4 Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday July 22, 1984 Hundreds attend memorial servie (Continued from Page i). late Friday in a San Diego funeral SOME35 riess fom trouhoutSan parlor viaitation room near the coffin SOME 35 prieats from throughout San containing Huberty's body. The mor- Diego County attended the Maas along tuary said the family planned no with government officiala and Joan services and Huberty's body will be. Kroc, widow of McDonald's founder cremated early next week. After the services, about 20 people Flowers and donations were pouring in for Huberty's victims from gathered outside the restaurant, which throughout the United States. has been closed since the shootings. "EVERYBODY identifies with it in They carried signs inSpanish reading, "EVRY'' ienies iKin "Pain in the Heart." They said they some way," Police Chief Bill Kolander wanted the restaurant permanently saA special counseling hot line has been closed and turned into a memorial opened for residents of San Ysidro and playground. McDonald's executives its cross-border counterpart, Tijuana, said there would be no decision on the Mexico. c t future of the restaurant until next week. Kroc said franchises of the world- Twenty-one people were killed in the wide fast-fod chain were donating $1 worst single-day mass murder by a million to the San Ysidro Family Sur- gunman in U.S. history. Huberty was vivors' Fund to help with burial costs killed by a police sharpshooter 67 and counseling. minutes after the massacre began. Local businesses stepped forward CORONER DAVID Stark said an with their own contributions, children autopsy showed no signs of alcohol, trickled into San Diego-area Mc- drugs or a brain abnormality and police Donald's restaurants offering nickles investigators said Huberty's motives and dimes and other customers gave will never be known. donations of up to several hundred Etna Huberty and her daughters sat dollars. Poland grants amnesty to political prisoners (Continued from PageS). U.S. official, who spoke on condition he the move "positive," but did not offer not be identified. He added, however, an end to the sanctions, imposed when that President Reagan may first want mrtial law was declared in December to determine whether the amnesty is "a 1981.paper tiger." The U.S. sanctions include a freeze on "The amnesty is an important liberal new credits, blockage of Poland's ap- step which should be recognized and plication for membership in the Inter- acknowledged," said another diplomat, national Monetary Fund, denial of most who also requested anonymity. favored nation trading status, and the Jals reque ed ty. suspension of scientific exchanges and Jaruzelski attacked the Western san- regular commercial airliner service c.ons as an "anti-Polish farce directed' between the two countries, by the American administration,' but "I EXPECT youshould see some added Poland did not want to remain' movement fairly quickly," said one "an isolated island." Midland may be industry's biggest failure in history IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Postal contracts expire, employees continue to work WASHINGTON - Postal em- ployees worked without a contract yesterday after talks between the U.S. Postal Service and four unions representing 600,000 workers reached an impasse as the old labor agreements expired. Federal law outlaws strikes against the Postal Service and the breakdown of negotiations triggered a fact-finding period that could lead to binding arbitration that may not be resolved before Dec. 10, said Postmaster General William Bolger. Attica uprising ends ATTICA, N.Y. - Guards at Attica Correctional Facility, scene of the' nation's bloodiest prison revolt in 1971, early yesterday quelled a seven-hour uprising touched off when a guard shot a bat-wielding inmate. The tense standoff at the prison, scene of the nation's deadliest prison revolt, began at 10 p.m. Friday after a guard fired at and wounded an in- mate who had slugged another guard with a metal bat. Some 182 prisoners refused repeated requests by prison officials to leave the yard, said Jim Flateau, spokesman for the state Department of Correctional Services. Agreement reached in Indian I fishing case DETROIT - State, federal and In- dian representatives yesterday hammered out a Great Lakes fishery management pact that will equally affect the tribes and state- licensed commercial fishermen un- til the end of the year. The agreement closes various par- ts of lakes Michigan, Huron and Superior to both Indian and com- mercial whitefish fishermen at the same time - a rejection of an Indian proposal for staggered closures, said Conrad Mallett, legal advisor to Gov. James Blanchard. British dockworkers end strike LONDON - Dockworkers' union leaders yesterday called off the 11- day-old strike that had paralyzed three-quarters of British trade, or- dering all ports to reopen at mid- night. For Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's beleaguered gover- nment, it came as a badly needed break. Shamir trails in Israeli polls JERUSALEM - Battered by the nation's economic crisis, Israelis seem determined to vote Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir out of of- fice in national elections tomorrow, the latest polls show. The future of the Israeli-occupied West Bank is the issue most heatedly disputed, but it is largely eclipsed by the realities of living with an annual inflation rate of 400 percent. If the opposition Labor Party wins enough seats in Parliament to form a coalition government, it promises to get the Israeli army out of Lebanon swiftly. Kidnapped millionairess freed by authorities WASHINGTON - Edith Rosenkranz, kidnapped from the bridge tournament she was atten- ding with her multi-millionaire husband, was freed last night, two days after her abduction, police said. Three suspects were arrested and an unspecified ransom recovered. "Mrs. Rosenkranz is safe and healthy," FBI agent Norman Zigrossi told reporters. He said she had been taken to a hospital for a checkup and was "meeting with her family."~ Police hope Mont. kidnap- per will turn himself in BIG SKY, Mont. - A troubled conscience may flush out one of two mountain men who eluded a SWAT team and sheriff's posse after abdu- cting a woman athlete and killing a man who tried to rescue her, authorities said yesterday. Don Nichols, 53, and his son Dan, 19, disappeared Monday into the steep, heavily timbered and rugged Madison Mountains of southwest Montana, leaving Alan Goldstein dead and Kari Swenson with a bullet wound in the chest. The young man's conscience may' drive him out of the woods, Madison County Sheriff Johnny France said. (Continuedfrom Page 3) to pass that amount on to its customers inu the form of a rate increase. CONSUMERS HAS also estimated that the total price of the two-unit plant, when finished, would have been around $5.7 billion. However, the company for months has never had active plans to complete both units and was talking about finishing only one reactor. That would have cost about $4.12 billion. For purposes of argument, however, the plant's financial "size" might be left at the figure Consumers expects ratepayers to pay - $4 billion. Another way of measuring size is the amout of electricity the plant was to produce. In Midland's case, that was 1,357 megawatts. The figure could go up or down depending on how many turbines were attached. CONSUMERS - ITSELF either the nation's 10th or 11th largest utility, depending on who's doing the counting and the reporting - is not sure whether Midland's cancellation was the biggest ever. A spokesman for the company referred the question to the Atomic In- dustrial Forum, a group which is active in promoting nuclear power in the United States. AIF spokesman Don Winston said flatly Midland was not the largest plant ever cancelled in terms of generating capacity. Others shot down in the con- tinuing struggle over nuclear power in this country were to have produced more electricity. That leaves price as a criteria, and there Winston was not sure. He referred the question to the Edison Electric Institute, a utility organization. AN EDISON spokeswoman also dodged the question. She said the group really does not collect that kind of in- formation. On to the United States Department of Energy, which was preparing a report on the subject, according to Edison. Justine Johnson, a DOE official, said the Midland plant's sunk costs of nearly $4 billion does put it at the top of the list. The next highest is apparently the Zimmer plant in Ohio which was recen- tly scrapped. But wait, Johnson's list does not in- clude the cost of plants put on hold last year by the troubled Washington Public Power Supply System. WPPSS was building five reactors, but cancelled two of them and "deferred" two others, Member of the Associated Press Vol. XCIV-No. 27-S The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967X) is published Tuesday through Sun- day during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday, Friday, and Sunday during the spring and summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: September through April-$16.50 in Ann Ar- bor, $29.00 outside the city; May through August-$4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second-class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. 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