it Iim anw lrnl Weather Tonight: Rain likely, low in the high 30s°. Tomorrow: Chance of rain, high 42°. One hundredjfve years of editorial freedom Monday February 26, 1996 U.S. seeks of Cuban attack Security Council set to consider request today From Daily Wire Services UNITED NATIONS - The United States asked the Security Council yesterday to order an *estigation into Cuba's downing oftwo Ameri- can-owned planes and to condemn the incident as an unlawful use of force. "Our position is that (the planes) were in international airspace and the Cubans knew it," U.S. Ambassador Madeleine Albright said after the 90-minute meeting. Chilean Ambassador Juan Somavia said at- tacking an unarmed civilian plane was "con- demhnable whether this act occurred within or Stside the Cuban airspace." o decision was made on the U.S. request, but several ambassadors said they were deeply concerned about the use of force against un- armed civilian planes, in this case Cessnas. "I think the shooting down of an unarmed civil aircraft... is indeed a threat to international order," German Ambassador Antonio Eitel said after the meeting.. The council met for about 90 minutes, during which CIA official James Gannon presented evi- dence backing the idea that the planes were over rnational waters, a few miles north of Cuban space, when they were downed on Saturday. The two downed Cessna planes, which had four people aboard, belonged to a group called Brothers to the Rescue, whose Cuban exile pilotsregularly fly over the Florida Straits search- ing for rafters trying to flee Cuba. Cuba claims the planes had violated their airspace. Senior U.S. administration aides said at least one of the three planes entered Cuban airspace before the shootdown. Albright said she had asked for a meeting today with the Cuban ambassador to the United Nations to demand an explanation of "the illegal act" The U.S. request for a full investigation by the International Civil Aviation Organization in Montreal, will be considered by the council today. It was unclear whether it would be ap- proved. Secretary of State Warren Christopher yes- terday accused Cuba's government of blatantly violating international law and warned that the United States is considering a range of retalia- tory actions. After 15 hours of silence, the Cuban govern- ment admitted to downing the planes but de- clared the action justified because the "pirate Cessna planes" had invaded Cuban airspace. Tension between the group and Fidel Castro's government in Havana reached new heights recently when the Brothers flew over Cuba at least twice to drop anti-Castro leaflets. "The shooting down of these pirate planes should be a lesson for those who support and carry out such acts and have the tendency to increase the tension between the United States and Cuba," the Cuban Foreign Affairs Ministry Site of Attck Disputed Cuban officials Passengers on claim the a cruise ship planes had ao vilaehd Cbassay the planes violated Cuba' sFRIDA were shot down airspace, Saturday over coming within Miami international 58 miles . waters. northwest of Havana. ___ HavanaCUBA-_ 200 miles 200 km JOSH WHITE/Daily said in a statement. But in a briefing to reporters at the White House before departing on a trip to Latin America, Christopher and other senior U.S. officials made it clear that by downing the unarmed private planes Castro's government was provoking the United States. Clinton's advisers met for three hours yester- day and provided the president with a list of possible actions. At the president's request, the U.N. Security Council held an emergency consultation last night to discuss the incident and possible inter- national responses. Inside: Brothers to the Rescue group tweaked Castro. Page 2A AP PHOTO Members of a Cuban-American paramilitary group protest the killing of four pilots at a rally yesterday near the Brothers to the Rescue hangar in Miami, Fla. GEO members poised N to strike; U' concerned S81. percent of voting members authorize striking after Friday Anupama Reddy ly Staff Reporter Members of the Graduate Employ- ees Organization gave a green light to the union's steering committee to call a strike if negotiations with the Univer- sity do not improve by March 1. GEO spokesperson Peter Church an- nounced the results of last week's strike authorization vote Friday. Fifty-two percent ofGEO's 1,200-body member- p sent in ballots, he said. Church said 81 percent of 542 voting members favored a strike if bargaining fails. Steering committee members are unsure if the union will actually strike, Church said. Shuttle s 42-mfle satellite tether snlaps From Staff and Wire Reports CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - A 12- le tether connecting a half-ton satel- lite to Columbia broke yesterday and drifted safely away from the space shuttle and its seven astronauts. Astronaut Jeffrey Hoffman shouted down the news nearly five hours into the electricity-generating experiment, as the cable was almost all the way out. "The tether has broken at the boom! The tether has broken! It is going away fromus!" Hoffinan toldMission Control. The satellite and dangling cord quickly drifted away from Columbia as all three objects sped around Earth at 17,500 mph. Within several minutes, the satellite and tether were more than 18 miles away from Columbia, a safe distance. Mission Control commentator James Hartsfield said the electricity-conduct- ing cable apparently broke somewhere side a 40-foot tower in the shuttle 1 go bay. Only 33 feet of the 12.8-mile tether remained in the tower and was steady. Engineering Prof. Tamas Gombosi said the problem was notcomp lely unexpected. "With brand-new things like this that have never been tried before, you can't "We took a vote, and our member- ship showed commitment," Church said. "(GEO's striking) depends on what the University is willing to move on at the table, but we do have a mandate from the membership." Still, no plans for a strike are in place. The University and CEO extended bar- gaining talks, which expired Feb. 23, until March 1. University chief negotiator Dan Gamble expressed concern about a strike, which he said would violate the current contract and state law. "I sincerely hope they don't strike," Gamble said. "It would have a negative impact on undergraduates. "Also, it would be against state law, which is against public employees strik- ing because public employees do things for the public," he said. Church said the University and GEO might interpret the law and its effec- tiveness differently. "The question ofwhether we'll strike is not based on technicalities of Michi- gan law but signing a fair contract," Church said. Students also expressed concern over the possibility of a strike. "It would be horrible," said LSA first- year student Kari Tait. "I know all my classes depend on (graduate student instructors). I didn't even know they had a union." Sonya Vasquez, a master's student in the School of Social Work, said she was annoyed by GEO because the master's program did not offer graduate teach- ing positions. "I pay for my tuition, but the majority of them get their tuition paid," Vasquez said. "I thinkpeople who aren't in (GEO) scoff at them because whatever they do will benefit them and not the rest of the University " GEO spokesperson Peter Church (left) and steward John Curtiss announced Friday its members are willing to strike if bargaining is stagnant. East U.to bcome pedestrianmall Israel suicide bombings 0 Bombs increase tension between Peres and Islamic militants Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM-Two suicide bomb- ings that killed 25 people and wounded almost 80 yesterday threw Prime Min- ister Shimon Peres' Labor Party on the defensive in an already bitter election battle with the rival Likud Party. The political fallout from the attacks began even before ultra-Orthodox mem- bers of the burial society had finished collecting the victims' remains from a busy Jerusalem street and a soldiers' hitchhiking station in Ashkelon, on the Mediterranean coast eight miles north, of the Palestinian Gaza area. Surveying the grisly scene of the Jerusalem attack, a heavily guarded Peres was booed and jeered by an angry crowd. "Peres go home!" they shouted, and "Peres is next!"- a chilling refer- ence to the last prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, who was slain Nov. 4 by a right- wing Jew who said he wanted to stop Rabin's peacemaking efforts. Islamic militants claimed responsibil- ity for yesterday's attacks, saying they were carried out to avenge the killing Jan. 5 of Yehiya Ayash - a master bomb- maker known as "The Engineer"-pre- sumably by Israeli agents. Ayash, be- lievedto have manufactured seven bombs used in suicide attacks on Israelis, died when a booby-trapped cellular phone exploded in his hand. Last night, hundreds gathered at the bombing sites in Jerusalem and Ashkelon, reciting prayers for the dead,, lighting memorial candles and weeping. Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu, Peres' chief rival in the race for the prime minister's job, said he would make no political comment on a day when the nation was plunged into mourning. "This is a day of unity of the ranks, and that's what we'll do," Netanyahu told reporters as he met with Likud leaders. But his partner, former Army Chief of Staff Rafael Eitan, mincedno words. 'It's an illusion that the Palestinians will collaborate with us (to stop bomb- ings)," said Eitan, leader of the far-right TsometParty,whichrecentlyteamedwith Likud for parliamentary elections on May 29. "They are all dancing on the blood. The peace process only weakens us." The bombings, carried out during the Sunav-morninnih hura the nation By Michele Moss For the Daily Students can look forward to more drilling during the next year as East University is scheduled to turn into a pedestrian mall. University planner Fred Mayer said the construction addresses the need to compete for new students by creating a more attractive campus. He said the construction indicates "the need to compete for you, the stu- dents. The University wants to upgrade to make it safer and better quality." The design was presented to SNRE told Johnson, Johnson and Roy they had ideas that could have made the design more ecologically balanced and energy efficient. "We all live and work here. This is our home place and we would like to be involved," said landscape architecture Prof. Bob Grese. The design uses exotic plants and trees, including Scotch pines and flow- ering crab apple trees, and nothing na- tive to southeastern Michigan. More energy and water will be needed to maintain the non-native vegetation in the future. Native plants could grow here more easily be- cause the soil natu- rally supports such vegetation. The plan will re- quire the use of an artificial irrigation system, saidpDale ,At t Sass, a principal of Johnson, Johnson "$ and Roy. Because of fresh NOPPORN KICHINATHA/Daily Congressional candidate Debbie Stabenow speaks to local residents at the Washtenaw County Women's Political Caucus fund raiser last night. ocal Caucus Creates women's network students and faculty Thursday by the landscape architec- ture firm Johnson, Johnson and Roy. It was approved by the University Board of Regents in December. Con- struction is sched- uled to begin at the end of this term. East University Avenue, between South and North j- J .A 1 COURTESY OF X By Kate Glickman Daily Staff Reporter More than 75 community members piled into Ann Arbor resident Janine Easter's home last night to give moral and financial support to female candi- dates running for government positions. The Washtena County Women's "This is probably the strongest event we've hosted," said Sydney West, WCWPC Fundraising chair. Founded in 1971, the National WPC guides women through recruitment, training and promotion supporting "women who are progressive, pro- choice nrotective of the environment University Avenues, is one of the origi- nal streets bordering campus. It will be full of grass, trees, flowers and benches and will not characterize the olden days. New benches, lighting, maps and bike racks will be added. The new plan will be in complete iOHNSON, JOHNSON AND ROY water shortages, the United States may need to cut back the use of water into the next century. Working with sustainable crops and veg- etation, local to southeastern Michigan, is one simple way to contribute to the solution, Griese said. "Sustainable landscapes are really the ; I 'I I