national Battalion/Page if ‘Beeper’ sales up, uses varied United Press International DETROIT — With an insis tent beep-beep-beep from boar droom to boudoir, electronic pa gers are signalling a change in the way Americans live, work and play. They are also ringing up bil lions of dollars in sales and are on their way to becoming as common as telephones in Amer ican culture. An estimated 1.5 million pagers are in use in the United States and the number is growing. Some beep, emit a tone or vibrate to notify the bearer a communication is at hand. Others are capable of leaving a 10 to 20 second audio message. The latest technology has pro duced pagers that emit a printed message at the push of a button. And manufacturers say the age of the two-way beeper, similar to Dick Tracy’s two-way wrist radio, is not far off. “It used to be if you saw some one wearing a pager you assumed they were in the medic al profession and they probably were,” says Jeff Prough, director of sales and marketing for Ram Beepers, Inc. a national firm with offices in Michigan. “Now doctors represent the smallest percentage of our customers. Doctors are way behind even the illicit users, whose numbers have skyrocketed. “The largest percentage of users are in sales and repair work,” Prough said. “And now we’re getting beyond the busi ness use, people are using them for personal reasons.” A few American parents are using pagers to avoid staying at home when Johnny calls for a ride home from football prac tice. Pager salesmen report a growing use of the devices among single parents who leave the number with their children in case of emergency. Another national pager ser vice, Radiophone, has a “Stork Alert” program where pregnant woman use them to tell the fathers when it’s time. “Just today a man rented one because his wife is pregnant and he’s on the road a lot,” said Russ Matson, Southfield, Mich, sales manager for the Radio Relay Corp., one of the nation’s largest pager services. “Some people rent them for no other purpose than for status — for a few good lines at the bar.” The uses of pager systems has seemingly become as varied as the human imagination. Prostitutes and call girls are now just a beep away from a trick with the use of pagers. Police in several of the nation’s cities report that highly paid call girls are using the system in the finest hotels. In January, while Detroit hosted Superbowl XVI, a repor ter was approached in the Re naissance Center by a woman who made personal gestures and an expense account inquiry. Her beeper sounded and she was dispatched to another hotel, leaving the reporter with a feel ing of naivete and a pager number. All major suppliers ques tioned about illicit uses of pagers agreed they have a problem but few would discuss it on the re cord. “We can’t refuse to issue a beeper to someone. We can’t even ask what they are going to use it for,” said Prough. “They are used by drug dealers and prostitutes who apply them to their business . There’s nothing we can do about it. “Occasionally we get beepers in the mail that police confis cated in (drug and prostitution) raids and send back to us,” he said. A spokesman for the Federal Communications Commission, which regulates the pager distri butors, says it has no regulatory authority over individual users of the devices. Beepers have penetrated all areas of society and it is not un common for them to be heard in restaurants or theaters as har ried patrons rush for a tele phone. Along with the growing use of the devices is fierce competition for the nearly $500 million in revenues generated this year by the flourishing industry. Clayton E. Niles, chairman of Communication Industries in Dallas, recently told the New York Times paging company re venues will swell to $2 billion in 1990. The nation’s largest paging companies, including a subsidi ary of AT&T, are planning na tional and international services. Currently, most pagers are us able only within a given metro politan area. Pagers allowing the bearer to receive messages with in an area of several hundred miles are available but more costly. BUT YOU CAN GET THEM Athlete's Foot 1016 Post Oak Mall College Station, TX 77840 Wyatt's Sporting Goods 505 University College Station, TX 77840 Athletic Attic 907-D Harvey Road College Station, TX 77840 Foot Action College Station, TX 77840 Foot Locker All Stores Firms rely on new goods United Press International NEW YORK — One of the ironies of the American busi ness climate is that most manufacturing companies are dependent on a constant flow of new products for profitable operation yet only 10 percent of new products are really in novative. John Rockwell, a vice presi dent of Booz Allen & Hamil ton management consultants, said new products are needed because existing products “degenerate into profitless price competition,” no matter now great a need they fill. Many of them are replaced by new or improved products and simply vanish from the market. A new study by Booz Allen of the technique of successful ly introducing new products concluded that only 10 per cent of those introduced in the last five years “were truly innovative or new to the world.” The study said 30 percent of the new products that actually reach the manufac turing and marketing stage are failures. Other studies in recent years have put the fai lure rate as high as 65 to 70 percent. It is generally agreed that hardly more than one in 20 new product suggestions that receive serious considera tion by management actually reach the stage of mam t uring and marketing. Yet, Rockwell said, non cessful company can eioj the need to maintain am slant How of new pnxkii- He said this means | manufacturer mUstappoB peoples’ wants, not itt | needs. Thus, a new in marketing terms, maytti ly mean finding a newiMij an existing product bvid signing it, repositioningw the market or repackamp so it will fill a public Mil Rockwell said thechalle* to manufacturers to keep, the flow of new prodra- products that either arerti innovative or fill a new® — will be extremely amt,■ the coming decade betas competition both at hontea from foreign firms willkt Houst looks sify. The Booz Allen studys the line between successs failure in introducing i* products can be very III Companies that fail with it products often invest asm: > money and effort into : veloping and introducj 1 them as those that succeei. success record usually 1 in the result of good luckbuii result of experience: pertise and of total dedicate of management in thectJ pany. lUH fl: leads ' of kidneys lengthen United Press International ST. LOUIS — Doctors are ex pected to begin human testing soon on a device that researchers say should triple the time a kid ney can he maintained outside the body for a transplant opera tion. Increasing the time a kidney can be preserved permits a more thorough search for the proper tissue match between a kidney donor and recipient, thus in creasing the chances of trans plant successes. “With better matching, you have less rejection,” said Max jel- linek, one of the St. Louis Uni versity researchers who de veloped the machine. “Also, it can shorten the sever al weeks of dialysis customary af ter a kidney transplant. “We’re trying to include the kidneys that are marginal,” Jel- linek said. “We’re trying to im prove the storage time. We’re talking about human suffering reduced and we’re doing this with a slight increase in cost.” The recently-patented machine works by precisely con trolling the amount of oxygen in the fluid, called perfusate, that is pumped through an extracted ki dney awaiting transplantation. If there is too much oxygen, the kidney quickly deteriorates. “The human being is slant ly protecting itself froiti damaging effects of oxyp Jellinek said. Conventional machines lower the kidneys ygen needs, but increase! organ’s susceptibility to os'] damage. “The kidney is forgrc within certain limits,” Jell) said. “But if you keepfi (with normal perfusion), in fail everytime.” Minimum cost of thedtj will be $350 plus about Slj| additional expense each! is used, Jellinek said. il Corne bolstei About 3,500 kidney iw plants are performed bem! non-related people annuall the U nived Stales, wndskwl could increase the poo) oft f able kidneys by 10tol5pf The machine, which cbjl of a two-chambered cyliilj and an electronic meter,sfl jl into the tubing of anexisll kidney storage machine maintains the organ forasl as six days. The current lin only two days. The six-year study to dew the machine was headedfc John E. Codd, professot surgery at the St. Louis liM sity School of Medicine. ?€KmG GJtR»€K CHiKCSe RCSTJUJJUKT DAI NOOtV buffet . 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