ca P~a.2--Friday, April 13, 1979-The Michigan Daily hePlot Mechanical Pencil: In hcz al TWO MICHIGAN NUCLER PLANTS INVOLVED: NRC warns plants of possible failure 2 yearg pencl ing to re Of c a mechE well-mac brass a all-meta <"" ' m akes i Pilot: in a wid colors a Pilot ; Strongs pressur The last time your mechanical pen- diamete cil failed did you heave it against the and me waf? Or just scream with frustra- mechar tion? Chances are, when your pencil. mechanical pencil has a breakdown, you'll have one, too!Pi That's why our 30 M Pilot Mechanical Pencil has an unconditional, b ilot MechanaicalPen so qoMd its guaranteed. guarantee. We're so sure our will be trouble-free, we're will- epair or replace it free! ourse, it's easy to guarantee anical pencil that's so ide. Because our patented nd copper chuck and our al self-feed mechanism it virtually indestructable. 's Mechanical Pencils come e choice of attractive barrel nd designs. also makes super lead! stuff that won't crack under e. Comes in 4 different ers: super fine; extra fine; fine dium and will fit any make nical PILOTI LOT CORPORATION OF AMERICA idland Ave., Port Chester, N.Y. 10573 From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission told operators of 34 atomic power plants yesterday to beware of the kinds of mistakes and breakdowns that plunged the Three Mile Island plant to the brink of disaster. The NRC had already issued new or- ders, shortly after the March 28 ac- cident near Harrisburg, Pa., to the operators of the nine nuclear plants designed by Three Mile Island's build- er, Babcock & Wilcox. The new direc- tive went to 34 plants designed by Westinghouse Corp. and Combustion Engineering Corp. Three of the reac- tors are inMichigan. THE MICHIGAN plants involved in yesterday's directive are Consumer Power Co.'s Palisades facility near South Haven and Indiana & Michigan Electric Co.'s Donald C. Cook Units 1 and 2 at Bridgman. The commission told operators of pressurized water reactors to make sure they understand what went wrong at Three Mile Island on March 28-- in- cluding "the extreme seriousness and consequences" of decisions made in the frantic early seconds of the accident. A commission staff investigation of t i r the accident concluded that human error, as well as problems with design and procedure, combined to turn a pump failure into a nuclear emergency. THE COMMISSION said yesterday workers should not override automatic controls at nuclear plants without knowing exactly what activated the controls, and should not make emergency decisions based on reading only one instrument. The commission said nuclear; operators should recognize the threat of interruption of the cooling water flow and write procedures to prevent that or" to counteract a cooling water loss in arm emergency. The commission told operators to; report back in two weeks outlining how; they will comply with the directive. New Ugarnc _ ----- --__ i tan rutei Your Choice: Scotland or Ann Arkr Spend the 1979 Fail semester in Edinburgh Scotland: studying, experiencing & living the Scottish way of life. Contact: Ranjit S. Bajwa, 308 Pierce Hall Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti Phone: 487-2410 fwant Amin £0 hang ARBIFrom APandReuerYusufu Lule, 67, was tryingy NAIROBI - Uganda's new rulers to fly back to Uganda .from'] said yesterday that Field Marshal Idi but Uganda radio paid het Amin deserved to hang and urged all delayed by bad weather and Ugandans to find him. crowds gathered to welcome "Hunt Idi Amin wherever he is," the they should go home. f new rulers urged in a radio broadcast Kampala residents said that from Kampala, Uganda's capital. zanian army had opened the "He deserves the gallows." prisons, which became infai The appeal was broadcast on Uganda torture and executions during radio, which came under the control of marshal's eight-year rule. the Tanzanian-led forces that captured They freed about 4,000 inn the city, drove Amin into hiding and cluding a fighter pilot who refu announced creation of a new gover- for Amin, and anti-Amin activi nment. Radio Uganda broadcast a However, the defeated dictator, to all the ousted president's s broadcasting from somewhere in surrender their weapons _u eastern Uganda, insisted the country hours or face the consequence. was still his. Tanzanian President Julius "We have got our soldiers controlling and Zambian President Kenne the country," Amin declared. His da announced recognition of, troops were reported streaming toward government headed by Lule,a the Kenyan border in a chaotic rout, vice-chancellor of Uganda's N however, fleeing the Tanzanian forces University. and Uganda rebels who captured Kam- pala late Tuesday. summer session until payment has been made." THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXIX, No. 155 Friday, April 13, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ings during the University year at 420 Maynard Streets Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann, Arbor. Summer ses- sion published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. + r. .&Wow"" ftmbmwm Petite ............ collection See the ArtCarved Representative Deposit required. Ask about Master Charge or Visa. LAST DAY TODAY, I