The Michigan Daiily - Saturday, September 8, 1984 - Page 3 Postal costs may go up 2 cents From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The Postal Rate Commission recommended yesterday that first class postage be increased to 22 cents and the post card rate be hiked to 14 cents - increases likely to take effect early next year. The commission, overruled three years ago when it rejected the current 20-cent rate, agreed this time with the Postal Service contention that it will need higher rates - but chopped a penny from the requested first class and post card delivery charges. "WE THINK 22 cents is a fair and equitable rate," commission chairman Janet Steiger said in announ- cing the recommendation. The cost of mailing a letter was last increased in November.1982 when it went from 18 cents to 20 cents. The Postal Service recommended a broad series of increases last November including a 23-cent first class rate and a 15-cent charge for post cards, which now take a 13-cent stamp. The rate commission has been considering those requests since then, and now sends its decision back to the Postal Service for ac- tion. THE COMMISSION, an independent five member board that must approve requests to raise postal rates, reached its decision after holding a series of hearings on the proposal. In pressing for the rate hike, the Postal Service predicted it will lose $800 million in the fiscal year en- ding Sept. 30, but the board members who opposed the rate hike say the service will break even and could even show a $200 million profit. Steiger said her commission scaled down the 23- cent request because the continuing improvement in the economy and the lowering of inflation have reduced postal costs and increased revenues from the original estimates. The rate-making decision comes amid labor negotiations between the Postal Service and four unions representing 600,000 workers. The talks reached an impass in July when the contracts ex- pired and the dispute was sent to a fact-finding panel. On Wednesday, both sides announced the two major unions would return to the bargaining table next week. The Postal Service is seeking a three-year wage freeze, a new wage scale and other contract con- cessions. Senate rejects Meese, Reagan still loyal WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan's nomination of Edwin Meese III as attorney general was removed from Senate consideration yesterday, but the president said that, barring the unexpected, he will resubmit Meese's name if he wins re-election. "I have not seen the report yet," the president said, referring to an investigation of Meese's affairs by an independent counsel. "But barring anything un- foreseen - and I don't expect anything of that kind - I have not changed my mind about him." THE REMOVAL of the nomination from Senate consideration effectively postponed Meese's chances of becoming the nation's top law enforcement official until a possible second Reagan term. Reagan, speaking to reporters as he left the White House for a weekend at Camp David, Md., said he understood the Senate's delay because of "the crowded agenda to have with regard to the election, and I don't think there is anything unusual about that at all." Asked specifically if he would resubmit his coun- selor's nomination if he wins re-election on Nov. 6, the president said, " Yes, yes." SENATE Judiciary Committee Chairman Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.), stripped the nomination from his panel's agenda for the rest of the congressional session to avoid election-year politics, an aide an- nounced. "The senator believes that an election year does not provide the proper forum for serious con- sideration of an important nomination such as this," said press spokesman Mark Goodin. The nomination of Reagan's long-time confidante, once considered a prospect for easy approval in the Republican-run Senate, attracted controversy after Democrats on the Judiciary panel raised quesions about Meese'safinancial ties with people who later received federal appointments. IN MARCH, Thurmond's committee put off acting on the matter pending the outcome of an in- vestigation by independent counsel Jacob A. Stein in- to Meese's affairs. Thurmond's move came one day after the Los Angeles Times said Stein would issue a report next week clearing Meese of any criminal wrongdoing. The report quoted unidentified sources as saying Stein was unable to find proof that Meese arranged federal jobs for friends in return for loans received by him and his wife, Ursula. The sources, according to the newspaper, said they did not know if Stein would address the question of whether Meese's actions were improper though legal. Associated Press White House to workbench Former First Lady Rosalyn Carter dons construction clothes as she and for- mer president Jimmy Carter work on the renovation of a building on Manhattan's Lower East Side yesterday. Calf wth artificial heart dies- in Utah T T a-. Associated Press Horseplay No one gets mad when this bar guest dances on the tables - it's a life size wooden horse made of wood which decorates a Zurich, Switzerland bar and probably makes some happy hour patrons look twice. Kremlin demotes high-ranking soldier SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A calf set 11 ty sa y s a record by surviving more than 268 days on the Utah artificial heart, but had to be put to death because of a lung infection, researchers said yesterday. Big Al, a Holstein calf, was given an overdose of painkilling drugs late Thur- sday. He had been given the n u ie a n polyurethane Utah 100 mechanical pump - similar to the one implanted in Barney Clark - on Dec. 13, 1983. "HE HAD some infection in his lungs can'th e and we decided it was getting out of control," said Dr. David Holmberg, a veterinarian at the University of Utah's Artificial Organs Division laboratory. ch alieng~eHowever, he said that before the ex- periment was 'ended the nine-month- By GEORGEA KOVANIS old, 287-pound animal broke by "three Ann Arbor's city attorney said to four hours" a survival record for yesterday that a suit challenging the calves fitted with mechanical hearts. proposed ban on nuclear weapons Big Al lived more than 268 days on the research is premature and filed a heart, surpassing the record set by motion asking thatrthe suit be Tennyson, a Jersey calf, in 1980. disqualified g THE UTAH 100, similar to the Jarvik- The suit, filed Wednesday by the En- 7 artificial heart implanted in Clark, vironmental Research Institute in the first human recipient, was shut off Michigan (ERIM) asks that a proposal and removed after Big Al died. to make Ann Arbor a nuclear free zone Clark, a retired dentist from the Seat- be taken off the Nov. 6 ballot becauseit tle area who suffered from a isdegenerative heart disease, died March City attorney R. Bruce Laidlaw said 23, 1983, after 112 days on the heart the suit opposing the proposal is when other parts of his body failed. premature because "Courts should not ************************* and do not involve themselves in the legislative process." * He added that no suits can be filed .o n PEPSI against the proposal unless it becomes . ES an amendment to the city charter and /r then only if the city accuses a party or * /2Lifer Bottle attempts to press charges against a . party, can it be taken to court. ERIM also contends in its suit, which is against the city of Ann Arbor, that the freeze involves zoning, a legislative issue which cannot be put on the ballotdit by initiative.*P However, Laidlaw argues that the issue is not a zoning matter because the proposal would not divide the city into zones where research could be conduc- ted. According to Gary Claypool, chief counsel for ERIM, the proposal which he called "ill conceived" will be taken off the ballot. A hearing on the issue is scheduled * M arsha I'sP for September 13. It had originally been * scheduled for Sept. 20 but was moved * S. Statec up a week because the deadline for * NO COUPON Goodthr having ballots printed is Sept. 18. * The human research portion of the artificial heart project has moved - along with Dr. William DeVries, the only surgeon authorized to implant the air-driven device - to Humana Heart Institute International in Louisville, Ky. BUT ANIMAL research and development of the device continues in Utah. The Utah 100, a cooperative design by staff members at the laboratory, is an oblong pump designed to fit smaller patients than the Jarvik-7. Holmberg said the calf was in wor- sening health as it grew, surpassing the heart's ability to circulate sufficient blood. Big Al weighed 105 pounds when the heart was implanted. "The trouble with calves is they grow to be such a size they exceed the capacity of the heart," Holmberg said. The infection was not believed to be linked to the air lines which passed through the calf's body todrive thq heart, but rather to an accumulation of fluid in its lungs as it outgrew the device, he said. Though Big Al was treated with an- tibiotics, doctors determined his case was terminal and decided to end the experiment. SALE es $1.69/8-pack e * ict aLLberty uSept. 22nd NO .IMIT MOSCOW - The Soviet Union offered relieved no clarification yesterday of the sur- other dut prise removal of Nikolai Ogarkov as the "IT WA country's top soldier, but most Western seems to experts interpreted the move as a what we' demotion. The official news media Western followed the lead of Tass, playing up not sayin Thursday night's announcement that The dip Marshal Sergei Akhromeyev had been mented named chief of staff and first deputy tified, sa defense minister. demoted. Ogarkov, who had become the Soviet "Trans Union's most visible military man, was strike me relegated to one paragraph in the for anoth newspapers. They 'noted tersely that added th the 66-year-old marshal had been sferred t -HAPPEN' "in connection with a move to ies.' AS A surprise to us, and that be true around town from ve been able to gather," said a diplomat. "The Soviets are g anything." plomat, who, like others, com- on condition he not be iden- id he believed Ogarkov was 1. sfer to other work does not e as a way to groom someone er responsibility," he said. He at if Ogarkov was being tran- o some higher position it was "INGS- Highlight The Maize and Blue opens the football season today with a game against Miami. The opener, which promises to be a thriller for all fans, begins at 1 p.m. in Michigan Stadium. Films Mediatrics - Breaking Away, 7 & 9p.m., Nat. Sci. Cinema Two - To Have and Have Not, 7 p.m.; the Maltese Falcon, 9 p.m., MLB3. Performances Ark-Michael Cooney, 8 p.m., 637 S. Main St. Meetings Ann Arbor Go Club-2 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Ann Arbor Christian Development Center-Intercessory Prayer Meeting, 7 p.m., Calvary United Methodist Chutch, Newport and Miller. Miscellaneous Michigan League-Buffet club, League cafeteria. Reunion of Black Graduates-Banquet, 7 p.m., Marriott Hotel banquet hall. School of Music-Piano Pedagogy Laboratory, auditions. University Musical Scoietv-Choral Union and Festival Chorus auditions. I "pretty unusual" that the post was not announced at the same time. "In view of (Ogarkov's) past activity, most of us saw his star as being quite high," said another diplomat. IN GENERAL, the Western experts were surprised because there had been no hint that Ogarkov was in any trouble, that he is in ill health, or that a shakeup of the military establishment was in the works. There had been frequent speculation that Ogarkov might eventually succeed Defense Minister Dmitri Ustinov, 75, if Ustinov retired or gave up the post to devote himself fully to his duties as a member of the Politburo. And given the secrecy in the Kremlin, few would rule out the possibility that Ogarkov might at some point move into another top job. Man turns 'U' mail truck into ambulance (Continued-from Page 1) NEVERTHELESS, she checked to see if the van had been towed away and eventually called the police to report it missing. About that time, she received a call from the student at the emergency room in University Hospital. "He said he had. hurt his foot and needed transportation to the emergen- cy room," Schroeder said. He told PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT - NIGHTS The Business School is currently inter- viewing students interested in partici- pating in the Business School phonathon this fall. Phonathons are a major part of our annual fund campaign. Callers will contact alumni nationwide. 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