The Michigan Daily - Sunday, July 22, 1984 - Page 3 Local Midland staff faces layoffs By LILY ENG Seventeen years ago when Con- sumers Power announced its ambitious plans for a twin-reactor nuclear plant in Midland, they said it would cost $267 million and provide energy and jobs for the state. But last week, after spending $3.6 billion and completing 85 percent of the plant, Consumers Power voted to aban- don the project. There has always been debate about whether Michigan needed the extra energy, but there was no doubt about the need for the more than 6,000 jobs which were eliminated by last week's move. ABOUT 750 of those jobs belong to workers at the Ann Arbor offices of Bechtel Power Division, the chief con- tractor for the Midland plant, and many of those workers wonder where they will be working next. According to Mario Cotruvo, public relations manager for Bechtel, 750 non- manual employees - engineers, technicians, and secretaries - at the Ann Arbor office will either be laid off or reassigned to other Bechtel projects and offices. "We are not just sitting still and let- ting our people go," Cotruvo said. The company's two priorities for these people are to find reassignments for as many as possible and reduce the trauma of being laid off for the rest, he said, adding that he does not yet know how many can be reassigned. WHEN THE Zimmer nuclear plant in Ohio closed this year, Bechtel was able to find jobs in its own company for only 200 of the 600 employees who had been working there. Two weeks ago 800 Bechtel craftworkers at Midland were laid off as the shut down process began. Bechtel has been involved in 30 nuclear plant projects around the country. Suzanne Gibbs, a supervisor whose job ended with the abandonment of the Midland project, called the move a "bad mistake for the state" because Michigan will need more energy in the future. Angry about the plant closing, Gibbs said she hopes to stay here but is con- fident she will find a job somewhere. "I've moved before for a job so that's no problem," she said. "I SEE people walking around here with sad faces," said Mary Piccola, a Bechtel data processor. "The closing of Midland has had an effect on the whole office," added em- ployee Robert Fromm. Both Fromm and Piccolla have yet to learn whether they will be among the laid off. According to William Castanier, a spokesman for the state Department of Labor, local unemployment offices will provide increased services as the layof- fs are announced. An emergency unemployment office recently opened in Midland, where 4,500 to 4,800 people are expected to use its services, which will include counselin, marketing in- formation, and job referral. The Midland project was abandoned after Consumers and a coalition of its top industrial customers could not reach an agreement on a financial program for completion of the plant. Midland may be biggest power plant failure ever LANSING (UPI) - Is last week's cancellation of the Midland nuclear plant the biggest such abandonment to hit the nation's nuclear industry? The answer to that question, like so many others that have surrounded this complex drama, is not quite clear. THE MATTER is complicated by how comparitive sizes of nuclear projects are figured. In the Midland case, that is complicated further by the fact that the plant was never finished. Consumers Power Co. says it has spent about $3.6 billion in th 17 years it was constructing the project. That figure goes up to nearly $4 billion when the cost of nuclear fuel is added in. This week, Consumers is expected to ask the Public Service Commission See MIDLAND, Page 4 Lebanese hijacker surrenders to police BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - A man wielding a phony Molotov cocktail tried to hijack a jetliner carrying 147 people from Abu; Dhabi to Beirut yesterday but the pilot flew on to Lebanon where all aboard were released unharmed and the suspect surrendered. About 30 minutes after Middle East Airlines Flight 419 took off on a midday flight, a Lebanese man upset over Abu Dhabi's refusal to grant him a visa demanded that the pilot return, said Osman Osman, director of Lebanon's Internal Security Forces. "A MAN pushed through to the cock- pit holding a bottle wrapped up in paper, which looked like a Molotov cocktail," passenger Hussein Ali Ab- boun said. "Everyone was very afraid." But MEA pilot Samir Hasbini said he only had enough fuel to fly to Beirut, and the hijacker - whose bottle con- tained only orange juice - agreed to let the Boeing 727 land in Beirut, police said. The plane landed at Beirut Inter- national Airport on schedule at 2 p.m. local time. Its occupants were released in two batches after two hours of negotiations with the would-be hijacker, who then surrendered to police. "WOMEN AND children were crying," said a witness who saw the passengers released. "Some were near hysterics, hugging their relatives." As anxious relatives greeted sobbing passengers and crew members, repor- ters and photographers were shoved aside in a scuffle with Lebanese troops. In a particularly tense moment, a Lebanese soldier grabbed NBC cameraman Gary Fairman by the neck, shoved him backward and then cocked his Kalashnikov automatic rifle. He later uncocked the weapon and swaggered away, laughing with his fellow soldiers. Christian Phalange-operated radio identified the hijacker as Aatef Zein, 45, a Lebanese native. Witnesses said he was released "scot free," but security officials later said he had been questioned and detained at the airport. Associated Press The relatives of a young Lebanese boy released by the hijacker of a Middle East Airlines plane celebrate after being reunited with him at Beirut International Airport yesterday. Miss America ponders resignation From AP and UPI MILLWOOD, N.Y. - Vanessa Williams, Miss America 1984, spent yesterday in seclusion at home with her parents, two days before tomorrow's deadline to relinquish her crown because she posed for nude photographs. Acquaintances said Williams, 21, was led to believe the pic- tures of her and another woman in sexually explicit poses would be used as art and she would not be recognizable. THE PICTORIAL layout is to apper in the September issue of Penthouse. The country's first black Miss America was in Little Rock, Ark., making personal appearances when the Miss America Pageant's executive committee voted unanimously Friday to ask her to turn in her crown in 72 hours. Dodging reporters, she hastily returned Friday evening to the tiny New York City suburb of Millwood, where her paren- ts' house still bears the plaque "Home of Miss America 1984." THE WILLIAMS' telephone was busy yesterday and her attorney did not return calls. The first runner-up, Miss New Jersey, Suzette Charles, would probably assume that title_ if Williams resigns. Pageant officials refused to say what they would do if Williams does not quit. "I've gotten a number of Mailgrams and a number of telephone calls, most of them supportive," said pageant director Albert Marks. "I did get two or three telephone calls from people who said, 'What right have you to do this to a woman who was only modeling?' My answer was it would be very nice for you to reserve judgement until you have had a chance to see these pictures for yourself. Then say if we made the wrong decision." Charles ... may assume title