Page 6-Friday. May 30,1980-The 0 Consumer advocate to try for Congress By DANIEL WOODS Kathleen O'Reilly, a Washington, D.C.-based consumer activist, announ- ced her intention to seek the 2nd U.S. Congressional District Democratic nomination Tuesday at her parent's home in Plymouth. The seat is curren- tly held by Rep. Carl Pursell (R- Plymouth). The 34-year-old attorney said she blames Congress for double-digit in- flation and unemployment, diminishing competition, and pressures threatening the survival of small business. O'Reilly' criticized the legislature for being "afraid to take a strong position on the hard economic issues" and claimed it is "afraid to stand up to the powerful special interests. My record has shown that I will be different." UPON GRADUATION from Georgetown Law School in 1971, O'Reilly entered a Washington law firm to practice trial law. In 1975, she joined the Consumer Federation of America, a lobby group which she currently direc- ts. O'Reilly said she supports the policies of Sen. Edward Kennedy (D- Mass.), but will campaign for either Kennedy or President Jimmy Carter in the November elections. She said she fears dissention within the Democratic party might result in the election of Republican contender Ronald Reagan as president, and said she would cam- paign vigorously against him. Other policies O'Reilly said she sup- ports are: * Kennedy's comprehensive national health insurance program proposal; " the recently-created National Con- sumer Cooperative Bank, a cooperatively-owned bank that provides loans and technical assistance to consumer cooperatives; and, " a gradual phasing out of existing nuclear fission reactors. AP Photos Iron lady or wax lady? A-h~O Britain's Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, often called "The Iron Lady," recently met her likeness in wax at Madame Tussaud's Museum in London. For those fooled by the similarities, the real Thatcher is on the left. Investigators charge military in toxic Love Canal dumpings gsC ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)-The U.S. military dumped radioactive wastes, nerve gas and other highly toxic chemicals at Love Canal and other sites near Niagara Falls in the early 1940s,, state investigators said yesterday. A preliminary report by a state Assembly task force said the military- supervised disposals occurred before the dumping by the Hooker Chemical and Plastics Corp., focus of the current pollution crisis among the nearly 1,000 Love Canal residents. The report did not identify any new sites of toxic dumping, and most of the chemicals were already known to have been dumped in the area, although their source had been a mystery. But in- vestigators said the military used dump sites in neighborhoods where residents, unlike the Love Canal residents, have not yet been offered health studies. The task force said that the military supervised the dumping shortly before the United States entered World War II in 1941 and that the substances included radium, uranium, and other radioac- tive wastes left over from the Manhat- tan Project, which led to development of the atomic bomb. In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Tom Ross said Defense Department of- ficials had not had time to examine the Assembly report, but he recalled a 1978 department study which found no evidence of chemical dumping by "the military in the Love Canal area. The Army previously denied reports from long-time residents who said they recalled military dumping in the area. The task force's preliminary report was largely based not on direct records of past dumping, but instead on deeds and leases in which the Army warned of potential underground dangers after it turned over much of the land for civilian use after the war Rep. John LaFalce (D-N.Y.) called for a congressional investigation into the apparent discrepancies between the Pentagon study and the latest Assem- bly findings. LaFalce, whose congressional district includes Niagara Falls, also asked the Defense Depar- tment to reopen its own inquiry. "If the allegations in the Assembly Task Force's report are true . . . it would establish an absolute respon- sibility on the part of the federal gover- nment to provide necessary restitution to innocent victims of exposure to hazardous chemicals. Nothing less would do," LaFalce said. The Assembly report said the military dumping occurred at Love Canal and at sites north and south of it. The Love Canal area is five miles east of Niagara Falls. Each site had already been identified as the location of some kind of toxic pollution problem, but task force mem- bers said they are only beginning to discover how serious the waste problems might be and how many people might be endangered. 4 4 The Ann Arbor Film Cooperstbie Presents atMLB: $1.50 Friday, May 30 LOVE AND DEATH (Woody Allen, 1975) 7 & '0:20-MLB 3 Woody Allen's satire on Russian novels, Napoleonic Wars, and movie classics from Einstein to Bergman, complete with one-liners on just about everything. With DIANE KEATON. WHAT'S UP TIGER LILY? (Senkichi Taniguchi and Woody Allen, 1966) 8:40-MLB 3 A Japanese agent named Phil Moscowitz (!) searches for a stolen formula to the perfect egg salad sandwich. What happens from then on is anybody's guess, as Woody Allen gives the gold finger to the James Bond epic with his hilarious jumble (a real Japanese thriller which Allen rewrote and dubbed). Allen's most anarchic film, with some of his best one-liners. WOODY ALLEN, FRANK BUXTON, MIE HAMA, AKIKI WAKEBEYSHI, TIGER LILY. Tomorrow: RICHARD PRYOR-FILMED LIVE IN CONCERT and Gene Wilder in I I HELD OVER! !! MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD - , . a t a "),.b : .7XA d .y