The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 17, 1979-Page 7 WITNESS SAID WORKERS FEARED COLLAPSE Testimony GALVESTON, Texas (AP)-Opening testimony yesterday at an inquiry into last week's tragic oil rig collapse in- dicated workers were afraid the plat- form might fall before it tumbled into the Gulf of Mexico. Joe Pillsburg, first mate of the ship that delivered supplies to the rig Ranger I, said his captain told him the workmen apparently felt the structure. shift or drop before the collapse. "The captain told me everyone on the rig was afraid it was going to fall," said Pillsburg, the second witness at the Coast Guard investigation of the ac- cident last Thursday that killed two workers and left six others missing. THE LEADOFF witness, Van Meter Fayard, captain of the supply vessel opens inoil rig accident inquiry Delta Seahorse, testified that prior to is scheduled to testify today. Fayard, of Waveland, Miss., said the collapse he heard someone talking Fayard testified the 15-foot Delta there was no damage to the Delta by radio from the rig to a dispatcher on Seahorse bumped a leg of the Atlantic Seahorse and added, "If there was any shore. Pacific Marine Corp. rig eight hours damage to that leg, it was very slight." "He said he had the hell scared out of before the collapse. him earlier in the day," Fayard said of BUT COAST GUARD Capt. William PRIOR TO the accident, Fayard had the voice on the radio. "It sounded like Whaley, chairman of the board, said unloaded about 50 tons of supplies in- he was not too concerned about it. the leg struck by the Delta Seahorse cluding a portable cement tank, Later that night, a leg on the rig apparently was not the same leg that chemicals, a drilling unit, and a basket ollapedh , dg the or a collapsed on the 1,300-ton rig, of rig equipment. collapsed, dumping the platform and 34 men into the Gulf. Twenty six were "We tried to moor to the rig Ranger I, Fayard said he also had pumped rescued. and during the mooring operation I about 9,000 gallons of diesel fuel onto FAYARD DECLIEND to identify the brushed the starboard bow leg of the rig the rig and about 250 to 500 barrels of voice from the rig, but Pillsbury told Ranger I," Fayard testified. "After water. the Coast Guard panel, "The captain that, we stayed on anchor because of told me it was the toolpusher." the weather. Two people came off the Fayard said he sent a Mayday Mack Johnson, a toolpusher-equip- rig. They examined the leg and as far distress signal immediately after ment overseer-was on the rig when it as I know, they didn't think it was rushing to the deck and ordered all life- toppled 12 miles south of Galvaston. He anything to get concerned about." saving equipment overboard. 'No nukes' coalition plans demonstrations LANSING (UPI) - Lawmakers created a special committee to probe Michigan's atomic power industry yesterday, while leaders of the state's anti-nuclear movement announced a series of demonstrations beginning next month in Monroe. The state House gave final legislative approval to the nuclear investigation by accepting minor Senate amendments to a resolution creating a 10-member joint: study committee. The panel likely willbe chaired by Rep. Mark Clodfelter (D-Flint), an out- spoken critic of nuclear power. It could begin work as early as next week and is expected to produce a report by the end of the year. MEANWHILE, LEADERS of a coalition of anti-nuclear groups outlined their plans which include a June 2 demonstration at Detroit Edison Co.'s unfinished Fermi II nuclear plan near Monroe, an October rally in Lan- sing and a protest at next year's Republican National Convention in Detroit. The more than 60 groups, now called the Michigan No Nukes Coalition, organized last month's demonstration which drew a record 5,000 protestors to the site of Consumer Power Co.'s unfinished nuclear plant near Midland. Spokesmen said they expect more than 2,000 to attend the Monroe protest and it may even outdraw the Midland march. ALTHOUGH THAT march sparked a local counter-demonstration, coalition spokesmen claim they will have at sub- stantial number of supporters in Monroe. Problems experienced with the original Fermi plant have left area residents jittery about a new one, they claimed. Ron Wilson of the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan claimed Edison has overestimated the growth in electric power demand and does not need the Fermi plant. NUCLEAR FOES have planned "a number of demonstrations over the coming year to call attention to our goal of bringing an end to nuclear power in Michigan," said Michael Moore,. a coalition spokesman. Moore said the coalition chose the Republican convention as a target because the next president "is going toi be one of the major decision-makers." "If that person is going to be a Republican, we definitely want to have some sort of impact," he said. THE SPECIAL legislative committee is charged with studying the health hazards posed by nuclear power, the reliability of safety and evacuation systems, the alternatives to nuclear power and their economic consequen- ces and the feasibility of phasing out existing plants. Clodfelter said he has serious questions about nuclear power and plans to look closely at the operation of atomic plants in this state. But he denied he has preconceived ideas about the outcome of the investigation. Michigan has operating nuclear plan- ts at Bridgman, Charlevoix and South Haven. ANTI-NUCLEAR DEMONSTRATORS protested Detroit Edison's unfinished nuclear plant near Monroe in April. A coalition of anti-nuclear groups is planning another demonstration at Fermi 2 on June 2. Committee says House ean diseipline Diggs (ContinuedfromPage3) "They are in effect saying this House is incapable of punishing for miscon- duct that becomes the subject of criminal prosecution," Committee Counsellor William Goeghegan said. Goeghegan pointed out delays for a pending criminal investigations, grand jury indictment, trial and appeal would almost always prevent the House from disciplining a member until after he is reelected to a new session of Congress. "WHILE THE people have the right to elect, this House has the obligation to maintain its own integrity," Goeghegan said. Rep. Bob Livingston, (R-La.), asked what congressional session, if any, could discipline a member for prior criminal conduct after he is reelected. "No Congress," Barnett said. "It would be left to trial. The criminal process is devastating. I'm not saying let a man go free." REP. MORGAN Murphy, (D-Ill.), expressed sympathy for Diggs' position. Three Democrats, Reps. John Mur- tha, Pa.; Morgan Murphy, Ill.; and John Slack, W. Va., voted for delay. Looking for the intellectual side of life? w Read the Michigan Daily . The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at Aud A THURSDAY, MAY 17 $1.50 WALKABOUT (Nicolas Roeg, 1971) 7only--AUD A A visionary and erotic cult film about paradise lost in the Australian outback. "One of the starkest, most savage, and yet most magnificent landscapes ever captured on film . . - WALKABOUT shatters complacency-it opens up pos- sibilities again. This is probably the most we can ask of a work of art."- Stephen Farber. With Jenny Agutter. EQUUS (Sidney Lumet, 1977) 8:45 only-AUD A A shattering transferral of this powerful play to the screen. A bored, middle- aged psychiatrist envies the possion of a boy who blinded horses in a climactic sexual fantasy, and fears that curing the boy will doom him to mediocrity. 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