The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 24, 1994 - 5 Balmy weather thaws 'U' out of hibernation By KATIE HUTCHINS DAILY STAFF REPORTER Spring's first week has been a success around Ann Arbor. Despite predicted rainfall, yester- day turned out to be a glorious day to spend in the sun, and students and faculty could be seen celebrating all over campus. The patches of grass near the RackhamBuilding and Hill, Auditorium were peppered with classes being held outside for the first time in months as students relaxed in the soft breeezes while taking notes on Spanish or sociology. School of Music sophomore Ben Abarbanel- Wolff also took advantage of the warm weather to grace the corner of State and North University streets with his saxophone tunes. After playing for nearly an hour, Abarbanel-Wolff said he received money from only two passersby. However, he said his playing wasn't for money. "It's for fun," he said. "I feel like a sense of relief. I'm happy that it's warm." Steven Fontana, an ISA junior, was also appreciative of the weather, which gave him the irst chance he's had in a while to use his rollerblades. . "It's not bad going to class when it's cold, but it's really frustrating," he said. "Now that it's warm and I want to go rollerblading and I have to go to class and do homework, it's tough to be disciplined." ISA senior Sandy Yueh said she was happy she could enjoy the weather before going to work at Mrs. Peabody's Cookies and Ice Cream. "It's been really busy," she said, adding that there were lines going outside the store and that the store was running out of frozen yogurt. The Diag was much more packed, harboring hundreds of walkers, bikers, dog walkers and frisbee throwers during the entire afternoon. It was even rumored that a bunny on a leash was hopping around in the sunny courtyard. Rackham student Eric Deweese and Engi- 'It's not bad going to class when it's cold, but It's really frustrating ... Now that it's warm and I want to go rollerblading and I have to go to class and do homework, it's tough to be disciplined.' - Steven Fontana LSA junior neering senior David Zaret were entertaining themselves and others with their juggling skills. Both students have been practicing the art for about seven years. When asked why they were spending the day outdoors, they cited sun and breeze as among the best reasons. "I have a shitload of homework, and this is a great way to avoid it," he added. "There's noth- ing like passing six clubs on a nice day." There were several groups playing hackey sack on the Diag as well. "The world is like a hack circle," commented Tim Meinig, an Engi- neering junior. "I've been studying for the last three or four days, and I decided to do nothing today," he added. When the afternoon began to fade into evening, the Diag emptied of frolicking students, and the grassy area was speckled with Stucchi's contain- ers, scattered Dailies and Wendy's bags. Engineering junior Brant Strand, who went to the Diag to play with his Devil Sticks, was disappointed. "You come out here and you see everybody and they've kinda got the crunchy environmental look ... and yet they don't back it up with their actions. "It's evident that it's nothing but a show," he said. Above: With the arrival of the warm weather and sun, a student has reattached a pinwheel to his bike outside East Quad. Right:The Diag, as seen from a nearby rooftop. MARK FRIEDMAN/ Daily 'Israel never anticipated Hebron massacre, military chief testifies LOS ANGELES TIMES JERUSALEM - In an angry, impassioned defense of his force's role in last month's mosque massacre in Hebron, Israel's military chief of staff told a judicial inquiry commis- sion yesterday that the military never hxpected a Jewish settler to open fire on Arabs. But Lt. Gen. Ehud Barak - Israel's highest-ranking military of- ficer - flatly denied earlier testi- mony from lower-ranking command- ers that Israeli troops were under or- ders not to fire on Jews, even if they were shooting at Arabs. Barak sug- gested that the commanders had mis- understood orders. "A massacre is a massacre is a massacre, and there is no need for a special order on the subject: If some- body is carrying out a massacre, he must be stopped," Barak testified to the five-member commission inves- tigating the killing of about 30 Pales- tinian worshipers as they knelt in Fri- day prayers in Hebron's Cave of the Patriarchs on Feb. 25. Referring to Baruch Goldstein, the New York-born Jewish settler who fired with an assault rifle into a room full of praying Muslims, Barak added, "We did not expect that a crazy per- son would come out of the settlers and carry out such an atrocity." Throughout his public testimony, broadcast live to the nation on Israeli radio and television, Barak resisted the commission's attempts to address specific security lapses at the mosque on the day of the massacre. Instead, in his 75-minute testimony - which came after a longer, closed session with the commission - Barak sought to deliver a general defense of the military establishment. He spoke in the wake of a series of disclosures to the commission, that suggested chronic indiscipline and intelligence lapses by Israeli security forces at the sacred shrine. His hour-long opening statement focused on the difficult task confront- ing the Israeli Defense Forces in po- licing Arab territory that Israel has occupied since the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, particularly since the onset of the intifada, or Palestinian uprising. Under questioning by the commission's lone Arab member - the first time ever that an Arab justice was allowed to interrogate Israel's top military official - Barak appeared to reinforce earlier testimony by the acting commander of Israeli forces in the West Bank that the massacre could have been prevented if the military's security plan at the site had been in full force. "I think that the security plan for the Cave, as it was drawn up, if it had been kept completely, it is very prob- able that it would have prevented the massacre ... or at least greatly reduced the extent of the crime," the general stated. But he deflected specific ques- tions from Judge Abdel Rahman Zouabi, an Israeli Arab, which were based on earlier testimony from the acting West Bank commander, Maj. Gen. Danny Yatom, who told the com- mission that the massacre would not have happened if the full contingent of five security guards had shown up for work. Just one of those guards was on duty when Goldstein opened fire, Yatom has testified. Zouabi also questioned Barak closely on Israeli military guidelines for the thousands of Jewish settlers who are permitted to carry arms in the occupied territories - and specifi- cally on why they were allowed to carry loaded weapons into sacred places of worship. *El Salvador rocked by charges of election fraud THE WASHINGTON POST SAN SALVADOR - Leftist former guerrillas yesterday expanded their allegations of fraud stemming from last Sunday's elections, focus- ing now on a clumsy and unusually slow vote count that they claimed was 4eing distorted. Ballots have been voided during the count, monitors' access to the tallies has been restricted and ballot boxes have apparently been stuffed, members of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, or FMLN, claimed as election authorities con- tinued to delay release of official re- sults. Other opposition parties - in- Wcluding an up-and-coming evangeli- cal party - joined in many of the complaints, demanding closer scru- tiny of the vote count. Preliminary results have given the lead in the presidential race to the government's right-wing party. But a run-off with the left will be held next month because no single candidate has received more than 50 percent of the vote. At stake still are legislative seats, which are distributed based on per- centages of votes and will determine whether the left is an effective oppo- sition force or whether ruling conser- vatives have free reign. Election authorities, already the target of harsh criticism because of the chaotic way in which they handled El Salvador's first post-war elections, abruptly cut off access to computer- ized tabulations of the vote yesterday. That action further raised suspi- cions about whether the process is above board. Although final results have not been released, the two top vote-get- ters, Armando Calderon Sol of the ruling Nationalist Republican Alli- ance, or Arena, and Ruben Zamora, who heads a coalition that includes the FMLN, were summoned before the official Supreme Electoral Tribu- nal yesterday to begin planning the run-off. Both candidates demanded the ir- regularities that tarnished Sunday's f 3 C voting be corrected. Gerson Martinez, a senior politi- cal strategist for the FMLN, said ini- tial tabulations of the vote showed that many ballot boxes contained more votes than is legally possible. Under the awkward Salvadoran sys- tem, no more than 400 voters can be assigned to each ballot box. Yet several boxes from the LaLibertad and Usulutan departments had two and three times that number, Martinez said. "The Tribunal is doing everything behind closed doors because they have serious problems," Martinez said. "There are serious doubts about the work the Tribunal is doing. (It) is not trustworthy." In San Miguel, one of El Salvador's largest cities, the left claimed that a group of Arena hard- liners absconded with 15 ballot boxes. And in a private school in the capital, 100 envelopes full of votes never de- livered were discovered, a govern- ment prosecutor said. Arena representatives dismissed the problems and claimed the FMLN was looking for "ghosts" to compen- sate for its electoral losses. The suspicions surrounding the count follow serious irregularities, delays and other systemic defects that prevented tens of thousands of Salva- dorans from voting on election day and have cast doubt over the election process, the first since U.N.-brokered peace accords ended El Salvador's 12-year civil war in 1992. Prelimi- nary results have given Calderon Sol around 49 percent of the vote, with about 25.5 percent going to Zamora. Doing the Wing Thing aR"STA" " 0 SPORTS OA w m.. -- -----...--- ......... - -- -.-- -- ...... - ----......... m m m I Best of Ann Arbor Ballot '94 I Please return by April 1 to the Daily at 420 Maynard, 48109. Results will be printed in the April 14 Best of Ann Arbor issue of Weekend. Thanks for your time. I I Best Restaurants/Bars for... 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