The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 08, 1987, Image 16

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 16/The Battalion/Wednesday, April 8, 1987
i
Dallas homemaker finds 2nd career
in campaign against nuclear plant
Assault
(Continued from page 1)
DALLAS (AP) — For a moment, Juanita Ellis
imagines herself sitting in a big chair behind a big
desk, a Ms. Big heading a giant utility trying to
build a nuclear power plant.
“I would make sure everybody at the plant had
my personal telephone number,” Ellis says. “I
would talk to them personally. I would make sure
their concerns are adequately addressed.”
ond career out of whistle-blowers and the Co
manche Peak nuclear power plant at Glen Rose,
about 75 miles southwest of Dallas.
For 13 years, she has fought the plant in what
she says is a David and Goliath kind of tussle be
tween her and Texas Utilities Electric Co.
ballooned from $779 million to an estimated $7.7
billion.
In her dream, whistle-blowers are as impor
tant to the company as the bottom line.
She says the men and women building a nu
clear plant know what’s right and what’s wrong
with the construction, and their voices must be
heard to avoid disaster later.
The 51 -year-old homemaker has forged a sec-
Ellis is president of Citizens Association for
Sound Energy, a group of about 200 people rely
ing on contributions and legal help from public
watchdog foundations.
The association has dogged Texas Utilities
since the early 1970s, when the company began
planning Comanche Peak.
The plant is about 94-percent complete, but it
is nine years behind schedule and the price has
Despite armies of lawyers and consultants, the
utility and its Comanche Peak project are bogged
in a mire of questions surrounding the plant’s de
sign, and ultimately, its safety.
The U.S. Atomic Safety Licensing Board has
twice turned down TUEC requests for Coman
che Peak operating permits. The utility now is in
the middle of a major reinspection of the twin-
domed plant, a project that includes correcting
flaws discovered earlier. The utility hopes the re
inspection, scheduled for completion early next
year, will be the springboard for an operating li
cense.
Bankruptcy
(Continued from page 1)
vious employee who is waiting for
about $600 in wages.
Rio has 120 days to submit a reor
ganization plan to the Western Dis
trict of Texas, Waco Division Bank
ruptcy Court, Phillips said, and he is
optimistic that the airline will fly
again.
A source in Phillip’s office, who is
directly involved in the restructuring
attempt, said Rio has over 400 out
standing bills that total in the mil
lions of dollars.
“We’re trying to figure out who
should get paid first, and employees
SCHULMAN THEATRES
2.50 ADMISSION
1. Any Show Before 3 PM
2. Tuesday - All Seats
3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With
Current ID s
4. Thur - KORA ‘■‘Over 30 Nite"
•DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
PLAZA 3
Wmk
226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457
*T1N MEN r
7:15
9:35
* MANNEQUIN pg
7:35
9:55
*LETHAL WEAPON r
7:25
9.45
MANOR EAST 3
Manor East Mall 823-
8300
* PLATOONr
7:10
9:40
SOME KIND
OF WONDERFUL pg-i 3
POLICE ACADEMY IV pg
7:20
9:50
SCHULMAN 6 '
iX%: -
2002 E. 29th 775
-2463
ANGEL HEART r
7:20
9:50
BEYOND THERAPY r
7:10
9:55
$ DOLLAR DAYS $
This Week’s Features Are:
CRITICAL CONDITION r
7:20
9:45
"CROCODILE DUNDEE pg-13
7:25
9:35
OVER THE TOP pg
7:30
9:40
STAR TREK IV pg
7:15
9:45
STRETCH
Your Dollars!
WATCH FOR
BARGAINS
IN
THE
BATTALION!!
are not at the top of the list,” the
source said.
Frank said he believes bad man
agement is the reason Rio went out
of business.
“The market was here (Bryan-
College Station) when they decided
to pull out,” he said. “They had a
monopoly in this area to cities
around the state and in Louisiana.
But the company was seriously mis-
run.”
Rio was established in 1974 by
Fred Connell of Killeen, who sold
the airline in 1985 to Hugh Seaborn
of Houston.
Applications
(Continued from page 1)
and II) or the equivalent, and in
cluding completion of or enroll
ment in JOUR 301 (Mass Media
Law) or the equivalent.
Those applying for editor of
The Battalion may apply for both
semesters. Summer duty begins
with the May 20 paper and con
tinues through the inside sections
of the Aug. 31 paper. Fall duty
begins with the May 4 paper and
continues through the May 13 pa
per, then begins again with the
news section of the Aug. 31 paper
and continues through the Dec.
12 paper.
Those applying for editor of
the Aggieland will be responsible
for the 1987-88 edition starting
on June 1, 1987, and continuing
until all pages are sent to the
printer in May or June of 1988.
Those applying for editor/pro
ducer of Video Aggieland will be
responsible for planning and pro
ducing a 60- to 90-minute video
tape, including activities between
June 1, 1987 and May 31, 1988.
Tapes will be reproduced for dis
tribution in mid-October 1988.
same sidewalk with her and she gets
nervous.”
Rapists, in general, aren’t “dirty
old men,” she said.
The average age of a sex offender
is 14 to 22 years old.
Castoria said women should never
investigate noises. They should call
the police.
"Why feel guilty about calling
people you’re paying?” she said. “I
don’t know any law enforcement of
ficer who wouldn’t want to come and
investigate.”
But a woman who files a false re
port of assault and doesn’t retract
her action before it reaches the dis
trict attorney’s office can be subject
to a punishment of a year in jail
and/or a $2,000 fine.
There are primarily three ways
for potential victims to protect them
selves.
Active resistance includes scream
ing, struggling, fighting back and us
ing weapons.
The second, passive resistance, is
used to “psychologically outsmart”
the attacker, and includes talking
and using surprise tactics and ac
tions.
But pleading or begging is out,
Castoria said — it only gives the at
tacker a stronger feeling of powei.
Texas law recognizes psychologi
cal coercion as a weapon and does
not require physical resistance if the
victim believes the rapist can cat ry
out his threats.
Submitting is not the same as con
senting, Castoria said, and in some
cases may be the only way tosaij
victim’s life.
The third available protetti
prevention, is most effective,Rj.
like any crime, needsopportunin
1
" I 'here is no ‘right thing' to4
Wiatt said. “What would dtscoun —
one attacker could send anotherj ■ Vol. o
a brutal rage.”
Students should notbepaJ
I ust aware.
Jaiapeno
c
e
◦
(Continued from pagel)
It didn’t take long for comtntj
enterprises to pick up the scent.
Old El Paso's Thick and Ct©
Salsa is f ull of TAM1, Villalons
"It’s really good with Fritot
said. "But most |>eopledon'ttoi
that salt. So thev have now nun. J
lined a low-sodium brandofii
with FA ML
T.u <■ products are aboptgta has be
poppi r," be said. I pionat
1‘he 1 A M I is already titriiifl t 0 bro
i < • n 11< >t im's and gardens andoB secunt
\c .u the plants are becomingmB mallei
and more popular with Ik ^B Sgt.
thumbs, he said.
Among the 15 differentia
pepiK’ts, fot Villalon,theTAMlai/
welcome reKefc | (^6
1 cant eat t hose not onts,
said " I lies I>'nai vourtastebudiB|^u^
I
Just twist a cap and you’ve got beer on tap.
New Miller Genuine Draft® is real draft beer in a bottle. It’s not
heat-pasteurized, like most bottled beers. It’s cold-filtered to give
you the smoothness and freshness of draft beer from a keg.
No way, you say? Tasting is believing.
MILLER GENUINE DRAFT. IT’S BEER AT ITS BEST.
c 1986 Milter Brewing Co.. Milwaukee. Wl
MOSCC
KGB ha
Embass)
fended
Secretar
and poij
‘Kremlin
Vladi
Jforeign
Ident Re
Imarks”
ling a W
iTuesda'
Iremarkc
“Such
Sever set
jfing,” P<
H-
Reag;
Idered h
[to detei
[pleted n
ntised Ir
it must l:
Schul
His tl
[eign Mi
inadze a:
|expecte<
|agreentt
Imissiles
His v
[for anot
|and Sov
|chev, w
j; place las
[land.
Petro'
ian open
luisites a;
[in resob
Imine So
j for reac
iofsecuri
“It ap
|Washinj;
|a prospi
jjpsychosi
Imosphei
Italics are
He sa
|a news
c
tc
fc
AUJ
43 gro
tore o
said V
tar an
come t
open.
. “We
lie edu
revert ii
“As
s ymi
ing
Any
accej
— \
ments
school
associ;
growth
man o]
Posiurr
The
Save i
17-27 ,
teacher
intpres:
that pu
“We