Boxcar, wastes go back to Flats DENVER (AP) - A steel-lined boxcar of low-level radioactive wastes returned to the Rocky Flats, Colo. nuclear weapons plant yester- day after being rejected by Idaho, leaving in its tracks troubling ques- tions about how the nation handles its atomic leftovers. The boxcar, ordered out of Idaho by Gov. Cecil Andrus on Saturday, was shunted to a siding at the Rocky Flats plant 16 miles northwest of Denver yesterday morning while officials debated what to do. Colorado Gov. Roy Romer on Sunday turned down a Department of Energy request to expand storage facilities for low-level radioactive waste at Rocky Flats and asked that the Department of Energy not unload the rail car, which contains 140 drums of waste at 55 gallons per drum. The state now allows storage of up to 1,600 cubic yards of radioactive waste at Rocky Flats, and the plant legally could accommodate the box- ear's cargo without exceeding the limit, officials said. "We'll cooperate with the DOE to find an alternative site until (a pro- posed disposal facility in) New Mex- ico is open," Romer said yesterday. "But I've said 'Look, no expansion of Rocky Flats."' It was the second time recently that Rocky Flats' operations have come under the spotlight. Earlier this month, the plant's plutonium repro- cessing facility was closed by the DOE after three workers were ex- posed to radioactive materials inside. Building 771 remains closed, but the production of plutonium triggers for nuclear weapons continues at the plant, officials said. The Washington state governor's office issued a statement yesterday that said the boxcar would be ac- cepted at the Hanford nuclear reserva- tion in eastern Washington. The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 25, 1988 - Page 5 Sane/Freeze warns A2 of U.S. missiles I DAVID LUBLINER/Dally Pharmacy graduate student Suha Hamid is one of the founding members of "Sa'lam Shalom - The Arab Jewish Peace Project." "There is a need for a dialogue between Arab-Americans and American Jews to dispel the myths and stereotypes," she said. BY DAVE BERNSTEIN Michigan Sane/Freeze, an arms control and peace lobbing group, is attempting to warn the community about a U.S. Air Force plan to equip selected decoy rail cars with two MX missiles. Called the Rail Garrison Plan, the plan would be implemented at 11 sites throughout the nation, includ- ing Wurtsmith Airforce Base near Oscoda in Northeast Michigan. If placed on the rail system, the missles would be mobile and hard to detect by the Soviets. Sane/Freeze members voiced op- position to the plan at their weekly meeting Sunday night because they think the missle system could be easily activated by the high frequency of false warnings reported each year. "We need to re-educate people about these military and peace is- sues," said Michigan Sane/Freeze di- rector Linda West, who also ex- pressed concern about the MX war- heads traveling throughout the state. A spokesperson for the Center for Defense Information said the number of false warnings could pose a danger to this system. "Between 1980-1984 the fewest number of false warnings that were somewhat serious (for any year) was 149," said Dunbar Lock- wood, spokesperson for the Center for Defense Information in Washing- ton, D.C. There is no public infor- mation on false warnings available after 1984. But Major General Vernon An- drews, director of Michigan's De- partment of Military Affairs which. handles the army and air national ,t guard, said the trains would only be , activated in case of national s emergencies such as the Cuban Mis- sile Crisis. "They will be kept primarily in military installations until such time as an alert," he said. Although the trains will go on test runs through the state, the warheads will not be on board, said Andrews. Sane/Freeze was created a few years ago after the merger of Sane Nuclear Policy and Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign. Founded in 1957, Sane is the oldest and largest arms control lobby in the nation. Freeze, founded in the early '80s, advocates the discontinuance of building more nuclear weapons. Since the merger, the group has dealt with a wider array of topics. Currently, the Sane/Freeze agenda includes rallying against Contra-aid, supporting the Arias peace plan in Central America and the INF treaty. Also at Sunday's meeting, Uni- versity Prof. David Singer discussed plans for peace groups following the Presidential election - in light of what he sees as a failure of the candidates to adequately address peace issues. "The Presidential campaign has done nothing to educate and clarify for the American public what the big issues are in national security. Fur- thermore, the campaign has rein- forced the misinformation in the public mind," he said. "The mission for the peace movement is to see what we can do to get more accurate information and understanding out to the attentive public." Singer feels that by getting out more information to the American people they will become more recep- tive to the issues of the peace movement. Peace Continued from Page 1 Festifall last month, realizing the need to unite the interests of their various organizations into a single forum. This group - unlike others that have formed in the past - plans to come to a resolution. The leaders of the meeting explained that although they want to spend time discussing the issues, they also think it is nec- essary to arrive at a symbolic plan for what they think should happen in the Middle East. Although many of the students at the meeting are members of other student groups, they stressed that they are representing only their own individual interests. The most prevalent reason that students had come to the meeting was to dispel many of their stereo- types. Students expressed the need to come into face-to-face contact with, rather than just read about, people who have differing opinions regard- ing the Middle East. "Instead of a good and a bad side, there are two good sides, two right sides," said one political science ma- jor. On that note, the group began to brainstorm ideas for future discus- sions. Topics the group plans to ad- dress include Arab-Jewish relations on campus, stereotypes and prejudice, the history of both Arabs and Jews, and political lobbying groups. Leaders also want to establish the group as a model for other joint-ac- tion groups around the country. They are presently trying to obtain recog- nition from the Michigan Student Assembly, which would enable them to bring speakers to campus and ob- tain funding for activities and pro- grams. FMLN Continued from Page 3 alliance, the Democratic Revolution- ary Front, at those encounters. The resumption of similar talks, which has been ruled out by the regime, is the centerpiece of the platform of the Democratic Convergence. Judging by voting patterns from last year's elections, a large percent- age of the electorate remains uninter- ested in the range of parties which have competed in recent elections. More than 50 percent of the 2.7 mil- lion eligible voters did not go to the polls, and more than 150,000 of those who did cast blank ballots or none at all. Whether Ungo and his colleagues can mobilize this sector is unknown. The candidate claims that the bigges factor working against him is fear and alleges that campaign worker have already been indirectly threat ened by military officials. Noting th tens of thousands of political murder that have plagued the country, Ung added wryly, "If an army officer tell you to watch out because something might happen to you, you know he' not bluffing." e S o' Is WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 I ~o u ___ i.~ Bain & Company, Inc. Management Consultants cordially invites The University of Michigan Classes of 1989 & 1990 to a presentation and reception on Associate Consultant Career Opportunities Drexel Burnham Lambert INCORPORATED Corporate Finance Department Presentation for Financial Analyst Position Tonight at 7:00 p.m. Michigan Union Pendleton Room Interested students are encouraged to attend and to speak with representatives of Drexel Burnham Lambert about the position of Financial Analyst. and .Internships in Corporate Strategy Consulting " Boston " San Francisco . London Thursday, October 27, 1988 The Michigan Union- Anderson Room 1 i