The Michigan Daily-Friday, May 11, 1979-Page 5 New nuclear plants need emergency plans (ContinuedfromPage3) " Require the NRC to develop for Officials said 12 of 28 states which Officials said Arkansas, Alabama, Pennsylvania reactor, also approved congressional consideration a plan for have operating reactors have gover- California, Connecticut, Delaware, - A . continuous monitoring of "the pnrincial nment-approved clans Almost all the Florida Iov Tso J si pm t several other steps uesigneu toU eai with Three Mile Island-type accidents of the future. They include: . Require the NRC to draft legislation giving the government sole authority to operate a reactor during an emergen- cy. * Require establishment of a hotline between the NRC and operating nuclear facilities for use in an emergency. * Require the NRC to place its own full- time inspectors at each of the nation's operating nuclear plants. Currently, there are NRC officials at 22 of the 70 plants in operation. Iran ups oil prices 60C per barrel TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - The Iranian government yesterday raised oil prices by 60 cents a barrel and an oil company official said "market conditions" demanded it - apparently a reference to world shortages. Before dawn, a revolutionary firing squad executed a doctor who ran a state police hospital, the 200th person to die at the hands of Islamic justice. OFFICIALS OF the National Iranian Oil Co. said beginning May 15, Iran will impose its second additional surcharge in a month, bringing the price to $17.17 per barrel of light crude and $16.64 for heavy grades. The move raised the prospect of more surcharges by other petroleum expor- ting countries, several of which have announced increases in recent months. On April 15, Iran slapped on surcharges of $1.80 for heavy crude and $1.90 for light crude. Yesterday's announced increase will help remedy what Iranian sources claim has been a drop in oil income sin- ce the February revolution led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. THE STATE radio broadcast said the man executed, Akbar Bahadori, 53, a surgeon in the central city of Arak, where he ran the hospital, was convic- ted by an Islamic court of corruption and of paying supporters of the ousted Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in Arak to attack anti-shah protesters with clubs. Bahadori was elected to Parliament in 1975 and held the rank of stte police colonel. In other developments, Iranian newspapers reacted angrily to foreign criticism of Wednesday's execution of multimillionaire Habib Elghanian, a prominent Jewish leader accused of corruption and associating with Israel. The newspaper Ettelaat, noting a U.S. State Department expression of concern, said "The government of the United States has been under the in- fluence of the five-million strong Jewish community of the United States which controls many of that country's mass media and has strong bases in the Congress and the Senate." THE NEWSPAPER Kayhan, in a front-page editorial, said Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin's concern over the execution "is in fact a protest against the revolutionary movement of a nation which is no longer willing to submit itself to exploitation." See IRAN, Page6 control-room safety instruments" in nuclear plants. MEANWHILE, Idaho Gov. John Evans told a separate Senate panel that state and local officials should be in- cluded, "as principals" in review of fuclear plant operation and safety, an area now left to industry and federal of- ficials. Evans said Pennsylvania Gov. Richard Thornburgh "bore a solitary burden" during the Three Mile Island aftermath because he was required to decide whether to order an evacuation but lacked swift access to information necessary to make the decision. states have some form of evacuation plan, even though they are not gover- nment-sanctioned. OFFICIALS SAID the following 16 states with operating reactors have no federally-approved emergency plans: Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin. In addition, Arizona, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, New Hampshire, Tennessee and Texas have plants under construction but lack NR- C-approved plans. ,ala kw, 41za, w Jersey, New York, South Carolina and Washington are the 12 states with operating plants and government-ap- proved evacuation plans. No list was available of the 41 plants that would be forced to close in six mon- ths under the committee's plan if their states did not develop acceptable emergency plans. Export markets consume the produce from almost one out of every three cropland acres harvested in the United States. ~0 r 7/ n 99 $5.99 PcoinuElEcaeVDocery P ENNew Chautauqua CDR- ~- $798 lst S 5.49tape EMECM ':f> f ;.G 1 1 $5 $99 I.p's $8.98 list 699 cassette $5.99 HM $4.99 our everyday low prices MON -RAT 1(1-F lUIN 12-R A N N A R B U R 523 E. Liberty 'O 994-8031 '7.1IAmC 514/2 E. William (Upstairs) / ll% o 068-1776