The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 11, 1988 - Page 5 Man pleads xguilty to rape BY DAVID SCHWARTZ A Seattle-area man pleaded guilty Friday to raping an Ann Arbor woman almost 18 years ago, revers- ing an earlier plea of not guilty. He will be sentenced by Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Patrick Conlin on Nov. 17. At his arraignment on Oct. 2, Philip Carlock stood mute before 15th District Court Judge Pieter Thomassen, so a plea of not guilty was entered on his behalf. Ann Arbor Police Detective Mark Parin said Carlock confessed to the rape in April to clear his conscience. Carlock apparently thought the statute of limitations governing how long after the crime he could still be prosecuted had expired, Parin said. Police Chief William Corbett said the normal statute of limitations for a rape case is seven years, but the time period was suspended because Carlock left Michigan shortly after the 1971 rape. Carlock was charged under the old rape laws, which were revised in "974. His sentence could range from probation to life in prison. Before prosecuting Carlock, the Ann Arbor police had to locate the rape victim to find out if she wanted to file a complaint against Carlock. The woman, whom police found living in Florida, agreed to sign the complaint. Parin said she indicated that her two marriages had been ru- imed because of the rape. Carlock was released last week after posting 10 percent of a $20,000 bond. He was permitted to return to his hometown of Kent, Wash., a suburb of Seattle. Carlock's attorney, Detroit lawyer Marjory Cohen, could not be reached for comment. Yugoslav 'ofcials counter protest BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - Communist authorities put more police on the streets and imposed unspecified "urgent measures" in Montenegro's capital yesterday, but protests fueled by economic crisis and ethnic tension did not stop. Protest has swept much of south- ern and eastern Yugoslavia in recent weeks. Police used clubs and tear gas for the first time over the weekend to disperse Montenegrin students and *workers demanding the dismissal of local Communist Party leaders. The weekend rally was an explo- sion of anger about the austerity program the government imposed in May because of a $21 billion foreign debt and inflation that has soared to ,an annual rate of 217 percent. Con- cern for Montenegrins in southern Serbia's troubled Kosovo province, Iwhere Serbs and Montenegrins are a ,minority to ethnic Albanians, has also stirred passions. President Raif Dizdarevic went on national television Sunday night to appeal for calm, warning of unspeci- fied emergency measures. But unrest continued yesterday in Titograd, the capital of Montenegro 280 miles southwest of Belgrade. In Niksic, 30 miles north of Titograd, ,workers and 2000 students rallied outside a government building and in a steel mill where 2,800 workers were on strike for a second day, the official news agency Tanjug reported. Tanjug reported, without details, that "urgent measures" were imposed #yesterday in Titograd and that SEC failed job, House panel says WASHINGTON (AP) - The Se- curities and Exchange Commission has failed to investigate most reports of suspicious foreign trading of U.S. securities, despite a growing number of illegal trades originating from abroad, a House panel said Monday. A report by the Government Op- erations Committee said the SEC had actively investigated only 61 of 229 reports from stock exchanges of sus- picious foreign trade, mostly those appearing to involve insider trading, in 1986 and 1987. The report was based on a year- long investigation by the panel's subcommittee on commerce, con- sumer and monetary affairs. The 168 incidents not investigated by the SEC, the subcommittee said, involved 503 foreign individuals, banks or other entities in 25 coun- tries and represented gross potential profits for the foreign investors of at least $38.1 million. The directors of the SEC's enforcement division, Gary Lynch, said yesterday he had not seen the report's final draft, but that in testimony before the panel last June the commission had taken issue with' way the probe was being conducted. He said the House subcommittee investigators had underreported the number of SEC staffers working on cases involving foreign purchases and sales of U.S. securities, and that the report was based on an incorrect assumption that all trading activity brought to the SEC's attention automatically warranted a federal in- vestigation. Lynch said many trades, by do- mestic and foreign investors alike, are reported to the SEC as "suspicious" because they are exe- cuted near the time of a major price move on a securities exchange. Most of these trades, he said, are legitimate. Besides cases of potential insider trading, the House report said the "suspicious" trades referred to the SEC included possible sales of un- registered securtities and unspecified other acts of market man-ipulation. The subcommittee, chaired by Rep. Doug Barnard (D-Ga.), found that the dollar volume of U.S. securities bought and sold by foreigners increased from $25.6 billion in 1977 to $277.5 billion in 1986. Last year it leaped to $481.9 billion. It said expert testimony before tile panel last summer indicated that the number of illegal trades also had grown in recent years, although the report gave no figures on this. Foreign transactions accounted for 18 percent of the total dollar value of all U.S. equity market transactions last year, the subcommittee said, but they represented more than 30 percent of the suspicious trades reported to the SEC by stock exchanges. In response to the subcommittee investigation, the report said the SEC promised to assign more people to its international enforcement activities and give them more re- sponsibility, to pursue new information-sharing agreements and to renegotiate and expand the scope of existing agreements. State Senator Lana Pollack campaigns following the Representative Carl Pursell arrived. Voting Continued from Page 1 good about that," he said. During his speech, he wa drowned out by choruses of "Whei is Carl" and "Bush-Quayle." The rally was sponsored by th Michigan Collegiate Coalition, th( United States Student Association the Michigan Student Assembly, an (D-Ann Arbor), who is running for a s voter registration rally yesterday (R-Plymouth) was scheduled to attend several other groups promoting voter numberc registration. Herb Kau Members of USSA, who pulled Office. up on the Diag in a Greyhound bus, City C are in the midst of a nation-wide tour said then to urge student participation in elec- her job "r s tions. Ann Arbor is the eighth stop to hire te e on their 37-stop journey. overtime MSA External Relations Com- all day Sa e mittee Chair Zachary Kittrie, an "We'l e LSA junior, presented a symbolic until Elec n, registration form emblazoned with a Todayi d large red "5,000," signifying the vote in th eat on the DAVID LUBINER/Dally. in U.S. Congress, the Diag. U.S. rally but never of students registered, to tz of the Ann Arbor Clerk's Clerk Winifred Northcross registration drive has made much tougher," forcing her rmporary workers and work every night last week and turday. 1 be hard-pressed right up tion Day," Northcross said. is the last day to register to' e Nov. 8 elections. Forbes' lists nation's richest BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS If you're sitting in your Ford at a shopping center and want to grab a quick pizza at home before heading to a sports event in Detroit, chances are you're making some of the rich- est Michigan residents just a bit richer. Forbes magazine yesterday re- leased its list of the 400 richest Americans, and 10 people living in Michigan made the elite ranking. Topping the Michigan list and ranked No. 14 by Forbes' estimates, is A. Alfred Taubman, a real estate developer who has made a good chunk of his $1.85 billion in shopping centers. Following Taubman is William Clay Ford of Grosse Pointe Shores, with an estimated worth of $630 million. Local resident Tom Monaghan, owner of Domino's Pizza Inc., who also owns the Detroit Tigers Base- ball club, is ranked 124th. I I ALEXANDRA BK/DoLily C'est MOi Helena Meryman, an Art School senior, works on a self- portrait in the Art School painting studio. The portrait will be exhibited at the Union Street Gallery in Detroit next month. Student protests disrupt Quayle appearance FARMINGTON HILLS (AP) - Dan Quayle flexed his political mus- cles to a group of Oakland Commu- nity College students yesterday, but demonstrators tried to kick sand in his face. More than 50 students shouted derogatory slogans outside the school's Orchard Ridge campus and heckled the Republican vice presidential nominee during his brief speech. The group waved signs that read "Quayle is no JFK" and "Just Say No to Danforth." Oavle'smiuddle said. "Bush picking Quayle is just another example of his poor judg- ment throughout his career." But inside, supporters of the U.S. Senator from Indiana waved their own signs and drowned out sporadic heckling from some demonstrators who slipped inside for the speech. Quayle spent most of his ten- minute address attacking the Demo- cratic presidential team of Michael Dukakis and Lloyd Bentsen, charac- terizing the pair as soft on crime and the environment.