WI DE... lcers move on to the Joe with sweep of OSU. See SPORTSmonday Pagel1. 1£.4di N TODAY Cloudy, may be flurries; High: 34, Low: 23. TOMORROW I Mostly cloudy; IHigh: 48, Low: 31. Since 1890 Vol. CI, No.103 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, March 4, 1991 Copig991 The Michigan 9Daily llies, Iraq agree to permanent peace Baker to Agreement seek plan for peaceov in Mideast .S Ws gswap of P0~ WASHINGTON (AP) - Sec- .x' SAFWAN, Iraq (AP) - Al- dul Amir al-Anbari, said in New retary of State James Baker said lied and Iraqi military leaders York that Iraq had released 10 yesterday that vanquishing Iraq's ^ agreed yesterday to a tentative POWs already, among them six army has created new opportuni- l cease-fire and a quick release of Americans, "including one of ties for peace in the Middle war prisoners in a dramatic them the young lady that was East, but the United States meeting of commanders at a captured." "cannot impose a solution" on captured desert airstrip in south- Schwarzkopf, the U.S. com- Israel or the Arab states.N em Iraq. mander in the Persian Gulf, and Baker and other top adminis- "I am very happy to tell you other allied chiefs refused to say tration officials signalled anew we agreed on all matters," U.S. whether they had learned how that the coalition will go easier _Army Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf many POWs are held by Iraq. on seeking reparations from Iraq "'7skg told a crowd of soldiers and The U.S. command knows of at if Saddam Hussein is removed journalists after the two-hour least nine Americans. The only from power. U.S. Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, left, top allied commander, and Saudi Gen. Khalid bin Sultan, second from the meeting. woman U.S. soldier listed as Baker said Saddam remains left, sit across the table from unidentified Iraqi military commanders at the start of a meeting Sunday to set the He announced that a missing the war is Army Spe. in control in Baghdad "as far as terms for a permanent cease-fire. The meeting was held in a tent at a captured Iraqi air base at Safwan, Iraq. "symbolic release" of POWs Melissa Rathbun-Nealy. we know," despite unrest in would be made immediately to He said U.S. troops would Basra and other Iraqi cities. no tears would be shed if he Hussein, who sided with Sad- in the defense budget over five show good faith, and that "all withdraw from occupied southern President Bush, who spent were toppled from power. dam. years. detainees," including several Iraq as soon as a permanent the weekend at the presidential Top White House officials, And National Security Ad- Speaking on ABC-TV, thousand Kuwaiti civilian cease-fire was signed and Iraq retreat at Camp David, Md., has making the rounds of network viser Brent Scowcroft said the Scowcroft said he did not think hostages held by Iraq, would be has complied with U.N. resolu- said repeatedly that while Sad- television talk shows, held out Bush administration may have to the United States could respond treated as war prisoners. tions. Those resolutions say Iraq dam's ouster was not a war aim, an olive branch to Jordan's King rethink plans for a 25 percent cut See BAKER, page 2 Iraq's U.N. ambassador, Ab- See GULF, Page 2 I - I Engler's vetoes send budget talks back to state legislature by Bethany Robertson Daily Government Reporter State budget talks were sent back to the discussion table last week after Gov. John Engler vetoed large parts of a bud- get bill approved last month by the state legislature. The bill was designed by House Democrats as an alternative to the 9.2 percent across-the-board state cuts passed earlier in the year. However, Engler did approve parts of the budget plan that will restore funding for corrections facilities, the state po- lice, some salaries for Department of Social Services employees, and mental and public health facilities. All other state departments will con- tinue under the original reductions. Higher education was excluded from last December's 9.2 percent cuts, re- 737 crash 25 aboard COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) - A United jetliner with 25 people on board crashed in flames as it ap- proached the Colorado Springs airport Sunday morning, and there were appar- ently no survivors, authorities said. United Flight 585 en route from Den- ver crashed at 9:55 a.m. four to five miles south of the airport, the Federal Aviation Administration in Washington said. There were 20 passengers on board and a crew of five. ceiving instead a 1 percent reduction. The legislature must now negotiate a new bill if the 9.2 percent cuts are to be averted. Engler Press Secretary John Truscott said the governor vetoed the majority of the bill because, instead of reducing the estimated state deficit of $1.1 billion, it authorized additional spending. "We just can't spend money that we don't have," Truscott said. But David Wiener, legislative aid to Representative David Hollister (D-Lans- ing), said another part of the Demo- cratic plan - now being considered by the Senate - would increase state rev- enues to offset the additional spending. "(Engler's) refused to even acknowl- edge that we are offering any revenues," Wiener said. One example he gave was a money-saving early retirement plan for state employees. "There are revenues available," Wiener said. "We'd be willing to give if we saw some sign from the governor that he's willing to come down from his cuts." Although the budget bill sent to the governor was passed almost unani- mously by the Senate, Truscott said it was passed with the Senate's under- standing that the governor would not ap- prove it. Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor) said the Senate passed the bill in order to send a message to the governor. "They really did it to quietly embar- rass the governor," Pollack said. "They'd tried privately to get him to ac- See BUDGET, Page 2 es in Colorado; all presumed The plane narrowly missed housest and apartment buildings; at least one person on the ground was injured. "There does not appear to be" any survivors, said Dick Meyer, of the FAA's public information office in Seat-] tle. Chicago-based United said in a1 statement that "at this time there are no reports of survivors" aboard the Boeing 737-200. "All obviously are presumed dead,"1 said Sgt. Dean Kelsey, of the El Paso dead County Sheriff's office. However, he said he would not confirm that until search efforts had been exhausted. "I watched and it went vertically into the ground," said Army Command Sgt. Maj. Leo Martinez. "There was a huge fireball, black smoke and orange flame." Denver airport official Richard Boulware said the plane's last stop be- fore Denver was Moline, Ill. Before that it stopped in Peoria, Ill. KRISTOFFER GILLETTFJDaily Clean laundry at last First-year students and University lacrosse team members Paul Guthrie and Kevin Lewand return to South Quad Sunday ladened with luggage. Student chalker 'S slate wiped clean State temporarily drops charges by Tami Pollak Daily Crime Reporter have the charges dismissed, Students voice approval for U.S. prosecution of Gulf War by Gwen Shaffer said. "I hate to see any soldiers Several other Universitys Daily Staff Reporter die, but that's the drawback of us dents agreed that trying Sad stu- dam at "I won't chalk on the Diag anymore. I won't chalk on ...." This time chalking won't be the punishment - it's the crime. LSA junior Todd Ochoa went to court last Thursday prepared to de- fend himself following an arrest for chalking anti-deputization slogans If T~rtrroit r~r~nrty - least temporarily, he was unhappy about having to drive two and a half hours with his mother for such an inconclusive trial, he said. "For the past four months I've been dragged about on a wrong charge. I'm glad it was dismissed, I knew it was a harsh charge, but it stl :na nr-, -..i -ridn, " Orhnn An overwhelming majority of University students interviewed said they believe the U.S. made the right decision by agreeing to an official cease-fire to the Persian Gulf War yesterday. Most students said they were pleasantly surprised by the rela- tively small number of Allied deaths. "I was really glad we got what m.- wnntpr wihnmnnvm . esnat being there," he added. Some students said that al- though the war has ended, they are still not sure the world has seen the last of Saddam Hussein. "I don't trust Saddam as long as he is in power - anything could still happen," engineering sopho- more Katherine Herrick said. "On TV, all the Iraqi's are saying, 'Kill Saddam.' But all we are seeing is what the media is showing us." Hussein was the just thing to do. "I'd like him to be tried in front of an international jury. If it wasn't for him, none of this would have happened," Schwehr said. LSA senior Lisha Cook said, "Saddam should pay for the crimes that he directed, even if he didn't personally commit them." Many students said they be- lieved the victory will assure Pres- ident George Bush's reelection in r% A -IL -- I