Page 14-Friday, September 28, 1979-The Michigan Daily Three Mile unsettled after 6 months CALL 1-261-LSAT OR WRITE: WASHINGTON (AP) - The irony University LSAT Preparation Service was unanticipated, and cruel. General 33900 Schoolcraft Road, Public Utilities' annual report was the Sui te G-2 very picture of progress. Its cover photo proudly contrasted an old 19- megawatt York Haven hydroelectric WATCH FOR THE HUGHES' RECRUITER VISITING YOUR CAMPUS SOON. Contact your placement office for interview dates. ------------, plant with the new 1,700-megawatt Three Mile Island (TMI) nuclear plant just upriver. But by the time the report reached stockholders, Three Mile Island lay critically wounded by the nation's wor- st commercial nuclear accident, an ac- cident that threatens the survival of General Public and the future of the en- tire nuclear power industry. SIX MONTHS AFTER, the accident, Three Mile Island Unit No. 2, started-up only last December, is out of operation for at least four years by company estimates and conceivable forever, severely damaged, and flooded with a small lake of radioactively con- taminated water. Its sister-plant, Unit 1, is shut down to provide support and could stay out of service a year or more for federal safety reviews. Critics of nuclear power say the ac- cident has provided them with what they need to stop development of atomic power by reminding a wary public of March 28: the day radiation started leaking from the plant, and there was talk of a "melt-down," and of a general evacuation of the populated area around Harrisburg, Pa. THE INDUSTRY'S advocates say quite the opposite, that Three Mile Island may actually strengthen nuclear power in the United States. They note that nobody was killed or seriously injured, and while some radioactivity was released, it should do little or no harm to -ublic health. / They say that despite a multitude of equipment failures and human errors, TMI's safety systems prevented the widely feared fuel melt down - the worst type of nuclear accident - or large releases of radioactivity. THUS, THEY SAY, the accident did not prove nuclear power unsafe as Ralph Nader and other critics claim, but demonstrated that nuclear systems are safe even when things go drastically wrong. They say, too, that the nation has no real choice but to build more nuclear power plants anyway. That interpretation was expressed within days of the accident by James Schlesinger, then secretary of energy and former head of the old Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). SCHLESINGER'S DEPUTY Secretary John O'Leary once directed nuclear licensing in the AEC and sup- ports atomic power, yet he is gloomy about its future, fearing that Three Mile Island may have given it a final death blow. Long before the accident, O'Leary was saying nuclear power was almost dead because of rising costs, regulatory and construction delays, and slowing electricity demand has dried up new plant orders and started a wave of can- cellations. "The industry has' been in the doldrums, no doubt about it," says Paul Turner, vice president of the Atomic Industrial Forum, an industry trade organization. "THREE MILE ISLAND made that situation worse," Turner said in a recent nterview. Turner said he thinks nuclear power plant orders will resume, but not for at least three or four years. The industry, said Turner, will wait to see what new regulations emerge from investigations of the accident by the Nuclear Power Regulatory Com- mission and the President's Com- mission on Three Mile Island. IN ADDITION, it may well wait to see whether the stricken TMI-2 plant can in fact be cleaned up, repaired, and put back into operation. The plant's operator, Metropolitan Edison Co., estimated recovery would take four years and cost some 400 million - more than half the plant's original cost. That is only part of the still untold costs of the Three Mile Island accident. GENERAL PUBLIC Utilities, parent of Met Ed and two other utilities, said it cost some $25 million a month to pur- chase electricity from other companies to replace TMI's lost capacity. With its $1.1 billion investment in Three Mile Island standing idle, General Public reported a 26.9 per cent drop in second-quarter earnings this year. To avoid bankryptcy, it has been forced to accept $409 million in short term 'credit from a consortium of 43 banks, pledging its own securities as collateral . The banks can suspend this credit and speed up collections of loans if they get worried about General Public's financial outlook. IN THE WAKE of Three Mile Island, the nuclear industry has started developing its own safety improvement organizations and a self-insurance plan for protection'against the massive costs of an accident. But until these new shields are in place, until new federalregulations are clarified, until state governments and the public regain their shaken trust in nuclear safety, until the final fate of Three Mile Island is determined, it seems certain that the once vigorous growth of nuclear power will be stun- ted. As O'Leary recently told a group of reporters, "Buildinig a nuclear power plant today is playing You Bet Your Company. /I HUGHES Creating a new world with electronics AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F earn '100 a month for 2 or 3 hours a week of your spare time. donate plasma You may save a life! i It's easy and relaxing. Be a twice-a-week regular. $10 cash each donation, plus bonuses. this ad worth $5-extra New donors only. Phone for appointment. ANN ARBOR PLASMA CORPORATION 662-7744 DON'T GRADUATE without talking to the Hughes Recruiter visiting your campus soon. Contact your placement office for interview dates. r ---- - - - - - HUGHES - - - - - - - - - - J Creating a new world with electronics AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F