shop Dillard’s monday thru Saturday 10-9; post oak mall, college station DILLARD'S WELCOMES THE AMERICAN EXPRESS" CARD Thursday, February 23,1984/The Battalion/Page 11 ^"'Drawings at plant may have been ‘fixed’ [ United Press International ^ooe l F0RT WORTH — The ^ Atomic Safety and Licensing j Board has suspended further m the %R CU ssion of record keeping at pedal Eveir.|{j le Comanche Peak nuclear ( Hope power plant until officials at the will arrivtr pi ant coni pi et e an internal in- ame betwdvestigation of the matter. ■ t Eachncl p e ter Bloch, chairman of the 'll benef three-member panel, said e accepiedi Wednesday tfte Nuclear Regu- nlOa.in.lp ||ory Commission, the ASLB’s 'parent agency, might also, how- r for the So | e ver, examine implications that a.alG.K construction drawings given an irumisSS independent consultant may |ve been cosmetically tailored. Bloch said the board would ailable, continue discussing other sub jects affecting the plant at its week-long hearing on progress at the plant, which is being built to supply electricity to the Dal- las-Fort Worth area. The Comanche Peak plant, near Glen Rose in Somervell County, has been overwhelmed with difficulties since construc tion started. Texas Utilities Generating Company, a corsor- tium of six utilities owning the plant, intends it to supply power to the Dallas-Fort Worth area. The most recent problem centers around whether an in dependent consultant looking into the plant’s record system, Cygna Energy Services of San Francisco, was given doctored information. , In an affidavit presented to the ASLB last week, Dobie Hat ley, former records supervisor at the plant, swore her supervi sor handed her a list of 32 docu ments on Oct. 24, 1983, that consultant Nancy H. Williams would be checking the next day and told her to make sure they were “all right.” On her attorneys’ advice, Hatley, who was fired from the plant Feb. 7, withdrew the affi davit, but not before her allega tions were espoused by a anti nuclear consumer group, the Citizens Association for Sound Energy. The group argued that the lead time provided gave the plant a chance to present the re- ? |uested information in the most avorable light, thus invalidat ing the consulting firm’s conclu sions. Such advance notice is rou tine, Williams said, and usually does not result in tainted data. However, she said hints of re cord tampering cause her now to question her favorable con clusion that the plant’s records were accurate and complete. The utility had hired Cygna for $500,000 to determine if its re cord system was adequate. The NRC sets high standards for re cord keeping at nuclear power plants because of public safety issues involved. Hutchison admitted to the li censing panel that he gave Hat ley the list of drawings, re quested a computer list of associated design changes and asked her to see they were in or der. He denied he wanted a whitewash. “I told her Cygna would be in the next day to make sure we were OK, to make sure every thing’s working,” he said. SUMMER IN THE ROCKIES Employment Opportunities available for college students in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado for the summer months through Labor Day in the areas of: Retail Sales • Food Service • Accounting Especially interested applicants with travel/tourism, hotel/restaurant interest. Write or call Audrey Hill immedi ately for more information. Rocky Mountain Park Company 3801 E. Florida Avenue., Suite #400 Denver, CO 80210 (3030 759-0598 An Equaf Opportunity Employer recently nl -st Bank ml] will give and fmanail d mission in alexasrai nking.Apd lent, Blocle il Aid Oft eologist says oil may be under hills United Press International LITTLE ROCK — An Ar- nsas geologist has sparked a fold rush of gossip about specu- ition that rich oil deposits might lie deep beneath the sce nic sprawl of the Ouachita Mountains. Ijohn Gray, an independent Bth 36 years of experience in ■ exploration, is spreading the nurse ! wor(1 ‘ n speeches to scattered QUiSe civic groups around the state. ■ The geologist said his office a defensin In El Dorado is swamped with March2r ‘about 75 telephone calls a day. ifficviolaiittl “Obviously, I don’t know that oncarinsi It's there. But all my life I’ve ihroughFil been in oil exploration. There * informahi are certain parameters we use |hat kind of make you say, [‘Look here,’ instead of say, I'Look there,”’ he said by tele phone from El Dorado. 1 “When you get to be old and bald-headed and you’re still in this business, you must be doing something right,” he said. 1 Gray said he suspects, from istudies of geologic formations il Br\an4 that fan out from Hot Springs y willhavet through five or six counties, Profession that rich Oil deposits might lie roup patients ait i is to pros' support fe hills of west-central Arkansas. all of the financial support we when it’s good. We’re obviously “That’s deep and that’s ex- can get to drill wells,” he said. looking for something big. pensive. This tells you we need “This is a risky business, eyetr ) " - "1 MARKETING SOCIETY presents an informal session with CLAYTON W. 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