The Michigan Daily -Thursday, October 11, 1990 - Page 3 Ann Arbor bike I thefts rise in '90 President jogs budget plans into party turmoil 6)y Jon Rosenthal Bike thefts in Ann Arbor are on rise. The 352 bicycle thefts in Ann Arbor during the first nine months df this year has exceeded the 348 thefts recorded for all of last year, ac- cbrding to the Ann Arbor Police De- pprtment. These thefts are more than petty larceny. Last year's Ann Arbor bike thieves stole merchandise worth a to- 1 of $84,000. As a result, the Department of Public Safety is preparing a presen- tation for next summer's first-year student orientation explaining the best methods to prevent bike theft.. The department is also trying to focilitate bike protection. "The older model bike racks weren't suitable for mountain bikes," said Sgt. Vern aisden of the University Depart- ent of Public Safety, "The Univer- sity embarked upon a project to in- troduce more of the U-shaped bike racks which seems to have been a hit with most people on campus." ;Sgt. Baisden recommended own- ers remove their bike's seat or lock their bikes to a solid object with a sturdy U-bolt lock or with a thick link chain. Students should put the lock or chain through the frame and the front wheel. "It is amazing to me why people will spend four, five, six hundred, maybe even a thousand dollars for a bike and won't spend ten or fifteen dollars to buy a good lock or that they'll buy the lock and then won't use it," said Sgt. Baisden. In order to make it easier to find stolen bikes the Ann Arbor Police require each bike owner to register the factory-stamped serial numbers of their bike with the police depart- ment. "The biggest problem we're see- ing is these kids don't record their serial numbers" said Naomi Loy, co- owner of the Student Bike Shop. "If it has been reported stolen anywhere in the U.S., it shows up," Loy said. As a result, most bike thieves will sell the bikes on the street because they know the danger of store sales. Some bikes are recov- ered but even then there are prob- lems. "Recovery is very minimal" says Sgt. Baisden "and sometimes (if its unregistered), we can't get (the bike) back to the owner." WASHINGTON (AP) - Confusion over President Bush's po- sition on higher taxes slowed con- gressional efforts yesterday to start work in earnest on a new budget agreement. Bush showed no inclina- tion to clarify matters, saying, "Let congress clear it up." Congressional Democrats com- plained that an apparent Bush rejec- tion of higher taxes on the wealthi- est Americans - a reversal of the position he took at his news confer- ence Tuesday - would make it tougher to forge a budget compromise. But there was no shortage of op- tions, as both Republicans and Democrats began floating new ver- sions of tax and spending plans on Capital Hill. Senate Minority leader Bob Dole and other lawmakers who met with the president Tuesday night said he had not ruled out the tax boost at that private meeting, as reported by Sen. Bob Packwood (R-Oregon). White House spokesperson Marlin Fitzwater told reporters that Bush "listened to" the GOP lawmak- ers rather than stating a position. Bush, on a campaign trip in the South, was asked repeatedly about the matter, but turned away the ques- tions with wisecracks. He was asked as he jogged during a break in St. Petersburg, Fla., if he would care to clear up the confusion. "Confusion?" he responded. Was he giving up on a capital gains tax rate cut, the item the Democrats supposedly were to trade for his support of higher income taxes on rich people? "Read my hips," he said, point- ing, as he jogged by. Could he clean up his position? "Let congress clear it up." The Senate Finance Committee indefinitely postponed a meeting at which it was to discuss a budget package written by its chair, Texas Democrat Lloyd Bentson, generally in line with the tax trade Bush en- dorsed at his news conference. "I had the deal all worked out un- til the president changes his position on taxes," said Bentson. Across the Capitol, the House Ways and Means Committee consid- ered a plan written by its chair, Rep. Dan Rostenkowski (D-Illinois). The package was similar to the measure Bentson's panel had readied, al- though it would add restrictions on tax deductions available to people earning more than $100,000 an- nually. It also would add private planes worth more than $100,000 to the list of luxury items subject to a new 10 percent tax, and place a 2-cent- per-gallon tax on petroleum prod- ucts-excluding home heating oil. Facing an Oct. 19 deadline, con- gressional committees must work out tax and spending details adding up to a $500 billion reduction in the federal deficit over the next five years. Lower, and a little to the left... . LSA seniors Sam Salvi and John Boundas, members of Sigma Chi fraternity, are decorated in honey (among other things) by members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority to kick off the start of Derby Days, a "charity fund raiser." *Israelis name panel to JERUSALEM (AP) - The Israeli government yesterday named a panel led by a former chief of the Mossad secret service to investigate the killing of 19 Palestinian rioters on, the Temple Mount. The investigation was ordered by I'rime Minister Yitzhak Shamir be- Sre the U.N. Security Council was to begin debate on condemning Israel for using police force against rioters. The Security Council also was ex- pected to order a U.N. inquiry into Monday's bloodbath. :Israeli security forces killed 19 Arabs and wounded 140 in Monday's clash outside the Al-Aqsa mosque, islam's third-holiest site. It was the bloodiest confrontation of the 34 9nonth old Palestinian uprising tgainst Israeli occupation, and it raised an immediate world outcry. The three-man committee was or- dered to investigate events leading to the riot and the conduct of paramili- tary border police in opening fire with live ammunition on the Temple Mount. However, Israel radio reported hat it will not have the power to subpoena reluctant witnesses, nor will its recommendations be binding. Yossi Ahimeir, Shamir's spokesperson, said the investigation would be headed by reserve Major General Zvi Zamir, who was head of the Mossad from 1968 to 1974. The other members will be Yaacov Neeman, a prominent attorney, and Chaim Kubersky, a former director of the Interior Ministry. Asked what powers the commit- tee would have, Ahimeir said it could make "every recommendation they see fit and the prime minister will decide what to do with it." Ahimeir said the panel would re- port "as soon as possible." When asked whether its hearings would be public, he replied that they "involve security and operational de- tails so, if necessary, discussions will be subject to the usual security laws." Members of the U.N Security Council on Tuesday debated a resolu- tion condemning the shooting and calling for a U.N. investigation, with the United States prepared to cast a rare vote against its ally in the chamber. investigate President Bush criticized Israeli forces for not acting "with more re- straint." And yesterday, China, Zimbabwe and Kuwait's govern- ment-in-exile added their voices to those condemning Israel for the violence. "It will now be investigated by ourselves. We don't need a probe by international factors," Ahimeir said. "The marginal point of whether it was excessive force or not is to be investigated." Ahimeir also said he hoped "our position will be understood, we re- acted against provocation that was planned against Jewish worshippers." In the occupied territories, sol- diers kept more than a million Palestinians under curfew for a third day to contain unrest triggered by the violence at the Old City site, which is holy to both Jews and Moslems. In a leaflet issued Tuesday, the PLO-backed leaders of the Palestinian uprising urged revenge attacks on soldiers and Jewish settlers. "Every soldier and settler in the land of Palestine is a target that deaths should be liquidated," it said. The government published a full- page ad in leading dailies urging Israelis to respond to Monday's riots by showing up at the Wailing Wall for "Simchat Torah" holiday celebra- tions tonight. The holiday, which means "Joy of Torah" marks the end of the eight day Sukkot, or feast of Tabernacles, and' is celebrated by dancing while holding the Torah of biblical scrolls at synagogues. Police chief Yaacov Turner denied reports in Israeli newspapers that suggested his troops had failed to heed intelligence information to ex- pect Monday's riot, and to deploy accordingly. The riot began when Palestinians hurled rocks at Jewish worshippers at the Western Wall, Judaism's holi- est site and just below the Al-Aqsa mosque. Twenty-eight Jews were in- jured by rocks. Police then charged at the rioters on the Temple Mount, initially fir- ing tear gas. According to Israeli of- ficials, the troops, heavily outnum- bered, only later opened fire with live ammunition. Supreme Court justices deliberate sex bias case WASHINGTON (AP) - Three. of the Supreme Court's nine justicesl gave a chilly reception yesterday to an employer's "fetal protection" policy that excludes all women of childbearing age from some hazardous jobs. In a case that could affect millions of working women, Justices John Paul Stevens, Antonin Scalia and Sandra Day O'Connor voiced doubts about the wisdom and legality of such a policy. The court is expected to decide by July whether the policy amounts to illegal sex discrimination. The three justices, along with Justice Anthony Kennedy, dominated an hour-long argument session. They posed numerous questions to the two lawyers before them, firing their most biting inquiries at Stanley Jaspanwho represented the Milwaukee-based Johnson Controls Inc. Stevens seemed dubious when asking Jaspan about the overall risk posed to women working at Johnson Controls' 13 battery-making plants. When Jaspan argued that exposure to lead, the principal material used in making batterigs, "poisons the fetus and causes permanent brain damage," Stevens interrupted to ask, "How often does this happen?" He asked whether "the slightest risk" was enough to render inapplicable a federal law, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,. banning on-the-job sex bias. "You are not coming to grips withm the effect of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act," O'Connor told Jaspan. THE LIST Co-op, fraternity broken & entered, stero, cash taken What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings: Society of Women Engineers meeting. 1200 EECS. 6:15 p.m. Michigan Video Yearbook Weekly Meeting. Fourth floor Michigan Union. 6:30 p.m. Men's Support Group Mass Meeting. Sexual Assault Pre- vention and Awareness Center. 580 Union Dr., #L107 - Winchell Hall, W. Quad. 7 p.m. International Student Affairs Commission. International Center. 6:15 p.m. Public Interest Research Group In Michigan (PIRGIM) meeting. Wolverine Rm., Michigan Union. 7 p.m. Call: Jodi Goldman, 994-3422. Rainforest Action Movement: Action-Planning for upcoming World Rainforest Week. Rm 1520, Dana Bldg. (School of Nat. Resources) 7 p.m. U of M Ski Team Mass Meeting. Pendelton Rm, Michigan Union. 7 p.m. ,Speakers: "DNA Electrophoretic Mo- bility in Agarose Gels - a Bio- physical Investigation Inspired by the Human Genome Project" - Prof. Benjamin Chu of the State University of New York-Stony Brook will speak. Rm. 1640 New aChem. Bldg. 2:15 p.m. "Attachment to Schooling Among Black Inner-City Young Women" Sandra Danziger, asst. prof. of Social work, will speak as part of the Michigan Program in Child Development and Social Policy Seminar Series. Develop- mental Area Lounge, third floor, * Iauen 1 1An m Rackham 4 p.m. Call: Judy Maas, 6-2526. "Endless Omiyage" Martha McClintock, Ph.D. candidate, will speak as part of the Center for Japanese Studies Brown Bag Lecture Series. Lane Hall Commons Rm. Noon. A colloquium on critical theory. "End and Ending: On the Lyric Technique of Some Wallace Stevens Poems" by Timothy Bahti. Rackham. E. Conferenc y Rm. 8 p.m. Furthermore: Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship. Mini Concert of Prayer. E. Quad, Rm. 126.7 p.m. In Focus Filmworks. New Stu- dent Film Production Company. Bring ideas. 2520 Frieze. 6:30 p.m. Northwalk. Free escort across campus. 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Call: 763-Walk or Stop by 2333 Bursley. Safewalk: Free escort across campus. 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Call 936- 1000 or Stop by 102 UgLi. Women & Spirituality (Journey Women) with Liza Bancel. Guild House. 7 p.m. U of M Cycling Men's Ride and Women's ride. Leaves from the steps of Hill aud. Men's: 3:30 p.m. Women's: 5:30 p.m. "Study Abroad in Australian and British Universities." U-M International Center. 7 p.m. Call: 764-9310. School of Social Work: Resumes & Cover Letters. Frieze Bldg.:15-1:30 p.m. B PP 2Question/Answer Ses- sion. School of Education. 3 p.m. Employer Presentation: Merck& Co. Inc. 6-8 p.m. by Josephine Ballenger Daily Crime Reporter An unknown suspect removed stereo equipment from Nakamura Cooperative House, 807 S. State Street, at approximately 3:30 a.m. October 4. Residents reported the theft to the Ann Arbor Police Department that day. President Josh Green said the res- idents speculate the suspect gained entry through an unlocked window on the first floor. Residents esti- mated the value of the tape-deck and stereo receiver at around $400. Curiously, Green noted, the speakers were not taken. A woman reported to Ann Arbor police that a male suspect hit her in the face with a book - a felonious assault - in the University Medical Center smoking lounge. Witnesses disagreed, accord- ing to the report. Phi Alpha Kappa, a graduate social fraternity at 1010 E. Ann, was broken into and entered at around 1:30 p.m. October 8. A man took $150 from a room, police reports said. The money was taken from a cash box in the business manager's room on the third floor, President Tom Sharda elaborated. Several fra- ternity members saw the suspect, Sharda said, and questioned the man, who said he was there to buy a mo- torcycle from a member. An unknown suspect entered a private residence on the 400 block of Ashley by opening an unlocked win- dow and climbing in sometime be- tween 11 p.m. Oct. 8 and 6:50 a.m. Oct. 9. A television, VCR, and tapes were taken. p An attempt at strong-armed robbery occurred at 7:15 p.m. October 7 at Total Realty of 2020 W. Stadium, according to police re- ports. The complainant told police she was working alone when a man grabbed her and demanded money. He released her when a customer drove in. A number of vehicles were stolen or broken and entered in the S. State-Packard area, a predominant student residential area: s a blue and gray, two-door '90 Plymouth Sunbird was taken from Food Bys [WHAT A WEEK the 900 block of Packard Oct. 5; a '74 Volvo, blue with four doors, was stolen from the 700 block of Dewey Oct. 8; a window of a car parked on the 100 block of E. Hoover was smashed Oct. 4 or 5 , and the stereo and tapes were taken; an unknown suspect took tools and a work belt from a vehicle on the 1000 block of Greene Oct. 4 or 5. The owner had left one of the windows open. In addition to the S. State- Packard area incidents, a radar detec- tor and a jacket were taken from a car on N. University with rolled-down windows. 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