Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 29, 1984 Alaskan man admits to slayings IN BRIEF ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - A 44-year-old baker who grew up with a "severe inferiority complex with girls" has confessed to slaughtering at least 17 women and raping 30 others in the worst mass mur- der case in Alaska history, prosecutors say. Robert Hansen, described by District Attorney Vic- tor Krumm as a "monster," was sentenced Monday to life in prison without parole. The bakery owner, who has a wife and two children, confessed during in- terviews last week in a conference room packed with prosecutors, investigators and police. DRUMM SAID Hansen admitted his decade-long crime spree to avoid the embarrassment of a long police investigation and trial. "He got off on the killing, but he didn't like people talking about him," Drumm said yesterday. "He's a cold-blooded, remorseless man." Officers said he calmly described killing 17 nude dancers, prostitutes and other women over the past decade and raping 30 others, and outlined his ex- periments with handcuffs, elastic bandages and chains as restraints. THE SKULL of one exhumed body was swathed completely with an elastic bandage, Krumm said. Only four bodies have been found. "There was no human sitting there in the room with us. Monster. That's a good term for him," said Krumm. Prosecutors fear there may be more bodies in remote snow-covered graves marked on three aviation charts discovered in Hansen's bedroom, car and plan. Two charts had 17 small Xs; the third con- tained 21. "WE THINK he gave us the areas where bears or people might find the bodies," Krumm said. "We believe that there is a good possibility that all the 'There was no human sitting there in the room with us. Monster. That's a good term for him.' - Victor Krumm district attorney marks on the third map coincide with victims." Hansen hauled some of the victims to their graves in his Piper Super Cub plane, equipped with oversize tires to get in and out of virtually inaccessible areas. Hansen grew up in the small northwest Iowa com- munity of Pocahontas and told investigators that as a boy, "he developed a severe inferiority complex with girls. He had bad acne and stuttered. He was attrac- ted to girls and was frustrated immensely. He was rejected uniformly," Krumm said. "WHEN HE grew up he decided it was his turn." The gravesites are scattered from Seward to the Susitna River, with "the bulk of the gravesites along the Knik River," Krumm said. "Two girls have been missing in the Resurrection Bay area since 1973. We know he was down there with a boat at that time. We feel the bodies are in the water and he knows we'll never find them," Krumm said. Two of the bodies found were unearthed by bears and the others were found by hunters. A .223-caliber Ruger Mini-14 rifle belonging to Hansen was declared the murder weapon in two of the killings. HANSEN HAD been in custody since last fall, charged with attempted kidnapping and assault after a teen-age prostitute said he raped her and tried to take her away in his airplane. The investigation stalled for several months after a friend and another person provided Hansen with a phony alibi. One of the two later recanted before a grand jury. Scan danavian jet slides into N. Y. creek NEW YORK (AP) - A Scandinavian Airlines jumbo jet carrying 177 people skidded off a Kennedy Airport runway into a 12-foot-deep creek while landing yesterday in drizzle and fog. Officials said nine people suffered minor in- juries. Some passengers were forced to jump from a door of the DC-10 and swim to safety, according to Tom Young, spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport. HE SAID others escaped by jumping down chutes or walking on a wing and climbing down a ladder. Young said the plane ended up sub- merged to its engines in 10 to 12 feet of water after the accident at 4:15 p.m. The plane was carrying 163 passengers and a crew of 14 on a flight from Stockholm, Sweden, via Oslo, Norway. EIGHT people were taken to the air- port medical center for treatment of cuts and bruises or exposure, and a woman who complained of chest pains was taken to nearby Peninsula general Hospital for observation, said center director Dr. Leon Star. He said many people were "cold and shivering," including a Port Authority police officer who jumped into the water to pull passengers to safety. Young said the unhurt passengers were taken to a lounge on the third floor 'of the airport's west wing, where they were being processed by Customs of- ficials. Herb Bauer, spokesman for the airline, said the cause of the accident "was most likely hydroplaning" - skidding on the wet surface. Credit card user WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate, brushing aside what one member called enthusiastic, heavy lobbying by the credit industry, voted yesterday to permit merchants to charge higher prices to people paying with credit cards. Sent to the House on a voice vote was legislation that would authorize businesses to impose surcharges of up to 5 percent on purchases made with plastic money if the fees are clearly advertised. THE ACTION came about 18 hours after the expiration of a 10-year-old federal ban on surcharges. Proponents of sur- charges said the legislation is necessary to ensure that extra fees do not violate federal and state usury laws. s may pay more Shortly after passing the surcharge bill, the Senate voted 84-0 for a stopgap measure that would reinstitute the ban through May 15 in order to give the House time to hold hearing on the issue.i Opponents of extra fees, led by Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, (R- N.Y.), pushed an amendment to make the ban permanent, but they were trounced 66-22. D'Amato succeeded, however, in getting the surcharge ad- vocates to agree to language that would give states three years to ban the extra fees or limit maximum surcharges to less than 5 percent. Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Court to review Upjohn appeal of chemical castration sentence LANSING, Mich. - The Michigan Court of Appeals yesterday agreed to hear Upjohn heir Roger Guantlett's challenge to his "chemical castration" sentence for molesting his 14-year-old stepdaughter. The matter, however, could be resolved on jurisdictional grounds, rather than the protriety of the actual sentence itself, which may have been the fir-' st of its kind in Michigan. The appeals court order blocked the chemical treatment ordered by a Kalamazoo County judge, but did not affect the incarceration of the Upjohn- heir. Gauntlett, 42, pleaded no contest to first-degree criminal sexual conduct for molesting his stepdaughter. Kalamazoo County Circuit Judge Robert Borsos stirred a nationwide con- troversey by sentencing Gauntlett to undergo five years of treatment with a drug designed to diminish his sex drive. Gauntlett was ordered to spend the first year of the five-year probation in jail. Iraq claims victory over Iran NICOSIA, Cyprus - Iraq claimed yesterday it had won the biggest victory, of the three-and-a half-year war by crushing an Iranian offensive and driving Iranian forces back across the border near the southern city of Basra. "Iraq's flag was hoisted at the last fortified position held by the Iranians at the Iraqi village of al Beidha ... and all enemy forces have been crushed ex- cept for those who surrendered," a battle commander said in a cable to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. The contents of the cable were broadcast- by the official Iraqi News Agency and monitored in Cyprus. Iran issued no new reports on the fighting near Basra, Iraq's second largest city. But Iraq claimed more than 30,000 Iranians were killed in three days of fighting near the city. The claims could not be independently verified. Western reporters are rarely allowed to go into the Iran-Iraq war zones. Iran, reported a victory for its troops 90 miles north of Basra, at Iraq's Majnoon Island, five miles from the border. Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency said Iraqi soldiers had fled after an intense battle at Majnoon. Governors offer deficit strategy WASHINGTON - With partisan politics very much in the foreground, the nation's governors voted 28-10.yesterday to recommend a federal deficit, cutting plan than could call for both spending cuts and tax increases. After three days of listening to experts and politicians on both sides of the volatile deficit issue, the National Governors Association spent two hours debating a plan to cut the expected 1989 deficit from a projected $308 billion to $120 billion. The governor's association has 35 Democrats and 15 Republicans, but the final vote, unlike the debate, was bipartisan. The resolution was controversial because it called for a combination of spending curbs on both federal benefit programs and the military, and tax increases in about equal proportions. Many congressional Democrats feel the benefit programs have been out enough. President Reagan says the defense budget cannot be safely cut and tax hikes would-cripple recovery. The basic program proposed by the governors was approved at their Por- tland, Maine, meeting last summer, but the new version contained some ad- ded details.- Soviets call U.S. defense 'sinister' MOSCOW - The Soviet Union charged yesterday that the Reagan ad- ministration is watching a "truly sinister" plot to equip more than 100 F-15 jet fighters with anti-satellite weapons and deploy them as a large-scale missile shield. The Communist Party daily newspaper Pravda and the military newspaper Krasnava Zvezda (Red Star) said the Pentagon plans to convert the jet into "Star Wars" defense systems increasing the danger of nuclear war. Both superpowers agreed under the ABM treaty not to deploy anti-ballistic missile systems so neither side would be encouraged to fire a first nuclear strike in the belief the other side could not retaliate. The Defense Department testified an unarmed version in January and both Soviet newspapers complained the test showed the United States was not paying heed to the Soviet proposal. "Of a truly sinister character are the plans for the creation by 1987 of more than 100 anti-satellite systems," said Red Star. "Practically any F-15 air- craft can be swiftly turned into an anti-satellite weapon." Pravda urged the United States to join the Soviet Union in reaching an agreement "prohibiting the use of force both in outer space and from outer space against the earth." Bomb explodes in Israeli store JERUSALEM - A terrorist bomb made of hand grenades exploded in the doorway of a men's clothing store on a busy downtown Jerusalem street yesterday, sending shrapnel flying through the air and wounding 21 people. A police spokesman said two of the four hand grenades wired together and wrapped in a plastic shopping bag blew up in the doorway of Avi's Men's Clothing Store on Jaffa Road, a main thoroughfare in Jewish West Jerusalem. The blast in the bustling commercial center came during morning shop- ping hours. It was the worst attack since Dec. 6 when a bomb destroyed a city bus, killing five people and wounding 42 others. In Amman, Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat praised the attack and a Damascus spokesman for a radical PLO faction claimed responsibility for staging it. I° A 11 14 GRADUATE ASSISTANTSHIPS AVAILABLE AT EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Get Good Teaching Experience While Working Toward an M.A. $3150 per year, plus 8 hours free tuition per SEMESTER For information call James Reynolds or Judith Johnson 487-1363 or 487-4220 DEADLINE: MARCH 15, 1984 For application forms write: DIRECTOR OF GRADUATE STUDIES English Department EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY Ypsilanti, MI 48197 AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER SUMMER JOB Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard, and Nantucket have thou- sands of good paying lobs available to students and teachers this summer. A Directory listing these jobs by employer also includes complete housing info and job application forms. Sum- mer 1984 Directory ready now. For copy send $3.00 (includes 1st Class Postage and handling*,*to: CAPE COD SUMMER JOB BUREAU Box 594, Room 210 Bornstable, MA 02630 Subscibe to The Michigan Daily ota for Fa3shion? " A The Michigan Dal y n eeds mod00els, writers, etc. for the Annualk Fnshion SuDDlement. k_ Sorority burglarized A clock and a microwave oven were stolen from Delta Delta Delta sorority house on 718 Tappan sometime during Spring break last week, said Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Harold Tinsey. There are no suspects and the case is currently un- der investigation, Tinsey said. The items were valued at less than $300. Assault attempted A man attempted to sexually assault a women in the parking lot of Briarwood shopping center at 3:50 p.m. Monday, Tinsey said. The woman told police that while she was getting into her car near Hudson's, a white male in his late twen- ties approached the car and exposed himself to the woman. He then grabbed the woman and forced her up against the car. When she resisted, the suspect fled and drove away in a 1984 van. The case is currently under investigation. Union trespasser arrested A 26-year-old Ann Arbor man who was caught breaking and entering the Michigan Union Monday was ap- prehended by Ann Arbor police, Tinsey said. The man was also wanted in Washtenaw County for resisting and obstructing a police officer. The man was arrested and is currently being held by the police. - Nancy Gottesman Storm winds cause drifts (Continued from Page 1) ter in Kansas City, Kans. Many homes on the Great Lakes shores in lower Michigan had to be evacuated yesterday as.40-mph winds pushed ice ashore that piledup to the rooftops. Politicians in New Hampshire ex- pressed concern that snow would cut voter turnout by as much as 20 to 30 percent. IN ROMULUS, police said looters were breaking into the stalled cars. "It's a madhouse," said police Sgt. John Myers. Schools, offices and factories remained closed in a second day of < A Wednesday, February 29, 1984 Vol. XCIV-No. 117 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate.. 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