Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom Lit an 1 Iai1 Pond Cloudy and breezy with a chance of showers. High in the low 80s. oL XCV, No. 17 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, September 25, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Eeon. arsonist loses appeal By JERRY MARKON mental state at the time of the fire was with wirereports "that. of a child," and defense ~ The Michigan Court of Appeals psychologist Max Hutt testified in favor yesterday upheld the 1982 conviction of of the not guilty by reason of insanity former University employee Arthur plea. i Arroyo for setting the Christmas Eve, Prosecutors brought in psychologists 1981 fire which gutted the University's during the trial who said Arroyo's men- 125-year-old Economics Building. tal disorders were not severe enough to * The court affirmed the five-to-ten constitute insanity. But after the appeal year sentence Arroyo received in was denied yesterday Hutt insisted that January, 1983 in Washtenaw County Arroyo was "clearly insane at the time Circuit Court. State law requires that of the crime. he serve at least the minimum five- year sentence before becoming eligible IN COMPLEX and emotional for parole. testimony during the 1982 trial, Arroyo DEFENSE attorney Mitchell Nelson, described his troubled childhood ad y who represented Arroyo during the fall, adolescence, saying he felt "unwanted" 1982 trial, said yesterday that the ap- and alienated" as a child. He said he pellate court made the "right decision" had problems with hoiosexuality and Bookendsily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL based on the facts of the case. spent 10 months in a New York But he maintained that the seminary trying to become a priest at Parer covers the windows of Follett's bookstore on State Street yesterday after the store closed Saturday. A sign in the prosecution "never proved that a age 19. window said only that the store was "closed for good." Store employees would not comment on the closing, and com- chemical accelerant was used in the In its decision yesterday, the court used gasoline or another chemical to established by the circuit court and help spread the fire became an issue in ruled that Arroyo's confession to set-7 the trial when separate chemical tests ting the fire had been properly ob ie thep prad hefie ecae n sseinruedthtproducednfesin o conflictingn s o v taceresults.nficin rtalsted.. Arroyo said he only planned to burn a Arroyo was arrested for setting the UNITED NATIONS (AP) - President Reagan, striking a "America has repaired its strength. . . We are ready for small stack of papers in the building, fire in San Diego where he was being in- conciliatory tone, said yesterday he would work to narrow constructive negotiations with the Soviet Union," Reagan but the damage from the fire was so ex- terrogated by U.S. Secret Service agen- Arroyo "the clear differences" between the United States and the said. tensive that the building, which stood in ts about alleged threats he had made' ...used insanity defense Soviet Union. The resident proposed high-level meetings The president, who once denounced Moscow as an "evil the Diag in front of the Undergraduate against the President of the United County Prosecutor William Delhey said that could be "essential, if crises are to be avoided." empire" that ultimately would be left on the "ash heap of Library, had to be demolished. States. He confessed on the plane en yesterday. Delhey, who was the prosec- As Reagan proposed regular high-level meetings between history," adopted his most conciliatory line yet toward the ARROYO, WHO had been fired from route back to Ann Arbor in a conver- utor in the trial, applauded the appeals the United States and the Soviet Union, Democratic Soviets in the speech, which came just over six weeks before his job as a secretary in the School of sation with a detective. court's decision. challenger Walter Mondale urged voters yesterday to elect a the Nov. 6 election. Public Health, told the court he was THE COURT said the confession was Arroyo is currently in the state prison president "who knows what he's doing in foreign policy." REAGAN,. PRESSED repeatedly by U.S. allies to soften disillusioned by what he regarded as voluntary because Arroyo had been at Jackson, serving the five-to-10 year SOVIET FOREIGN Minister Andrei Gromyko listened his once harsh anti-Soviet rhetoric, was interruped just once reverse discrimination by the Univer- read his rights and initiated the conver- team for arson and a three-to-10 year with a poker face, hands folded in his lap, as Reagan ad- by applause, when he remarked: sity on the basis of sex. sation. sentence for breaking into the dressed the 39th session of the United Nations General "Outside this room, while there still will be clear differen- Nelson, who did not represent Arroyo The authorities "operated within the Economics Building a month before the ssembly. See MONDALE, Page 2 in the appeal, argued that Arroyo's constitutional framework," Washtenaw fire and stealing a typewriter. f_ : Chinese scholar Jdlied i campus bike accident' By MARLA GOLD A wit A visiting law scholar from China firmed t died yesterday after colliding with a the cycl University truck on South State Street. police sf The man,, whose name will not be AFTE released until officials notify his next of victim kin in China, was pedaling his bicycle vehicle west across State toward East Madison The v at 11 a.m. when he slammed into the had a i side of the truck with the front wheel of the acci the bike, according to Ann Arbor Police Hugh Sgt. Arthur Hughes. the way THE DRIVER OF the truck, Rockey he was Mayne, said he did not see the victim at ter he a all, and only realized that someone had The vi *un into the truck after he heard the not thro anging on the side of the truck, of his sh "He came out between a bus and from th another (vehicle)," said Mayne. vestigat Beirut blast sparks need or emb ass s ecurit hi e ness who was not identified con- that Mayne could not have seen ist in time to avoid the accident, aid. R HITTING THE truck, the slid against the side until the came to a stop. victim was still breathing. and ulse, but was not conscious after dent, Hughes said. es said the man died either on.. to University Hospital, where taken for treatment, or soon af- rrived at the hospital. ictim, who was born in 1959, was wn from his bicycle, though one hoes was thrown about eight feet he scene. Police ar'e still in- ting the accident. Woman an r after boys in her money LYNN, Mass. (AP) - Some people are hard to please. When two boys found $4,000 and gave it to police, they won praise and $5 rewards, but no thanks came from the money's owner, who complained angrily that "no one had the right to take her bag from the seawall," police sa Marc Norcross, 11, and Bekim Demirai, 12, found the money, mostly in $50 and $100 bills, in a shopping bag on the Nahant Beach seawall Saturday af- ternoon. The bag also contained a bathing suit, shampoo, toothbrush, pocketbook, passport and photos. "WE COULDN'T take the money i 'cause it wouldn't be right, and if we took it we couldn't spend it," Bekim said yesterday. "I couldn't buy anything like a radio 'cause my mother would know.' " The boys turned the bag over to Metropolitan District Police, who told them, "You're probably gonna be rewarded for this,"Bekim said. Instead, "the lady was mad," he said. "She was irate," said officer Frank Anderson. "She said no one had the right to take her bag from the seawall.' ." The bag's owner, 28-year-old Anna Maria Altamari, told police she had left it behind while she went on.,a two-mile jog, Anderson said. She had an unlisted East Boston number and could not be reached for comment yesterday. Daily Photo by KAREN ROMFH Officials examine the scene of a fatal accident yesterday at the corner of State and Madison Streets. The chalk outline shows where the victim, a student from China, and his bicycle fell after the accident. NEW YORK (AP) - The State Department yester- day disclosed it is asking Congress to urgently approve another $372 million in emergency funds to im- prove security at American embassies in the wake of the terrorist bomb that devasted the U.S. Em- bassy annex in Beirut last week. John Hughes, the State Department spokesman, said the funds will be used to build and strengthen barricades around embassies, to speed up con- struction of some new embassies in "high threat areas," to provide armored vehicles, and to con- trol public access to certain embassies. HUGHES SAID the Reagan administration wants the aid approved before the end of the current session of Congress. Plans to upgrade security at U.S. embassies was first envisioned in 1979 as a response to mob at- tacks against U.S. facilities in Pakistan, Iran and Libya. The program called for improving security at 125 sites at a cost of $192 million. Some posts were dropped from the program, which until yesterday was expected to cost $145 million. Hughes announed the aid request after Secretary of State George Shultz, attending a United Nations session here, received a report from a team of investigators who probed the devastation of the embassy annex in Beirut and are to make recommendations about now to improve security. LEADING THE team was Robert Oakley, the State Department's coordinator for counter- terrorism. Hughes said the administration has no plans to disclose its diplomatic posts in Lebanon following the terrorist attack, the third to destroy an American installation in that city in 17 months. The other blasts destroyed the U.S. Embassy in April of 1983 and the U.S. Marine headquarters last October. "The embassy is going to stay, but obviously we need to do some hard thinking on how it's going to operate," Hughes said. TODAY Ugly duckling S OME UGLY PEOPLE think not having a date every Saturday night is the worst thing in the world, but Bruce Morgan from the Indiana University of Pennsylvania turned his ugliness into popularity. Morgan was selected as the "ugliest man" on the campus rSt1rdav night hsting nut six other finalists. The contest plans to use the title for everything it's worth. "I've just been waiting to become famous and I guess this is the time," he said. And does he feel bad about being ugly? "Man, I ain't ugly," Morgan said. "My mom's been telling me for 24 years that I'm the best-looking guy in the world." Kiss off A KISS may be just a kiss, but the smooch Eddie Levin and Delphine Orha planted on each other was no perfunctory peck. Their lips didn't part for 17 days and 9 hours-an achievement that won them a new car and a trip to Paris. "This ha shrngiht us clnrt naether mave tnn were alotted each hour to take naps or showers. For their efforts, Levin and Orha drove off with a $15,000 sports car from the dealer and won a week in Paris from a beer com- pany. But they apparently missed a record by a few days. In June 1983, Dino DeLorean and Barbrar Kane puckered up for three weeks. Levin and Orha, who met in a laun- dromat, were never alone during their bussing bonanza. Dozens of curious passers-by pressed their noses to the glass and watched the couple swap kisses in the dealer- ship's showroom. "All in all, it's been a wonderful 17 days," said Levin. apartment in January 1982 when Hartford's ex-wife, Elaine Kay, and a friend, Adrianna Adereth, came into the room and tied her to the bed. The women, who were allegedly ar- gry with Dowling for spending a night out with Hartford, then clipped her nearly bald, the suit said. Kay, Hartford's fourth wife, and Miss Adereht pleaded guilty last year to criminal harrassment in the incident and fined $500 each: Lipsig said his client was pleased with the settlement. 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