1 Page 8-The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 14, 1990 Greenspan says FDIC funds are at low point Asian-American rep. aims to unite student groups WASHINGTON (AP)- Federal Reserve Chairperson Alan Greenspan said yesterday the fund that protects bank depositors will likely "remain under stress for some time to come, but he cautioned Congress against hastily passing legislation that would only make the situation worse. Greenspan noted that the reserves in the Federal Deposit Insurance Fund now stand at their lowest level ever as a string of near-record bank failures has depleted FDIC reserves. "There remain all too many problems in the banking system, problems that have been growing of late as many banks, including many larger banks, have been experiencing a deterioration in the quality of their loan portfolios, particularly real estate loans," Greenspan told a House committee. "It thus seems clear that the insurance fund likely will remain under stress for some time to come," Greenspan said. "Moreover, pressures would intensify if real estate market conditions were to weaken further or a recession were to develop in the general economy." Members of Congress, alarmed by reports that the FDIC fund is in trouble, have rushed to introduce legislation to boost its reserves and avert a bailout for the bank fund. But Greenspan cautioned that "while reform is needed, so is caution." r by Elisabeth Weinstein Daily Staff Writer Yee Leng Hang may have one strike against him in performing his new job: he graduated from Michigan State. Hang is the new Asian-Ameri- can representative in the Uni- vesity's office of Minority Student Services. He began the job August 13. Hang's job entails helping stu- dents program Asian-American events on campus, and informing and advising Asian-American stu- dents. He says he can provide con- tacts and resources for students. However, his goals go beyond his responsibilities. Hang hopes to unite all the different Asian-Ameri- can groups on campus through an organization called United Asian- American Organization (UAAO). Hang, as well as some Asian stu- dents say there is a lack of commu- nication between different Asian student groups. "If I were to say there was no friction (between groups) I'd be ly- ing," says Hang. "Hopefully it (UAAO) will serve as an umbrella for all the Asian groups," he said. Because he works with both students and faculty, Hang'hopes he can communicate student's desires and needs to the faculty. "I see myself as a construction' worker. I want to strengthen the bridge for students to cross it,' Hang said. "I want to implement programs which are beneficial to the growth and welfare of students,", says Hang. He is compiling a directory of Asian-American staff members so students and staff can easily find, support. Asian-American students say they are optimistic about Hang's ar- rival to the University and have high expectations for Hang. David Im, LSA junior and vice president of the Korean Student As- sociation (KSA) said, "I would like the different Asian Organizations to be more united, and for communica, tion to be better. I think what he could do is organize groups so they can work together." Im says he thinks the new Asian representative will be successful at his job. "I like the fact that because he's young he relates well to stu- dents. He seems responsive and re- ceptive to students." Tom Fujita, a Rackham Gradu- ate student and member of the Trot- ter House staff, said Hang should be a good resource person. Hang can talk to all kinds of people such as people from administration or housing, he said. KENNETH SMOLLER/DWIk Yee Leng Hang, Minority Student Services' new Asian American representative, discusses his plans for organizing the campus' Asian American student groups. Nuclear plant's repairs worry residents GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - The Palisades nuclear power plant in Covert, which has one of the worst records in the nuclear power indus- try, is undertaking two projects that have some residents even more ner- vous than usual. The first project, for which the plant is shutting down tomorrow, will be replacement of its two steam generators, using a method never tried before at a U.S. nuclear plant. Because the equipment door in the containment building housing the 480-ton generators is not large enough to bring in the new genera- tors, workers will have to cut a hole 28 feet by 26 feet in the steel and 3 1/2-inch thick concrete wall, plant spokesperson Mark Savage said yesterday. The hole will not be repaired un- til the switch is completed 37 days later, he said. During that period, negative air pressure created inside the building and a rubber curtain over the hole will prevent radioactiv- ity from leaking, Savage said. The plant on Lake Michigan will be closed about four months during the $100-million project, which will include other maintenance. But residents and nuclear-safety activists are worried, saying the risk or radioactive leaks is too great and that not enough is known about the process to be sure the hole is re-' paired properly. "If repairs are not done ade- quately, the containment structure could fail in the case of an accident," said Robert D. Pollard, a former Nu- clear Regulatory Commission offi- cial. He is now a nuclear safety en- gineer with the Union of Concerned Scientists, a non-profit group based in Cambridge, Mass. "Just because this has never been done before there is an increased risk that something could go wrong," Pollard said. The procedure has been used once before, however, at a nuclear plant in Sweden, Savage said. Consumers Powers Co., which owns the 780- megawatt Palisades, sent engineers there to study the project, he added. The generators are being replaced because of constant radioactive leaks, which have prompted numerous shutdowns and given Palisades one of the worst records in the industry. The old generators, which nuclear officials thought would last 40 years but are already corroded with radioac- tivity, will be stored on plant prop- erty. "It's no secret that Palisades has had a cloudy past," Savage said. With the project, the plant's biggest in its 19-year history, he said "Palisades has the goal of being one of the top nuclear performers in the country." Margaret Roche of Evanston, Ill., who spends four months a year at a Lake Michigan cottage in the shadow of the plant's reactor, isn't so sure. "We're concerned about the fact that the plant has had such a poor safety problem," she said. "I don't know that we can trust them with this." No group has organized to protest the project because many live there only a few months a year and most of the ones who do live there all year depend on the plant for jobs, Roche speculated. NRC project manager Brian Ho- lian said the procedure wasn't deemed* dangerous enough to warrant pubfic hearings, but that the site will be in- spected throughout the shutdown pe- riod. During the Palisades shutdown, consumers will buy power from neighboring utilities to supply elec- tricity to the estimated 570,000 cus- tomers served by the plant through- out Michigan. Even more unsettling to many residents around the plant is another Palisades project scheduled to start next fall. Palisades, along with a growing number of nuclear plants nationwide is seeking to store spent fuel on site in above-ground casks because it is running out of room in its spent fuel pools. FRIDAY SEPT. 21 * 8 PM " MICHIGAN THEATRE TICKETS AT TICKETMASTER OUTLETS INCLUDING HARMONY HOUSE. GREAT STUFF. 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