Page 10-Thursday, July 24, 1980-The Michigan Daily Two volunteers venture safely inside TMI nuclear plant MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (AP) - Two volunteers ventured safely inside the dark chamber housing Three Mile Island's crippled nuclear reactor yesterday for the first time since a nuclear power plant accident 16 months ago alarmed the nation. WIlliam Behrle and Michael Benson managed to swing open a balky 1,000- pound steel door that had blocked their way in an earlier attempt in May. They said they found predictable radiation levels and little physical evidence of damage from the accident. "IT WAS A little bit like walking into a tomb," Behrle said at a mid- afternoon news briefing. "I felt kind of relaxed. I was not apprehensive. When I took the first radiation reading, I thought, 'This is fantastic'." Before leaving the reactor contain- ment building at 10:26 a.m., the team spent 20 minutes measuring radiation levels, taking smear samples of surface contamination and conducting other tests considered vital to the plant's cleanup. Plant officials said in a statement that the team reported no apparent evidence of physical damage to equipment or instruments. But the engineers could not see the damaged reactor holding 100 tons of uranium, steam generators, pressurizer or reac- tor cooling pumps. "THE ENTRY mission proceeded smoothly and according to plan, and the data gathered will be valuable in plan- ning the cleanup," said Robert Arnold, in charge of recovery efforts for Metropolitan Edison Co., the plant's operator. "Conditions do not appear to be any WE ARE SHKING FOR A FEW GOOD PEOPLE Wode.Trkm& R oodotei, kc. 25185 Goddard Road Taylor,5Michigan 48180 313- 291-5400 Edmanci EngineerngInc. 1501 W. Thomas Bay City, Michigan 48706 517-686-3100 GracxXer Engineedng, Inc. 314 Haynes St., Cadillac, M149601 616 - 775-9754 knpaC - Improved Planning Action 25185 Goddard Road Taylor, Michigan 48180 313 - 291-5400 CIVIL ENGINEERS, LAND SURVEYORS, MUNICIPAL AN0PLANNING CONSULTANTS EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERS worse than we expected - perhaps a little better," he added. "The next step is another entry a month from now, probably into areas that were not covered today." About the only unexpected thing the team saw was a dented stairwell door. Arnold said it probably swung Spen during a hydrogen explosion the day of the accident and hita pipe valve. THE ENGINEERS also said there were pockets of rust and discoloration on the floor, as well as pieces of amber- colored glass that may have come from a broken light bulb. Arnold also said the radiation readings taken by the two basically confirm remote readings taken during Oaily Photo by JIM KRU the past few months. 'P nPet'promoters Their instruments showed whole body readings of 400 to 700 millirems Several young women pause to look at the wares displayed in one Art Fair per hour, which Arnold said were booth yesterday. The booth is one of many exhibits to be found at the Art "about where we hoped they would be," Fair, which will be open through Saturday evening. Assassins kil newsp mogul on Leanese road U: BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Assassins killed the chairman of the Lebanese newspaper syndicate on Beirut's seaside highway yesterday, riddling his limousine with bursts of automatic weapons fire from a passing automobile. His driver was also killed. It was the latest in a recent wave of slayings or attempted assassinations of leading Middle East figures, attacks that have spilled over into Western Europe and the United States. NO ONE CLAIMED responsibility immediately for the murder of the press association executive, Riyad Taha, 53. The killing touched off an uproar of public condemnation over the wor- sening lawlessness in Lebanon, where the government has been unable to establish a state of security since the 1975-76 civil war. Lebanese political leaders of both the left and right joined President Elias Sarkis and the government in denoun- cing Taha's assassination as a crime against freedom of expression. TAHA WAS A strong advocate of freedom of the press, resisting pressures to impose censorship on Lebanon's newspapers. In Paris, President Valery Giscard d' Estaing vowed to put a halt to foreign terrorism on French soil. "France will not allow its soil to become a base for foreigners seeking to organize violent actions here," Giscard said. "The necessary measures will be taken to protect the national territory. These intolerable ac- ts will receive the required justice." also Shiite Moslems. PARIS WAS the scene Monday of the Since the mid-1970s, Lebanon1 murder of former Syrian Prime been torn by conflict involv Minister Salaheddin al-Bitar and of an Christian rightists, left-wing Mosle assassination attempt last Friday Palestinian refugees and rival facti against former Iranian Prime Minister within each group. Shapour Bakhtiar. Taha was the second promin Police said they could establish no Lebanese journalist slain in re motive for the assassination. One un- months. Last March, Salim La' confirmed report circulating in Beirut editor and publisher of the Lond said it may have been a revenge slaying based Arabic-language magazine by relatives of a Shiite Moslem youth Hawadess, was abducted and slai who was killed recently, supposedly by Beirut. a member of the Taha family, who are. Registration resisters may he proseeuted has 'ing ms, ions nent cent wzi, don- Al n in 0 (Continued from Page 3) vocated a political view. For example, Landeau -said, com- mercials aimed at black viewers said young men should register to keep themselves out of trouble. Those ads aimed at white viewers, he continued, told those eligible that they should register, not because it is the law, but because it is "the right thing to do." LANDEAU SAID instead of wasting money producing public service com- mercials that no one will air, the gover-, nment should have spent money to buy ad time. He also said the Selective Ser- vice needed at least another six months to prepare for registration. In addition to his involvement with the sex discrimination lawsuit, Lan- deau is co-counsel in a suit testing the constitutionality of the request for social security numbers on the registration forms. The outlook for the sex discrimination case-in which a federal appeals court ruled registration of men only unconstitutional-looks bright, Landeau said. Calling the wording of the ACLU's case "very strong," Landeau said, "I think the Supreme Court is likely to uphold the decision of the lower court." Landeau said he was not surprised when Supreme Court Justice Brennan issued a stay of the appeals court's decision last weekend. "The gover- nment filed a hysterical brief," said Landeau. "Brennan really had no choice." 4 I