The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 27, 1982-Page 3 AP Photo IN THIS TIME exposure of the Ginna Nuclear Plant in Ontario, N.Y., a sheriff stops traffic from entering the area around the plant. The plant was closed Monday after a pipe containing radioactive water broke. Steam is being released from the plant as part of the cool-down process. Ginna nuclear From AP and UPI by Saturday,"C ONTARIO, N.Y. - The R.E. Ginna The cold shu nhu fear plant wasbrought to a cold hours after pla shutdown. yesterday, 31 hours after a canceled the steam tube rupture automatically shut emergency clas down the unit and sent radioactivity in- THE PLANT to the atmosphere, officials said. Gas & Electr The Nuclear Regulatory Com- various emergi iiission's emergency response team "Tne ecir lft the area after cold shutdown was "The ener reached, according to Rochester Gas&' situation is sr Electric chief spokesman John making prepart Oberlies. the spilled wat a COLD SHUTDOWN is attained when spokesman for the temperature in the primary cooling Commission. system is under 200 degrees You will." Fahrenheit. "We optimistically hope to More than be able to inspect the steam generators evacuated from ned to work ve plant Oberlies said. tdown was achieved 514 nt officials had declared eremaining nuclear ssification. , operated by Rochester ic Corp., had been in ency stages for 26 hours ent Monday. gency is over. The table. Operators are ations for the cleanup of er," said Jan Strasma, the Nuclear Regulatory It's the mop of phase, if 100 plant employees nthe site Monday retur- sterday But the utility I shuts down said the reactor would not be cooled sufficiently for a damage assessment until sometime today. " A BURST PIPE automatically flooded the containment vessel Monday and vented radioactive gas into the at- mosphere - a process that is kicked off automatically as a built-in safeguard against explosion. Officials then declared a site emergency - the nation's first since the 1979 accident at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania. Shortly before noon yesterday, the plant was taken off "alert" status and declared in a "recovery phase" by Rochester Gas & Electric Corp., with the consent of a Nuclear Regulatory Commission inspector at the site. Two still missing in Boston air',crash BOSTON (AP) - Two passengers froTp a World Airways DC-10 jet that slid off a runway into Boston Harbor ,over the weekend are missing and feared drowned, officials said yester- day, three days after they said no one had been killed in the accident. Asked if the bodies of the father and son we believed to be in the harbor, Edward Ringo, senior vice president of the airline, said: "It's pretty obvious." DIVERS immediately returned to the scene to search for'bodies with no im- mediate results. It had been believed that all 196 passengers and 12 crew members escaped serious injury when the plane slid, off the runway at Logan Inter- national Airport on Saturday night. . Three people remained hospitalized yesterday for minor injuries. But Ringo said a computer check of tickets and the discovery of carry-on luggage showed two passengers unac- counted for, and two relatives of the missing passengers told state police at the airport they believed the men had been on the plane. "EVERYTHING matches that there are two people missing," he ,said. Ringo identified the two as Walter Met- calf, 70, and his son, Leo, about 40, of the Boston suburb of Dedham. Ringo said the two men boarded the plane in Neward, N.J., and sat in the plane's midsection., "We've searched the hosptials, the hotels with the assumption that they may be in shock," Ringo said. Pat Moscaritolo, spokesman for the Massachusetts Port Authority that runs the airport, said a daughter and anotherson of the elder Metcalf went to the airport police station about 10 a.m. yesterday. The two, "visibly disturbed and quite upset," said they believed their relatives were on World Airways Flight 30, "but as yet had not gotten in touch with their families," Moscaritolo said. He said the couple had contacted the airline repeatedly since Saturday night to report that their brother and father were missing. He said they finally went to state police after an airline represen- tative told them to contact local police and file a missing persons report. 737 N. Huron. Ypsilantl 485-0240 for hends and"* Drink Specials TONIGHT W~ed. Phi Beta Sigma Party Party Night. No cover. Thurs. 2 for 1 Pitchers until 10:30. Kamikaze Specials Fi Happy Hour until '10. Fri. &No cover before 10 D.J. Spins Top 40 Funky Disco Party Night Sun. Open 10 p.m. Drink Specials New Video Games UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 2nd ANNUAL ISPRING BREAK DAYTONA BEACHI FFBRI:4RY 19. 28.1982 F(NO 1R4111.IV(., WIfil $187 x199 SIX PER ROOM (3 DOUBLE BEDS) FOUR PER ROOM (Z DOUBLE BEDS) (rt.Itt*. 1'<' M i Ih''lL TRIP INCLUDES * Round trip motor coach trans- portation via modern highway coaches to Daytona Beach, Flor- ida leaving Friday, Feb. 19; ar- riving the following day. The re turn trip departs the following Saturday arriving home Sunday. . Seven nights accommodations at the beautiful and exciting Plaza Hotel of Daytona Beach. Lo- cated at 600 North Atlantic Ave., it is the most demanded hotel on the strip at that time. Questionsal: Hal 764,477 Rick 764-4769 S f. .} A f -_HAPPEN I NGS HIGHLIGHT MSA and PIRGIM are sponsoring a mass meeting for financial aid this evening at 7 p.m. in Conference Room 5of the Union. The meeting will cover plans for lobbying in Lansing and other measures planned to fight aid cuts' and tuition hikes.. FILMSx *PIRGIM-The Killing Ground: Hazardous Waste in the Environment, 7:30 p.m., Pendelton Rm., Union. Cinema Guild-The Third Man, 7 p.m., Lorch, The Spy Who Came in From- the Cold, 9 p.m., Larch. tCine a l-Alphaville, Angell Aud. A., 7 p.m., Weekend, 9 p.m. CFT--Insatiable, 6, 7:30, 9, & 10:30 p.m., MLB 3. PERFORMANCES Music Society-Oakland Ballet Co., 8 p.m., Power Center. School of Music-Piano Recital, Rachelle McCabe, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Ark-Hoot Night, Open mike, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. -UAC-Laugh Track, 9 p.m., Univ. Club, Union. SPEAKERS CEW-Lec., Betsy Ancker-Johnson, "Science and the Clea~n Air Act," 4 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Russian and E. European Studies-Brown Bag, Anatoly Liberman, "Vladimir Prop and Russian Folklore," noon, Commons Rm., Lane Hall; Larissa Vilenski, "Parapsychology in the Soviet Union: Research & Ap- plication. Are they Ahead of US?" 4:10 p.m., E. Lec. Rm., 3rd fl. Rackham. Chem Eng.-Lec., James O. Wilkes, "FORTRAN IV Programming Language- 111," 7p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Afroamerican & African Studies-Colloquim, Oscar Gish, "What's Hap- pening in Mozambique? Report on a Recent Visit," noon, 246 Lorch. Chem.-Sem., Sean S. Bigelow, "Alkenylidenecyclopropanes,'"4 p.m., 1300 Chem.,, Comp. SCtr.-Lee., Forrest Hartman, "Intro. to Visual Editing," 7 p.m., B114 MLB. MEETINGS Commission for Women-Mtg., noon, 2549 LSA. Science Fiction Club-Mtg., "Stiliyagi Air Corps," 8:15 p.m., Ground Floor Conf. Rm., Union. Botticelli Game Players-Mtg., noon, Dominick's. Med. Tech. Program-Mass Mtg. and Lab tours, 7-9 p.m., Main Hospital Cafeteria, Private Dining Rm. 1. Tau Beta Pi-Electee Interviews, 7 p.m., W. Eng. MISCELLANEOUS 1.7 Surprise I / witness SPONSORED 8Y WEST QUAD AND COUZEYS 0INCIIs FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONS STOP BY OR CALL THE WEST QUAD FRONT DESK OR THE COUZENS FRONT DESK i " " impliates Williams ATLANTA (AP) - A black teen-ager testified as a surprise witness yester- day that Wayne Williams lured him into a car and sexually fondled him. He also said he once saw Williams get in to a car with a youth who was later slain. It was the mnost damagirig testimony to the defense yet at Williams' murder trail, now in its fifth week. THE WITNESS. who was not iden- tified, said he saw Williams and Lubie Geter, 14, get into a car on Jan. 2, 1981, the day Geter was last seen alive. Geter was found slain a month later. The youth also said Williams was the man who approached him in the same area of south Atlanta in August 1980, in- vited him into a car and attempted to sexually molest him. Sources say prosecutors may present evidence on the other killings for the purpose of establishing a pattern that might fit the Geter and Payne slayings. r Williams has denied knowing any of the 28 victims. ALSO YESTERDAY Gov. George Busbee, Georgia Bureau of In- vestigation Director Phil Peters, and former acting U.S. attorney Dorothy Kirkley said they have been sub- poenaed to testify for the defense. The three said they did not know why there were subpoinaed. ABC News reported Williams' lawyers wanted to ask about a meeting at the governor's man- sion last June 19, two days before Williams' arrest. The 15 year-old witness, whose iden- tity was kept secret by agreement of the defense and prosecution, said he was working in a carpet store in south Atlanta the. day he saw Geter and Williams get into a "white and black- top automobile." Phantom stabbing A bizarre stabbing incident occurred on campus early Monday morning, police said yesterday. The victim, a 25- year-old man, was walking near Packard and Division Streets around-2 a.m. when he suddenly felt a sharp pain in his lower stomach. He looked down and saw blood, police said but he did not see anyone stab him. The victim then went to the Packard and State St. area and phoned his ex-wife, who took him to St. Joseph's Hospital. Police have no suspects. He is being treated for ab- dominal injuries and a punctured lung. He had been drinking at a bar before the stabbing. Hospital lab explosion A centrifuge either exploded or rup- tured, causing a small fire yesterday in a University Hospital laborator, police and fire officials said. Several windows were broken and walls were damaged. Some chemicals were spilled, but fire officials said Hospital contingency plans had taken care of that problem. Hillel-Panel Disc., home and family with women, "Our Lives.: As Women } and as Jews," 8:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Meekreh-Study Break, 10 p.m., Alice Lloyd Lounge. Tau Beta Pi-Free Tutoring, lower level math & science, Walk-in, 8-10 p.m., 307 UGLI; and 2332 Bursley. International Center-Presentation for first-time travellers in Europe. "Getting Organized and Documented for Your Trip," noon, Int. Ctr. Rec. Rm., 603 Madison. Women Engineers-Pre-Interview, General Mills, 1 p.m., 144 W. Eng., 7 p.m., Northeast Utilities. CEW-Counseling group, 'Onward and Upward," 7:30 p.m. WCBN-"Radio Free Lawyer: Discission of Legal Issues," 6 p.m., 88.3 FM. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. SARGENT & LUNDY ENGINEERS will be recruiting on campus z (r. HAVE A DEGREE IN SCIENCE OR ENGINEERING? _P omwer S r 7 I ( ii ; i I il The Air Forc has job openings for science and engineering officers in many professional areas. Find out if one of them is yours. Then ask about that excellent Air Force salary. . . the executive experience... the worldwide assignments. . .liv- We Build Qpportunities for the College Graduate. For the recent college graduate, Bechtel emphasizes initial assignments that allow you to participate in the daily activities of the company. Bechtel's Ann Arbor Power Division conducts Fall and/or Spring interviewslon campus for the following disciplines. Contact your career planning and placement office for campus inter- viewing dates. * Civil/Structural * Control Systems * Electrical *Mechanical *Nuclear e PlantDesign 0 Construction II