Page 14-Tuesday, August 12, 1980-The Michigan Daily Only PBS expands TV captionng for deaf viewers WASHINGTON (AP) - Six months after its inception, the federally suppor- ted effort to enhance television's value to the deaf has prompted more than 24,000 people to buy the $250 decoders needed to-display otherwise invisible captions on selected shows.. But only the Public Broadcasting Service is expanding its number of such programs, and, among the commercial networks, CBS still has none at all. "I THINK we're on target, but the hearing-impaired community is going Shark. " warning s ale ri N. C swimers OCEAN ISLE BEACH, N.C. (UPI) - Surfers and swimmers ignored war- nings of prowling sharks yesterday to splash in the Atlantic off a vacation beach where a 10-year-old girl was at- tacked. "They don't care," said Ethel Williamson, an employee at a beach pier. "People will stick their foot in a fire to see ifit will burn." MOST VACATIONERS, however, heeded the warning and stayed on the sand. There were no reports of shark sightings yesterday. But during the weekend, hundreds of hungry and prowling sharks were reported near shore in Carteret County, about a hundred miles to the north of Ocean 'Isle Beach. Connell Purvis, director of the State Division of Marine Fisheries, said there have been only two documented cases of shark bitings in North Carolina this summer. Sunday's attack was reported to an estimated 25,000 people crowding the Brunswick County beaches near the North Carolina-South Carolina border. EVERYN, HT Pm"10, WO'OFFCOVER GREATLY REDUCED PRICES ON ALL BEVERAGES " to have to continue showing its sup- port," said Jane Miller, a spokeswoman for the National Cap- tioning Institute (NCI), "It's the old chicken-and-egg problem," she said. "The deaf want to know when more programs will be cap- tioned, while the commercial networks want to know when more people are going to purchase decoders." The captioning program is unique on several fronts, including the level of cooperation among ABC, NBC, and PBS and a commitment by Sears, Roebuck and Co. to sell the decoders at cost - currently $249.95. NCI IS a non-profit organization founded last year with seed money from the federal government. It is ex- pected to become self-supporting through the fees it charges for cap- tioning and encoding TV programs. That process employs the use of new technology which allows users of the decoders to see the, captions without irritating other viewers who don't want words dancing across their TV screen. The key to the system is the use of a small portion of the standard TV signal. Television pictures are made up of lines, some of which are blank. The new system uses one of the blank lines to transmit captions. WHEN ABC, NBC, and PBS broad- cast their first closed-captioned programs in March, not a single decoder had been delivered by Sears. Now, according to Miller, there are more than 24,000 decoders in use. When the program started, the three participating networks were offering a combined total of 14 hours of captioned programming each week. NBC and ABC haven't changed their totals of five hours apiece, but PBS will have raised its total to 111%2 hours each week by the end of September. Sears, meantime, has just begun of- fering a color TV set with a built-in decoder for $519.95. The company also has agreed to begin selling individual decoders through its stores instead of just its catalog. AND NCI HAS received unexpected support from various corporations like Procter & Gamble, AT&T, IBM, and Polaroid that want to caption their commercials. Problems remain, however. NCI's federal grant will run out in 1982, by which time it must be cap- tioning enough programs and cbmmer- cials to be self-sustaining. ABC and NBC have not decided when, or by how much, they will increase the number of programs which they cap- tion. a "- AP Photo Miniscule minister Twelve-year-old Thomas Schillinger of Moline, Illinois was ordained a minister Sunday in services at Calvary's Faith Climber Church. Schillinger, who says he dislikes disco and rock music because both lead to adultery, feels his young age is not a deterrant in his profession because he has been called by God to serve. Striking AATA employees to return to work today 4 (Continued fromPage 1) within 48 hours of when the strikers return to work. AATA Executive Director Richard Simonetta said the Board is -confused about what the employees want. "Their expectation level is high, and that's OK. But when they keep changing their minds over what they're asking for, it gets confusing." Simonetta used wage rates to illustrate his point. "We thought that the wage issue was settled. But now that the weekend is over, they raised the wage issue again," he said in an in- terview yesterday evening after a day of discussion with TEU management. "THE BOARD has a strong belief that they (TEU members) don't want a negotiated settlement," he added. The July 25th contract proposed by AATA includes a 29 per cent wage in- crease over the next three years. The employees' decision to return to work came on the heels of a Sunday night meeting at which employees. rejected the contract proposed by AATA after around-the-clock bargaining over the weekend. At that meeting, however, Kevorkian made phone calls to Simonetta and Board Chairman Cecil Ursprung, and the Board decided to allow for one more day of "explaining" the new proposal. "Kevorkian said he needed time to sell the package," explained Simonet- ta- If the employees had voted not to go back to work, they would have either had to resign or face being fired by the AATA, according to Simonetta. "Those were my orders from the Board," he said. Employees present at yesterday's meeting mentioned lax safety standar- ds of the AATA as one reason for dissatisfaction. "It's the riders who get hurt in this case," said one union mem- ber. "Right now, if drivers are given a vehicle that is unsafe, they cannot reject it or demand repairs be made. Who loses out then? The rider," he said. I I 4