nted + U|||. room apart. I 9(21 *+^1 Wilt room i t 4 “foi 3l( (6 ■ old, Wen, feesIPat. 1-7010 i| IB gold t iwum )om Csrlet Bryan it de at Ad» Square SB- 5 IB ) apaitmrt disWask: Kellie, SB CE loll nge inday hru urdaf 2-9 lerviceRl'l i»i lates Fai r ent Local / National Cool temperatures a month away THE BATTALION MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1981 Paged?. Warm spell will stay awhile to honor Ryman ■ ^ A homecoming celebration First runner-up was Miss Three Mile pushes ads, then springs new leak United Press International HARRISBURG — The oper ator of the Three Mile Island nuc lear power station is pushing hard for public acceptance of its plan to : restart one of its nuclear reactors i this year. In four separate television ads, f General Public Utilities empha- | sizes it has “a new management | team” since the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island 2V2 years ago, and that the team can operate the i plant safely. But even as General Public Uti- 5 lilies Corp. pushed its television I advertising campaign, a new leak spilled contaminated water inside , the reactor building that was the ■ site of America’s worst nuclear l accident. Technicians baited a leak of wa- ; terSatuday from the damaged No. 2 reactor. Lake Barrett, senior NRC official at the site, said no radiation was released into the environment. Barrett said about 500 gallons of | water spilled onto the reactor floor between 5 p.m. Friday and 4:24 a.m. Saturday when the leak was brought under control. Officials then canceled plans for an entry into the contaminated reactor building. The Atomic Safety and Licens- 5 ing Board has conducted a year of hearings into the proposal to re- f start nuclear reactor Unit No. 1, twin of the Unit No. 2 involved in I the 1979 nuclear accident. | General Public Utilities prop osed that Unit No. 1 be reopened 1 this fall. It was shut after the acci- , dent at its twin by order of the ! Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The ads, which began during the Labor Day weekend and will continue through September, cost $55,000 to produce and air, utility spokesman John Fidler said. ! ‘ The reason we did it was to let people, specifically people around TMI, know about the tremendous amount of study and research that S is going on before restart,” Fidler said. “We are aware people are con cerned about safety,” he said. “That’s the big issue. That’s why we are emphasizing safety in the spots. ” He said the ads, one which fea tures radiologist Jon Shoup assur ing residents the plant can be op erated safely, were aired in Har risburg, Lancaster, Reading, York and Lebanon. Although the government has not decided whether to grant per mission to operate Unit No. 1, the ads contain the statement “When the government approves restart, we ll be ready to provide electric ity dependably and reliably. ” Fidler said the company did not intend to suggest it believed gov ernment approval of a restart proposal was beyond question. He said the company wanted to con vey the message it was prepared should permission be granted. The licensing board is expected to make its recommendation on a restart to the NRC in November. It is expected the NRC would rule by the end of the year. The ads note 1,400 employees have been working to clean un the radioactive waste left by the nuc lear accident at Unit No- 2 and that 100,000 pages of evidence were collected in government hearings on the proposed restart. “In fact,” the ads say, “TMI has been studied more thoroughly than any other nuclear plant in the country.” A spokesman for the Three Mile Island Public Interest Resource Center, an antinuclear organiza tion, said it considered the ads a waste of money. ^ Cfisp VIhMS 1/ £ l/RKg FcR ViuR t-jL si£ bp. &Reeg LE-r-re-f^ 1<£> 1 F •5©“RoRiTy OR. 7 vre colors i ) c\^ck oil ZLvJeetL veu^ety V.b.’Bcn: lose 2>aw-as,tj: ART SHOPPE • Custom Framing (Including Diplomas) • Posters and Prints Perfect for Decorating • Art Supplies and Lessons • Prints Perfect for Gift Giving: • Windberg • Charles Beckendorf • Carol Gibson Sayle • Large Selection of Wildlife Prints • Larry Dykes • George Boutwell By LAURA WILLIAMS Battalion Reporter Bryan-College Station resi dents will have to endure humid ity and temperatures in the high 80s at least until October, the Na tional Weather Service in Hous ton said Thursday. Local residents should be feel ing cooler temperatures — with highs in the mid-80s and lows in the low 60s — by October 6. The weather service said these are nor mal fall temperatures for the area. June, July and August in the Brazos Valley saw average high temperatures in the low 90s. Last summer’s average high was 97 de grees. “The high humidity may have made some people more uncom fortable this summer, but last year was much hotter and much dryer,” Texas A&M climatologist Bob Strauss said. The Bryan-College Station area received more rain this summer than last summer, despite a 27- day drought in early August. “It’s hard to understand that we can have such a wet year even with that terrible drought we had in August,” Strauss said. He pointed out that by August the local area had already received 29.14 inches of rain, 0.12 inches more than the 29.02 inches that fell last year. County Extension Agent Tom Sistrunk said that although har vesting of crops has been delayed due to long rain periods, this sum mer was much better to farmers in Brazos County than last summer. Sistrunk said last summer’s heat damaged many crops beyond the point of recovery. Winter, however, will prob ably be relatively mild. Bryan and College Station usually average a wintertime low of 41 degrees. On those same days temperatures often reach a high of 61 degrees. Snowfalls don’t come often to Bra zos County. Having enough snow to play in isn’t likely, Strauss said. “We ha ven’t had a ‘miserable snow’ since ’73,” he said. Bryan and College Station re ceived eight inches of snow that year. Strauss said that although Texas A&M students got excited about the snow that fell on campus the day before Thanksgiving this past year, the weather station'recorded only a trace of snow. A homecoming celebration for Miss Texas Sheri Ryman has been scheduled for Oct. 30 and 31 by the Memorial Student Center Hospitality Committee, the sponsors of the Miss Texas A&M Scholarship Pageant. Ryman, formerly Miss Texas A&M University, Saturday was named fourth runner-up in the 1982 Miss America Pageant. Elizabeth Ward, represent ing Arkansas, was named Miss America at the conclusion of the televised pageant. Ward will receive a $20,000 scholarship; Ryman will receive a $5,000 scholarship for her fifth-place finish. First runner-up was Miss Illinois, Sandra Truitt; second runner-up was Miss Georgia, " Kristi Anne Evans and Miss In diana, Pamela Carlberg was the.', third runner-up. During last week’s prelimi-„ naries, Ryman won the talent See related editorial page 2. competition and a $2,500 scho-' larship by performing a gym- nastics-jazz routine to the mo tion picture theme “Close En counters of the Third Kind” — the same routine she performed in the Miss Texas Pageant. • I iiaixiifp Solid in a Rainbow of Colors! $16-$17.50 Boys Sizes 14-20 :: 17.1: :: : : :::ViSmrnm^mmm.®1P ? piiiSii*.: ;;K : ■ rti Christian Fellowship vE* cAnrejzBuuv house cptscopAi, sruOenr cenrejz would like to welcome you to our Wednesday ELvening (5-30) Elucharist and Supper other activities available are-— Friday morning (6-30) ElucKarist and breakfast Evening Prayer Bible studies Life Small Qroup (small sharing groups) prayer partners student center chapel (St, Jude’s) open 2.H hours study space and XV room open until 11 pm daily 002. jersey sr. across ppom rhe eonpiRc sire 696-0774 op 696-1726 enem efficient nome?i Boys-Size (Offer good through - "-V/. ' v W * A V- * V*** ^ / ' ' ■I DISTINCTIVE-- i Drive East —• VISA — American •• 3-089C ,<2.01 \ V-- S. College 10% Student Discount on Art Supplies 822-5130 N' Ay m MoneyStore offers no service charge checking with a $250 balance. Every dollar earns 5V4% — regardless of balance. MoneyStore is unlike any other checking account You can use MoneyStore 3 ways and there is no cost (if you maintain a $250 minimum balance each month). Write checks. Or call us and we ll pay your bills for you. Or authorize us to pay your reoccuring bills auto matically. There is no transaction charge no matter how you use MoneyStore. Every dollar earns the maximum interest permitted by law. regardless of balance. Withdraw cash from any of our Central Texas offices or drive thru lanes. With the MoneyStore Photo Card, there's no waiting for signature verification. Its easy to open a MoneyStore account. And well pay you while you use it. BRAZOS Savings Main Office; 2800 Texas Avenue Bryan College Station: Texas Ave. at Southwest Parkway / 696-2800 : i •i* Hi