Page 8-Friday, October 26, 1979--The Michigan Daily I I Gov't. seeks nuclear wastes sites 'IT' 1.111 IT'S GETTING TOO EXPENSIVE TO HAVE A BAD HAIRCUT. WASHINGTON (AP)-With two of country's three low-level nuclear waste dumps closed, the government is plan- ning to ask governors to provide tem- porary storage sites for radioactive waste produced in their own states, of- ficials said yesterday. - That could mean establishment of temporary storage sites in at least a dozen states in which nearly 7 per cent of the country's low-level nuclear waste is produced. TWO OF THE three U.S. sites for disposal of nuclear waste were closed this month. A dump in Washington state was closed because improperly packaged wastes were being delivered to the site. Another site, in Nevada, was closed after radioactive waste was' discovered outside dump boundaries. The third site, in South Carolina, remained open yesterday, butofficials' said none of the wastes that would nor- mally go to Nevada 'or Washington could be sent there. Government officials and spokesmen for the medical community have said hospitals, research facilities and some nuclear power plants will face serious problems within weeks because they will have nowhere to ship their radioac- tive wastes. In an attempt to head off that problem; the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Energy Depar- tment will urge governors in the states where the wastes are produced to establish interim above-ground storage facilities, administration officials say. ASKED HOW hard the NRC would push the governors to adopt such a plan, NRC spokesman Frank Ingram said: "To the extent that we can. We can't order them to do it." Richard Cunningham, whose NRC of- fice licesnses operations that produce low-level nuclear wastes, said the proposal to get states to provide tem- porary storage was discussed Wed- nesday at a hastily called meeting of federal officials and others involved in the issue. A spokesman for the National Gover- nor's Association, which also had g representative at the meeting, saiq such a plan was sure to provoke con- troversy and that some governors and',.; state legislators would oppose it. "WE RECOGNIZE the wastes havq, to be put somewheretbut you can't leave it up to the 50 governors," said Joe McLaughlin of the governor's association. Meanwhile, Govs. Dixy Lee Ray of Washington and Robert List of Nevada were described by federal officials as remaining adament in keeping the,, waste dumps in their states shut until A, national policy is worked out. South Carolina Gov. Dick Riley, who. barred any of the wastes from being diverted from Washington and Nevada to his state, said the amount of material now moving into the South Carolina dump will be cut next week. , 7 SOLUTIONS TO YOUR PROBLEM Use these numbers to call the Michigan Daily °_ <_ Doctors say shah s ." cancer is spreading Billing . . ....... ... Circulation . . . . .... Classified .. .... . Display . . . . . . . . . . New s *..*.**.*..*..*..*.. Sports . . . . . . . ... . Composition ...... . 764-0550 764-0558 764-0557 764 -0554 764-0552_ 764-0562 764-0556 The REDKEN SH EOR IMPOCT TEA M offers the best in European Hairstyling. Jbe £41ian 1tailg NEW YORK (AP) - The deposed, shah of Iran's cancer is spreading rapidly, his doctors said yesterday, and he should stay in the United States for treatment for up to a year. Dr. Hibbard Williams said of Shah Mohammad IFteza Pahlavi, who under- went gallbladder surgery here, "a potential for recovery does exist." 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