Page 10-Friday, June 9, 1978-The Michigan Daily OSHA links deaths to company ne WASHINGTON (AP)-The govern- ment charged yesterday that a con- struction firm committed "willful" safety rule violations that contributed to the deaths of 51 men in a West Virginia scaffolding collapse in April. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration cited Research-Cottrell for 16 violations of federal safety rules, 10 of them "willful" and six "serious." OSHA linked three of the willful violations to the collapse of the scaf- folding. THE FINDING of "willful" violations means the government can turn the matter over to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution. However, Dr. Eula Bingham, the administrator of OSHA, said at a news conference that her agency had not decided whether to recommend criminal prosecution, which could lead to a six-month jail sentence upon con- viction for each violation. A willful violation means that an em- ployer either intentionally violated a safety rule or was aware of a life- threatening hazard but made no reasonable effort to correct it, Bingham said. RESEARCH-COTTRELL was building a cooling tower from which 51 men plunged to their deaths April 27 when the scaffold they were working on peeled away from the top of the 170- foot-high tower. The accident happened at the Monongahela Power Co. plant at Willow Island, W.Va. In addition to the citations, the OSHA proposed penalties totaling $105,100 against Research-Cottrell. The company has 15 days to appeal the citations and fines to an OSHA review board. If the board upholds the citations, the company can appeal through the federal courts. AT RESEARCH-COTTRELL head- quarters in Bound Brook, N.J., spokesman Phillip Cocco said the com- pany feels that "OSHA was not justified" in issuing the citations. He said the company "intends to contest them." The OSHA also cited two other firms at the construction site with two safety rules violations apiece and proposed fines of $1,600 for each. The two firms are Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory, which was testing concrete used to build the cooling tower, and United Engineers and Constructors of Philadelphia, the general engineering contractor at the site. Bingham said an agency in- vestigation of the disaster concluded that there were three principal factors that caused the accident: -Failure of the three contractors to conduct proper tests of freshly poured gligence concrete to make sure it had strengthened sufficiently before the scaffold was raised and attached to the new ring of concrete. -Failure by Research-Cottrell to properly secure the scaffold support system to the cooling tower. -Failure by Research-Cottrell to properly anchor and maintain sections of a concrete hoisting system to support the maximum intended load. The hoisting system is attached to the scaf- fold and helped stablize the scaffold. AP Photo Home again! Naomi James, standing with her husband Rob, acknowledges the cheers of the Dartmouth, England crowd as she returns from her 272-day solo trip around the world in a sailboat. Presents ON THE WATERFRONT A forceful drama about labor union corruption on the docks of New Jersey. BRANDO gives another bravura performance as the tough "little guy" bucking a corrupt establishment. Winner of many Oscars, music by Leonard Bernstein. Co-star- ring EVA MARIE SAINT, KARL MALDEN, LEE J. COBB and ROD STEIGER. $1.50 7:30 and9:30 Aud A, AngelId Tomorrow: Polnskl's REPULSION