Page 10-Tuesday, June 3, 1980-The Michigan Daily MILITARY TO DRAFT NEW CONSTITUTION S. Korean congress thwarted .0 SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - In yet another apparent setback for democracy, South Korea's military- dominated government said yesterday that the popularly elected National Assembly will not help write the nation's new constitution. The government also announced the appointment of two military leaders - Maj. Gen. Ro Tae-woo, commander of the Seoul garrison, and *Maj. Gen. Chung Ho-yong, special forces com- mander -to a new committee that is to run the country's affairs. Both are closely tied to Chun Doo-hwan, the military strongman who is chairman of the committee. CHUN ANNOUNCED he was resigning his post as director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, but he was not expected to yield any power. In Washington, State Department spokesman Hodding Carter said the United States will "evaluate the role of the new committee through its actions rather than its words in the coming days and weeks." He again called for establishment of a broadly based coalition government. In Seoul, a member of a special government committee appointed to rewrite the constitution said, "The original plan was to write a unified draft by discussing it with the National Assembly, but the government changed its mind and will now produce a first draft without the National Assembly." THE PLAN now, he said, is for the committee to complete its draft of a new constitution by the end of July, then hold a national referendum on the document beforeSept. 20. Chun and other national leaders, in- cluding civilian president Choi Kyu- hah, have pledged that a new con- stitution will be written by the end of 1980 and that general elections based on it will be staged in early 1981. However, opposition leaders have expressed fears that the constitution will not provide for sufficient democratic reform and that elections will be tailored to satisfy the military. THERE WERE widespread calls for constitutional reform after last Octob- er's assassination of President Park Chung-hee. Park consolidated his power by rewriting the constitution in 1972. That constitution is still in effect. The government-appointed con- stitutional committee first met May 19, but its second scheduled meeting last Monday was postponed because of the crisis over an anti-government rebellion in Kwangju. Paratroopers recaptured the city last Tuesday, and the military on Saturday moved a step closer to absolute control of the country with the formation of the 25-member Special Committee for National Security Measures. All but eight of the council's members are ac- tive or retired generals. CHUN AND the two other military leaders were named to the "standing committee" within the councilfthat will exercise control. Observers speculated Chun gave up his post as head of the KCIA, which he took in April, ina bid to remove friction between the military and student dissidents. The students had demanded that he quit or be fired. HIKING BOOT SALE In another development yesterday, the government ordered the closing down of Japan's Kyodo News Service Bureau in Seouland told bureau chief Kenjiro Hayashi to-leave the country by next Monday. The Culture and Information Ministry said Hayashi was guilty of "ill-intended, distorted and false repor- ting" of events in South Korea. Hayashi denied the charges, but said he would not appeal. TMI sued by gov't to compel testimony WASHINGTON (AP)-The Justice Department sued yesterday to compel five employees of the Three Mile Island' nuclear plant to testify before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission about the major accident which occurred there last year. Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti said a single count civil suit was filed against the five employees of Metropolitan Edison, the utility which operates the Pennsylvania nuclear reactor, in U.S. District Court in Harrisburg. THE GOVERNMENT said the five employees had refused to testify last month after each of them was sub- poenaed by the commission. The defendants are control room operators Hugh McGovern and Lynn Wright and shift supervisors Brian Mehler, Joseph Chwastyk and William Zewe. The government said the five, who live in the Harrisburg area, were present at the nuclear plant on March 28, 1979, the first day of the accident. "I don't have any comment on anything along those lines," said McGovern, who added that he knew nothing of the suit. Efforts to reach the other four were not successful. ACCORDING TO the NRC, their testimony about three events bearing on the seriousness of the accident is needed to help the commission decide whether the accident should have been reported more promptly to its staff. The Justice Department said infor- mation about the three events is crucial to assessing the potential for release of radiation outside the plant and possible hazards to the surrounding population. The five employees filed a motion with the commission last month to quash the subpoenas on grounds that they were unduly burdensome and that a grand jury investigation of the ac- cident is underway. The NRC denied that motion finding no undue burden in subpoenas. Ad- ditionally, the NRC rejected the conten- tion that its civil investigation should be halted because of the ongoing federal grand jury probe. The grand jury investigation is looking into allegations by a Three Mile Island control room operator, Harold Hartman, that results of certain tests had been falsified over - period of several mnth- before the accident. 0 I A ..... T D% OFF. IG BOOTS O nl VERCORS, nickels arcade UPER GUIDES 20% -44 ALL HIKIN FABIANO, PUETEREY, S _