Aristide focuses on selecting pficials Los Angeles Times PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - The flags still waved, the troops remained on the streets and crowds milled about the Presidential Palace yesterday, but President Jean-Bertrand Aristide spent his first full day back in Haiti out of sight, attending to the dull routine of governing. According to diplomats, Aristide advisers and Haitian political figures, his first task will be to name a new prime minister and Cabinet and find money to restore a bureaucracy that had become the personal servants of the military over the last three years. Aristide, who was accused of in- decision and even sloth during the seven months he ruled before the Sept. 1991, coup that sent him into Wle, immediately went to work Sat- urday after an official luncheon, talk- ing to political and parliamentary lead- ers into the night and again yesterday. Aristide told reporters on his Sat- urday flight from Washington to Port- au-Prince that he had selected a prime minister but had not decided when to announce the nomination. First, he indicated, he wanted to int Haiti toward reconciliation and peace in order to convince the nation that his focus will not be the past and vengeance. "Nice words," said Franz Voltaire, an aide to caretaker Prime Minister Robert Malval, "and obviously the guiding principle of the government, but what he is doing now is looking at the hard work of translating words eo action . The prime minister is a key figure in Haiti, actually more powerful on a See HAITI, Page 2 t 40V AL AL. One hundred four years of editorial freedom An AroMcia ody coer1,19 94TeMca DI;y or rapist intensifies y A.b J> Victim describes man to police By FRANK C. LEE Daily Staff Reporter Following the brutal rape of a woman Thursday night, Ann Arbor police released a more detailed de- scription of a serial rapist operating in the Ann Arbor area. The suspect is described as a Black man with a light complexion, between 25 and 35 years old, approximately six feet in height, weighing nearly 170 pounds, with short hair, police said Saturday. Due to the nature of the attack and the description of the assailant, police believe the rape to be the work of the city's serial rapist. The 41-year-old Ann Arbor woman was sexually assaulted near the city's Community High School at around 9 p.m. The woman is currently being treated for multiple head injuries at University Hospitals, where she was listed in fair condition Sunday. Police believe the unidentified man has raped and beaten three other women and killed a fourth. He has been implicated in six attempted rapes in the Ann Arbor area over the past two years, most of which occurred on the city's west side. The woman is the only victim so far to get a good look at her attacker. The rapist's other victims were taken by surprise and too disoriented after- ward to provide much of a description to the police. The woman was returning home via a sidewalk along the school prop- erty off Fifth Avenue. There, she was approached by her attacker. The victim was punched in the head and beaten repeatedly until she lost consciousness. When she awoke about 20 minutes later, her attacker had dragged her into some bushes, sexually assaulted her and fled. The woman managed to walk to her apartment and called the police. Investigators searched the crime scene for clues and for possible witnesses. As of last night, no suspects had been identified. Police are offering a $36,000 reward for information lead- ing to the rapist's arrest. A police tracking dog was brought to the area where the assault occurred and traced a scent that led to the entrance of the Women's Hospital of University Hospitals, the same com- plex where the victim is being treated, one-half mile away from the crime scene. Police initially thought the rapist may have been a hospital employee, but have since found contradicting evidence. "The reason that has been ques- tioned is because some of her belong- ings were found west of the location in West Park," said Sgt. Phil Scheel, a spokesman for the Ann Arbor Po- See RAPE, Page 2 MOLLY STEVENS/Daily This walkway behind Community High School is the site bf Thursday's rape of a 41-year-old Ann Arbor woman. Iraq pulls troops from 'no-fly' zone U.S. threatens Hussein with retaliation Rape strikes anerve in community By KELLY FEENEY Daily Staff Reporter Students and residents responded to Thursday's attack much the same way they've responded to previous rapes: They're scared and tired. Police say the attack on a 41- year-old Ann Arbor woman is likely the fourth rape committed by a serial rapist in the past two years. LSA firs-year student Diana Grossman said of the latest rape: "It makes me feel really scared. I feel like I should be able to walk around on my own campus. "This definitely limits my free- dom to do what I want. I feel like I have less freedom here than I had back at home." Many students echoed these senti- ments. Michael Anne Erlewine, an LSA sophomore who sat enjoying the fall weather on the front lawn of Commu- nity High yesterday, did not know of the rape that occurred near the high school. "It makes me feel sick, hon- See REACTIONS, Page 2 Perry in China on diplomatic mission The Washington Post BEIJING - First there was talk about butter. Now comes talk about guns. The thaw in U.S.-Chinese relations continued with the arrival here yester- day of U.S. Defens'e Secretary William Perry, the second cabinet member to visit since President Clinton eased ten- sions between Washington and Beijing by cutting links between human rights and trade in May. Unlike Commerce Secretary Ronald H. Brown, who delivered a sales pitch for American companies during a visit in August, Perry has diplomatic objectives. He aims to re- new ties with the Chinese military, because of the importance of Chinese politics and because the United States and China share security interests ranging from arms control to defense conversion, Pentagon officials say. Perry's mission is a sensitive one, both in the United States and China. In the United States, human rights advocates have condemned the resto- ration of military contacts cut in 1989 after Chinese troops opened fire on pro-democracy demonstrators around Tiananmen Square. Other critics have raised concerns about China's exports of sensitive missile technology to Pakistan and other nations. This con- cern continues despite an accord signed in Washington this month by Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen in which China promised not to sell medium-range missiles abroad. Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON -Iraq appeared to be pulling the last of its elite Re- publican Guards out of the "no-fly" zone near Kuwait yesterday, but the Clinton administration kept the pres- sure on, warning Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein that the United States may retaliate immediately the next time the troops threaten Kuwait. A day after the U.N. Security Council approved a resolution order- ing the Iraqis to withdraw from the border area with Kuwait, Pentagon officials reported troop movements indicating that the second of two Re- publican Guards divisions sent south two weeks ago were pulling out and moving north. One of the divisions left the area several days ago, but another had re- mained camped around Nasiriyah, south of the 32nd parallel, prompting the Clinton administration to press, over initial Russian objections, for a new Security Council resolution warn- ing the Iraqis of "serious conse- quences" if they did not withdraw. The resolution was finally passed unanimously late Saturday after a day of intense negotiations that, for the time being at least,. appeared to paper over the administration's differences with Russia over Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev's mission to Baghdad last week. As recently as Saturday, Pentagon officials said that the 10,000 Iraqi troops camped around Nasiriyah were showing no signs of leaving. But al- though the troops were still in the area yesterday, officials said there were now signs that the division was pre- paring to move north. An administration source said af- ter a White House meeting between President Clinton and his senior mili- tary and foreign policy advisers yes- terday that the president was now "cautiously optimistic" that the Iraqis were finally complying with the U.N. ultimatum, "We're not announcing that it's finished yet ... but (Hussein) does seem to be moving in the right direc- tion," Secretary of State Warren Chris- topher added yesterday on NBC's "Meet the Press." AP PHOTO A Bangladeshi U.N. soldier stands with his vehicle about six miles from the border between Iraq and Kuwait on Satudray. But as the latest gulf crisis began to recede, it seemed apparent that the administration had only temporarily bridged a widening gap with Moscow over what to do about Hussein and his continuing refusal to comply with a series of Security Council ultimatums that the United States insists must all be met before it agrees to ease any of the trade sanctions that have crippled Iraq's economy and cut off all its oil exports. In a clear departure from the Clinton administration's position, Kozyrev announced in Baghdad last week that Russia would work toward an easing of the U.N. sanctions in return for what he said was a promise by Hussein to recognize Kuwait and respect its borders., But arguing that Iraq should re- ceive no reward for withdrawing its troops, U.S. officials strongly opposed the Russian initiative and pressed the Security Council to approve a diluted version of the resolution, which warned only that Iraq would face un- specified "consequences" if it failed to withdraw, without specifically threatening or authorizing the use of force. In the end, it passed unani- mously. itian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide waves after arriving back in Port-au-Prince on Saturday. Kohl's coalition ekes out win in German election From Daily Wire Services BERLIN - Chancellor Helmut Kohl capped a re- markable political comeback yesterday with a razor-thin re-election victory that appeared to give him a fourth term as Germany's leader. Kohl's ruling center-right coalition captured an esti- mated 48.3 percent of the vote - enough for an absolute ajority in the federal Parliament under Germany's com- -x election rules - compared with an estimated 48.1 percent for the combined opposition parties, according to network television computer projections. Kohl's coalition was projected to win 330 seats in the 656-seat parliament, a two-seat majority that Kohl called "workable." A iubilant Kohl claimed victory less than 90 minutes Israel set to resume Palestinian talks Cabinet reopens Gaza Strip; Arafat feels heat after cracking down on Hamas movement Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM - Moving to ease tensions with the Palestinian self-gov- erning authority, Israel's Cabinet de- cided yesterday to end the closure of the Gaza Strip, imposed last week after an Israeli soldier was kidnapped, and said that peace talks with the Palestinians will resume tomorrow in Cairo. ers blocked Netzarim, a main junc- tion in northern Gaza, and threw stones at Jewish settlers and soldiers yester- day morning. Israeli soldiers report- edly fired shots in the air, then re- treated to form a defensive ring around a nearby settlement. They left it to the Palestinian police to disperse the dem- onstrators peacefully. No casualties were reported. Israeli Cabinet ministers expressed satisfaction with Arafat's decision to confront Hamas, the main Palestinian group opposing Israel's peace accord with the Palestinians. Foreign Minis- ter Shimon Peres and other ministers reportedly urged that Israel move for- See PERRY, Page 2 BEL . . Nil IMS, I