" ti Page 6-Thursday, October 2, 1980-The Michigan Daily IRAN A TTA CK ON IRAQ NUKE PLANT SPARKS SCARE Exp erts fear radiation from reactor WASHINGTON (AP)-The Iraqi nuclear research reactor targeted by Iranian bombers contained no atomic fuel and was not hit, but an accurate hit on an operating facility could spread radioactive material into the at- mosphere, experts said yesterday. Tuesday's bombing of the Iraqi nuclear reactor complex outside Bagh- dad centered on an uncompleted $500 million French-built reactor, in- troduced a potentially dangerous new element into a long-simmering con- troversy over construction of the facility. While the French reactor is not com- pleted and contained no nuclear fuel,. there are two other reactors in the complex. Only a small Soviet-built reactor is operational. It was not hit. IN THE PAST, the United States, Israel and other nations have expressed unhappiness because the bigger French reactor will use weapon-grade uranium to supply power-fuel that could be used in making an atomic bomb. U.S. nuclear experts now express ad- ditional concern that a potentially dangerous release of radioactivity is possible if a reactor containment building or spent-fuel storage sites of an operating reactor are directly hit during a bombing attack. Officials in the Energy and State departments, described the Iraqi com- plex like this: THE 70-MEGAWATT French-built facility will use 22 pounds of highly enriched uranium to produce power. An 800-kilowatt reactor is also being con- structed by French technicians. Iraq has operated the 5-megawatt Russian reactor for more than a decade. The smaller reactors each would use at least 10 pounds of uranium. These test facilities put out less power than the typical 1,500-megawatt U.S. nuclear plant. But even such facilities contain enough radioactive fuel to cause serious releases into the atmosphere if hit by bombs, U.S. nuclear experts said. "An explosion could lift radioactivity up to 2,000 feet into the air. The fallout wouldn't get into the jetstream like the explosion from a nuclear bomb, but the prevailing winds could carry it 10 or 15 miles away from the reactor site," said Paul Walker of the Union of Concerned Scientists, which has been warning for several years about the threats posed by possible terrorist attacks on nuclear reactors. WALKER SAID the resulting radiation levels could be high enough to cause deaths in the area around the plant but other experts doubted this. They said, however, that it would be high enough to force evacuation .of a wide area. The Iraqi facility is on the outskirts of Baghdad, a city of 3.2 million people. Walker, an expert on warfare, said most conventional bombs probably could not pierce the five to six feet of concrete and steel surrounding the largest Iraqi reactor. But he said new non-nuclear bombs with sophisticated guidance systems might be able to do s Iranian air force "proba those weapons." IN ADDITION, other the smaller reactors, pE older Soviet model, are have such thick protect The spent-fuel from the R probably is being stored resting in swimmin facilities-making the fu susceptible to Iranian bor U.S. officials say they Car dealer aids FBI in cony THIS WEEK fiT t MONDOY PIZZA NIGHT TUOESDAY JAM SESSION live music, no cover WEDM ESD BOAT NIGH RY T URSDAY :HER NIGHT SAT, )N E no cover paito .University E11 WASHINGTON (AP)-A California auto dealer told yesterday how he left his wife and children and went under- cover for the FBI for 21 years to help win the first felony conviction of organized crime kingpin Joseph Bon- nano, Sr. In an interview at FBI headquarters, Louis Peters, 48, of Lodi, Calif., sat beside his wife, Marilyn, and described his fears, motivationwand determination during the odyssey which took him far- ther inside an organized crime family than any innocent citizen is thought to have penetrated. THE ODYSSEY ended Sept. 2 when Bonnano, 75, was convicted in U.S. District Court in California on charges ou 4 ferse ec of estPrpartio e of obstructing justice. It was the first felony conviction in what authorities say has been a 68-year life of crime that took Bonnano from a gun runner for Al Capone to head of one of New York's five organized crime families. The conviction came just months af- ter Peters collapsed and was told by his doctors that he had a brain cancer. They have given him less than a year to live. Knowing now that he may have spent the last years of his life away from his wife and three daughters, the 6-foot-3, 240-pound millionaire Cadillac dealer said, "If I had it to do over again, I would do it again. You don't change what's right." PETERS was a guest at Bonnano's Tucson home, although the FBI had told him Bonnano put fiends and lawyers up at' a nearby motel. Bon- nano's driver, Tony, told him he was "part of the family.' He also told how he sp Miami hotel during at nano's nephew and shoe and chairs up against C room. He said he had n room's sliding glass doo an eight-story drop and me they could come in d and just push me out." He did not want to bec mant, Peters said, becau like a criminal who had he refused informant'sf him. PETERS said his invo in June 1977 when a la came to him with an off for his auto dealership was worth only $1.2 mill When the contractor told was Joseph Bonnano Sr. had never heard the nam Bonnano was head oft wanted the dealership t State law halts distribution ofr anti.Tiseb newsletter to elderly bombings o. He said the of the location of the spent-fuel dump. bly has some of The French reactors have been under construction since 1975 and are expec- ted to be operating next year. U.S. of- experts said, ficials know some enriched uranium articularly the has been shipped and probably is in the less likely to complex, but French officials said it ive coverings. had not been loaded into the reactor. 3ussian facility French officials also said that as soon I in cannisters as the Iran-Iraq border war broke out, ig pool-type technicians in charge of the project put iel much more a concrete and lead jprotective lid on mbs. the smaller of the two reactors being are not certain installed. icting mobster. ent a night in a from crime enterprises. trip with Bon- "I couldn't believe it," said Peters, ved the dresser adding th'at he had only recently been the door to his sworn in as foreman of a grand jury, oticed that the He said he went to a meeting with rs opened onto Bonnano's son, Bill, and other family "it dawned on members and told them he was a per [uring the night sonal friend of the police chief in Lodi and Stockton. "I told them that because called an infor- I knew they could find out and they use that sounds wanted someone with an excellent d snitched, and reputation who could buy up businesses fees offered to for them and not be questioned," Peters said. Two days later, he met with FBI lvement began agents and agreed to work with them in scal contractor, gathering intelligence about Bonnano's er of $2 million plans. which he said Peters said Bonnano once told him ion at the time. "You're going to make a lot of.money." I him the buyer According to Peters, the Bonnanos , Peters said he wanted to buy up 12 to 14 auto dealer- ne. He was told ships and did not flinch when Peters the Mafia and told them that would cost as much as o wash money $40 million. LANSING-The Office of Services to the Aging said yesterday it will stop distributing a newsletter urging readers to vote against the Tisch tax cut amendment in favor of the Milliken administration's rival tax shift plan. A spokeswoman for the state office said about 10,000 copies of the fall edition of its publication "A.I.M." distributed so far violate an attorney general's ruling by urging readers to "Vote No" on Proposal D and "Vote Yes" on Proposal C. BUT SHE insisted the violation was unintentional and said the remaining, 15,000 copies of the newsletter will be reprinted without the 'offending headlines before they are distributed. The publication sent to senior citizen centers and individuals across the state, however, will retain articles covering the decision of the state Com mission on Services to the Aging to op- pose Tisch and its reasons for doing so. "We were unaware of the attorney general's opinion at the time the newsletter was printed," saic spokeswoman Jackie Borden. THE OPINION, issued last year, barred state agencies from propagan dizing on ballot proposals. The newsletter normally costs about $400 per issue to publish, but the fall edition cost about $1,500 because more copies were printed to give wide ex posure to the commission's views or Tisch. Sen. John Welborn, (R-Kalamazoo) e S Y e 3 ,; t i e z and Rep. Richard Fessler, (R-West Bloomfield), reacting to the newsletter, asked Gov. William Milliken to issue a directive to state agencies to tow the line on the attorpey general's ruling. Welborn said cosmetic changes an- ticipated do not meet his objections to the publication, and hinted a suit or formal complaint may be filed with election officials Groups combat SIMCHIT TORAH CELEBRATI ON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2 LIBERAL AND ORTHODOX SERVICES AT 7:00 PM at.HILLELr 1429 Hill Street A A I ~id R q, ruimors (Continued from Page 1) "No, there has not been another murder," Corbett said. He explained that if there had been police would not have suppressed it. Corbett explained that rumors are almost impossible to run down. He cited as an example the tip line the police use to track down possible leads. People, he said, will call with a tip, not want to get involved, and say something like: "Listen, at 3:30 a.m. on September 14,I saw an individual go in- to the Walden Woods apartment com- plex." And the person would hang-up,. Corbett explained. The information' is worthless because police have no way of knowing from where that infor- mation came, he said. The Ann Arbor Police Department is asking anyone who has knowledge of. crimes-or anyone who believes he .or she is witnessing an assault in progress-to notify the department at , 994-2875. A confidential telephone line has also been established by the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department for. citizens with information. The number is 973-7711. Everyone then joins together for Dancing Singing Celebrating! Sff1 BRITH F idak i foundatkon Beyond fantasy Beyond obsession. 3a. s,...aA. Beyond time itself.. he will find her. WAYSIDE STARTS TOMORROW! Mon, Tue, Thur, Fri. 7:00-9:00 Sat-Sun-Wed 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:00-9:00 f /'11 ETIT1TTT T T Y NT 1 r ~rT) T lT1 r1t AV "Ci IGCT lollr-WT" I