It IF4 . o ritt an t tt One hundred three years of editorial freedom Police uncover few clues in Peoples shooting case F-A 7 By WILL McCAHILL and MICHAEL ROSENBERG SAILY SPORTS WRITERS A thorough search of the parking lot where former Michigan football player Shonte Peoples fired shots at police turned up no bullets, Ann Ar- bor police said yesterday. However, police said they found seven shell casings that matched the bullets found in Peoples' gun. Police also found a gun in a snow- bank off of South Main Street, which Sad been thrown there by a suspect in the course of police pursuit. The sus- pect, Herman Culkar, was later ar- rested and charged with breaking into five different vehicles and stealing various electronic equipment. Police said Culkar used two types of screwdrivers to break into the ve- hicles. The thefts allegedly occurred in the area of Signature Boulevard and Waymarket Way, including in the parking lot directly in front of Peoples' apartment in the 3000 block of Signature Boulevard. One of the cars allegedly hit by Culkar was a 1993 Jeep Grand Chero- kee belonging to Peoples. Police re- ports estimated the damage to the vehicle at $500. Ann Arbor Police Department (AAPD) Sgt. Phil Scheel said yester- day that Culkar had a previous crimi- nal record and was only recently re- leased from jail. Plainclothes police of the AAPD Special Investigation Unit observed Culkar breaking into the vehicles in- volved, resulting in the pursuit and apprehension of Culkar. It was during a police search of the Signature Boulevard area that offic- ers were fired upon by Peoples from the second- and third-floor balconies of the apartment complex in which he lives, police said. According to Scheel, at least 12 officers, including five not in uni- form, were at the scene. Scheel said the officers "would have been justi- fied" if they had shot at Peoples but declined to do so for fear of injuring innocent bystanders. Peoples fired two volleys of shots at police, due to some confusion during the encounter. Police reports indicated that when the officers shouted "Police! Police!" at Peoples, he took it to mean that the officers thought Peoples him- self was an officer. It was after this that Peoples fired the second round of shots in the officers' direction. The gun Peoples used was regis- tered with AAPD in December, when he purchased it from an Ann Arbor firearms store for approximately $500. Peoples, a Kinesiology senior who has no previous criminal record, has been charged with assault with a deadly weapon, a felony which car- ries a maximum sentence of four years imprisonment or a $2,000 fine. Peoples could have been charged under Michigan's firearms felony stat- ute, which carries a mandatory two- year sentence, but Scheel said Peoples was not charged with this offense because he had no criminal record. Peopies Israeli Jews agonize over .Hebron massacre THE WASHINGTON POST JERUSALEM - The Hebron massacre has unleashed a wave of profound soul-searching among Is- raeli Jews, who are questioning what went wrong in their society, their poli- *ics - and even the very nature of the Jewish state - to lead a militant set- tler to murder Muslims at prayer. Although many of the questions are just beginning to surface, it seems clear the massacre carried out by Baruch Goldstein has stirred new doubts among many Israelis about the messianic nationalism that motivated the most zealous Jewish settlers in the vgest Bank. The killings may also accelerate Israel's long and agoniz- ing debate about the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and the fate of 110,000 Jewish settlers who live there. Israelis are worried the massacre will trigger a painful wave of retribu- tion, and it already appears to have dampened much of the optimism that emained from the peace accord be- een Israel and the Palestine Libera- tion Organization. Regents will likely release search papers AP PHOTO Rabbi Yisrael Lau, Israel's chief Rabbi, extends his hand to Palestinians in Jerusalem's Muslim quarter yesterday. By JAMES R. CHO DAILY STAFF REPORTER The University's five-year legal fiasco may soon come to an end. The Board of Regents will likely announce tomorrow they will comply with a circuit court order requiring the University to hand over docu- ments pertaining to the 1988 presi- dential search. On Feb. 11, Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Patrick Conlin ordered the University to release rat- ing sheets, notes used to evaluate can- didates, unedited minutes and a list of candidates in the search that ended with the appointment of James J. Dud- erstadt as president of the University. With a court-imposed deadline, Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor) said the regents have until tomorrow to comply with the ruling or file an appeal. Despite feelings of shame over the murders, many Israelis questioned here did not want to evacuate Jewish settlements and did not favor disarm- ing the settlers. And, for now, Israelis appear to remain locked in the sharp polarization between hawks and doves that has characterized the state for a quarter-century. Goldstein, who gunned down 39 Muslims as they prayed Friday in the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron, was a militant Jewish extremist and disciple of Rabbi Meir Kahane, who before his assassination advocated the use of force to assert hegemony over lands to which Jews claimed a bibli- cal heritage. While Goldstein's ex- treme views are held by only a tiny fraction of the settlers, a significant. part of the settler movement in the West Bank and Gaza Strip believes in a mixture of messianic purpose and nationalism. But the massacre has provoked introspection and denunciations. See ISRAEL, Page 2 Architect Silvetti discusses society, design in Raoul Wallenberg Lecture Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Ar- bor) said, "This matter is over and done with. Any additional comments doesn't add anything." The University has been entangled in a court battle since 1988 when The Ann Arbor News, later joined by the Detroit Free Press, filed suit against the board claiming the regents vio- lated the state's Open Record and Open Meetings acts when they met in closed, sub-quorum meetings to evalu- ate and interview prospective presi- dential candidates. The lawsuit ques- tioned the legality of the presidential selection process, headed by Regent Paul Brown (D-Mackinac Island). When asked about much awaited release of the documents, Heath Merriweather, executive editor of the Free Press, said, "I am looking for- ward to informing our readers when See REGENTS, Page 2 Bogus psych flyer makes rounds on 'U'campus By NIDHI AGRAWAL FOR THE DAILY "If you are an undergraduateor graduate student... you may be needed for psychology experiments that pay- $20 per hour." Sound too good to bd true? It probably is. Flyers posted throughout the Uni- versity offer this chance to students who send their name, address, phone number and $6 in cash to a nameless P.O. Box number located in the Ar- cade Station Post Office. According to the flyer, the fee is necessary for the application's pro- cessing and would be refunded in the first paycheck of those who are hired. James Hilton, undergraduate chair of the psychology department, stressed that the flyer has nothing to do with his department. "We go through great pains to make sure our subjects know that our experiments dy ZACHARY M. RAIMI AILY STAFF REPORTER Renowned architect and Argen- tinian native Jorge Silvetti spoke about the complexity and importance of ar- chitectural design to an audience of about 100 people at Rackham Am- phitheater last night, making the Brady Bunch's Mike Brady's work look sim- plistic. Silvetti was brought to the Uni- qersity by the College of Architecture and Urban Planning in honor of Uni- versity alum Raoul Wallenberg. Wallenberg is credited with sav- ing more than 100,000 Jews from death by the Nazis in Budapest, Hun- gary during World War II. Robert Beckley, dean of the archi- tecture college, said, "We usually try and bring a distinguished architect or Manner who has a particular interest in creating a better environment for people in the spirit of Raoul Wallenberg." Throughout history, Silvetti said architects have commanded power in society, and along with this power comes responsibility. "Architects can and should have a beneficial impact on society," he told the audience. Silvetti added that architecture reflects, and in some ways, alters so- ciety. This insight "gives us the op- portunity to be critics of society," which, Silvetti said, is sometimes unfair. In a highly commercial world, where dollar signs sometimes stifle creativity, Silvetti said, "The conven- tional designer -which I am - will survive, but an idea of ethics (must be included)." Silvetti then showed slides of four of his recent projects including a large private residence in New England and a Princeton University parking ga- rage. Many of the audience members were architecture students who came to listen to someone they consider a giant in the field. Architecture graduate student John Strasius said, "(The college) really tries to find someone who represents what Wallenberg stood for." After graduating from the Univer- sity, the Swedish-born Wallenberg traveled around the world, spending a lot of time in Israel. In July 1944, Wallenberg was sent to Hungary by the Swedish government to save as many Jews as he could. He was taken into custody by the Russians in 1945 and disappeared. He has not been seen since. MARY KOUKHAB/Daily Architect Silvetti speaks at Rackham Auditorium last night. Students scramble to find rooms in dorms, fret over lottery 'Luck of the draw' will determine where mnvn stu drnt_ lives each student a random ranking on a list to reapply for another room. While some students are waiting fair to those at the end of the reappli- cation lists, those at the beginning seem quite satisfied. their adviser's offices in East Quad - has changed. "We also have a greater flexibility in cases for special The survey will aim to find where the students are moving to and what the positives and negatives of dormitory E