light through a manhole cover and
grabbed onto ladder rungs at a sewer intersection near
Highway 6 and Rocky Shore Drive. He hung on for nearly a
half an hour while authorities prepared to drag the Iowa
River— about a quarter mile away — in search of his body.
A heavy thunderstorm that dumped 1.6 inches of rain in
parts of Iowa City early Monday afternoon caused the
storm sewer to back up and fill the ditch and part of a gravel
parking lot. >king
Schmitz said he fell into the ditch becauseiUitenti;
umlci (In- Hooded parking lot emat
"1 thought it was flat and didn’t see it,” be sj.
Harry Boren, Iowa City superintendent of ; eac ^y
control, was summoned to trace the storm sent The
river. ndrc
Idea could save lives of fire victims
oooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooo
7:30
CAMPUS THEATRE
846-6512
Now Showing
9:50
Hollywood bull__
at its funniest
and sexiest.
BLAKE EDWARDS'
United Press International
GUNTER — Though there are few tall buildings in this
small north Texas community, local resident W. B. Reed
has come up with an idea he thinks could save people
trapped in burning high-rises.
“If this had been invented sooner, every one of the lives
lost in the MGM Grand Hotel fire in Las Vegas could have
been saved,” Reed said.
His contraption consists of a large truck, a rescue basket
and either a permanent or a movable section placed on a
building roof from which cables are run to the basket.
The system would be centered in an 18-wheel tractor
rig. Three motors would provide power. The rig would
include a storage facility and a first aid station. It also would
have a fire-resistant covered basket that looks like a large
elevator and could hold up to 50 people at a time.
There’s also a 10-foot-long lookout section that could be
permanently attached to the roof of a building or lifted into
place by a helicopter within minutes.
“The beauty of the system is, when the truck arrives at a
fire, the first people can be rescued within three minutes,”
Reed said.
Any high-rise building could be protected easily with his
system, he added.
“The idea is that a city could purchase one of the truck
rigs and the portable lookout and any high-rise building in
the city can be protected by adding only the rings to secure
the lookout to the top of the building,” he said.
He said developers also could purchase the system for an
individual building and use the basket to carry workers and
equipment up and down during construction and, later, as
a rescue system.
In permanent installations, zinc-coated steel cables
would be secured in a locked box on the building roof.
When necessary, the rescue truck would be driven into
place beside the building, the box unlocked and the cables
lowered to the box on the truck.
The basket would then be lifted by cable to the desired
level, a side extension opened to a window or other open
ing in the building and people would board it.
If people had to be rescued from the top of a building, he
said, a covered ladder would be extended from the roof into
the basket.
“We heard him calling when w'e started toope n net
Boren said. “As soon as we got the manhole s
started climbing out and the two policemengru: .heir t
Boren said 01,1,11
Schmitz was treated at Mercy Hospital in Ion, 01056
bump on Ins head and s< \eial cuts and bruises a 6 e v
released. Sine
I gay .‘
uth; i
gay 1
d Sco
e, a (
Leadt
his invention. Ox\ gen would be pumped intotls>> an i z i
use by people overcome by smoke ! proi
Two or three persons can operate the entin : lrs -
while bringing the victims down, the unitalsoo: The
in > .u i \ tiremen and their equipment to the
Inc. he said. “If you have to climb 14 (loony f* 0 '
equipment, you’re too tired to fight the firerar U.S.
i ' l said 1m ha btmm d.- ■ >
department and building code officials and
engineer has been able to give me a singl
and work W< II
reason why it won’t work
ibe
* We’v
>d citi
ad 'tuul
In'- idea. Hehopesitad. “A:
v'an G
“If someone fell going down the ladder, they’d just end
up in the rescue basket,” he said. “It’s a great help for
someone who is afraid of heights.”
The basket would be controlled by an operator on the
ground with a second operator inside the basket in an
enclosed space away from possibly panic-stricken people.
An emergency brake and chute is a feature that Reed
says has interested firefighters who have seen a model of
He said a number of dt
have expressed interest in
into production SOOn
•uston
“Even if I never get the becking. 111 convattm^t
investments and produce it myself, he uid. nosex
tli.it it will be fuccessful itartii
The rescue system is the first invention for fr nosex
of Reed Decorators and Reecom and a conureiup w
industrial paint and coating contractor. nmun
“I don’t see how people could not be intertg^f
system, ” he said. "One of them could offer pr e( j
every high-rise building in a city. There s nousfk
to die.”
or
-.ee I!
ucus.
LORIMAR PRESENTS
IULIE ANDREWS WILLIAM HOLDEN
BLAKE EDWARDS SOB
RCHARD MULLIGAN ■ STUART MARGOLIN LARRY HAGMAN ROBERT VAUGHN MARISA BERENSON
ROBERT WEBBER• SHELLEY WINTERS ROBERT PRESTON LORETTA SWIT ' HENRY MANCINI
BLAKE EDWARDS TONY ADAMS BLAKE EDWARDS A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
lOWMAR
Box Office opens at 7:00
Midnight Movie
Friday Saturday
Ringo Starr Barbara Bach
CAVEMAN
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
We’re tooting
our own horn . . .
J/)
Hi
Battalion
Classifieds
Call 845-2611
MANOR EAST 3
823-8300
From the makers of JAWS
and Star Wars
RAIDERS
OF THE
LOST ARK
2:35 4:55 7:20 9:40
Burt Reynolds
in
Canonball Run
2:45 5:05 7:25 9:45
DRAGONSLAYER
2:30
4:50
7:15
9:35
Military to retire .45-caliber pislti
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The main
stay sidearms used by the armed
forces for more than 50 years are
about to be retired.
The Pentagon said Monday the
military wants to replace its stan
dard .38-and .45-caliber sidearms
— preferably with a 9mrn hand
gun offering “numerous opera
tional benefits.”
The Army, which procures
small arms for all four services and
the Coast Guard, released a re
quest for bids for 220,000 of the
new XM-9 handguns. The cost
will not be known until a contract
is awarded.
The Army hopes to award a
contract in January and have the
first guns bolstered on the hips of
officers, military policemen and
Air Force crewmen by 1983. The
Coast Guard will get the new guns
first because it requires only 7,(XX)
of them, an Army spokesman said.
The 9mm weapon was chosen
after seven years of testing to
bring the U.S. military in line with
the standard NATO sidearm poli
cy and because of its “numerous
operational benefits,” the Army
said.
The advantages, the Army said,
include “higher hit probability,
reduced weight, improved safety,
double action firing, improved hu
man factors, reduced recoil, im
proved reliability and reduced
training.”
Additionally, a 9mm pistol car
ries between 14 and 15 rounds per
clip, compared with
clip of a .45 There art|
revolver. ^
IN SEARCH OF NOAH’S ARK
What a strange old man he seemed to be — working hard, year after year, as if he really thought
there was going to be a flood. How absurd! It had never flooded before. Besides, why would God
send a deluge? They weren’t doing anything wrong, were they?
How odd Noah must have seemed to his contemporaries. There he was, building that strange
boat for years, and all the time preaching righteousness and protesting the evil of his generation.
They mocked him, being too occupied with the immediate pleasures of their temporary lives. Had
they done anything wrong? One thing — they had forgotten God. Yet Noah kept building and
calling for others to turn their lives and heed God’s call. The door to the ark stayed open — until
that day. Then it began to rain, and Noah was transformed from a fool to the wisest man on the
earth.
Network official says Silvern
to resign as president of NB(
United Press International
BURBANK, Calif. — Fred Sil
verman is resigning as president of
NBC, ending his unsuccessful
three-year battle to pull the net
work from the bottom of the rat
ings war, a network source says.
The NBC source, who asked
not to be identified, said Grant
Tinker, ex-husband of actress
Mary Tyler Moore and head of
MTM Productions, would replace
Silverman as NBC’s chief prog
rammer.
RCA, parent company of NBC,
planned to announce Silverman’s
resignation Tuesday in New York,
the source said. A spokesman for
RCA in New York issued a “no
comment.”
Since being hired away from
ABC-TV and joining NBC as net
work president on June 9, 1978,
Silverman has been trying to im
prove the network’s ratings.
While heading ABC’s prime
time programming, Silverman
boosted the network’s ratings to
the No. 1 position. Prior to joining
ABC, Silverman had been CBS-
TV’s vice president of programs
for five years.
During his tenure at ABC, the
network presented the highly
acclaimed 12-hour adaptation of
Alex Haley’s “Roots.”
Silverman developed and sche
duled many successful prime-time
There are about SSfO 1
.45-caIiln i guns now*^ Unii
most ot th< in 45s, tkti*corch
The C i .ililx-r l
standard issue, -ntdents ;
in 1911 and a variety of
been carried by scr '^ t So tlic
1890, an Army spokesi®
The e
ckly tc
n hold
|niore,
fessor
iting <
Mech;
ts dub
“No n
I moutl
programs at both CBS®. th e j r
but audiences wereur rhe te .
to such Silverman sho'»'' anc j t ]
k>, Larry” and Supert;‘ entors
he was unable to lift N^ s jty of
No. 3 ranking. He said
Tinker, 55, product na ke jt
long-running televisi#st res s e .
"The Mary Tyler M<* ation ;
and as head of MTM f^s.
has (Hoclix ed Hill Stt ’he ne
"WKRP in Cincinnati Sped b)
Grant.”
The ark he was building had two important characteristics. The first was that the ark, though ever
so large, had only one door. How strange! Wasn’t that a narrowminded plan? Yet God had
ordained that this ark, which was to carry the willing creation to safety, should have only one door,
one entrance. Jesus said, “I am the door; if anyone enters through Me, he shall be saved.” (John
I0:9a) There have been many who have claimed to have had a way to God, but only Jesus ever said,
“I am the way, the truth, and the life; no man comes to the Father except through me.” (John 14:6)
Just as in Noah’s ark, so also today God has ordained that there be only one door to enter into
salvation — Jesus Christ.
The second main characteristic of this ark was that it was covered within and without with pitch.
The Hebrew word for pitch has the same root as the Hebrew word for atonement. When the flood
attacked the ark, the inhabitants within might have been afraid except for the sight of the covering
pitch. What kept the ark from sinking was this covering pitch. In like manner although many
teachers have had philosophical things to say, Christ sealed His words with His own blood. By
allowing His blood to be shed He has made atonement for our sins. When a person receives the
salvation that is in Jesus Christ, like the inhabitants of the ark, he no longer need fear any
condemnation or death. This ark will never sink, being covered with the redemption of Christ.
Does the time we live in parallel that of Noah? Jesus said, “For as the days of Noah were, so shall
the coming of the Son of Man be. For as they were in those days before the flood, eating and
drinking, marrying and being given in marriage, until the day in which Noah entered into the ark,
and they did not know until the flood came and took all away; so also shall the coming of the Son of
Man be. (Matthew 24:37-39) As in Noah’s day, so many today are befuddled and drugged with the
enjoyment of fleeting pleasures, refusing to hold God in their consciousness. Yet, as in Noah’s
time, so today there are some who are using their time to build an ark. And, as in Noah’s day, there
are some who are mocking. The door is still open. It’s starting to rain now, but God still holds the
door open to all who would choose to enter in. While we are still in this age, anyone may freely
come to Christ and enjoy the peace, even the protection of His cleansing blood. To enter in, simply
open to Him with an honest heart and ask Him to cleanse you and to fill your life with God
Himself.
Shimmcrtime...
and tine living is easy
at
nrm vAY *^2
KESTAITIIAJVT AAI* BAR
4 th of July
Celebration
th
For literature.concerning
“THE UNSEARCHABLE RICHES OF CHRIST.
Come celebrate
Saturday July 4 1
with 25# beer and
*1.25 mixed drinks from
11 a. m. till midnite
Write:
Free Packet
401 Dominik
College Station, Tx
Happy Hotii* — JHon.-FVi. 4-7
V* pi*f ee dsHLnks and appeti*e«-s
Phone:
696-8943
775-5330
77840
Large Parties Welcome — Please call in. advance.
Bring this Ad for a IO% discount for your entire
party (limit one coupon per party)
4501 S. Texans S46-0045
ber, Sc
is as p;
. They
jam cu]
in cer
hot lo
heir de
heat-;
ed bet
ind a ct
iuckley
r l d dls the ci
Day students get their news from the baiip eratul
i long ti
ts estirr
^ will cc
wannm^nnnnnnntnnannnn0>
:ers am
Shabbat Service
JULY 3 8 P.M.
in the home of
Mr. <3f Mrs. Sol Klein Ba
Call 696-7313 or 693-6545 for directioi
Everyone is invited.
AGGIES
Douglas
Jewelry
uml
10% AGGIE DISCOlL
ON ALL MERCHANDISE r* 99
WITH STUDENT ID
(Cash Only Please)
We reserve the right to limit
use of this privilege. Bl
Downtown Bryan (212 N. CL
and
Culpepper Plaza