Page 4/The Battalion/Tuesday, July 17, 1984 Warped by Scott McCullar College Station firefighter likes being public servant By PAM BARNES Reporter Firemen are old scruffy men who hang around the fire station waiting for a fire. When the alarm goes off they slide down a pole and race there to chop it up with their axes and douse it with water. If that’s what you think, you haven’t looked lately. The College Station Fire Depart ment is staffed with men and women of all ages who are proud of their neat appearance in their regulation uniforms. They are public servants who are trained in all methods of fire fighting. There isn’t even a pole to slide down. Over five years ago a young col lege student at Blinn Junior College also thought that firemen were old. One day he drove past the fire sta tion and saw young men working in the yard so he stopped to ask some questions. He spent the rest of the day there. Today Tim Kinchloe, 25, has moved up from firefighter to driver and hopes to take his lieutenant’s test soon. “That’s almost a promotion a year,” says Kinchloe. He says his age isn’t a real problem but that it’s sometimes hard to ask for respect from someone who is older than Firefighter Tim Kinchloe yoi “Instead of telling someone to do something, I ask them,” Kinchloe says. “I never ask anyone to do something that I’m not willing to help them do. If I tell someone the floors need mopping and then grab a mop to help them, it’s not so bad. You have to earn a person’s respect.” Kinchloe says he likes being a fire man. “I like helping people,” he says.“A fireman is a public servant. We have to be available to the public at all times, for any reason.” Each fireman works for 24 hours then he is off for 48. “That’s a third of my life,” Kinch loe says, admitting that it was hard to get used to working so closely with so many different people. “You’ve got to work together,” Kinchloe says. “I was one of those people who said, ‘I did my job and that’s it.’ That’s wrong, it takes team work.” He says when there’s a fire he has to set aside any personal differences with others, and has to leave your personal problems at home. When all the duties are done around the station and it’s after 5 p.m., Kinchloe says things are pretty relaxed. “Sometimes we get a game of bas ketball going or we work out on our new weight machines,” he says. “A lot of times people go off and study or watch t.v. But when the alarm sounds, it’s a different story. When I hear the tone my heart always starts racing. It’s unbelievable; your gears automatically start turning.” As the driver, Kinchloe must get the address of the call and think of the quickest and easiest route there. “One of the greatest dangers is getting to the fire,” Kinchloe says. “You have to worry about people pulling out in front of you or not pulling over. With all the bike riders in this town it’s scarey.” Firefighting is a dangerous occu- NEST IN A TREEHOUSE! If you’ve been nesting in one of the A&M dorms, now could be the time to fly the coop. Treehouse Apartments give you more room than dorm housing while keeping you close to cam pus. Only a block from A&M, Treehouse Apart ments offer all the secur ity and convenience of dorm life. PLUS the extra space, privacy and features you want — including swimming pools, large closets, and outdoor storage areas for bikes and more. Efficiencies, one- and two-bedroom floor- plans are available, many with patios or balco nies. So come home to roost. At Treehouse Apart ments. treehouse apartments Move up in the world 205 Jersey St. West / College Station, TX 77840 / 409/696-5707 CS school trustee resigns By HOLLY ROBINSON Reporter pation but Kinchloe says he doesn’t think of it that way. “It really makes you feel good when everything goes like the book,” Kinchloe says. He says it’s frustrat ing when time goes by and there haven’t been any fires or accidents. “It’s horrible to say something like that,” Kinchloe says, “but it’s hard when you don’t get to do the job you’ve been trained for.” Kinchloe’s blue eyes look away as he remembers the sad stories of the fire that burned a litter of puppies or the smell of a car accident. He says those experiences stay with him and it’s sometimes hard to deal with the disaster and death. “We talk about it,” Kinchloe says. “Maybe a firefighter that has been through bad fires before will see it bothering a new fireman. He’ll go over and say something and talk it over with him. It really helps to get it out. You can’t shoulder it all your self.” His pride shines through as he re calls a story from a few years ago. “We delivered a baby once,” Kinchloe says. “We got a call from a woman in labor. When we got there it was too late to transport her so we delivered it there. The mother sends us pictures of the kid every once in a while.” Now that he is a driver he says he misses fighting fires. At a fire the driver takes care of the truck and the hoses and the pumps. With each fire Kinchloe has been to comes a new story. In a quiet voice he tells of the car wreck that left four family members dead or of the house that almost burned because there wasn’t a water hydrant near. College Station School Board Trustee Mike Fleming resigned Monday. Board President John Rea- gor read a letter from Fleming Mon day night announcing the resigna tion. Fleming is taking a job in Corpus Christi. The board will appoint someone to Fleming’s position until the next elections — in April. A group of parents spoke out about the program for gifted and talented students that began last year. Many felt the program, which provides special classes for gifted students, was not being imple mented. The board agreed to add a reaffirmation of approval for the five-year plan at the next meeting. The board approved the contin uation of the drug prevention pro gram which uses specially trained dogs to find illegal substances in stu dents’ lockers and automobiles. The dogs can find firearms and alcoholic beverages as well as drugs. Using incident reports and input from campus personnel, the admis- tration found that the service re duced the flow of illegal drugs. Securities Associated Interna tional, which provided the dogs in 1983, will be contracted for 288 hours of service for the nine-month school year. A trained drug detec tion dog is available in Brazos County, but the administrators felt the SAI service was superior. The cost of services for the 1984-’85 school year will total $8,004. curriculum and instructioiil mated the cost of the pro v $29,519 to $4 1,000. Owens's ing part-time instructors, iratsl the proposed full-time instgl could reduce the cost rug $20,169 to $27,075. A $5,000 for instruments froo| Arts Council of Brazos Valleio reduce the cost f urther. Re< Vice President Deanna R. Wor- muth added that the health educa tion program at the Junior High School had been successful and would be more beneficial in the long run than drug detection dogs. The board also approved a group employee insurance program that maintains current premiums and coverage for employees, dependents and retirees and increases the bash life insurance from $5,000 to $ 10,000 for each employee. The board tabled a proposed strings program for grades 0-8 be cause of budget restrictions. Dr. Michael Owens, director of The board discussed a sum to begin the school days o«j hour earlier — 8:05 forekiM students and 8:10 for secondn dents. The extra half hourwaJ lease students earlier for exrJ ricular activites and prevail students from missing the! riod of the day. AssistantSJ tendent Donald P. Ney sax schedules might be disrupted^ earlier time. He said somesm would need to be picked upbd a.m. and some problems will loading might occur, butmotti was needed to determine thcl impact. Trustee Joe Templttal the earlier bus routes would! early for kindergarten andt lary school students. Tin Fun Ei ties on a.m. m given a and 3n forms c era Ho lion isf Th Courst certain countc p.m. tc 845-93 H) Apartment market glutted Rents ‘may not declim He also tells stories of practical jokes or embarassing experiences that leave other firemen laughing or adding to it. “Like the time,” Kinchloe says, “when the alarm went off in the mid dle of the night. I jumped out of bed and grabbed the nearest pair of cover-alls. Half-way to the truck I re alized the zipper was broken and half the seat of the pants was miss ing. I had to go to the call like that. I was lucky it wasn’t a real fire. I don’t know what I’d have done.” By Leslie Heffner Reporter If you’re waiting until August to sign an apartment lease because you think the prices will decrease, recon sider. Prices may be as low as they will get. Nancy Ludwig, an adviser at the Off-Campus Housing Center, says apartment complexes cannot afford to drop rates any lower. College Sta tion was glutted with apartments so badly last spring semester that about 1,000 apartments were vacant, she says. According to the state comptrol ler’s office, Bryan-College Station is not the only area glutted with apart ments. “From the staked Plains to the Gulf, from Big Bend to the Piney Woods, apartment occupancy rates are dropping and more complexes are on the way,” says the July issue of Fiscal Notes, a publication of the comptroller’s office. Arthur Wright, a research econo mist at Texas A&M’s Real Estate Re search Center told the Bryan-Col lege Station Eagle last week that the glut affected Bryan-College Station the worst two y^ars ago. “...The mar ket is still pretty soft right now and vacancy rates are about 20 percent during the school year,” he said, “but it’s better than it was.” Wright agrees with Ludwig’s opinion that rental rates are not going to drop because they have al ready dropped substantially. If any thing, Wright told the Eagle, rental rates are expected to rise. Drew King, leasing agent for Wal den Pond Apartments (a complex “It’s going to get worse be fore it gets better, but we will see the rental tales stabilize. ” Ludwig says, but no one elseiM knows what is happening. Shi the area just seems to keepeJ ing. under construction) says people are waiting to sign apartment leases be cause prices usually drop in August. Walden Pond will probably not change its rental rates before Au gust, he says. The report in Fiscal Notes states that rates that do not change are ac tually falling because they do not keep up with inflation rates. It also said that the apartment surplus is the result of the 1981 Economic Re covery Tax Act. The act reduced the amount of time over which a building can be depreciated from a range of 30 to 50 years to 15 years. Another contribution to the over supply of apartments is decreasing occupancy rates. “As the supply of apartments began climbing in 1982, ... occupancy rates began dropping” the report says. Ludwig says that in the Bryan- College Station area apartment oc cupancy rates have decreased be cause enrollment at Texas A&M has a leveled off. The off-campus center, Ludwig says, believes College Station is very much overbuilt. “The town is built for an indus trial setting,” she says. Town investors may know some thing about the growth of the town, Lisa Miinch, a senior marl! major from Orange, says, years ago when I was a fresli and lived in a one bedroom ment, I paid about thesametlu now paying for a two bednx® present apartment is newer, and better than my first one cost me $325 a month.” Ludwig says she knows oh complexes that operatedata3l cent occupancy rate last spring. Wright told the Eagle thai local apartment complexes good management and locatiot still able to reach a 90 to95pei occupancy.” According to the comptroller! port, a recent Texas Aparimeis social ion survey of the 25 apart! associations in Texas, disclosed Victoria, Beaumont, Longviev Killeen look for higher occup rates. Eight towns expect no cl in occupancy rates, while 13 expect a decline. As for the Bryan-College occupancy rates, Ludwig says going to get worse before ilgeii ter, but we will see the rental stabilize.” Shi Educal named Hyden live At “M nary n 150 su Pn holds; atton award' Sh Studei involvi Ol' T1 across Wi was oi tried t Wi Feder broug firstha which began Angel Fo< The comptroller’s report said throughout Texas, building is slowing down and will slower if Congress dec lengthen the building depi period in order to reduce national deficit. i u wy Lni ONE YEAR MEMBERS PLUS s 6 PHOTO I.D. 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