national Battalion/Page 9 July 20, 1982 17, of G) ■d second in the r of the n, was rani in 1981 am y inthisevi hmanatS us fall, pome of us spend our sunny afternoons washing ofElmGt P 11 cars — Gary Martin, left, and Leah Hardcastle with a tk pave other work to do. The pair spent an senior an is, was rant n this event for the ub at Texa Planes get dirty too staff photo by David Fisher afternoon recently washing Martin’s airplane at Easterwood Airport. Both live in College Station. Martin has been a pilot for about seven years. rv seagan no red rallies to support ink’ amendment dich Darwin, ; in the ei( iter by n United Press International WASHINGTON — President Jgan Monday urged adop- |m of a constitutional amend- nt requiring a balanced Iget — “an idea whose time come.” In a speech at a rally on the ?s of the Capitol, Reagan ‘Crisis is a much-abused d. But can we deny that we a crisis, that no more than a n wall of wavering willpower nds between us and ruin by ink?” I The Fighting speech appa- tly was designed to whip up [e crowd of BOO members of bgress and invited guests to rally, complete with band patriotic trappings. Reagan, who campaigned on promise to balance the federal iget, has seen the deficit rise [til current administration Injections are for a deficit of .9 billion — the largest in story. gan’s original budget ich tied proposal to Congress contained :kup infieli ^91.3 billion deficit, but the ying the i C° n g re ssional Budget Office Dwight EoBf u was closer to $1 12 billion, s were luff I have said before, balancing ik hasbeenff^budget is a little like protect- weeks, he J n gy° ur virtue: You just have to means. ff rn t0 sa y ‘no,’” Reagan said. iu’re notplff F or 1:00 i° n g> their voices lat this i» kwebeen ignored. But no army it never d 0n eart h can stop an idea whose bdjurakyta'e has come. Our time is now. Id with R* e come not as some special in- ght. “Youjff est group, pleading for per- imped up S(mal g ain - ■ “We do not say, ‘Here is our woblem, government is the Elution.’ We say, ‘Government yi Otis the problem, and people have IlUIe solution.”’ ( ■ Reagan has stated several r-» I I ffres previously his strong sup- dll ipon for the amendment that Bould require a balanced budget starting in 1987 and fortheAjj m because dll enroll it i last seasod r spring pul thereafter. The amendment is being debated in the Senate. He predicted ratification will produce an immediate impact: “From that moment on, the watchword to Washington will be: Start shaping up, or you may be shipping out.” Before motoring to the Capi tol, Reagan met with the Amer ican Lobby, a newly organized private group to promote pas sage of the amendment. It is headed by Don Kendall, chair man of the board of Pepsico Inc. Reagan said the nation has had only one balanced budget in 22 years, and the national debt has doubled in the last decade. He said borrowing to finance the annual interest on the debt “crowds out investment and keeps interest rates too high.” Reagan said: “Let’s quit kid ding ourselves. Pretending gov ernment could spend like there is no tomorrow and not hurt anyone has ended up punishing everyone — and the needy most of all.” Reagan blames the budget problems on the spending poli cies of past administrations and maintains his slashed-back approach will eventually put the federal budget and the national economy back on track. The Senate resumes con sideration this week of the prop osed balanced budget amend ment, which was debated for two days last week. An anti-amendment rally has been scheduled by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, a group of senior citizens and some House Democrats. They are particularly concerned about the measure’s potential impact on Social Security. The Senate has pending a motion by Sens. Charles Mathias, R-Md., and Max escribe nany to le they ou wl election fat free i. 5 PM TOTAL PERFORMANCE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE CENTER 696-3775 FULL CAR CARE Air Conditioning • Tune Ups Brakes • Charging Systems Engine Rebuilding • OWNER J. BITTLE ATM 78 ■"" PartS Baucus, D-Mont., to kill the proposed constitutional amend ment in favor of balancing the budget through a simple federal law. The chief sponsors of the proposed constitutional amend ment, Sens. Orrin Hatch, R- Utah, and Strom Thurmond, R- S.C., warned that any amend ment changing the language in the measure might cost it some votes in the Senate and kill what ever chances exist for the Demo- cratic-dominated House passing it this year. The amendments are being offered because of concern by some, including Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici, R-N.M., that the con stitutional amemdment would give the president new im poundment powers to withhold federal funds or that its directive would not be enforceable. Domenici is one of the 61 co sponsors of the resolution. A companion resolution that has been bottled up in the House Judiciary Committee is identical to the Senate version. Sponsors hope to achieve con gressional passage this year and then have the proposed amend ment ratified by the necessary 38 states to become part of the Constitution by fiscal 1987. Another co-sponsor of the measure, Sen. Howell Heflin, D- Ala., announced he would offer Quirks in the News United Press International HOLLYWOOD — Kids across the country will be able to buy E.T. dolls, a pastic model of the lovable little extra-terrestrial who stars in Steven Spielberg’s runaway hit movie, “E.T.” LJN Toys, which enriched the world’s culture by producing the Brooke Shields doll a couple of years ago, will make E.T. in two versions, a 2 3-8ths inch- high walking windup doll and a 3- 3 /4 inch articulated figure with , its own “speak and tell.” Jack Fiedman, president of LJN, said the toys will sell for $2.99 and $3.99 each and will be available be mid-August every where. an amendment allowing a waiv er during a “military urgency.” Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., would allow a waiver when the unemployment hits a certain amount. He has eight such amendments, each with a diffe rent unemployment waiver trigger. Another co-sponsor, Sen. Mack Mattingly, R-Ga., said he has an amendment that would mandate a reduction in federal spending as a percentage of gross national product by 1 per cent a year until spending equals 20 percent of the GNP. Current ly federal spending equals 24.5 percent. THE VEST OF WARPED Classic strips from the past 2 years of “Warped” by Scott McCullar $3.95 Available at BOBBIE’S BOOKS Loupot’s Whole Earth, Hast ing’s, & 216 Reed McDonald Bldg. A “different spokes for different folks” 403 University (Northgate) Open 10-7 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 846-BIKE Search for flood victims abandoned in Colorado United Press International ESTES PARK, Colo. — Rocky Mountain National Park offi cials have abandoned the search for three people missing in a high-country flash flood be cause it is believed their bodies are buried under tons of debris. “There is no evidence of the people being near the surface at all,” park spokesman Michael Smithson said Sunday. “The assumption now is that they are buried. We’re just going to have to wait until some of those debris piles are cleaned up.” The flood cascaded out of Lawn Lake Dam at the 10,987- foot level of the park early Thursday and flowed into Fall River, which overflowed and in undated the tourist town of Estes Park. The torrent up rooted trees, tore away under brush and dragged huge boul ders along its path. Saturday, a crew of six Park Service personnel vainly picked through flood debris for the three missing people. A body tentatively identified as that of Steven See, 21, of Hil bert, Wis., was found in debris Friday but there has been no sign of the three delared mis sing: Bridget Dorris, 20, Arling ton, Texas; Terry William Co ates, 36, Peoria, Ill., and an un identified man in his late 30s. Smithson said the unidenti fied man is considered missing because several witnesses said they saw him being swept away. Meanwhile, Estes Park mer chants struggled to reopen their COPIES ZVzt kinko's copras shops at the height of the sum mer tourist season which is vital to the area’s economic health. Police Sgt. Walter Kappely said most stores in the central business district were reopened for the weekend, although one block on the town’s main street remained closed amid the cleanup from mud and water that flowed up to five feet deep through town. “It’s been an amazing recov ery,” said Mayor Harry B. Tre- gent. “The people of this town are wonderful. They keep bouncing back no matter what.” But several businesses — mostly motels at the west end of town, where the flood hit first — were seriously damaged or des troyed. Chris Parrel, owner of the Ponderosa Motel, spent a day writing refund checks to people ■ who had reserved space for the T summer. “We were going to be full this summer,” she mused. “And now * ■ we don’t even know if we can * make the mortgage payments. T- “We used to have 18 units--* > (cottages); now we have two,” F she said. “People would come out here and say, ‘Gee, I envy you.’ Dreams go up in a second,-^ but life goes on.” Smithson said the flood caused about $2 million damage in the park. Sue O’Brien, a news secretary , for Gov. Richard Lamm, said.,- assessments prepared for the governor would be in the neigh borhood of $10 million in dam age to private property and $6’ million in damage to public 1 property. ifar vL* vL» *1? 'Af "Af* •A? 'Af 'Ar NLf "A? sk Atf ^Af *Af Ac Ac Ac Ac Ac Ac Ac Ac AcoS ■# — - — - * * Petal Patch Texas Dozen (15 Roses) Yellow Roses $ 19 50 doz 707 SHOPPING VILLAGE 696-6713 stejsL* vL» vL* vL* •si/' sir A'* A* A* Ac A* A* A* A* Ac Ac Ac A* A* A* A* Ac Ac AF" •X* *T* ’’T* 'T* •T- *T* *T* 'T* 'T' 'T'* 'T' 'T s *T'“ "V* *7* 0 V‘ 0 T % *T* * * * * * * * . * * * * * * * * * * * * * * to I College Main 840-8 711 Sale Price July 19-31 Only PAIN? We can help... Dr. Kevin G. 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