Newspaper Page Text
10-B
. . . . . The Summerville News, Thursday, May 29, 1986
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The Summerville-Trion Optimist Club
recently bought two car seats which were
donated to be used by needy families in
Chattooga County. The car seat program
isa pr(’)l!'ect of the Georgia Extension Ser
vice. The service stresses all young
Car Seats Help With
Misbehavior Problems
Beginning with the first
ride home from the hospital,
children spend a lot of time in
cars. That time can be en
%oyable and safe for the whole
amily, if parents help their
children develop safe riding
habits.
Parents often spend much
of the time while they are driv
i!llugl trying to keep their
children contented and still.
One study showed that
children who are not buckled
up often crawl around in their
seats, stand up, complain, get
into fights, and play with the
dashboard controls. In con
trast, this study demonstrated
that children who were buckl
ed into car safety systems
demonstrated 95 percent fewer
incidents of misbehavior.
Children are more likely to
sleep and look around quietly
when in car seats because they
PENNVILLE
CHRISTIAN
MISSIONARY
ALLIANCE
CHURCH
HIGHWAY 27 NORTH
» ! \ %:‘ -
DANIEL E. TANNER
Pastor
R S RO S
Sunday School ...9:50a.m.
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship . .7:00 p.m.
Wednesday ......7:00p.m.
“‘3")( 7‘ E G‘“‘j\
° 7 C ENLAR
5 \
*.“', N . r
(= & 5195
7{/:\' A & VALUE!
~" . S
(| P om e
. % L/ 1-HR. DEVELOPING & PRINTING
T ) Vis
Get a full-color, 5’ x 7" enlarge- a
ment FREE with each roll of 135
size film you bring in for high-quality
on-site 1-Hour Developing & Printing Of Your Graduation
‘ MAY NOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER SP_E_C‘IA!. OF_FER. :
OFFER EXPIRES 6/30/86
Valid only at
PHOTO WORLD
31 N. Commerce St. 867-3221 1-HOUR
Mon.—Fri. 9-6-Bat. 10-6 PHOTO
Donate Car Seats
children be in car seats. Shown are left to
right, Optimist member, Dr. Wilber
Bishop; Priscilla Hammond of the
Georg;a Extension Service and Optimist
member, Lee Hamby.
feel comfortable and safe.
Control of the child’'s
behavior can make driving
safer in addition to makih?lg the
time more %leasant. Children
who are not buckled up may be
able to open the door of a mov-
Lndg car and fall out. Unrestrain
children also can pull at the
steering wheel or distract the
driver. When children are
buckled up properly, their
parents spend less time
scolding them and have more
time to think about the road.
The children themselves
benefit from ndmgbn: car seats,
too. Car seats can be very com
fortable, making them a good
place to sleep. In addition, car
seats and booster seats place
children in a riding position
that allows them to see out the
windows without standinil:p
and crawlinf around. Looking
out the windows is much more
interestinf than looking at
door panels or the dashboard.
Another major benefit for
children is that car seats limit
the amount of mischief
Darden Supports
Belt-Tightening
Seventh District Con
sressman George ‘‘Buddy”
arden says he supports pro
posals to terminate certain
military research and develop
ment and procurement e?m
grams — im:ludin%l develop
ment of the C-17 airlifter — In
order to protect funding for
vital readiness programs.
*“lt is obvious that military
budgets for the next several
Bears will be tight,” said
arden, a member of the
Readiness and Research and
Develo&ment subcommittees
of the House Armed Services
Commitee. ‘“We need to put
our limited resources where
they are most needed — to
keep our trooaßs well-equipped
for the small-scale, conven
tional conflicts which are the
greatest threat to peace over
the next few years.”
Darden praised Armed Ser
children can get into in the car.
Car seats help children to
behave appropriately, making
interactions with their parents
more positive. Positive interac
tions with parents help
children to feel good about
themselves, which makes time
sgent in the car pleasant for
the whole family.
Of course, the most impor
tant reason for using a car safe
ty system is safety.
Automobile accidents are tfi'e
number one preventable cause
of death in American children.
Each year 1,500 children under
the t&ge of five are killed in auto
accidents and 60,000 more are
irfl'ure'd. It is estimated that if
all children rode properly
restrained, the number of an
nual deaths of children under
five would drop from 1,500 to
150 and the number of injuries
from 60,000 to 1,800. A child
riding unrestrained in a car is
14 times more likely to be kill
ed in a crash than a child who
is secured in a safety device.
vices Committee Chairman Les
Aspin’'s suggestion that the
C-17 program be scrapped to
preserve Pentagon funds for
Zeadiness. “The C-17 will cost
merican taxpayers approx
imafii' S4O bilEon if the pfanes
actually are built — yet those
aircraft would represent no
technological improvement
over our existix:f airlifter
fleet,” Darden said.
“I heartily agree with
Chairman Aspin that, if budget
cuts are inevitable, the reduc
tions should come in areas
where our basic defense
capability would not be af
fected for five or 10 years,”
Darden said. ‘‘We must apply
the money available now to
protecting our near-term
capability.”
A House-Senate conference
committee soon will begin
working on a compromise
federal budget for fiscal 1987.
The House budget version calls
for $285 billion in defense ex
penditures, while the Senate
aprroved $3Ol billion for
defense. President Reagan, in
a budft rejected outright by
both houses, called for a
$320-billion military budget.
This year's Pentagon
budget authorihy is approx
imately $287 billion,
Darden noted that the
Heritage Foundation, in a
report issued last Februlrf'.
said the United States could
save S2O billion by halting C-17
development, retainins ex
isting C-130 and C-141
airlifters (which under current
?lans would be scn:rged in
avor of the C-17s) and buying
50 additional C-sßs to aug
ment the airlifter fleet.
The Conireuionnl Budg:t
Office also had included the
C-17 on a list of projects which
could be prime candidates for
elimination under a tight
defense budget. The CBO said
in a March report that the ex
iutinfi:irlmer fleet is sufficient
for the conflicts most likely to
be faced by the United States.
Grigsby
Reunion Set
The annual Grigsby family
reunion will be held at the
LaFayette Park Sunday, June
1. This is for all the descen
dants of John and Elender
Grilgaby. Lunch will be spread
at 1 o'clock.
FR E E ' SELFfPROPELLED
' s LAWN BOY MOWER
To Be Given Away Saturday, May 31 At 2 p.m.
DURING REMOTE BROADCAST NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO REGISTER ‘
ON WSAF * You Do Not Have to Be Present to Win
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