Saturday, Augus# xE, i 977 THE M1CHf GAN D AlLY Pope Five rl Project Seafarer safety questionable WASHINGTON IA') - A scien- tific study said yesterday that a massive underground radio an- tenna system proposed by the Navy probably would have no serious adverse effects on peo- ple, plants or animals at the pro- posed construction site in Michi- gan's Upper Peninsula. However, the Nationel Re- search Council said the 4,000- square-mile Seafarer antenna grid, designed to communicate with submerged submarines, should not be approved without two design changes because of possible prgblems from electri- cal shock under specific condi- tions. CONGRESS has blocked con- struction of the system, at least for the time being. In a reporot based on an 18- month study, the council's com- mittee gave the proposed pro- ject "a qualified clean bill of health." It said fears raised about the effects of the project's extremely low-frequency radia- tion are "invalid and unwarran- ted" and concluded that "the likelihood of serious adverse bi- ologic effects is very amall." The $150,000 study, funded by the Navy, focused an potential problems from the electric and magnetic fields of the system. THE PANEL said the project "would not systematically pro- duce shock to those who walk over the buried lines or over the ground terminals." But it outlin- ed a worst-case possibility wherea person could get a haz- ardous and potentially fatal shock. For example, the scientists said, a barefooted person with a cut on his foot, dragging a long altmninum canoe and standing in a puddle of water around the terminals near the periphery of the grid could be electrocuted. Thus it recommended that the 15-volt-per-meter maximum spe- cified by the Navy be reduced by burying the terminals deeper or by changing their shape and distribution. CRITICS OF the project have said it would damage the en- vironment . make the area a prime nuclear target and would give off radiation. Michigan Gov. Wiliaim Milli- ken said last March he was ex- ercising his veto power over the Navy's plan to build the pro- ject. In a letter to Milliken, De- fense Secretary Harold Brown said Seafarer "would not be in- stalled should there be an over- whelming consensus of the peo. ple of Michigan against such an action." Milliken said Brown was backsliding on promises that the governor would have veto power over Seafarer. T HE NATIONAL Research Council, an arm of the National Academy of Sciences, faulted the proposed design for the sys- tem's procedure to d e t e c t breaks in the underground ca- bles. The council also disagreed with the design of proposed ground terminals that would feed electric current into the earth. As presently designed, the committee said, both elements could - under certain circum- stances - p r o d u c e electric shocks in animals and humans venturing very near a broken cable or a ground terminal. The panel said neither prob- lem would result from the low- frequency radiation, but were "classic engineering problems associaited with large electrical systems and likely subject to design solutions" THE COMMITI'EE said it was unable to "identify with certainty any specific biologic effects that would definitely re- u slt from exposure to a propos- ed Seafarer field." However, it recommended that if the project is built, "an ener- getic and carefully designed long-term program of monitor- ing should be coupled with ba- sic research." It said particular attention should be paid to any effects on bird flight patterns and the behavior of fresh-water fish in areas within the buried antenna grid. Public opinion is strongly against the project in Upper Peninsula counties that have vo- ted on it. UNDER INSTRUCTIONS from Congress, the Navy is studying the possibility of a smaller sys- tem that would include a 130- mile-long antenna system in the Upper Peninsula linked with a test facility already built at Clam Lake, Wis. Late last month, House and Senate conferees agreed to ap- prove $15 million for the project at President Carter's urging. Carter said in a letter that the system would not be put in Mi- chigan without his personal ap- proval. The Navy says the Upper Pen- insula has not been ruled out as a site and that it still views the area as the best location ANGELL HALL AUD. A Saturday, August 6 SM.ES OF A SUMMER'S NIGHT Director, ingmar Bergman (1955) Bergman captured in a rare mood of comedy and romance, in this classic exercise in spicy partner switching. This Cannes Film Festival winner in- spired Steve Sondheim's hit Broadway musical, A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC. Starring the usual stable of Bergman's regulars. Swedish with sub- titles. 7:30 & 9:30 $1.50 - ANN ALIIW 11144 C4D-CI Saturday, August 6. TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN tWoodv Allen: 1969) 7 & 10:20-MLB 3 In his directing debut, Allen plays Virgil, product/result of an unfortunate childhood: broken glasses, neighborhood bully, bicker- ing parents, acute cella playing, and a neurotic tendency to win a girl by stealing money. His downfall comes when he misspells "gun" on his holdup note. Stars Allen and Janet Margolin. THE PRODUCERS (Mel Brooks, 19681 8:45 ONLY-MLB 3 Zero Mostel plays the producer. When his accountant (Gene Wilder) shows him hew producing a Broadway flop can make more money than a hit, he buys a horrible, hilarious musical called "Springtime for Hitler." One of the funniest movies in recent years, it was Mel Brooks' first movie and he still hasn't topped it. "Pure lunacy . . uproariously funny±"--TIME. Academy Award-Best Origini Screenplay. ADMISSION: Still only $1.25 sintle feature, $2.00 double feature Martin Scorsese's 1973 MEAN STREETS Scorsese's first critically acclaimed film comes out of his heritage in New York's Little Italy where the Mafia influence is accepted as a part of everyday life. With Harvey Keitel and Robert DeNiro. SUNDAY FREE SHOWINGS Pudoukin's MOTHER (at 8 CINEMA GUILD Taniqht at OLD / RCH. AUD. 7;30is 9:30 Adreassion $1.50 D CANCER ND I LIVED. It's possible to go into an annual checkup feeling terrific. And come out knowing something's wrong. It happened to me. The doctor found what I couldn't even feel ... a little lump under my arm. If I had put off the appointment for one reason or anotheriI probably wouldn't be here today. Because that little lump I couldn't feel was a melanoma, a highly aggressive form of cancer that spreads very quickly. It's curable-but only if found in time. So when I tell you, "Get a checkup," you know it's from my heart. It can save your life. I know. It saved mine. Have aregular checkup ft can save your life. American Cancer Society. 'taW)~coStlya't1tS, ir E PiarE a ra sle