Firemen testify in Econ building arson trial The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 18, 1982-Page 3 Bomb in Pais bits Israel By GEORGE ADAMS and GREG BRUSSTAR Details of the fire that destroyed the University Economics Building last Christmas Eve unraveled yesterday at the trial of accused ar- sonist Arthur Arroyo when firefighters and security officials told the court what happened that night. The court also heard testimony from a friend of Arroyo who said Arroyo admitted breaking into the building on November 27 and stealing a typewriter. Arroyo's attorney hinted after yesterday's proceedings that he may ask his client to take the stand in his own defense. "It's possible," said Chief Assistant Public Defender Mitchell Nelson. "I certainly wouldn't count out that possibility." UNIVERSITY Security officer James Lansky testified he drove to the building in response to the fire alarm at approximately 10 p.m. December 24 and saw smoke above the roof. "I walked around the building and observed a large amount of fire at the top floor," he said. Lansky's testimony was confirmed by fellow security officials Nancy Evanski and Jesse Johnson. Ann Arbor firefighter Vincent Lynch reported that upon arrival at the scene of the fire at 10 p.m., he and another fireman crawled into the building through the main en- trance, but were overcome by the extreme heat. They had to break in through basement windows to reach the fire's source, he said. "THE HEAT was so severe that it melted the shields on our helmets," said firefighter Robert Lethanski, who entered the building with Lyn- ch. Both reported that the fire took three days to extinguish completely. Early in the proceeding, Arroyo's friend Abdullah Al-Hosan, who traveled from Saudi Arabia to testify at prosecution's request, told the court that Arroyo admitted breaking into the Economics building on November 27 and stealing a typewriter. "He (Arroyo) began to cry and describe problems with his family," Al-Hosan said. "He said he broke in- to a building through a window," and stole a typewriter. d4plomati ear in the bike's sad- Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOT Alleged Economics Building arsonist Arthur Arroyo leaves Washtenaw County Courthouse yesterday after trial proceedings. Arroyo's attorney hin- ted that the former University employee might take the stand later in the trial. PARIS (AP)- A bomb ripped through an Israeli diplomat's car in the center of Paris yesterday, seriously wounding four people and slightly in- juring about 40-most of them high school students in a classroom near the explosion site, French officials said. The bombing occurred on the eve of Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year. French television said an anonymous caller told a news agency the "Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Fac- tion" was responsible for the blast. That group has claimed it carried out other terrorist actions in Paris during the past year. Israeli Ambassador Meir Rosenne blamed the Palestine Liberation Organization and told a radio inter- viewer the attack was "new proof of what can happen when the presence of terrorists is tolerated." It was the 10th attack on Jewish or Israeli targets in the French capital since the beginning of the year, and the 20th in a series of terrorist actions since July 20th. Ten people have been killed in this year's violence. The Israeli Embassy identified the wounded diplomat as 61-year-old Amos Man-El, a member of the embassy's purchasing mission. A police spokesman said two other people in the car, Zoltan Mandel-Sch- midt and his wife, Veronica Rolh Man- del-Schmidt, were seriously injured along with a 17-year-old boy who was passing by. He said he believed the Mandel-Schmidts and Man-El were related. The spokesman said he could not con- firm press accounts of another youth being seriously injured or an embassy report that a fourth person in the car escaped serious injury. He said police were working on the theory that the bomb was placed "in the engine or perhaps under the fender" of the white Peugeot 504. A nearby motor- bike was destroyed by the blast and an embassy statement suggested the UA W narrowly approves pact bomb had been dlebags. Hospital authorities said the youth and Mrs. Mandel-Schmidt were in very serious condition. A fireman said Mrs. Mandel-Schmidt's feet were shattereid. The driver of the car was able to get out after the explosion, then collapsed on the street, witnesses said. It took the firemen a half-hour to extricate the other passengers. The injured students were in the Lycee Carnot, across the street from the explosion site, when the bomb went, off at 3:25 p.m. The blast blew the classroom windows in. "There would have been 500 students- in the street" if the bombing had oc- curred 20 minutes later when the students were to get out, a student said: The youngsters were treated at the scene for cuts from the flying glass. The bomb went off on Rue Cardinet in the 17th district a few blocks east of the Arch of Triumph and around the corner from the Israeli Embassy's military purchasing annex on the Boulevard Malesherbes.a A few hours before the explosion police arrested two Frenchmen they said were members of Direct Action, the left-wing terrorist group that the government outlawed Aug. 18. The - group has claimed responsibility for five of the attacks against Jewish or Israeli targets this year. Police said the two men had 33 pounds of explosives in their possession. The tactic of placing explosives in the saddlebags of a motorbike was used in a bombing outside a synagogue on the Rue Copernic in October 1980, also on a Jewish holiday. Four passers-by were killed and nine injured in that blast, and there have been no arrests. The Israeli car and two nearby autos were heavily damaged, while windows were blown out of cars parked farther away. All the windows on one side of the school were blown out, as were those of a bank across the street. From AP and UPI SOUTHFIELD, Mich.- United Auto Workers of- icials from Chrysler Corp. plants nationwide arrowly voted yesterday to recommend to workers a tentative contract which pegs pay increases to company profits and the cost of living. "It was a hell of a fight today and a long one," UAW President Douglas A. Fraser said at a news con- ference after the vote. "I was happy to get by today." FRASER WOULD not predict whether the agreement would be ratified by workers. The tentative settlement had been reached nearly 6 hours after an extended strike deadline expired at idnight Wednesday. Thousands of autoworkers ationwide already had walked off the job because they had no contract. Most of them were back at work yesterday, but hundreds of dissident workers were still on strike at An ti-nuke supporters Chrysler plants in Newark, Del., and Detroit, protesting the tentative contract agreement. The tentative contract calls for a one-year agreement on wages and fringe benefits and a two- year pact on non-economic issues. It calls for a joint committee to chop $10 million out of Chrysler's more than $300 million health care program and a joint program to curb absenteeism. Fraser said the cost-of-living plan is identical to the plan workers have at General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. The wage increases are tied to profits so that if a quarter profit is between $20 million and $50 million, workers receive 16 cents more an hour. If the quarterly profit is more than $50 million, they will receive 32 cents an hour. The average hourly wage for Chrysler autoworkers is now $9.07. Autoworkers at GM earn $11.76 per hour; workers at Ford earn $11.58 hourly. It was one of the closest votes in recent memory by a council of union leaders on a contract. The delegates now have to sell the pact to rank and file members, but several predicted it would be difficult since their members were not pleased with the economic features of the contract. "Our people told us if they don't get some more money or cost of living allowances, they don't want it," said one official. Observers credited an impassioned speech by UAW President Douglas Fraser at the end of the five-hour long meeting as the reason for the approval of the contract. begin fall campaign LANSING (UPI) - Proponents of a Sutual U.S.-Soviet nuclear weapons reeze said yesterday "enough is enough" and kicked off their fall cam- paign to pass a ballot measure ex- pressing that sentiment to the federal government. "A strong new wind is blowing across this country - carrying forward the positive, life renewing idea of bilateral nuclear weapons freeze," said Betty Duley, a member of the executive Dard pressing for passage of Proposal THE MEASURE, put on the Novem- ber ballot through a petition drive, calls on the clerk of the House and secretary of the Senate to write to Congress, the president and the U.S. secretaries of state and defense expressing the desire for a mutually verifiable freeze on nuclear weapons. * State Public Health Director Bailur Walker said, "I have serious doubts that our health services system could cope with the consequences of a nuclear confrontation," which he said could kill 139 million Americans. He said it was "essential" that the ballot measure be passed to help stop what he called "the final medical epidemic." DULEY SAID Michigan is one of nine states voting on similar measures this fall, involving a quarter of the nation's voters. Voters in one of the nine, Wisconsin, recently overwhelmingly passed a freeze proposal. She cited a Department of Defense report in contending the United Staes and Soviet Union are at "rough parity" in nuclear weapons and said both sides have the technical sophistication to *gprifIL whthr the nthpr is~ i nlaino a AUDITIONS for the UAC MUSKET musical RUNAWAYS BOOK, MUSIC, AND LYRICS BY ELIZABETH SWADOS A MASS MEETING WILL BE HELD MONDAY, SEPT.2S0 at 7:30 p.m. in the Pendelton Room of the Michigan Union for all those interested in auditioning or getting involved. The play calls for cast members of many diverse ethnic and cultural backrounds including people who: t 3 i i 1 1 t i t ; f A !. f DoLy Photo by ELIZABETH SCC IT Ann Arbor aliens No, these aren't three lost space intruders. It's just a Liberty Street jewelry store's method of displaying their merchandise. * know spanish * play basketball * rollerskate * know sign language HAPPENINGS- Highlight The Birmingham Branch of the American Association of University Women is sponsoring a booksale all day at the Birmingham Masonic Temple in Bloomfield Hills. Proceeds from the sale will be contributed "for educational purposes." Films Pilot Program - The Paper Chase, Alice Lloyd Red Lounge. AAFC-Canterbury Tales, 4, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB. CG - Body Heat, 7 & 9:104p.m., Lorch. C2-The French Lieutenant's Woman, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Performances School of Music - Harp recital, Donna Webb, 2 p.m., Recital Hall. Ark - Stan Rodgers, 1421 Hill. Meetings MICHIGAN: A TWO COLOR RECREATION OF THE T.V. LOGO MICHIGAN (BLACKI IMPOSSIBLE (REA) Hand SiIksarend on Quality Stock Gray " whit - Tan " Blue I All Sians T's $7.50 Sweatis514.95 Postange Inclusded MAIL CHECK OR MONEY OROER TO: DISROSICS INC. 11911 Wink Houston, Tx. 77024 besides the normal group of actors, singers and dancers ! !or further Info .call 763-1107 Universiyy'Adivities Center, M