II E' f-l mm national Battalion/Page September 29,198! Officials vow mill will open United Press LatematicnaS ST. FRANCISVILLE, La. — Crown Zcllerbach officials vow to push a huge paper mill back into production despite a crip pling walkout by /50 union members concerned about job security. Monday’s walkout idled all , but 100 of the plant’s 850 work ers. However, Crown Zellerbach officials hope to use salaried workers to reopen the plant, which is capable of producing 850 tons of paper daily. “Our immediate short-term plans are to operate the mill with salaried personnel,’’spokesman Laurin Baker said. “We have competitors sitting out there just waiting to take our orders. We don’t intend to let that happen.” He said the mill, which pri marily produced slick paper used by magazines, would be back in operation this week. TRADITIONS COUNCIL GENERAL MEETING C. H. RANSDELL. Dean Emeritus of the College of Engineering 66 The Pursuit of Aggie Ideals through Traditions’ #510 Rudder 7:30 p.m. THURSDAY, SEPT. 30 Eve?~yo?ie Welcome! *Catch the Spirit!* um cha photo by Karen Gita 1 Training to win Johnny Heldenfels, from Corpus Christi, and the rest of the Aggie swim team are training twice a day for the upcoming season. Heldenfels is i sophomore civil engineering major. SAFEWAY (S) wnW*: Solon ‘surprised at sit-in arrest THOMPSON ISAVE J5$$' SiilUSS 6RAPESI FRESH ICGRNl how you con save on rn&sh produce this week at your Safeway — Fresh fruits and ve^etab/es,.. fiiied with deticious goodness. Especially selected by our field buyers and rushed to you to insure the freshness that you have known front Safeway! Conte see. Shop and SA VES ft's the pick of the crop! TOP O AWE $$$! From Fiorislis 101 . Lb. lycciim ISOliASH ■ yj United Press International AFTON, N.C. — Rep. Walter Fauntroy says he was surprised police arrested him with 113 other people attempting to stop state dump trucks from hauling PCB-contaminated dirt to a landfill. Led by Fauntroy and the Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, about 500 demon strators marched Monday from a church to the landfill’s access road. Some of them sat down to block a truck loaded with the dirt. Highway patrolmen moved in and began making arrests, taking the protesters to waiting prison buses. “I told them being a member of Congress, en route, and as a member of the House in ses sion,” it was illegal for them to arrest him, Fauntroy said. Faun troy is from the District of Col umbia and is chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus. “I was surprised,” he said af ter posting $200 bond on charges of impeding traffic and resisting arrest. A spokesman from the Dt partment of Crime Control an Public Safety said, “It is hardfc us to understand whathe.ife route to Congress, is doingt his knees in front of a dun; truck in North Carolina." The 114 arrests Mond; brought to 391 the number* people arrested since the truck began rolling Sept. 15. More demonstrations were scheduled for Tuesday. Residents and civil-right leaders claim the landfill poses health hazard and is located is Warren County because dt area is pi edominantiy black The PCBs, or polychlorinateS biphenyls, which havebeenlink ed to cancer in laboratory an® als, were illegally dumped alon; 210 miles of North Carol® 1 highways in 1978. Pa i ma The state has removed mon than half of the contaminate: soil from roadsides and expec the operation to continue forah out three more weeks. Gov. James B. Hunt Jr. said Warren County is the site for the landfill. REV HOf PRICE.!, ©antes* Ei-ash! ©reehM ■ONIOMS oft RADISHES SAVE $$$! Fresh! By the Bunch SJ ■BARTLETT PEARS IpickI OF THE LCROPI Alleged killer tried to get mental help mmiu KPKRSl ifetiCliiiBERS Serving Suggestion WILKES-BARRE Pa. — A suicidal prison guard held in the slayings of 13 people sought help at a mental health unit eight days before the killings but was not institutionalized because he did not qualify as homicidal, officials say. John Creek, executive dire ctor of the Luzerne County Mental Health-Mental Retarda tion unit, said Monday George Banks went through an initial interview Sept. 17 and had been scheduled for an appointment Tuesday. SAVE $$$! 8* YELLOW I ONIONS ■russet! POTATOES PICK Of THE CROP! MUSHROOMS u»< II.S. Vto. 1 5 Lb. ..Bug J Gil I Rkfi Banks, 40, who served a seven-year term at Graterford state prison in the 1960s for armeci robbery, was in relative isolation and under suicide watch Tuesday at the Luzerne County Prison, said a source who asked not to be identified. Creek said the mental health center could not commit Banks to an institution involuntarily because he did not meet the leg al criteria of overtly suicidal or homicidal. Armed with an AR-15 auto matic weapon, Banks is charge with shooting four people mobile home in Jenkins To»t ship Saturday and nine more and near his home in Wilb Barre, police said. The vie® 1 included four of his girlfrfe- and five children he fathered' them. The state prison at Camp ft near Harrisburg referred Bart to the mental health center: Wilkes-Barre Sept. 6 after" threatened suicide while ondi* as a watchtower guard, $ Bureau of Correction spofe man Kenneth Robinson. Robinson said other guar* talked Banks out of his to* 5 and Banks was immediatelyp on leave. A source said Banks had f» len into a severe depression ar* threatened to kill a guard, i “One more body won’t nuk ; any difference,” the so# quoted Banks as saying. The Philadelphia Inqi# Tuesday reported Gov. Mt# Shapp commuted Banks' rot bery sentence in 1974, reduce his parole period by 20 month 5 C ? er 0 das sufi lem whi plea nea har as t faih wor atte unc opti of e of froi clos ove blui stur stuc Garden^ Fresh! ®C©PrWGHT 5982, SAFEWAY STORii JMC. OUANTiTT RIOHiS SESifiVt©. THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THRU SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 30 - OCTOBER 3, 1982 AT YOUR BRYAN/C.S. SAFEWAY STORE OWlYi USDA FOOD STAMP ACCEPTED! I A small space in the right place makes... A BIG SALE! The Battalion Classifieds 845-2611 % % i t % % % % §