The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 18, 1982-Page 3 Tests ordered for arson suspect' By PERRY CLARK held in Washtenaw County Jail with hnnd set at Pn ll Psychiatric testing will delay the preliminary examination of Arthur Arroyo, accused of setting fire to the University Economics Building, Public Defen- der Lloyd Powell said yesterday. The date for the examination, originally scheduled for Feb. 24, will be set after 15th District Court receives a psychiatric report from the Forensic Cen- ter in Ypsilanti, Powell said. "WE NEED TO determine the competency of him before proceeding any further," Powell said. "We are doing it because it is in his best interest." Arroyo, 30, was arraigned yesterday and is being $10,000 for arson charges, and $20,000 for charges of breaking and entering the Economics Building last Thanksgiving. Police Chief William Corbett would not give details about the evidence which he 'said points to Arroyo, a former University employee, in the Christmas Eve arson of the building. He said police have a set of palm prints from the Thanksgiving Day break-in, but have not yet proven if they belong to Arroyo. A psychiatric examination is necessary to deter- mine Arroyo's ability to cooperate effectively with defense attorneys in preparing his case, according to If Arroyo is found competent, Powell said, a preliminary hearing will be scheduled immediately. If he is found incompetent,.he will be psychiatrically treated until he is considered competent, Powell said. "We have no other recourse," he said. "It's just solid defense." Meanwhile, the $4,000 offered by the University and State Arson Control as a reward to people who anonymously provided tips leading to Arroyo's arrest remains untouched, according to police Sgt. Harold Tinsey. Visiting Ft. Lauderdale Area For Spring Break? i Clip This Ad And Enjoy A FREE Drink i t I At The World Famous i PARROT LOUNGE I* GET ONE I BUY ONE FREE Also, Feb. 25 is MICHIGAN U. DAY Blck From Beach, Sunrise & A1 A, Behind Sunrise Inn Offer Good till 5 P.M. Feb. 20-28 "m= == -- ---=- -- -- -- -- - - - - -- - m mm m--mnm HAPPENINGS Regents to discuss financial issues HIGHLIGHT Original Oriental art treasures will be exhibited and sold by Marson Ltd. of Baltimore today from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. The collection includes pieces from Japan, China, India, Tibet, Nepal and Thailand and will be located in the Michigan Union. FILMS Alternative Action-The Accident & Danger! Radioative Waste, 8 p.m., UGLI Multi-Purpose Room. Michigan Theatre-Chinatown, 8 p.m. PERFORMANCES Eclipse-Concert, Ornette Coleman, 8 p.m., Power Center. Musical society-Versailles Chamer Orchestra, 8:30 p.m., Rackham. UAC-Soindstage, Kelly Schultz with Poel Gottleib: "Infrared," 9 p.m., University Club, Union. Union Arts Program-Concert of the Month, Richard Taylor, Baritone, 8 p.m., Pendleton Room, Union. University Gospel Choir-7 p.m., Blue Lounge, Stockwell. Ark-Julie Austin, Singer-Songwriter, 8:30 p.m., 1421 Hill St. Les Harvey Productions-Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, two dramatic performances, 8 and i1 p.m., Second Chance. Tickets $6.50. For more info. call 994-0600. SPEAKERS Trotter House-Lecture and Workshop, Ornette Coleman (jazz/saxophonist),1-4 p.m., Trotter House. Trotter House-Morris Lawrence, Afromusicology and the 'U' Gospel Choir;7:30 p.m., Trotter House.- Health Psychology-Bag Lunch seminar, Joseph Veroff, "Dimensions of Subjective Adjustment," 12-1 p.m., Rm. A154, VA Medical Center, 2215 Fuller Rd. English-Colloquium on Critical Theory, Suysan Carlton, "Represen- tation & Fictional Reference:Roman Ingarden's Phenomenology of Literary Language,"7:30 p.m., E. Conference Room. Atmospheric & Coeanic Science-Sem., John R. Hummel, "Climate Modeling with Radiative-Convective Models: Assumptions, Results and Limitations," 4 p.m., 2233 Space Res. Music Theory-Lec., William Benjamin, "Aspects of Phrase Structure in the Mozart 'Haydn';" 8p.m., Rackham Aud. Vision/Hearing-Lunch sem., Lynne Friedman, "Cone Antagonism in Red-Green Dichromats," 12:15-1:30 p.m., 2055 MHRI. Japanese Studies-Brown Bag Lec., Lee Hamilton, "Moral Judgments in the U.S. and Japan," Noon, Commons Rm., Lane Hall. Developmental Biology & Genetics-Sem., Rupert Billingham, "Tran- sportation Immunobiology Revisited," 12-1 p.m., Aud. C, Angell. Chemistry -Se~., Roy Clarke, "Carbon, Commensurability & Chaos," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Sigma Xi & MHRI-Le., Rupert E. Billingham, "Transplantation in Nature," 4 p.m., M5330, Med. Sci. i. Medicinal Chemistry-Lec., Michael P. Groziak, "Model Chemistry of a Covalent Catalytic Mechanism or Orotidine 5'-Phosphate Decarboxykase," 4 p.m., 3554 CC Little. Computing Center-Chalk Talk, CC Counseling Staff, "Simple FORTRAN Debugging with SDS," 12:10-1 p.m., 1011 NUBS. Michigan Society of Fellows-Lec., Paul Ewald, "Medicine & Evolution," 4-6 p.m., Board Rm., 1506 Rackham. CEW-Panel discussion with women in technological and science careers, 12-1 p.m, E. COnference Rm., Rackham. Dept. of Far Eastern Languages-"Research Directions in Modern Chinese Literature," lee., Ma Lingchun and Zhu Zhai, 4 p.m., Lane Hall Commons Room. Women in Communications Student Chapter-Guest speaker Tavi Fulker- son, freelance media talent, 7 p.m., Marsh seminar room, Frieze. MEETINGS Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowshi--7 p.m., Union. Campus Crusade for Christ-7 p.m., 2003 Angell. Med. Center Bible Study-12:30 p.m., Rm. F2230 Mott Children's Hospital. Committee Concerned with World Hunger-7 p.m., Conf. rm. 4, Union. Regents-1 p.m., Regents Rm., Fleming Adm. Bldg. American Society for Training and Development-5-30 p.m., Holiday Inn West.' First Ward Democrats-8 p.m., Welker Room, Union. PIRGIM Women's Safety Task Force-3:30 p.m., U-Club. MISCELLANEOUS Folk Dance Club-Ballroom Dancing, 7-8:30 p.m., Mich. League. Call 971- 5194. Scottish Country Dancers-Beginning class, 7 p.m., Intermediate class, 8 p.m., Union. Call 995-8345. Tau Beta Pi-Free tutoring (in lower-level math and science courses), walk-in, 7-11 p.m., at 307 UGLI and 8-10 p.m. at 2332 Bursley. League-International Night, India, 5-7:15 p.m. Turner Geriatric Facility-Free classes for older persons with either mild or severe hearing problems. 10-12 a.m., Communicative Disorders Clinic at Turner, 1010 Wall St. Women's Basketball-Mich. vs. Saginaw Valley, 7 p.m., Crisley. Housing Special Program-Soul Food Dinner, 4-6:30 p.m., West Quad. "Being Willing to Grow Up," workshop with Bob Egri, M.D. 7:30-10 p.m. $15 fee, call 666-6924, 1402 Hill St. College of Engineering-Humanities 497 Debates, 7 p.m., Rm. 1508 East Engineering. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. By JANET RAE Pressing financial issues - possible additions to the University's invest- ment portfolio, a proposed 9.55-percent residence hall rate hike, and the framework of the "five-year plan" - will occupy most of the Regents' time at their February meeting today and tomorrow. As part of their, 12-month review of investments, the Board of Regents will consider adding several new cor- porations to their master list, including at least two which work largely in defense department contracts. LAST YEAR AT this time, the Regen- ts approved the addition of five defense department corporations to their master list of investments. The con- troversial decision to invest in defense prompted widespread protest on cam- pus and a bomb scare during the meeting. Regents also are expected to approve a recommendation to increase rates for .traditional residence halls by 9.55 per- cent, while increasing Oxford, Fletcher and Baits housing by 12.5 percent. Family housing units are expected to go up by 12.2 percent. Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye also is expected to detail his five-year plan, which recommends cut- ting back on programs and personnel as part of a comprehensive effort to reallocate funds to higher priority areas. The meeting will convene today at 1 p.m. in the Regents' Room of the Fleming Administration Building. The board is scheduled to re-convene tomorrow at 9 a.m. Angolan struggle discussed by national youth leader (Continued from Page 1) the importance of the role of youth in the liberation and growth of Angola, a country in which 42 percent of the population of 8 million is 18 years old or younger. "I had a great feeling for the capacity of their use and the extent of their in- volvement in the liberation process," Steele said of the young people he met with while in Angola. ANGOLA GAINED its independence from Portugal in November, 1975 after a 15-year armed struggle and more than five centuries as a colony, ac- cording to Steele. However, since People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) came to power, Angola has been engaged in a war against apartheid in South Africa. Politically, things have not been easy for the MPLA, which is currently tran- sforming itself from a political to a workers party with Marxist-Leninist roots, according to Steele. "The coun- try as a whole aspires to. build a socialist society" he said. The media and the government in America, he said, haverunfairly represented the role of Soviet and Cuban assistance to Angola in its struggle against South Africa. STEELE COMPARED the material aid Angola has received from the two nations to French help the American anti-colonialists received during the Revolutionary War. "One can argue," he said, "that what Angola did is as American as apple pie." "National independence is a prerequisite notonly to human development but also to human sur- vival," he said of Angola. "They have literally had to develop a nation." According to Steele, when Angola gained independence, 85 percent of the, population could not read or write and average life sean was 41 years of age. Presently, he said, the illiteracy rate has dropped toabout 25 percent. - w _ .. E-Systems continues the tradition of the world's gre at problem solvers. Unquestionably, Leonardo da Vinci possessed one of the world's great minds. Not only re- nowned as a painter and sculp- tor, da Vinci also applied his exceptional talents to the me- chanics of fiight, to cartography for planning military campaigns, and even astronomy. 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