In tomorrow's sun day maazit1: I 'U' students in quest of kudos Kent State: Remembering May 1st AtMOMA, the walls have ears MSA SOMBER ENDORSEMENTS See editorial page See Today for details; Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIX, No. 144 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 31, 1979 Ten Cents Eight Pages Melt-down possible in worst domestic atomic emergency From UPI, Reuter, AP, and staff reports The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), reporting the nation's most serious atomic emergency is far worse than it thought, said yesterday Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania faces the slight but real risk of a melt-down within a few days. Dudley Thompson of the NRC's office of inspection and enforcement said the threat ranges from the "real possibility" of partial melting of the uranium fuel to the "miniscule" chance the reactor core could melt and release massive radiation-the worst type of atomic plant disaster. PROMPTED BY a new, severe burst of radiation from the plant, Gov. Dick Thornburgh urged all pre-school children and pregnant women within a five-mile radius to evacuate. Thornburgh ruled out a general evacuation, but said residen- ts in a 10-mile area should stay inside. "We cannot predict what the situation will be in 24 hours," Thornburgh said. A melt-down occurs when the cooling system of a reactor fails to properly disperse heat from the reactor's radioactive core rods. At its worst it can lead to the core rods burning through the plant, thus releasing amounts of radiation into the environment. It is the worst mishap that could happen to a nuclear reactor. MEANWHILE, THE Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) yesterday asked the federal gover- nment to halt nuclear power plant construction in Michigan pending an investigation of the Three Mile Island accident. President Carter said yesterday the accident at the power plant probably will lead to stricter safety standards for nuclear plants. White House press secretary Jody Powell reported the federal government stands ready to help evacuate citizens near the Harrisburg plant if necessary. He said contingency plans for evacuation have been prepared by state and local officials and that the president was in touch with Thornburgh by telephone through the day. FEDERAL OFFICIALS said radioactivity levels in the immediate vicinity of the reactor site had been as high as 20 to 25 millirems per hour, with off-site levels measured at a few millirems. A single chest or dental X-ray provides 30 millirems. tS 'Nobod y knows whether the chance is one in a thousand or one in a million or one in ten ... but they (NRC officials) now admit for the first time that a melt- down is possible. -Sen. Richard Schweiker (R-Pennsvlrania) Scientists have said it could be 30 to 40 years - when an increase in cancer rates show up - before the full effects of the radiation released since Wednesday's accident is known. "We are faced with a decision on how to proceed within a few days, rather than hours," Thompson told reporters at an NRC news center. "WE ULTIMATELY face the risk of a melt-down depen- ding on the manner in which we cope with the problem. If there is even a small chance of a melt-down, we will recom- mend precautionary evacuation." The accident has jeopardized the future of nuclear power in the United States, several Senators said yesterday, echoing Carter's statements. Henry Jackson, chairman of the Senate Energy Commit- See ATOMIC, Page 2 AP Photo LATE LAST NIGHT, the 'three Mile Island nuclear power plant still faced the danger of melt-down. The plant, located near Harrisburg, Pa., malfunctioned three days ago releasing unknown amounts of radiation. DOUBTS ACADEMIC FREEDOM: S amoffU' By JOHN SINKEVICS and BETH PERSKY Political Science Prof. Joel Samoff criticized the role of \the University in pursuing academic freedom yesterday, saying the structure of administrative and faculty power prevents those with radical views from obtaining influential positions. Samoff made the comments during his talk on "Academic Freedom and Radical Faculty" to a group of more than 30 at Guild House. HE SAID THE two goals of a univer- sity= its creative function and con- trolling function - cannot coexist, and for this reason radical faculty whose "sense of educational task is to focus On critical evaluation of the Univer- sity" are often "threatening to the for- ces that have to do with maintaining the present order." Saturday, " Edward Wilson, Harvard biologist and a leading advocate of Sociobiology, last night spoke of his belief in a genetic foun- dation for human behavior. See story, Page 2. " Two project directors from the University's Institute for Social Research (ISR) are currently involved in studies of the social, physical, and economic welfare of blacks and chicanos. See story, Page 3. Road the Today column,.ae3 Samoff said one of the aims of a university is to maintain "the order of things" by classifying people in terms of their level of accomplishment through varioul grading procedures, and leading them to believe they are only capable of achieving that par- ticular level of performance. He said universities also are concerned with "diverting some of those who might otherwise be troublemakers into an arena where they might not be dif- ficult." Samoff also said a university must serve a creative function. "A Univer- sity has to deal with the ability of scholars - to pursue topics without the fear that society will object," he said. "IF IT'S TRUE that a university has a control and a creative function they're in tension with each other," Samoff added. Samoff, whose tenure denial appeal is still pending, said tenure is designed to make it hard for a university to fire faculty, but that it also protects those who already have tenure. "Tenure enables those who are in to See SAMOFF, Page 2 HASH BASH But first comes a lawsuit Bomb blast kills By BETH PERSKY The annual mingling of Diag Hash Bash participants may be sup- plemented by Chriztian revival music tomorrow, if the Sweetfire Ministry, an area church group, succeeds in obtaining a restraining order today which would allow a religious rock group from Chicago, the Resurrection Band, to play at tomorrow's bash. Last year's Hash Bash attracted over 3,000 people, many of them out- siders and high school students. THE PERMIT allowing the group to play was revoked by University officials late Thursday. In turn, the group filed a $10,000 lawsuit yesterday against the University's trustees and three of- ficers of the University, on the See GROUP, Page 2 4th Ward holds city power base By JEFFREY WOLFF Local political observers will watch with keen interest Monday's Fourth Ward City Council race between Democrat LeRoy Cappaert and Republican Edward Hood because of the ward's image as a microcosm of Ann Arbor. Ann Arbor's ward system, since its revision in 1973, has tended to result in strong Republican domination of the outlying Third and Fifth wards and an equally strong Democrat advantage in the First and Second wards which are currently located in the campus area. The Fourth Ward, however, includes large student areas of Democratic sup- port, as it extends south from Hill Street. But as it stretches between I-94, US-23 and Briarwood, the ward absorbs many of the city's strongest Republican neighborhoods. FOURTH WARD voting in the citywide mayoral race is expected to be a good yardstick of the race's outcome. Democrat mayoral candidate James Kenworthy says voting in the Fourth Ward will be a "sample of what will happen in the whole city." Cappaert and I will both win or both lose," says Kenworthy. Republican Mayor and candidate Louis Belcher says the Four- th Ward "will certainly be the key ward." The Fourth Ward council race also is expected to be a tight one. Last year, Cappaert lost the council seat to Republican David Fisher by 58 votes. HOOD, AN Ann Arbor attorney, was selected by the Republican Fourth Ward organization and sworn in this January to replace Republican coun- cilman Ron Trowbridge who resigned. city elections '79 Hood says he has concluded from citizen "excitement" over recently issued property tax assessments, many representing 25-30 per cent increases from two years ago, that the "tax bur- . See POWER, Page 8 British 1 From AP and Reuter LONDON - A terrorist bomb blasted apart, an automobile outside Parliament yesterday and killed a top Conservative Party leader who fiercely opposed the Irish Republican Army's (IRA) battle to end British rule in Nor- thern Ireland. Within two hours of the blast, two Irish guerrilla groups claimed respon- sibility for the assassination of' Airey Neave, a member of the House of Commons and right-hand man to Con- servative leader Margaret Thatcher. A MAN purporting to represent the Irish National Liberation Army, military arm of the Irish Republican Socialist Party (IRSP), telephoned a Dublin newspaper and said: "This is the first attack in a new campaign against the British political and military establishment and will continue until there is a complete with- drawal of the British political and military presence" from Northern Ireland. The IRSP, a left-wing revolutionary splinter group of the IRA's Marxist "Official" wing, is allied to the movement's "Provisional" wing fighting to end British rule in Northern Ireland. egislator SOON AFTER, a further claim was made to the same newspaper by a man claiming to represent the Provisional IRA. He said, "We have this message for the British government: Before you decide to have a general election, you had better state that you have decided not to stay in Ireland." Neave, who represented a district in Berkshire west of London, was the Con- servatives' spokesman in Parliament on Northern Ireland and had long called for tougher measures against the IRA. He opposed the outgoing Labor gover- nment's withdrawal of some army units from Northern Ireland and demanded the death penalty - abolished in Britain - for terrorists. The IRA statement threatened more disruption in the election campaign and police immediately put extra guards on other prominent politicians. The assassination could catapult law and order and the Northern Ireland conflict into major issues in a campaign otherwise dominated by economic mat ters. No politician had been assassinated at the House of Commons since 1812, when Prime Minister Spencer Percival was shot there. Greeks occupy Diag, displace By PATRICIA HAGEN and KEVIN ROSEBOROUGH A Diag rally for Democratic mayoral candidate James Kenworthy scheduled for noon yesterday was all but smothered by a crowd of 400 Greek Week. celebrants participating in a giant game of spin the bottle. Due tn an error in scheduling, the enworthy processed the forms and sent them through." Moresaid that in addition to the Kenworthy and Greek activities, the Natural Resoutes Club was also given permission to use the Diag area. "We've gone through the books and don't anticipate having this problem . ...1 - - . YSA uses elections to leducate for social change By JULIE ENGEBRECHT Fourth in a five-part series The Young Socialist Alliance (YSA) Bob Warren, a junior in the Literary College (LSA), said, "We want to use the interest in student government elec- tions to nublicize these issues." Warren