Reagan's Wall. Street blues See Editorial, Page 4 E Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom 1 Iai1 Key chain Today will probably be cloudy with a large chance of rain showers. The high will be in the upper 30s. Vol. XCIII, No. 50 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, November 5, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages GEO decides to head back Sto bargaining table with adrministration By GLEN YOUNG In their first meeting since the rejection of their proposed contract, members of the University's teaching assistants' union last night ruled out for the time being the formation of a strike committee and decided instead to go back to the bargaining table with the administration. Suggestions that the union elect a special committee to consider the possibility oif striking were turned aside until the next meeting and the graduate assistants voted to look for members of a new bargaining team to negotiate a new con- tract. MEMBERS OF the union, the Graduate Employees Organization, earlier this week voted down a proposed con- tract worked out with University administrators over the summer. The rejection of that contract-the produce of four months of bargaining-raised questions about the union's next step. Trying to answer those questions last night, GEO members discussed several possible courses of action, ranging from moving toward a strike, to voting again on the contract proposal, but near the end of the two-hour meeting, members voted to elect a new bargaining team to try to come up with a new contract with the University. GEO LEADERS said they will now accept nominations for members of the new team. They said they hope the new m members can be elected at their next meeting, yet to be scheduled. But some members said the union should still consider seriously the possibility of a strike. One leader, Jon Bekken, said the union should begin beefing up its strike and legal defense funds just in case. And another leader, Joseph Graves, said teaching assistants and graduate staff See GEO, Page 2 Arroyo guilty of torehing Econ. Ic By SCOTT KASHKIN Arthur Arroyo was found guilty yesterday of set- ting the fire last December that destroyed the University's Economics Building. Turning aside the defense's claims that Arroyo was temporarily insane when he set the fire, Coun- ty Circuit Court Judge Henry Conlin ruled yester- day that Arroyo is guilty of arson and of breaking into the Economics Building a month before to steal a typewriter. ARROYO, A 31-year-old former University em- ployee, sat passively while Conlin read the decision, his eyes fixed on the floor in front of him. Arroyo's attorney, Mitchell Nelson, said after the verdict was announced that his client will probably not appeal the decision. Judge Conlin said he will announce the sentencing date within two days. The sentence will probably be handed down in about a month. Arroyo's crimes carry a maximum sentence of 10 years imprisonment. Yesterday's verdict came after two months of testimony from police detectives, chemical exper- ts, psychologists, and friends of Arroyo, to whom he had confessed his guilt. THE TESTIMONY was complex and at times emotional, tracing Arroyo's life from his troubled childhood to his friendless adolescence to the days, leading up to the Christmas Eve blaze. Arroyo had admited he set the fire from the day he was arrested in California last January. But )UIldig throughout the trial, which began Sept. 7, his at- torney contended that Arroyo was unable to con- trol his actions when he broke into the Economics Building last Thanksgiving, and again when he burned the building a month later. Even after Conlin's announcement yesterday, defense attorney Nelson maintained that Arroyo, while unusually intelligent, has the emotional maturity of a child and cannot be held criminally responsible for his actions last year. "HE REGARDS everything as a personal af- front," Nelson said, "which is why he has held 40 jobs in the past 10 years. "I'm sure that I'll be requesting psychological treatment (for Arroyo)," Nelson told reporters af- ter the decision. "He is psychologically unstable and would do better with treatment than incar- ceration." "In prison he'd be in bad shape. He has no defense before the prison population," said Nelson, adding that he hopes Conlin will consider the danger to Arroyo when deciding sentencing. THE KEY issues in the trail centered on whether Arroyo was temporarily insane at the time of the fire and whether he actually intended to destroy the entire building when he set a small fire in its basement. Both the prosecution and the defense produced chemical experts and psychologists who gave cony flicting testimony about Arroyo's mental health and about the possible use of accelerants, such as gasoline, to spread the fire. See ARROYO, Page 5 Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK. Arthur Arroyo is led out of the Washtenaw County Building after being found guilty yesterday of setting fire to the Economics building last Christmas Eve: *City ballot proposal may cut tenant energy bills By BETH ALLEN Next winter won't be as cold for some Ann Arbor renters if a proposal setting minimum standards for "weatherization" and insulation of ren- tal housing gets on April's ballot. Members of the Coalition for Better Housing, a tenants' rights group, plan to begin a petition drive next week to accumulate the signatures necessary to bring the proposal to Ann Arbor voters next spring. If the proposal passes, it will become part of the city housing code. The proposal was drafted over the course of a year by attorneys Jonathan Rose and Paul Teich of Student Legal Service's Housing Reform Project, and is meant not only to save landlords and tenants money but also to conserve energy, Rose said. UNDER THE provisions in the proposal, landlords would have to weatherstrip and caulk around doors and windows or other cracks that allow heat to escape. Furnace ducts or joints would have to be sealed with pressure-sensitive tape or sealant, and hot water pipes would have to be insulated. Landlords would also have to seal drafts through switch plates and elec- trical sockets on outside walls, and would have to fit approved storm win- dows and doors where needed during specified months of the year. RESIDENTS with their own ther- mostats would have to be provided with either an add-on device, or a new ther- mostat that could be pre-set to automatically adjust the heat twice daily. The deadlines for compliance with the code are spread out over a five-year period, and any landlord who cannot af- ford to comply can ask the city for an extension of the deadline. Landlords who would have difficulty doing the necessary work because of the structure of their buildings could be See BALLOT, Page 6 Iranian children curse U.S. on 1, 1 1 i anniversary of Emba TEHRAN, Iran (AP)- Tens of the walls and walkways. thousands of well-disciplined A small group of American jour- schoolchildren cursing the "Great nalists'was allowed onto the grounds- Satan" in Washington paraded at the the first such visit since the hostage former U.S. Embassy yesterday on the crisis. third anniversary of the seizure of the AN AMERICAN flag was burned atop American hostages. the compound wall and then Moslem The noisy but orderly crowd was clergyman Mussavi Koeini, spiritual much smaller than the masses that tur- mentor of the youths who seized the ned out spontaneously to jeer the embassy three years ago, exhorted the United States during the 444-day youngsters to follow their elders' hostage crisis. example. FIVE-YEAR-olds carrying posters Taking over the "spy den" was "a they weren't old enough-.to read and victory of oppressed people over a teen-age girls draped in traditional superpower," he told the students, black robes chanted "Death to many of them barely toddlers when America! Death to America!" Iranian militants stormed the com- Inside the 27-acre compound and pound on Nov. 4, 1979. around the perimeter, scores of Iranian A large painting depicting the Revolutionary Guards armed with "heroic students" scaling the embassy Kalashnikov automatic rifles patrolled walls was held aloft by some demon- ssy seizure strators. Other banners and posters claimed "All our, troubles are because of America" and "The U.S.A. is con- demned to death." CHILDREN were let out early from classes and marched to the protest site, in front of the embassy gate on tree- lined Taleghani Avenue. They were joined by small groups of adults, in- cluding tough-looking young "Hez- bollahis"-members of the Islamic militant "Party of God." Throughout yesterday's demon- stration, the boys and girls were kept segregated, according to revolutionary Iran's strict Islamic practices. During the hostage crisis, as many as a half-million demonstrators gathered around the captured embassy to scream their hatred for the United States. Daily Photo by SCOTT ZOLTON Liddy vs. Leary Watergate mastermind G. Gordon Liddy speaks his mind yesterday as former drug guru Timothy Leary, right, waits his turn. Fred Hindley of WUOM mediates the debate at the Michigan Theatre. See story, Page 3. Utl Ity propositions D andH go from ballot to courtroom By CARL WEISER The battle over ballot propositions D and H, which contradict one another and which were both passed by voters Tuesday, did not end with the election. Both proposals, which regulate utility increases, are destined for long court battles, according to state officials. PROPOSAL D, which passed narrowly Tuesday, forbids utility com- panies from asking for more than one rate increase at a time. Proposal H, which was also approved Tuesday, allows utilities to ask for as many rate hikes as they please. Because they contradict each other, and because their backers both claim victory, state officials say the question of which one supercedes the other will almost inevitably end up in court. Backers of Proposition D claim that D is more valid than H because it was placed on the ballot through a popular petition drive, whereas they clair\ H made it onto the ballot because of utility lobbying. BUT PROPONENTS OF Proposition H maintain that H is more valid because it passed by a wider margin See UTILITY, Page 6 TODAY Local writer does good T HE EDITORS of Ms. magazine have selected the winner of their College Fiction Competition, and of course, the winner is a student at the University of Michigan. Ph.D. student Shannon Richards, 35, was awarded a Smith-Corona 2500 portable typewriter in recognition of her success. The announcement from Smith- Corona goes on to say: "Ms. Richards won the prestigious competition with her poignant account of the relationship 'Gops,' says the Pope P OPE JOHN Paul II acknowledged Wednesday the Spanish Inquisition, which tortured and burned thousands of "heretics" during a three-century reign of terror, was a historic mistake. The pontiff, addressing students and teachers at Madrid University on the fourth day of his 10-day visit to Spain, also warned scientists against allowing their work to be "perverted" for making nuclear weapons. It was the third time the pontiff, spiritual leader of 579 million Catholics, has acknowledged-without actually apologizing-that the Roman Catholic Church has one-liners trickling down to the news media. Onstage in the Charles Russell High School in Great Falls, Mont., Reagan began a political speech with "Some of my hard-working aides recommended against leaving the capital and coming all the way out here. I said 'OK, we'll flip a coin.. . I had to flip 14 times before it came out right." Next joke: "I said, 'Boys, we're going where the people think big and the sky's the limit.' They all headed for Tip O'Neill's office." The president went on: "On the way out here I told Air Force One's pilot to fly low over Mt. Rushmore. I just wanted to see if they were adding any new faces." Each of the lines got the intended round of laughter and applause. But when gathered in Ann Arbor for the second time in eight months as it was reported that he was missing in action. Harmon was stationed with the 449th Fighter Squadron at an air base in China about 80 miles north of Chungking. Also on this date in history: *1936-Members of the Committee on Men's Dor- mitories announced that prices of rooms in freshmen dor- mitories would be set at a minimum of $3 and not exceed $5. " 1943-The Ann Arbor Community War Chest was well past the halfway mark of its $126,539 goal. The University's goal was $20,000 with reports showing that $11,037 had been collected so far. I I