The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 26, 1984 -Page 3 Second Congress sets defense uspect 1n ab driver urder arrested By GEORGEA KOVANIS Ann Arbor police yesterday arrested another man in connection with the Sept. 13 shooting of a city cab driver, Sgt. Jan Suomala said yesterday. Layman Sales, 20, was arrested early yesterday morning at his home in Westland by Ann Arbor and Westland police officers. He was charged with felony murder. ANOTHER SUSPECT in the killing, Arnold Clark, 19, of Inkster, was arrested Sept. 21. The charge against him is assault with intent to rob while being armed. Torsten Kutsche, a 41-year-old Yellow Cab driver, was killed and rob- bed Sept. 13 while responding to a false call on the 3600 block of Braeburn Circle in Ann Arbor. Kutsche, who lived at 320 S. Division was shot once in the chest in an ap- parent robbery attempt, police said. He was pronounced dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. After discovering that they request was phony, Kutsche radioed his dispat- cher at the Yellow Cab Company and said that he "would look around for a bit," Suomala said. Kutsche drove to the 2700 block of Braeburn Circle, where the murder took place. Kutsche was the first cab driver to be killed in Ann Arbor since Christmas Day, 1980. budget whici By the Associated Press WASHINGTON - House and Senate negotiators agreed Tuesday to a 1985 defense budget plan that trims billions from President Reagan's original budget and delays further production of the MX missile pending a chance for either chamber to scuttle the nuclear weapon in April. After months of deadlock, conferees on the defense authorization bill resolved 1,200 differences between the House and Senate versions of the measure in a final, round- the-clock session that began early Monday. REAGAN originally had sought $313 billion. Under a leadership agreement that triggered the breakthrough, the appropriations bill, which accompanies the authorization bill will call for $292.9 billion, or less, in actual spending for fiscal 1985. That amounts to a 5 percent "real" - or inflation-adjusted increase for the Pentagon. Reagan, at first, said 13 per- cent, then came down to 7.5 percent before retreating yet again under terms of a general agreement reached last week by House Speaker Thomas O'Neill (D-Mass.) and Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker (R-Tenn). House Armed Services Chairman Melvin Price (D-Ill.) said the final product, which yet must be considered by the House and Senate, reflects a consensus of both chambers. That consensus, he said, is "that national security im- delays MX. peratives require real growth in the defense budget, but that the size of the deficit does not permit growth to the degree requested" by the president. REAGAN'S biggest concession was on the MX. The com- promise legislation will bar any further production of the 10- warhead weapon, the centerpiece of his strategic buildup, pending two go-ahead votes by each chamber next April. Failure to win any of those four votes would doom the missile, and opponents in both chambers, who demanded the complicated parliamentary procedure, say it's all but dead now. Regardless of what happens in those future votes, the legislation would limit 1985 production money for the MX to $1.5 billion, enough for 21 missiles, according to Senate estimates, but only 15 according to the Congressional Budget, Office. Reagan originally wanted 40. As for other strategic items, the compromise bill calls for $8.2 billion next year to buy 34 B-1 supersonic bombers,. despite questions raised by the recent crash of a prototype model in California. Also approved: $400 million for 70 Per, R shing 2 nuclear missiles for deployment in Europe, and more, than $1.3 billion for hundreds of Tomahawk cruise missiles- for air, sea and ground launchers. Some Tomahawks will- carry nuclear warheads. Engin. school issues photo I.D. By ALYSSA FIRST In an effort to clamp down on studen- ts who show false identification cards to use computers at the College of Engineering, college officials this year are requiring students to carry a new photo pass, according to a safety department supervisor. Engineering students will have to show monitors the new photo passes, in order to use computers in the Chrysler Center, the Undergraduate Library, East Engineering and the Dow Buildings, said Robert Patrick, associate security supervisor for the safety department. FORMERLY students needed to show only a special sticker on the back of their regular University identification cards. The new picture passes will prohibit engineering students from loaning their identification cards to other students who want to use the special computers, said Mary Robertson, a senior who sits on the college's student council. "I've heard of people giving away their ID cards and a lot of people doing LSA stuff on the engineering com- puters," Robertson said. "THE PROBLEM was brought up in engineering council and photo IDs were seen as the best solution," she ad- ded. Use of engineering computers is limited to students in the college because they pay an additional $100 each term for the privilege, said Engineering Prof. Richard Phillips. "Other students don't pay for it, and a non-engineer who is not supposed to be there could be denying access to an engineering student who has paid a fee to use the computers," Phillips said. SEVERAL students said the college failed to notify them about getting a new pass. "Something should have been sent to me," said Kay Koskey, who added that she heard about the photo ID through a friend. Jerry Borg, an engineering graduate student, said he had borrowed another. student's identification card once. because he had forgot his. He said the photo passes were unnecessary. because most of the instances of loaning are between engineering stud ents. Engineering senior Cliff Henry said he heard of students loaning their ID cards and thought the photo ideas would prevent that abuse. Students can have their picture taken for the passes at the Chrysler com- puting center through Friday. Next Monday and Tuesday students can get theri cards at West Engineering and the, following week, Oct. 11 and 12, at Chrysler center. Associated Press Lineup Hundreds of Detroit Tigers fans wait outside Tiger Stadium yesterday to purchase playoff tickets. The people at the front of the line began waiting on Monday. -HAPPENINGS- Highlight W.A. Fowler, winner of the 1983 Novel Prize for Physics, will deliver the H.R. Crane Lecture at 4:30 p.m., in Rackham Lecture Hall. Fowler's presentation, "The Quest for the Origin of the Elements," is a version of his 1983 Novel lecture. Films AAFC/Cinema Guild/Cinema 2 - Berlin Alexanderplatz, parts 8, 9, 10 & 11, 7 p.m., Lorch Hall MTF - Streamers, 7 p.m., Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean, 9:10 p.m., Michigan Theater. Mediatrics - Brian's Song, 7:45 p.m., Cannery Row, 9 p.m., MLB 3. Performances Michigan Voice - Concert, Gary Reynolds & Friends, 8 p.m., 812 Monroe St. School of Music - "Basically Beethoven" series, 8p.m., Recital Hall. The Ark - The Lady of the Lake, 8 p.m., the Ark. Speakers Center for W. European Studies - Bruce Lenman, "Back of the Band Wagon: The Highland Aristocracy from Culloden to Yorktown," 4 p.m., Clements library. International Center/Ecumenical Campus Center/Church of Women United in Ann Arbor - Seong Soo Han, "Korea: Future Prospects and Hopes," noon, International Center. Chemistry Department - Gerald Small, "Laser Analytical Spectroscopy and Chemical Physics in Amorphous Molecular Solids," 4 p.m., AMAX Materials Research Lab, 1600 Huron Parkway. Anthropology/Center for Human Growth and Development - Phillip Tobias, "The Kalahari Bushmen and the Changing Size of Modern Human Beings," 4:10 p.m., Rackham. Computer Center - "Intro to File Editor," 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS; "In- tro to Taxis part 1" 3:30 p.m., Room 516 Business Administration Building. Bioengineering - Stanley Sternberg, "Machine Vision," 4 p.m., room 1042 E. Engineering Building. Center for Russian and Eastern European Studies - Tina Arnold Durband and Randy Durband, "Adventures in Yugoslavia", noon, Lane Hall Com- mons. Industrial and Operations Engineering department - William B. Rouse, "Training and Aiding Operators and Maintainers of Complex Systems," 4 p.m., room 241 IOE Building. Statistics Department - Mark Berliner, "Robust Bayesian Analysis," 4 p.m., 451 Mason Hall. Chemistry Department - Edgardo Laborde, "I. Total Synthesei of prostaglandins. New Strategy for (3 + 2) Annulation." Meetings CEW - Job Hunt Club, noon, 35 S. Thayer Ave. His House Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann St. Ann Arbor Go Club --7 p.m., room 1433 Mason Hall. Climbing Club - 7:30 p.m., Anderson Room, Union. Lacross Club - 7 p.m., room 1250 CCRB. Michigan Gay Undergraduates - 9:30 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe St. Miscellaneous Student Organizations Development Center - Workshop, "One for All and All for One: Team Building" 4 p.m. & 7 p.m., Union. Microcomputer Education Center - Workshop, Intro to Macintosh Per- sonal Computer, 9 a.m., Word Processing with MacWrite, 3 p.m., room 3014, School of Education Building. Student Wood and Craft Shop - Workshop, Intro to Wood Working, 7 p.m., Citrus growers receive harves " WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - Three citrus growers received har- vesting permits Tuesday, one day after a statewide ban on harvesting was im- posed because of the threat of citrus canker. The bacterial disease, which destroys fruit and eventually kills the tree, has been found in stock from six nurseries, and officials are trying to track down newly planted trees that came from these nurseries in order to prevent its spreading through the state's $2.5 billion-a-year citrus industry. THE CANKER is harmless to humans who eat oranges or drink juice contaminated by the bacteria. The three growers who received har- vesting go-aheads yesterday got the permits "apparently because they had no newly planted stock," said Wayne Baggett, spokesman for the federal- state eradication program. 'I'm in favor of losing one season of business rather than take a chance and lose the whole industry.' - Glen Davidson, citrus merchant t permits This complies with a Sept. 14 federal' quarantine, which permits the movement of Florida citrus to all ex- cept other citrus-producing states. This is aimed at preventing the spread of the' disease from Florida to other producing areas. Since Florida is a citrus- producing state, Conner and industry officials decided to stop shipment within the state, too, until survey teams pinpoint all infested sectors of the 760,000-acre citrus belt. For Glen Davidson, owner of a road- side shop on U.S. Highway 27, the ship- ping ban could be devastating, he said. We do about 30 percent of our sales . . over the counter to tourists," David- son said. But he agreed that the in- dustry should exercise extreme caution now, rather than be sorry later. "I'm in favor of losing one season of business rather than take a chance and lose the whole industry." Florida Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner on Monday imposed both a harvesting and intra-state shipping embargo while inspectors re-checked groves for the disease. The ban on all citrus shipments for sale within the state continued without exception yesterday, meaning that roadside stan- ds, supermarkets and other fresh fruit outlets were not getting any Florida- grown citrus. HOWEVER, the three newly recer- tified groves, and others that are found canker-free in the future, may ship their fruit to packing houses for reshipment to out-of-state markets. Charles Manson set. afire by fellow inmate VACAVILLE, Calif. (AP). - Mass killer Charles Manson was doused with a flammable liquid and set afire yesterday by a fellow inmate who said Manson had threatened him because of his religious beliefs, prison officials said. Manson, serving a life sentence for seven 1969 murders including the killing of actress Sharon Tate, was treated for second- and third-degree burns in the prison infirmary and was in good condition, said Bob Gore, spokesman for the state Corrections Department. MANSON, 48, was in the hobby shop of the California Medical Facility, the state's prison for psychiatric prisoners, when the other inmate doused him with flammable liquid and set him afire, Gore said. Prison officials believe the liquid was paint thinner, which is available in the hobby shop, Gore said. Many inmates carry matches for cigarette smoking, he added. Correction A witness to Monday's fatal bike ac- cident said that the law scholar from China was still breathing and had a pulse when he left for the hospital and that the truck driver could not have seen the cyclist in time to avoid the ac- cident. 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