Parkway Medical Clinic 2604A South Texas Avenue 693-0202 or 693-0204 Open Seven Days a Week-No Appointment Necessary General Medical Care, Minor Emergencies, Immunizations, Laboratory and X-Ray Facilities 20% Discount to TAMU Students! Page 6BAThe Battalion/Friday, August 31,1984 1794 survival tactics taught United Press International Survival instructor Paul Risk tea ches today’s adults tasks that were fundmental to life two centuries ago — and could save their lives even Texas A&M Corps of Cadets Company V1 (off campus outfit) • Veterans • Married Students • Local High School Graduates The Only Coed Outfit! contact: Raul 846-6860 Maj. Huff 845-2216 c lfie c W&rd is getting around... CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST A weekly meeting designed to help Christians learn how to experience a more abundant Christian life and learn how to communicate their faith to others effectively. MEETS Friday, 7 p.m. Rudder Tower - Room 701 •Help spread *W&rd now. “If Daniel Boone came back today and found out adults are in the field learning to build tires and make shelters, he’d wonder how they sur vived long enough to be adults,” said Risk, Pennsylvania State University associate professor of recreation and parks. “We’ve bred a whole genera tion of people who don’t even know how to build a fire. “I’m teaching the basics of life in, say, 1784.” Risk, a former park ranger and former member of a mountain res cue team, tries to minimize risk for people who are lost or face emergen cies in the wild. He has been teaching college courses, including one on global wil derness survival, and holds public survival seminars. He also helped tape a simulated survival attempt by plane crash victims, for broadcast on the Pennsylvania public television program “Outdoor Pennsylvania.” His 340-page textbook, “Outdoor Safety and Survival,” is in many bookstores throughout the country. The seminars held by Risk and his firm. Survival Technology Asso ciates — with help from state and lo cal authorities throughout the na tion — are attended by teenagers to sexagenarians. He will leave his less lucrative university post in July. Some of the seminars are funda mental day-long courses on survival or outdoor safety. Some advanced two-week seminars include field trips. He also offers courses on com munication techniques and urban safety, including how to deal with an attacker. techniques anu camping is mat one is voluntary and other is necessary. Risk stresses psychological aspects of survival — on his stationery is printed “Survival is an attitude” — and he said the wise person remains calm and knows what to do next be cause of preparation. The most basic survival tools are a whistle, matches and knife — for use, respectively, in signaling, start ing fires and as an all-purpose tool. Risk said. Other survival items to have in car or camper, particularly when travel ing in wilderness areas, include wa ter, shovel, blanket, reflector, flare, aerosol horn, spray paint, tool kit, fiasnlij Risk, 47, of College Park, Pa., said in an interview if people know na ture and prepare for emergencies, they will not be too scared of the wild to f unction nor will they take its dan gers too lightly. He estimated that several thou sand people in this country per year go through a survival experience, which he defines as any delay or dis orientation in the wilderness. The only difference between survival first-aid kit and flashlight. The five keys to survival are fire, shelter, signals, water and food. He called food least important be cause the average person can survive 30 to 50 days without it and rescue often comes before food is nec essary. But water is needed within four days. Risk said it is wise to notify some one of your travel plans, ana to stay put when lost, because rescuers look where you are most likely to be. And when most people unfamiliar with the wilderness start moving, they just go around in circles. He recommends staying in place, establishing a camp and starting a fire — even in summer. He said making a fire occupies the hands and provides a psychological boost. Next, obtain shelter from the el ements — heat, cold, rain, wind. “If your car has broken down,this may mean dismantling your vehicle for insulation,” he said. Theuphok- tery and filler can help keep you warm. The hood could help forma lean-to. It is important to establish contaa, perhaps with people searching for you, by making yourself as visibleas possible. You could spray paint an)i — the international distress signal- on the car’s roof. The spare tire could he burned as a signal fire. If you haven’t brought water,he advises using a purifying kit on any water you find. But if you have no kit, drink the water anyway. “It’s no choice between being sick of giardiasis or dead of dehydra tion,” Risk said. Oklahoma, Alaska races will be close United Press International Early signs of a heated contest between former U.S. Attorney Frank Keating and Rep. Jim Jones, D-Okla., surfaced Wednes day when Jones, targeted for de feat by national Republicans, challenged his new opponent to debate. The national Republican cam paign committee Wednesday called Jones’ action “unprece dented,” saying it showed Jones was scared of his opponent. Keating, a conservative, re signed as U.S. attorney to run in the Republican primary Tuesday and won the right to take on Jones, the House Budget Com mittee chairman. Jones was unop posed in the Democratic primary. “We expect Keating to be the next congressman of the 1st Dis trict in Oklahoma,” said Steve Loiterer, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressio nal Committee in Washington D.C. “The Jones campaign has been running scared for some time, with good reason,” he said. “It is unprecedented for an incumbent to sit glued to the television so he can pick up the phone and chal lenge his opponent to a debate.” “How sweet it is,” Keating said after his win over consultant Tom Cantrell. “Now we switch into third gear.” Jones, who is considered vul nerable because of his frequent opposition to President Reagan on budget issues, challenged Keating late Tuesday to a debate adde but added he may “have to force Keating to stay with the issues.” Keating has agreed to debate. The race highlighted primary action in Oklahoma and Alaska. In the Oklahoma race for the Senate, Democratic incumbent David Boren piled up 90 percent of the vote over political un known Marshall Fuse to win re nomination for a second term. Republicans George Moth- ershed, an oilman and attorney, and management instructor Will Crozier will meet in a runoff Sept. 18 to determine Boren’s op ponent in November. In Alaska, Republican Sen. Ted Stevens ran unopposed in the primary and claimed more than two-thirds of the vote. He said his strong primary showing may help him in a bid to be Sen ate Republican leader. “It helps you a lot to have that kind of support in your home state,” Stevens said. The Democratic winner, for mer Alaska Attorney General John Havelock, received about 20 percent of the vote and easily beat four other Democratic hopefuls. In the primary race for Alas ka’s one seat in the House, Rep. Don Young, who also ran unop posed on the Republican ticket, garnered about half the vote. Movies: how they relate to politics United Press International WASHINGTON — Whenever protesters greet the president at a campaign stop, you can count on hearing “Reagan, Reagan, he’s no good; send him back to Hollywood.” What they fail to understand is how deeply entwined the movie in dustry is with modern politics. Reagan, who played down his Hollywood background early in his political career, is now recalling it with gusto, exhorting U.S. olympi ans to “do it for the Gipper.” (He had the gall to say that on the cam pus of the University of Southern California, the school beaten by Notre Dame in the game that was won for the Gipper.) With politicians belatedly recog nizing what Reagan knew a long time ago, that acting skills are nec essary not only for campaigning but for governing, it was no surprise that Democrat John Glenn pinned his hopes on last fall’s release of the movie “The Right Stuff,” invoking nostalgia for the bygone patriotism of the Kennedy presidency. Glenn, of course, posed as a true- life hero, in contrast to Reagan’s cel luloid roles, and although he and the movie failed at the box office, Holly wood found it was on the right track — chauvinism was in. “The Right Stuff was followed by “Uncommon Valor” and the newly released “Red Dawn,” both movies appealing to the political right. Two of this summer’s biggest movie hits have been appropriated by Reagan supporters. Republica At the GOP convention, Kepublican youth as sumed the identity of “Fritzbusters," a takeoff on “Ghostbusters," in which a quartet of brash con men, fighting City Hall and the federal government all the way, rid Manhat tan of an unearthly menace. And a magazine columnist has gone so far as to declare Reagan no less than the 1980s incarnation of Indiana Jones. Vice President George Bush has called the site of the Democrats’ convention “The Temple of Doom.” Where does this leave poor Walter Mondale? Say what you will about Mondale, he just is not the dynamic man of ac tion celebrated in so many modern movies. Except one. The runaway hit of late summer portrays the angst known by almost everyone in high school and college. The kids who wore unstylishly short hair, unstylishly white shirts and white socks ana unstylishly studied hard, bullied all the way by jocks and bimbos. If ever there was a movie for the beleaguered Mondale campaign start identifying with it is “Revenge of the Nerds.” Laugh at the nerds of this world if you will, but when they seek their revenge and justice triumphs, as always does in Hollywood, it is based on the one undeniable truth of this world — there are more nerds than golden boys. WASH FREE* & Look us Over! YOUR LOCAL FULL SERVICE LAUNDRY Fully Air Conditioned! »SMHn SBISA Basement In-to Fz?uz?in Mes- Th^- Unpbrcrounp A TA6T& T-Re^A-t' so/ QocC’ I < ‘5houu 7 | U-^S-AU llNCeRGROUNP Pen 4 Of»e.n Mon - Fri Undefscrounp Snacks* Gam£5 O PtN Mon — Fm -I* 30 AM - io- bo AM Lunch QAMtS - -|'*OAM-|o*JOPrl SHPCKS-H’Ooam-io'Oopt'i SUNPAY I0'30 AM - l'A*PT1 A'OO PM-to-.OOf’M OllALITYFiRStI Wash-Dry 8c Fold/7 Days/Wk Attendants on Duty 8:OOAM-10:00PM Dry Cleaning Pick-up 7 Days/Wk, 8AM-9PM 55 Washers 8c 27 Big Double Load Dryers Double Load Washers Huge 35 lb. Washers (Good tor blankets, sleeping bags, etc) TIRED WE HAVE THE FORMULA TO MAKE YOU THOUSANDS! Two Convenient Locations: 3702 S. College Ave. 846-2872 3529 Old Hearne Rd. 823-5330 Call Toll Free 1-800- 468-3788 III I < M m spcii Inc. of N.Y, FREE WASH tiunlS I V T^1AUNDRY I FREE WASH ‘NOTHING TO BUY... JUST PRESENT THIS COUPON TO ATTENDANT WHEN READY TO WASH Good only 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Limit one washer per customer per day Offer expires Sept. 16, 1984 We Didn't Invent the Sports Service... WE PERFECTED IT! Can you imagine a system that will win at least 65% of the time? Our Star-rated System is guaranteed to win 65% of the time or better! IN NEW YORK AND HAWAII CALL: (516) 783-1177 MAIL ADDRESS: PO Box 431, E. Meadow, NY 11554 W/U: Hicksville, NY 1 SE has s< chiati tal - soap mask Th beliei ter is when woun can h life w Faye- to rek Fa) cartot to ex] cartot easier with t "Sc press pie k< that | feelin as thn For with Faye-1 F I- HE tempe an an fighte tain sc ready timbei Monta Of and v the bl has be fightei ago ai Lake( Whi jor rai ner of planes retard the lin jor fir other since tl Gre: topou Hill Fi of the of the in thi threatc “Th said Pj office, standir dant i threate Hon the cer so lucl state’s acre H lings.