Category: Content Type (Page 15 of 36)

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): Message in the Crisis

Newspaper: The Evening Sentinel
Date: April 5, 1979
Title: Message in the Crisis
Author: Letter to Editor

To the Editor,

Our Three Mile Island incident the past week may have derived from the beginning; little sins, so called, are the beginning of great ones. The explosion is in the spark, the upas in its seed, the fiery serpent in its smooth egg, the fierce tiger in the playful cub. By a little wound death may be caused as surely as by a great one.

Through one small vein in the heart’s blood may flow not less fatally than through the main artery. A few drops oozing through an embankment may make a passage for the whole lake of waters. A green log is safe in the company of a candle; but if a few shavings are just lighted, and then some dry sticks, the green log will not long resist the flames.

How often has a character which seemed steadfast been destroyed by little sins. Satan seldom assails in the first instance with great temptations. Skillful general, he makes his approach gradually, and by zigzag trenches creeps toward the fortress he intends to storm. Therefore it is essential that we watch against the little sins.

The million little things that are daily dropped into our hands, the small opportunities each day brings. He leaves us free to use or abuse just as we please and goes unchanging along His silent way. We may outrun by a violent swiftness that which we run out, but we are swiftly losing by overrunning.

C. W. Dick
Carlisle

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): Focus on Crisis, but Life Went On

Newspaper: The Evening Sentinel
Date: April 5, 1979
Title: Focus on Crisis, but Life Went On.
Author: Unknown

The big game for Cumberland County this week was the nuclear engineers vs. the Three Mile Island reactor.

And it hardly seemed like spring with the weather getting cold and rainy.

But, almost unnoticed here, major league baseball opened Wednesday for its 1979 season.

Baseball isn’t nearly as significant as the fate of the power plant or of the thousands of area residents who may be affected by it. But through the worry and fear and the relief, it is comforting to know that other things are still happening in the world.

Elsewhere, people may have paused to look at us as we dealt with the problems of radiation and threats of catastrophe, but they didn’t entirely stop what they were doing.

The Teamsters’ union went on strike, Three Mile Island or not. So did the United Air Lines mechanics.

Chicago had an election and picked its first woman mayor.

Patty Hearst got married to her former body guard.

Conductor Eugene Ormandy announced that he was retiring from the Philadelphia Orchestra.
“Aunt Jemima” and Emmett Kelley died.

Former U.S. Rep. Otto Passman was acquitted in Monroe, La., of tax evasion charges. Former U.S. Rep. Joshua Eilberg was disbarred in Philadelphia after pleading guilty to federal conflict of interest charges.

Hustler owner Larry Flynt, convicted in Georgia on obscenity charges, said he would continue to distribute his magazine there.

The Pentagon announced plans for sharp cutbacks at the New Cumberland Army Depot and at Fort Indiantown Gap.

And, Wednesday afternoon, the San Francisco Giants whipped the Cincinnati Reds, 11 to 5, in the National League opener. Later in the day, the Seattle Mariners beat the California Angels, 5 to 4, to get the American League started.

Once again grown men will act like boys, indulging in the most American of pastimes.
And once again two teams will act out on the baseball field tragedy and crisis that, with time, may replace for many the tension endured by all of us in the shadow of Three Mile Island.

Baseball is a fantasy of the powerful and the underdogs, a game played as much in the mud as on the field. It is fraught with its own emergencies and disasters, always resolved in the end, a substitute for the tidy endings that don’t always occur in real life.

The danger at Three Mile Island seems to be passing now: we gradually can turn our attention to those things we may have recently missed.

Like baseball, which began on the day the nuclear crisis appeared to be over.

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): County Work on Evacuation is Continuing

Newspaper: The Evening Sentinel
Date: April 5, 1979
Title: County Work on Evacuation is Continuing
Author: Deb Cline, Associate Editor

If a precautionary evacuation were called, farmers might be able to return to their farms for short periods of time to take care of livestock.

But county officials meeting with farmers Wednesday night said any provision for them to return to the evacuated area would depend on the level of radiation.

“Our primary concern is your safety,” a state official said.

Evacuation of the area around the Three Mile Island nuclear power generating plant is only a remote possibility now as thousands of families who had left the area on their own began returning home Wednesday.

The meeting Wednesday was one of the last of a series of evacuation contingency plan briefings various groups in the county have received since the nuclear accident more than a week ago.

Don Overdorff, county extension agent, said the plan now is that in case of an evacuation farmers from the evacuated areas would assemble at the county extension office on Claremont Road.

“ONCE THE area is cleared, the situation would be assessed by the county as to whether it’s safe to re-enter,” Overdorff said.

Farmers would be given identification, possibly even before evacuation were called, enabling them to get back into the evacuation area for short periods of time.

Officials did not rule out the possibility of removing some livestock, particularly prize animals from the area once all the people are out.

Officials urged farmers to consider problems they might face in a possible evacuation and relay them to county agents or other officials.

Also Wednesday, county commissioners and emergency personnel met with representatives of the business community Wednesday to discuss problems they might have during a possible evacuation and how the county can help offset long-term negative effects of the plant accident.
A major concern now is preventing tourists and businesses from shunning the central Pennsylvania area.

County Commissioner Chairman Nelson Punt said the decision by five convention groups not to come to the area this spring will have a bad economic impact.

A BUSINESSMAN also told commissioners some western meat packers and other food transporters are reluctant to ship their commodities through the area.

In addition to fear of contamination, these people are concerned about food being left in the area should an evacuation occur.

County solicitor John Broujos, who has been working on the emergency plans, said Wednesday, “We will press for solving that production of what to tell out-of-state businesses. That will be a long-range impact of Three Mile Island.”

One way to help avert some possible long-term negative effects of the nuclear accident is to return to an attitude of normality, said Oran Henderson, state civil defense director.

During a visit to Cumberland County Wednesday, Henderson said, “All of us in working together can set this kind of tone, in trying to get things back to normal. Rumors should be squelched at every opportunity.”

Henderson said the counties surrounding Three Mile Island now have excellent contingency plans.

After reviewing Cumberland’s plan Tuesday, he said, “I know specifically it will work. Although we’re not anticipating any kind of evacuation, if something unforeseen happens, Cumberland could manage an evacuation or any other mission it’s called on to do.”

Henderson said before the Three Mile Island accident, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission required contingency evacuation plans in areas within a five-mile radius of the facility.

He believes the NRC may expand that requirement to 10 miles around the plant.

But he said the chance of ever having to evacuate beyond 20 miles is remote.

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): Dickinson Students Probe Personal Effects of Nuclear Crisis

Newspaper: The Evening Sentinel
Date: April 5, 1979
Title: Dickinson Students Probe Personal Effects of Nuclear Crisis
Author: Deb Cline, Associate Editor

Perhaps the most obvious reactions to Three Mile Islands were the jokes, stories and slogans about radiation and nuclear destruction.

They are ranging from harmless wit to sick jokes or black humor.

One such slogan, “Hell no, we won’t glow,” a nuclear variation on the anti-Vietnam slogan of the 1960’s, is now being silk screened onto t-shirts at Dickinson College by students who view it as a way to relieve tension.

Lonna Malmsheimer, American Studies professor at the college, views it as part of the folklore building up around the nuclear accident. And she says such slogans and jokes are a normal reaction for people trying to cope with a crisis.

ACCORDING TO Malmsheimer, there are numerous other reactions-fantasies, dreams, religious experiences, recollections of past crises, and, of course, jokes-that she, three other professors and 18 to 20 Dickinson students are attempting to record for a study on how people react to a crisis situation.

The students are now conducting in-depth interviews with both college students and people in the community and Monday will send out a detailed questionnaire on the subject. They are also asking that anyone with interesting stories, jokes, religious experiences or any other interesting reactions to the accident write them to Reaction to Reactor Project, Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. 17013.

“Folklore is one of the quickest responses to a crisis,” Malmsheimer said. “New terms, wit, jokes tend to reveal the way people feel and the things they fear.

“Many of the jokes are forms of denial. It’s kind of like saying it couldn’t happen or it couldn’t happen here.”

She said the mental images people have, their fantasies, dreams, perceptions, jokes-call can be very revealing about the way they are reacting.

“A LOT of people connect it with bomb images which is expectable,” Malmsheimer said. “People alive during World War II connected it with Pearl Harbor.”

“People who became adults in the 1960’s are more likely to connect it with the Kennedy death and other events of the 60’s.”

“It’s not a rational process. It has to do with confusion, wondering if anybody’s in charge. There are also images from different kinds of disaster films.”

“We’re trying to find out what sorts of cultural inventories people draw on in a situation that is unprecedented for them.”

She said often people will use their imaginations to place themselves in a prior crisis situation which will then help them to better understand the new crisis and how they wish to react to it.
Although definitive, conclusions on the study may not be reached for some time; Malmsheimer said members of the group conducting the interviews will give a presentation Friday at 1:30 p.m. in the college’s Holland Union Building.

In the meantime, Malmsheimer believes the area may soon be crawling with social scientists eager to study the reactions of people to the accident.

“We’re at the beginning, and we’re lucky,” she said.

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): They Stalked Story of Hour

Newspaper: The Evening Sentinel
Date: April 5, 1979
Title: They Stalked Story of Hour
Author: Jim Kershner, The Evening Sentinel

There they were in Middleton Borough Hall: the press.

There was Don Allegerella, a young reporter for the Capital Times.

Not many small newspapers sent reporters from as far as Madison, Wisc., but “The Times has been warning people about nuclear power for years,” he said.

This was the biggest story he’d ever covered. He said he’s never seen so many reporters.
There were a couple hundred reporters and technicians with notebooks, briefcases, typewriters, tape recorders, cameras, lights and deadlines, all suddenly crowded into an old basketball court and meeting room.

THE TELEPHONE company scrambled to spin a web of telephone lines around the long rows of press tables.

Joyce Barnell, a production coordinator for NBC News, had to find not only telephones, but cars, planes, helicopters, and even binoculars at the drop of a story.

“Where do you find binoculars at 10 a.m. Sunday morning?” she asked. (At a Camp Hill department store, it turns out.)

Tony Sargent, ABC radio correspondent from Washington, said he didn’t have any particular problems except the unavoidable pitfalls of a story this size happening in a place the size of Harrisburg.

The location was a little too close for comfort for Ed Perrone. But the Harrisburg Magazine writer felt good about one thing. His magazine was inundated with requests for the article they did shortly before the real accident describing the possibility of an accident at Three Mile Island.

Metropolitan Edison Co., part owner and operator of the nuclear power generating plant, had tried to get the magazine’s CETA funding withdrawn because of the article, he said.

Takemoto Iinuma, from Japan’s nationally-circulated daily, Yomiuri Shimbum, said in some ways this was the biggest story he’d ever covered. But then, he’s covered the fall of Saigon.
“This event itself is not so dramatic as a war,” he said, “but in a philosophical sense, this has a great impact on the people.”

It had a big impact in Japan too. “The Japanese people are very sensitive to radioactives. The people there say the amount of radioactives is not the issue. The issue is the presence of radioactives.”

The Japanese government has ordered safety checks on all 19 of the country’s nuclear power plants.

Iinuma found it quite interesting that there was no panic here.

“IF THIS had happened in Japan it would have been very different,” he said. “The people would have rushed out but there is no place to go on an island.”

Washington bureau chief for his paper, Iinuma noted a difference in Japanese and American reporting of the event. “In the U.S. you pay much more attention to the process-every little step is reported.”

Reporting for the Voice of America was Gill Butler. He said the accident had been the lead story in 37 languages for most of the week.

For Butler, the biggest problem at first was that none of the reporters knew what questions to ask. And then Met-Ed said one thing and the NRC said another.

Max Robinson of ABC World News Tonight said he had the same nagging feeling every reporter there had-that in this story, “I might also be a victim.”

But he thought it was important to be on the scene to bring the story to the ABC viewers.

“That’s one of the things we try to do on World News Tonight,” he said with a television smile.
Another reporter asked if he felt the press had gone overboard.

“We were on the brink of a very serious disaster. In view of that how could we have overreacted?” he replied.

BUT IN THE end it was Jimmy Breslin, the New York Daily News columnist who got the story.

He had arrived on Friday but didn’t stay with the pack of reporters fighting for scraps of news in borough hall. His column Sunday told the real story of Three Mile Island.

“At first yesterday, I wasn’t all that afraid,” it begins.

Breslin had stood at the gate to the plant and watched the steam drift out of the tops of the cooling towers. He talked to one of the workers who wasn’t afraid. And to a man who works for the plant in health physics. Then he summed it all up in one exchange.

“Where’s the wife and kids, out shopping?” I asked.

“No, I sent them away to the mountains,” he said.

“Oh,” I said.

How does he do it?

Legwork.

“I only made it with legs,” he said.

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): Recovery Emergency Declared

Newspaper: The Evening Sentinel
Date: April 5, 1979
Title: Recovery Emergency Declared
Author: Unknown

Cumberland County commissioners today declared a county state of emergency “for the purpose of planning, readiness and the recovery of costs” relating to the Three Mile Island nuclear accident.

Commissioners also requested local taxing bodies submit itemization of nuclear accident-related expenses for possible Met-Ed reimbursement.

Commissioners issued State of Disaster Emergency for possible collection of federal and state funds to aid in normalization, Commissioner Nelson Punt said.

Commissioners also asked local government officials and school districts to “assemble all the bills and records of overtime payments by police departments, school bus drivers and other people that…you have asked to participate in the readiness preparations attendant to this emergency.”

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): The ‘enemy’ is us

Newspaper: The Sentinel
Date: April 6, 1979
Article: The ‘enemy’ is us
Author: Patricia R. Sweeney

To The Editor:

More than a year ago, President Carter announced a campaign to save energy that would be “the moral equivalent of war.”

Those few of us who rallied to his banner and who have been having a rather lonely time of it here on the front lines hope the Three Mile Island Incident will inspire some laggards to join our ranks.

As I traverse the terrain between my home and the supermarket on a creaky 3-speed bicycle, constantly shoved over the shoulder of the road by automobiles who have sailed forth at 45 mph just to mail a letter;

Or, as I offer a shivering guest a motheaten but comforting old woolen afghan as a supplement to the cardigan sweater she has procured against the 64º temperature in our living room;

Or, as I grope my way down a stairwell lighted only by a 7-watt nightlight, thereby twisting an ankle and incurring a $25 orthopedist’s bill;

Or, as I juggle pans back and forth between the two burners of the electric stove that I permit myself to use;

Or, as I wash the 26th coffee cup left behind by my guest denied the luxury of styrofoam (made from petroleum);

Or, as I tramp on our 500th “tin” can that I am flattening in the vain hope a recycling center may open soon to accept the small armory of tins, bottles and brown paper grocery bags that threatens to overflow our back porch;

As I do these things, I wonder how many people who are taking aim at Med Ed for endeavoring, in the quickest, easiest and cheapest way – so I’m sure it seemed to them – to provide consumers with energy that thought they had to have or DIE;

I wonder how many of these people are now prepared to reorganize their priorities and join in the great conservation effort that would make installations like Three Mile Island superfluous.

In the words of the immortal general, Pogo, “We have met the enemy, and he is us.”

Patricia R. Sweeney
Carlisle

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): S. Middleton reviews plan for evacuees

Newspaper: Sentinel
Date: April 6, 1979
Article: S. Middleton reviews plan for evacuees
Author: Unknown

SOUTH MIDDLETON TOWNSHIP –

Supervisors Thursday night reviewed plans for hosting evacuees from eastern Cumberland County, if an evacuation is ordered.

Ann Neimer, township secretary-treasurer, outlined activities planned for evacuees who would be housed in South Middleton Schools in the event of an emergency.

It includes provision for registration, security, first aid, recreation, and even provisions for evacuated household pets.

Neimer and the supervisors worked through the last week with county emergency prepardness officials on the possibility of the township serving as a host area, she said.

In other business, the supervisors awarded a contract to Frank Slyder, Mount Holly Springs, for the installation of two fire hydrants in Pine Road Heights.

One would be at McLand Drive and Sunset Drive, the other at McLand Drive and Sycamore Drive.

The board also reappointed Richard Ingle to the Municipal Authority and accepted the appointment of Roger Morgenthal as solicitor to the Planning Commission.

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): Engineers aim to reduce radiation leaks

Newspaper: The Sentinel
Date: April 6, 1979
Article: Engineers aim to reduce radiation leaks
Author: United Press International

HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI) – Engineers worked around a troublesome valve and began operations today aimed at reducing the small leak of radioactive gases from the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant.

The process was pumping gases from an auxiliary building into the radiation-proof dome around the crippled reactor. Nuclear Regulatory Commission officials said it should make a significant reduction of all gases leaving the plant.

The degassing operation was stalled for a while early today by a valve that would not open. Engineers worked around that by switching to a second gas source and planned to deal with the valve later.

BECAUSE OF THE continuing release of very low levels of radiation from the plant, officials continued to advise pregnant women and young children to stay out of a five mile radius around the site.

Engineers, meanwhile, proceeded slowly in their efforts to bring the reactor to a safe cold shutdown condition. The final shutdown was expected late next week.

Robert Bernaro, an NRC technical specialist, said it took plant operators 18 hours to stabilize the reactor March 28 when the accident occurred, but he said the situation was never out of control.

“That implies people had no means with coping with the deterioration,” Bernaro told UPI. “I don’t think that was the case at all. They had a number of things they could do.”
President Carter, referring to the Pennsylvania nuclear crisis, told the American people in a nationally broadcast speech on energy Thursday night: “You deserve a full accounting and will get it.”

Carter said he would appoint an independent presidential commission to investigate what the Nuclear Regulatory Commission calls the worst accident at a commercial nuclear power generator in American history.

TENS OF THOUSANDS of the estimated 200,000 people who fled to other parts of Pennsylvania and even to other states have returned home, but some still stayed away, waiting for clearer signs the danger had passed.

At a hearing in Washington Thursday, a Congressman and a power company lawyer disagreed over whether the consumers served by the Metropolitan Edison Co., operator and 50 percent owner of the plant, should bear the costs of the accident – estimated to range into the millions of dollars.

Rep. Eugene Atkinson, D-Pa., said rather than the consumer, the power companies – and possibly the federal government, too – should pay for repairs and the replacement of power lost to the accident.

But Gerald Charnoff, a power industry lawyer, said large costs could bankrupt even an electric utility.

That was when officials declared there was a chance of a reactor core meltdown, a nuclear catastrophe that would have threatened the very lives of area residents and ravaged the rolling central Pennsylvania dairy farm countryside.

Gov. Dick Thornburgh said late Thursday he would not lift his recommendation that pregnant women and pre-school children stay outside of a five-mile radius of Three Mile Island because they are particularly vulnerable to its dangers.

“THE NEWS remains encouraging, “Thornburgh said in a statement. “It appears that we may not be close to the time when the women and children who left their homes a week ago can return.”

The governor also said schools in the area would remain closed until further notice. Classroom doors were shut last Friday.

Federal and state health officials said radiation levels still were not high enough to cause harm to public safety. Tests indicated milk produced on numerous farms around the plant has not been adversely affected.

Carter cautioned Americans against overreacting to the Three Mile Island crisis.

Earlier, Carter administration officials said the country could not afford to drop nuclear power as a source of energy. Thirteen percent of U.S. energy comes from nuclear generators.

At the plant, meanwhile, engineers took the first steps Thursday leading to a shutdown of the reactor that went haywire last week.

Harold Denton, the NRC’s operations chief at the Susquehanna River site, said the 10-day cool-down process began with the gradual removal of gases from the water around the uranium fuel core. This action was to avoid the reformation of a dangerous gas bubble when pressure is lowered.

The high pressure in the reactor kept gases dissolved in the water, like the gas in a bottle of champagne before it is uncorked.

DENTON SAID approval was given to a plan to pump radioactive gases from an auxiliary building into the radiation-filled dome around the reactor. This, he said, should reduce by at least 30 percent the slight level of radiation escaping from the island plant.

The cooling plan now being followed will use in a few days the same natural circulation process Henry Ford used to cool the Model T engine half a century ago.

Hot water from the reactor will flow into a steam generator filled with cooled water. The hot water will become cooler and thus sink and push already cooled water ahead of it back into the reactor to take away more heat from the core. The process will continue without the need for pumps, which might fail.

The Sentinel (Carlisle, PA): Met-Ed: Consumers should foot bill…

Newspaper: The Sentinel
Date: April 6, 1979
Article: Met-Ed: Consumers should foot bill…
Author: United Press International

Washington (UPI) – Consumers and not utility company stockholders should pick up the tab for repairs and power losses resulting from the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant accident, according to a lawyer for owners of the Pennsylvania facility.

Washington attorney Gerald Charnoff, testifying at congressional hearings, said Thursday forcing utilities to pay the costs could “impoverish or bankrupt” them.

Charnoff’s contention that electric ratepayers should foot the bill was challenged by consumer spokesmen and several members of Congress, including subcommittee Chairman Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.

Consumers should not be made to pay for bad business decisions, Kennedy told the utility spokesman.

“CONSUMERS ARGUE that the management made the decision, so it should pay the costs of its mistakes,” he said.

“It seems to me inescapable that considerations of fairness and ultimate economic impact require that the cost of replacement power be flowed through to consumers,” Charnoff told the energy subcommittee of the Joint Economic Committee.

He said the company had invested $780 million in the damaged unit and that it was insured for up to $300 million.

“It is not yet known whether the total (accident) costs will exceed $300 million,” he said.
Pennsylvania Rep. Eugene Atkinson, a Democrat, said he was opposed to automatically passing on costs to consumers “who played no role” in causing the plant shutdown. He suggested that the government share in the costs if the Nuclear Regulatory Commission was “responsible for licensing a deficient plant.”

MARK WIDOFF, official Consumer Advocate for Pennsylvania, said the Three Mile Island plant was merely the “the most dramatic and most serious example” of a growing problem for utility customers faced with picking up the tab for shutdowns.

And Alden Meyer, testifying for the Environmental Action Foundation, urged that, “Consumers must no longer be forced to bear all risks of poor design, operator error, or other shortcomings for which utility management is primarily responsible.”

Hazel Rollins, deputy administrator of the Energy Department’s Economic Regulatory Administration, said that passing the accident costs on to customers would add about $7.50 to the average monthly electric bill.

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