Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, August 7, 1985 Mourners remember Hiroshima HIROSHIMA, Japan (UPI) -Some Yasuhiro Nakasone and Hiroshima At one end of the park - near 55,000 people, among them survivors Mayor Takeshi Araki, a survivor of "ground zero" of the blast zone - sat of the atomic bomb attack that opened the bombing, reflected on the day's the skeletal "Atom Bomb Dome," the the nuclear age insa whit-hot flash 40 theme: "No more Hiroshimas." city's former.Chamber of Commerce years ago, mourned the dead yester- "I STRONGLY desire, as prime and Industry Building, which has day and prayed there will be "No minister of the world's only nation been left unrepaired asa grim remin- MoreHiroshimas." which suffered from the catastrophe der of the holocaust. Mourners from all over the world of nuclear weapons, the ultimate jammed the riverside Peace destruction of nuclear weapons and Outside the park, several hundred Memorial Park for an emotional for eternal peace for the world," pacifist protesters, many wearing mrigte4tanie-Nakasone said, white robes, lay down in the streeta in ceremony marking the 40th annver- Nakasone later visited hospitalized a mock "die-in" at the moment of the sary of the Hiroshima blast. "hibakusha," or bomb victims still blast to dramatize their anti-nuclear AT 8:15 A.M., the minute on Aug. 6, 'ufrn rm aito-ndcdmsae 1945 when the first atomic device used suffering from radiation-induced message. in war was dropped from the bomb ailments, at the city's Atomic Bomb bay of the U.S. B-29 bomber Enola Hospital, where he renewed his As a band played requiems, sur- Gay, the huge throng stood in silence pledge to workfor peace. vivors, mourners and foreign visitors as temple bells tolled and air raid Seven "hibakusha" appealed for placed yellow and white chrysan- sirena wailed through the tree-lined free medical care for both the sur- themum wreaths at the foot of a sad- streetsa of the rebuilt city. vivors and their families, many of dle-shaped tomb where bound A flock of 1,500 white doves, sym- whom suffer from radiation-induced volumes of names of victims are kept. bolizing peace, was released into the hereditry illnesses. Araki added three volumes with the overc sumer srsky. Men and Police said 30,000 people jammed names of 25,410 bomb victim: whodied overcast smen wept r openly as hundreds o the park and another 25,000 thronged or were identified during the past peoplenspontanoulyangndrescethe surrounding streets for the year. The list of known dead now people spontaneously sang a peace memorial service, including almost totals 138,690. song composed for the oreinister 13,000 "hibakush." IN BRIEF From United Press International Shuttle comes home EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. - The shuttle Challenger landed safely yesterday from a successful science mission that almost ended eight days ago in Spain, demonstrating NASA's ability to bounce back from adver- sity. In contrast to its limp into orbit with an engine out, the shuttle flew an on-target re-entry into the at- mosphere, swept across Southern California beaches and glided to a smooth, but dusty touchdown in the Mojave Desert. Commander Gordon Fullerton, co-pilot Roy Bridges, flight engineer Story Musgrave and scientists Karl Henize, Anthony England, Loren Acton and John- David Bartoe had traveled 3.3 million miles around Earth in the name of science. Sexual harassment case reopens LANSING - The Michigan Court of Appeals yesterday revived a lawsuit charging a waitress was subjected to sexual harassment because of the scanty uniform her employer required her to wear. Donna May Slayton's lawyer said the decision may have far- reaching effects, but the West Bloomfield woman did not live to see her vindication. She died of cancer last year at age 49. Slayton said she suffered sexual discrimination and harassment and claimed her employer harassed her into quitting her job in retaliation for her filing a com- plaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in federal court. A Wayne County jury found in favor of Slayton's employer, Michigan Host Inc., and one of her supervisors. A judge ruled in favor of another supervisor. Slayton worked in a Detroit Metropolitan Airport restaurant operated by Host. Cosmonauts repair Soviet space station MOSCOW - Two cosmonauts repaired a critical fault in the power supply of the orbiting Salyut-7 space station that could have left it a useless hunk of space junk and forced the spacemen to return to Earth, Tass said yester- day. In an unusually frank report, the official Soviet news agency said that because two solar batteries on the outside of the station were not aligned correctly, the supply system failed and the instruments, food and water inside the capsule were frozen. Crash sparks lawsuit GRAPEVINE, Texas - In- vestigators yesterday moved part of the wreckage of Delta Flight 191 to a hanger used as a makeshift morgue following the crash that killed 133 people, and lawyers in Miami filed the first lawsuits stemming from the disaster. "The tail section has been moved over to the hanger,". Matt Guilfoyle, a Delta spokesman, said yesterday. "We got the authority (from the National Transportation Safety Board) to move that por- tion." 'Boat ride for peace' begins in Nicaragua MANAGUA, Nicaragua - Members of an American religious group said they would begin yesterday a "boat ride for peace" through battle-torn territory and would hold President Reagan responsible if they are attacked by anti-government rebels. The trip by 31 Americans, 19 of them from the New York area, is sponsored by Witness for Peace - an ecumenical Christian organization founded two years ago to protest Reagan ad- ministration support for the Con- tras. They planned to leave yester- day for a two-day trip along the San Juan River. Daily Photo by KATE O'LEARY A passerby approaches some facsimiles of human shadows on Maynard Street painted on the sidewalk outside of Dooley's bar. The shadows were painted on sidewalks around the city in commemoration of the 40th an- niversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. Locals commemorate atomic blasts (ContinuedfromPagel) University Prof. Donald Rucknagel, spit on them and call them com- When he continued his voice was president of Physicians for Social munists." trembling: "I saw this destruction Responsibility, spoke about the T and was scared. I'm still scared. I'm 200,000 deaths that resulted from the "THERE HAS been enormous press horrified that people can run around two atomic bombs. coverage and the message has been and shout, 'Kill the "ussians! Kill the THE 40TH anniversary seems to that warfare must be prevented," he Americans!'" " , leave us on a threshold and it's not en- said. "Before we do that maybe our tirely clear where we are going to go "Another cause for hope is many of leaders should go to Hiroshima and Rucknagelsaid. the people involved in warfare are maybe they'll change their minds" President Reagan seems intense on clearly jumping ship" he said, as Macklei ysaid. ' 'Star Wars.' "Congress voted to give scientists and retired military men $2.5 billion for research on the renounce defense policies. MACKLEM visited Hicone, Japan, Beforeithenceremosyart~Gallhp Ann Arbor's sister city, with nine program. Before the ceremony at Gallup other junior high school students to Some people think it's already too Park, people stenciled "death commemorate the bombings of the late, that we're already beyond con- shadows" on Ann Arbor's sidewalks two Japanese cities at the end of trol,"he said, to represent the victims of the bom- World War II. "All of these are a cause for bings who were burned onto the Macklem's was the first of three pessimism, but there are reasons to pavement. speeches at last night's ceremony, co- be optimistic," Rucknagel said. "In sponsored by the Interfaith Council the '40s on Hiroshima Day when Beside some of the figures was in for Peace and Physicians for Social someone stood with pickets saying inscription that said, "Hiroshima Responsibility. 'Never again,' people would come and 1945, Ann Arbor 19??" 01he Mirt-igan al Vol. XCV - NO 47-S The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and-winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the spring and summer terms by students at The University of Michigan. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in town, $35 out of town. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. ARTS STAFF: arwulf arwulf, Sue Baum, Noelle Editor in Chief ................ ERIC MATTSON Brower, Byron Bull, Richard Campbell, Mike Fisch, Managing Editor .............THOMAS HRACH Neil Galanter, Jackie Ruznik, Ron Schechter, Marc News Editor ...........,........ MARLA GOLD Taras, Mike Zwick. Opio,nPge,,Editor,..ANDREW ERIKSEN Business Manager ..........DAWN WILLACKER Editor ...............RACHEL GOTTLIEB Sales Manager ............ 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