The Michigan Daily-Saturday, May 12, 1979-Page 15 Wishing you were here AP Photo Tourists have their picture taken by a family member as they pose in-front of Commerce Secretary said yesterday that tourism around troubled plant has the cooling towers at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant. Pennsylvania's recently increased. Tourists flock to nuclear accident site HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)-The accident that damaged the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant and prom- pted thousands to flee their homes may turn into a blessing for Pennsylvania's tourism industry, the state's commerce secretary said yesterday. "I think Three Mile Island is becoming a tourist attraction of its own. I don't think there's any question but that spot is and can be ... a significant tourist attraction," said James Bodine. HE ALSO SAID the publicity brought on by the accident, which damaged the core of a reactor and resulted in some release of radioactive material, has put the area on the map. "Pennsylvania's got more visibility than it has had in a long, long time," he said at a news conference. "Visibility is the name of the game when it comes to the travel industry." Tourism is the state's second largest industry-behind manufac- turing-bringing in an estimated $4.7 billion a year. But an impending gas shortage that could curb vacation travel and the stigma of Three Mile Island, just south of this capitol city, threatened to cut tourism, Bodine said. "I THINK WE can take these things, which a1 their surface appear to be negative, and I think we can make them positive," Bodine said. The Commerce Department sur- veyed 10 travel-related industries in the area and estimated their losses due to the March 28 reactor accident at $1.5 million. There is no estimate of total losses from canceled conventions or tourists who shunned the area. "The industry was hit very hard at the time of the accident," said Bodine. "I think the bottom line is very clearly that there is hope the industry can recover from the losses. However, I don't think it can fully recover by sit- ting on its hands. I think we need to, promote travel in Pennsylvania even more strongly than we intended to before," he added. BODINE WANTS the next state budget to include a $1 million fund to be used to promote tourism and lure vacation dollars. Part of the sales pitch will be to tell Pennsylvanians to stay in Pen- nsylvania on their .vacations. In surrounding states, the appeal will be for travelers to take a short trip here and save on gas. Curious tourists routinely jam the road to look at the mammoth Three Mile Island plant. Many of them pose for pictures against the background of the plant's 372-foot-high cooling towers. Enterprising merchants have been hawking such things as T-shirts and "Canned Radiation," souvenirs of the worst accident in the nation's commer- cial nuclear power program. Swimming motions, by fish or people, create low-frequency vibrations that are picked up by sharks' acute hearing. If the sound is regular and rhythmic, a shark may ignore it, National Geographic says. But if it is irregular, indicating thrashing or struggling, the shark may sense easy prey and attack. NEW HOURS BILLIA RDS and BOWLING Now open 11:30 A.M. Mon.-Fri. 1 P.M. Sat.-Sun. at the UNION Beverage cost too high, club charges LANSING (UPI)-The Michigan United Conservation Clubs (MUCC) which spearheaded the 1976 drive to ban non-returnable bottles, accused some beverage firms and retailers yesterday of gouging Michigan con- sumers with price hikes unrelated to the new bottle law. "Overall, the Michigan United Con- servation Clubs has been quite pleased with the implementation of Michigan's new bottle biil," said MUCC Executive Director Thomas Washington. "THE ONLY development troubling MUCC and others in Michigan is a thinly disguised attempt by some within the beverage industry to gouge Michigan consumers with price in- creases which they attribute to the bot- tle bill." Washington told a legislative com- mittee reviewing the bottle law that prices are being increased "to increase their profits, to create consumer resistance to the law in hopes of a repeal or to show others outside of Michigan that a deposit law is in- flationary." He said similar price increases have not been found in Vermont and Oregon, which have bottle laws comparable to Michigan's and noted that price hikes in this state spurred a legal investigation o~possible price fixing. WASHINGTON SAID returnable packages always have been "substan- tially cheaper because of reduced packaging costs realized by reuse of containers." "The point is that factors having nothing to do with the deposit law have contributed to the cost of manufac- turing, distributing and selling beer in Michigan," he said. "What is dishonest and misleading is for bottle bill opponents to blame every beverage price increase on a deposit law."