POLICE Compromise NOTES may let U.S. build chem. Break-ins reported weapons A window was pryed open to a house in the 700 block of Arch St. between noon and 6 p.m. Wednesday. Police WASHINGTON (UPI) - Defense said they have no suspects in the case negotiators, finishing up on a $302 billion defense bill, agreed last night Less than $50 cash was taken from a on a chemical weapons compromise home in the 900 block of Mary St. that could allow assembly of the Wednesday between 11 a.m. and 8:30 weapons in 1987 for the first time in p.m., police said. nearly two decades. After that roadblock was lifted, MotorCyCle taken House and Senate conferees sailed through their remaining differences A Honda motorcycle valued at and finished two weeks of talks on the $1,100 was stolen from the 500 block of massive fiscal 1986 defense Church St. Wednesday evening, saidbill. cau sat. Wdiresdoy LeoHengaid The pact still must be approved by campus safety directorTLe Heatley. both the House and Senate and, under the agreement, the House will take a Cash stolen separate vote on the chemical weapons issue. A wallet and contents valued at $55 The House entered the conference were stolen from a University staff insisting that NATO nations get a vote member's purse between noon and 1 on whether chemical weapons are p.m. Wednesday in the Art and Ar- produced and stockpiled in Western chitecture Building on North Campus, Europe where they would be most Heatley said, likely used. H yBut under the compromise, the Thirty-nine dollars was stolen from United States will consult with the a staff member's purse between 2 and allies on the weapons, rather than 3 p.m. Wednesday in Randall permitting a NATO vote. Weapons Laboratory. components could not be built until the United States had ready a plan for deploying the weapons and they could Lassie Robbery reported not be assembled for potential deployment until at least 1987 - some 18 years after the United States Tammy Gorshe, 3, teaches her nine- An Eastern Michigan University unilaterally decided to quit produc- cing steps in front of her home in San. student was attacked by three men tion. beat up, and robbed of $22 in the 400 The agreement retains House in- block of East University at 11:45 p.m. sistence that separate chemical agen- Never leave children or animals lock- Wednesday, campus security said. ts used in the "binary" weapons be ed in a closed car, even for a brief time, stored and shipped separately. It also with the windows rolled down a bit, ac- tiesanyassmbl decsio toanycording to Family Circle magazine. In -Laura Bischoff g summer, a cars interior temperature progress in efforts to get the Soviets to can rise to 120 degrees within 15 agree on a new chemical weapons minutes. treaty. The Michigan Daily - Friday, July 26, 1985-- Page 11 Wallace -- begins surgery recovery ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (UPI) - Alabama Gov. George Wallace yesterday began an expected two- week convalescence from spinal surgery doctors hope finally will relieve stubborn, debilitating pain left by his 13-year-old bullet wounds. Dr. Daniel Lammertse, medical director at Craig Hospital and Wallace's attending physician, said Wallace's vital signs were stable and that he had begun taking fluids, but was "still experiencing the expected post-operative discomfort." Billy Joe Camp, Wallace's press secretary, said he had visited the governor at about 9 a.m. yesterday, 24 hours after Wallace went into surgery. He, too, noted Wallace's normal post-operative pain. Nn IT-SHIRT Ann Arbor's fastest! 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