taM Jrch 3,1 national Battalion/Page 9 March 3, 1983 Residents try to prevent start-up at 3 Mile Island United Press International IheemiB WASHINGTON — Neigh- irector ’b 015 of Three Mile Island, seek- sajdJirfg to prevent restarting of the nuclear plant, have urged the d w j] {t Supreme Court to spare them t befcriffnom reliving the anguish they »d faith-experienced following the na- Tjn’s worst nuclear accident. - A lawyer for residents Bound the Three Mile Island ipclearpower plant told the jus- :es Tuesday that the commun- toni'Mty had suffered severe mental is rlwidistress after the March 1979 ity ini^ferciclent. shrinitS “Restart brings with it the id psychological reality of another accident,” William Jordan said. “A traumatized population is now facing the possibility of another accident.” Jordan is asking the justices to uphold a lower court ruling requiring the Nuclear Regula tory Commission to weigh neighbors’ fears of recurring catastrophe before allowing a start-up of the undamaged reac tor at the plant near Harrisburg, Pa. Metropolitan Edison Co. wants to put one of the reactors back to work generating electric ity. Both reactors at the island have been shut down since reac tor No. 2 was so seriously dam aged that radiation leaked into the air. Under questioning by Justice Lewis Powell, Jordan said the mere knowledge the plant was running — even without visible evidence — would be traumatic. Last May, nearby residents voted overwhelmingly against reopening the reactor. But the government’s lawyer, Paul Bator, argued that anxiety produced by fear of environ mental harm is not the kind of environmental ill the NRC is re quired to review under the Na tional Environmental Policy Act of 1969. The NRC has postponed in definitely a decision on reopen ing the plant until the Supreme Court decides the case, probably spring, nds the some time this s[ Bator contends the govern ment should weigh psychologic al concerns only when it directly alters the environment, which is not the case at Three Mile Is land. Some justices were uncertain about exactly what he meant. “Is it because, in this instance, it has been concluded it (starting the reactor) is safe to physical health?” Justice Sandra Day O’Connor asked. Bator replied that, “When it is clear there are actual changes in water, land or air that directly propagate mental health changes, emotional stress may be considered.” facility die Sii" tutor ‘aring. tiding I learin; ;ranve Bankruptcies hit fanners i .pendtc nd 2,1 revif* t hit an th 2,6 Grain elevators studied United Press International WASHINGTON — Farmers „ f ()St millions of dollars ^ rorth of grain because the cur rent bankruptcy laws do not protect them if the grain eleva- prs storing their grain go broke, i Nebraska congresswoman tes- jfied Tuesday. t —I Rep. Virginia Smith, R-Neb., Jold a House subcommittee that |here were 177 grain elevator in- jolvencies, many of which ended In bankruptcy, during a six-year period which ended in 1981. “Producers had lost between R25-$50 million because their bsets were not properly pro tected,” she said. “Since that time there have been some 25 bther elevators that have gone bankrupt. “Millions of dollars more (have been lost to grain produc ers because the present bank ruptcy laws are not sufficiently explicit about the status of assets such as grain when farmers have merely stored the grain in eleva tors without transferring the ti tle to the grain operator,” she said. Smith is a cosponsor of a one of several bills introduced in Congress that would give grain producers a priority position in the distribution of assets in volved in a bankruptcy. Another co-sponsor is Rep. Bill Emerson, R-Mo., whose dis trict includes the Ristine, Mo., elevator whose bankruptcy drew nationwide attention when Pux- ico. Mo., farmer Wayne Cryts withdrew 33,000 bushels of his soybeans from it in July 1981 in violation of a Little Rock, Ark., federal judge’s order. The warehouse was one of 1 1 owned by a bankrupt Corning, Ark., company, and the judge ruled the soybeans were part of the firm’s assets under federal bankruptcy law. Cryts, who has been found in civil contempt, is scheduled to testify at a March 14, Kansas City, Kan., meeting of the sub committee. “More and more of our farm producers are finding them selves held hostage by the bank ruptcy process,” Emerson said. “In fact, it has been said that the failure of the law to adequ ately protect the farmer whose grain becomes entangled in an elevator bankruptcy has jeopar dized the integrity of the na tion’s entire grain storage sys tem,” he said. Agriculture official Ed Hews told the House Ad Hoc Subcom mittee on Grain Elevator Bank ruptcy that the department was setting up plans to ensure that farmers would not lose under the program — where farmers are paid surplus commodities to stop producing crops — if an elevator went bankrupt. “The need for creative thought and sound solutions to this problem is especially urgent in the wake of the recently announced payment-in-kind program,” said Rep. Dan Glick- man, D-Kan. and subcommittee chairman. “Under this program, far mers may be given ownership to grain stored in elevators that are far from their own farms and with whose management prac tices they are not familiar,” he said. “If this program is to have a chance at working, farmers must have confidence in the ele vators where their commodities are stored.” The sucommittee, appointed by Rep. Kika de la Garza, D- Fexas, held a second hearing late Fueday on the bankruptcy problem. Age suit ‘blow’ to states jpeak > so, I* incorpl •nmei® ) feeds the di R United Press International ■ WASHINGTON — The Sup- ■ reme Court, dealing states a sig- ■hificant blow, ruled 5-4 Wednes- ■ day the federal government can ■enforce age bias protections for ■state and local government ■ workers. The decision was a victory for g the Equal Opportunity Employ- 51 inent Commission, which had T challenged a ruling that the fed- I’eral age discrimination act could K not be applied to state workers y in Wyoming. Justice William Brennan deli vered the majority opinion, which held that extending fed eral anti-bias law to states was not “federal intrusion that might threaten their (states) ‘separate and independent ex istence.’” Wyoming had argued that federal age discrimination re quirements interfere with tradi tional state functions. At issue was whether Wyoming could f orce a wildlif e warden to retire. The state’s arguments were supported by four dissenting justices. At the center of the age bias dispute is the Age Discrimina tion in Employment Act of 1967, which prohibits employers from discriminating on the basis of age against workers between 40 and 70. Congress in 1974 ex tended its protection to state and local government workers. The case before the court was sparked by a Wyoming law that permitted forced retirement for some state employees as early as age 55 and ordered mandatory retirement at 65. The law was tested when Bill Crump, a district game division supervisor for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, was forced to retire at 55. He filed a discrimination complaint with the commission, and it sued on his behalf, charg ing the Wyoming law violated federal regulations. task i' ; ral a con'J -on, a to eek u i#j ai^ * P ,re bf ? ‘ p “RUSH” BOTTOM (White Only) Famolare® Sandals $24 90 Reg. $ 34 00 Only soft Italian leathers touch your feet. Famolare is the expert in making comfortable casual footwear, and these RUSH bottom sandals are no exception. Offered in appealing color selection in Slim, Narrow, and Medium widths. On Sale for a limited time. ACT NOW! $ 24 90 “RUSH” BOTTOM (Bone and Bright Multi) SHOE FITTERS SINCE 1934. CULPEPPER PLAZA. Charge it on Lewis’ Charge, Mastercard, Visa, or American Express THE MSC PRESENTS M S C Aggie cinema Fri. & Sat. presents Sylvester Stallone... This time he’s fighting for his life! FIRST BLOOD 8:00 p.m. Auditorium Fri. & Sat. Theater Midnight Wear your scrubs and get 50c off! Sun., March 6 Theater 7:30 p.m. ONLY $1.00! $1.50 w/TAMU I.D. Advance tickets at MSC Box Office Mon.-Fri. 8:30-4:30 Also 45 minutes before showtime. ^ MSC ENDOWED LECTURE SERIES Presents “Future of the Western Alliance’’ Monday, April 4, 1983 8:00 P.M. Rudder Auditorium Tickets on sale March 7 MSC Box Office EDWARD HEATH Prime Minister of Great Britain 1970-74 HELMUT SCHMIDT Federal Chancellor of West Germany 1974-82 GERALD FORD President of the United States 1974-77 MSC Cepheid Variable presents another Cepheid Celluloid Cinematic Endeavor... .the most devastating killing machine ever built... 4L Thurs., March 3 7:30 & 10:00 p.m. Rudder Theatre Davidson ’84 $1.50 ;PGI PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED T S€ SUIT ABU FOR OWCOACN I