The Michigan Daily-Friday, July 9, 1982-Page 3 OECD urges West to exp nuclear PARIS (AP)- Western industrialized nations risk serious harm to the nuclear power industry if they continue to shy away from atomic energy, the 24-nation' Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said yesterday. It said in its annual report for 1981 that unless governments make a firm commitment to develop nuclear power over the next decade the resources of the nuclear construction and uranium mining industries will rapidly disperse, making it more difficult to meet energy targets in the future. The report also chided member governments for backing away from nuclear energy "even when there are good economic and technical reasons for taking the nuclear path." Concern over safety, location, waste management and public health remain leading obstacles to the expanded use of nuclear energy, the report conceded. It also said many utilities abandoned plans for new nuclear reactor plants power because of the length of time and size of the investment needed for licensing and construction. Despite the steady growth of the nuclear industry in some member countries, the report predicted nuclear energy growth by the year 2000 will fall far short or previous targets. France is ranked first among Western nuclear consumers with atomic power providing 38 percent of its energy needs. Sweden is ranked second with 1 37 percent nuclear share followed by Finland with 34 percent and Switzerland with 29 percent. The report was prepared by the Nuclear Energy Agency of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development: The United States, Western European and Scandinavian nations, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Japan and Turkey are members of the organization, which was established in 1961 to coordinate economic policies and promote growth of the member states. 'U' hospital psychiatrists treat "potential risk" infants DUST FROM THE Union's exhaust system litters a recessed portion of the roof below MSA's third floor offices. The inset shows a closeup of the dust on a fourth-floor window ledge. Union offies 'dusted' in ventilation accident By GEORGE ADAMS Offices on the third and fourth floors of the Michigan Union were blanketed with a layer of dust late Wednesday night - following an accidential discharge from the building's exhaust system. The dust, a gray-brown powdery sub- stance, apparently started coming through the exhaust vent on the roof of the Union at'roughly 11:15 p.m. Wed- nesday, just as workers were finishing cleaning the exhaust system's ducts, which take airborn matter from Union kitchens and vent it outside. TO CLEAN the ducts, workers must, crawl inside them with vacuums and brooms to sweep them out. "Someone turned a duct on too quickly is what it boils down to," said John Wanzeck, maintenance super- visor of the Union. "It's no big deal. It wasa mess and we cleaned it up." The cleanup, however, lasted until yesterday afternoon at the Michigan Student Assembly's third-floor offices, which were hardest hit by the dust. "I left here at about 12:15 (a.m.), and when I came back at ten this morning (yesterday) they had just finished," said MSA secretary Janny Huisman, who was working late and spotted the dust coming in through the windows. MSA TREASURER Jim Flaum was also in the chambers working when the dust started coming in. "I noticed some dust after I had opened the window," he said. "I continued working, then a few minutes later I looked dawn and my whole body was covered with dust." Ted Palka, owner of the company that performed the cleaning, said. yesterday he was "very sorry" that the incident occurred, and added that he has "seen hundreds of these things (ducts), and it's the first time I've ever seen anything like this." Palka said the dust was drawn into the Union's upper floors because of a difference in air pressure between the building and the air outside. The low pressure in the building acted as a vacuum to draw the material in through cracks in the windows and around air conditioning units, he said. THE EXHAUST system from the kit- chens was inadequate, according to Palka. "That's the wrong system," he said, "it wasn't intended for the pur- pose they're using it for." Palka said he and his workers could not turn off the fan for one of the dust-ladened ducts, and when they disturbed the dust, it naturally was drawn outside to the roof. He also said that Wanzeck didn't know how to turn the fan off. "It was extra heavy dirty in that duct. It hadn't been cleaned in years and years," Palka said. Those who were inside the building when the dust seeped in expressed some concern for their health. "We're all breathing this wonderful dust," Huisman said, "and who knows what's in it." Both Huisman and Flaum said their lungs and throats hurt yesterday morning, and that they had trouble waking up. THE UNIVERSITY'S Department of Occupational Safety and environmen- tal Health is analyzing the dust for possible toxic content and will have the results of those tests today, according See UNJON, P.age . (Continued from Page1) child, for example, may reflect feelings of neglect in his behavior, Solyom saidl. BY SPOTTING such difficulties in a parent/child relationship early, he ad- ded, child abuse often can be preven- ted. Solyom said that psychiatric care of infants has become more available in the last decade and has emerged, as an important subfield of child psychiatry. The University's program has been a success, officials report. Families from across the state have participated in the program, cited as one of the most comprehensive in the country. SOLYOM HESITATED, however, to speculate on how widespread infant paychiatry will become, but he did say physicians are becoming more aware of the field's importance. "I would not want to propose that> people seea childpsychiatristyearly as they do a dentist," he said. "Pediatricians are more and more open to discovering changes in children's mental attitudes, and might consult a psychiatrist after they see the children." The program's most important message, Solyom stressed, is that parents must become actively involved in their child's development. Doily Photo by DOUG McMAHON This sleek MG, packed to the hiltth a completeet of golf clubs, sitsready to roll out at a moment's notice.