Senate kills nuclear waste transport bill LANSING (UPI) - The Senate effec- tively killed yesterday a bill which would have stiffly regulated a planned shipment of radioactive waste across the Mackinac Bridge. On a 23-10 vote, the Senate sent the measure to the Upper Peninsula In- dustrial and Economic Affairs Commit- tee - a group which has not met in its nearly three years of existence and probably will not meet on the bill. THE BILL needed Senate approval yesterday if it was to receive final passage before the legislature recesses for the summer July 1. The Nuclear Assurance Corp. of Atlanta has proposed sending six truckloads of atomic waste through Michigan sometime before July 31. The spent nuclear fuel rods from Canada's Chalk River reactor would travel into the state at Sault Ste. Marie, across the "Big Mac" Bridge and down Interstate 75 to a storage center in Aiken, S.C. Gov. William Milliken is awaiting a response from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to his questions concer- ning the safety of the shipments. A SPOKESMAN said there had been no word from the NRC yesterday, but he still is anticipating a response this week. Michigan utilities were concerned the bridge restrictions would have ended their own shipments of nuclear plant waste to out of state storage facilities, he said. "They're ducking the issue," Irwin said. He said the legislature has no time to act on a bill dealing with the pending shipment. He will work now toward a comprehensive set of laws on nuclear shipments. INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave .b ,'W 761.6700 FRIDAY 7:15& 9:35 SAT & SUN 12:05, 2:25, 4:55, 7:15, 9:35 CHRISTOPHER REEVES UPRMAN T H E A D V E N T U R E CONTINUES s uper ipetter A"'""" 12-year-old Jason Johnson of St. Joseph, Michigan proudly presents the House resolution which he was awarded yesterday at the state Capitol. Jason was honored for his runner-up finish ina national spelling bee. Air controllers may strike Monday WASHINGTON (UPI) - The gover- nment yesterday established emergen- cy plans for a threatened nationwide air traffic controllers strike Monday, but the union offered not to strike if President Reagan would back pay- raise legislation. Federal Aviation Administration chief J. Lynn Helms told Congress the FAA will meet any time with the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, but the union said no new talks are scheduled. THE WHITE House said an "illegal strike" will not be tolerated. ALthough there was no movement in negotiations, PATCO announced late yesterday it would sign a new contract in return for White House endorsement of amended legislation to be introduced in Congress today. The union said Rep. William Clay, (D-Mo.), will sponsor a revised bill in the House, permitting a top base pay of $59,200 instead of the $73,400 in the original Clay bill. MICHIGAN REPERTORY Loose Ends JUNE 17, 18. 19, 20 TONIGHT- SATURDAY POWER CENTER- 8:00 p.m. PLUS.., Three Defier Revue PTP Ticket Office, MI League 764-0450 Power Center Ticket Office opens at 6:00 p.m. 763-3333 THE NEW legislation also would eliminate a "productivity bonus" to boost pay still further, and would scale back cost-of-living raises while retaining provisions for a 32-hour, four- day work week. As Civil Service employees, con- trollers now get from $20,000 to $50,000 for a 40-hour week. The contract largely covers working conditions. "If this bill gets White House backing, they will sign the contract," said PATCO spokesman David Trick. "I HAVE to ... assume there will be some kind of strike action," FAA Ad- ministrator J. Helms told a congressional subcommittee. A federal judge in New York City, meanwhile, said the controllers' complaints about being underpaid are "no excuse for violation of the law" and refused to lift an injunction barring a work slowdown or strike. A walkout could take out as much as 85 percent of the workforce, but the FAA has worked out contingency plans to handle about half of the normal commercial traffic and perhaps 25 per- cent of traffic overall. CHEAP FLICK COUPON WITH THIS ENTIREAD- ONLY $2.00 " ONE "SUPERMAN" TICKET! Fri a Sat at Midnight Only 994-350 g g g gg g g (K STARTS FRIDAY MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD