2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 17, 1994 HAITI Continued from page 1. day-to-day basis than the president, since he and his Cabinet set and ad- minister policy. If Aristide has selected someone from an original pool of six candi- dates, he has kept it a close secret, although many sources think it will be Smart Michele, a wealthy busi- nessman who has maintained links with the generally anti-Aristide in- dustrial sector.while strongly backing the president. The other key Cabinet nomina- tions that diplomats say must come quickly are the ministries of finance and planning and the president of the Central Bank. "If Aristide expects to get a quick infusion of money, then he has to name a financial team this week," .said a U.N. financial expert. Most sources think the finance minister will be Leslie Delatour, a free-market ad- vocate who has designed a long-range economic program approved by Aristide and the international lending agencies. The planning minister probably will be Leslie Voltaire, while the Cen- tral Bank could be headed by Marie- Michele Ray, a veteran banker who was finance minister in Aristide's original government. Those selections would be ac- cepted, even welcomed, by most of the business community, including those who approved if not actively backed the coup because of Aristide's alleged leftist political views. One possible candidate who draws shudders from diplomats and some moderate pro-Aristide Haitians, is Rene Preval, Aristide's original prime minister and current political adviser. Although Preval was on the original list for prime minister, Aristide has found a less controversial job for him. RAPE Continued from page 1 lice Department. "Her wallet and her checkbook were found in West Park." Both items were missing after the attack, but were found Friday morn- ing with the aid of a police tracking dog. The park is about seven blocks west of the rape scene and in the opposite direction of the scent that led to the hospital area. "So one theory is that the guy was traveling west from the hospital area perhaps backtracking," Scheel said. "Another theory is that the guy dropped her wallet and her checkbook, and some- body else picked them up, rifled through them, and dropped them off at West Park. ... It's too early to tell which theory might be the right one." Police are examining videotapes from security cameras around the city, including a camera near the hospital entrance, in hopes that the suspect was captured on film after the assault. Scheel did not rule out the possi- bility that the scent tracked to the hospital was not that of the attacker. Any evidence collected in this case will be sent to a state police crime lab for analysis. Sexual evidence retrieved in the incident has been sent to the state police DNA lab in Lansing. It will take six to eight weeks before the DNA test results are avail- able to compare with evidence in the serial rapist's previous sexual assaults. In August, an anonymous call was made to the Ann Arbor Police De- partment from a man claiming to be the rapist. He was upset that he was being described as aBlack male rather than as of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent. In that call, he said his next victim would be a teen-age girl. But the victim in the latest, known rape is older and has described to police that her attacker as a Black male. Police are unsure whether or not to identify the August call as a hoax, but continue to investigate tips being phoned in. U Anyone with information regard- ing the serial rapist is urged to con- tact the police tip line, 996-3199. AUSTRALIA O CANADA 0 CHILE 0 CHINA 0 CZECH REPUBLIC 0Q * O 7P The University of Michigan 313 764 4311 tel ? 01P Office of International Programs 313 764 3229 fax *I G513 Michigan Unionz k 4 530 South State StreetM S Ann Arbor Michigan 48109-349 R * : INFORMATION MEETINGS f ~Eabout0z oSTUDY ABROAD)x THIS WEEK: O Monday, October 17, 1994 o 0 Academic Year Programs in A Santiago, CHILE and Quito, ECUADOR 0 Tuesday, October 18, 1994 Academic Year Exchange Programs in O Seoul, KOREA 0 Wednesday, October 19, 1994 Academic Year Exchange Program in3 0 Perth, AUSTRALIA 0 All meetings will be held from 5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. G in room B116 of the MLB. 0~ 0 . VIION0M NVdVr 0dY 1mijrf40AwYI n YINIIi0 VS3NONIU( I :: i STOP SMOKING SEMINAR Stop Smoking Nowli IFeel Better, Healthier and Have a New Lease On Life ThURSDAY, OCTOBER 20 7 PM. 9 P.M. FEE $35 LOCATION: Washtenaw Community College Conference Center 4800 East Huron River Drive Ann Arbor, Michigan Call 434-6199 ,. < .< _ REACTIONS Continued from page 1.- estly," she said. "I sit here now and think I should be more careful. But I don't want to be more careful. This is just another story that keeps you from being who you are. It leaves you a little powerless. "Also, each rape that he commits adds to the fury," she continued. "You know he's gaining more and more power. I personally have a lot oftcon- fidence in myself to control situations and to protect myself. But when a person gets beyond moral values - like this guy - there isn't really any- thing you can do." While the serial rapist remains at large, many women have said they have changed their habits. Many women say Thursday's rape only so- lidifies their dependence on others. "Though the practical solution to the problem is for women to be walked or driven places, I don't like having to depend on someone else. It makes me feel like a child," said Jenny Schmid, GERMANY Continued frompage.1 to use it to stop the government from governing." Kohl campaigned with a slogan of "No Experiments!," and the chancellor's fourth term is unlikely to deviate from the cautious domestic and foreign policy policies that have marked his tenure. Strongly commit- ted to greaterEuropean unity, agradu- ally expanded NATO and strong ties with the United States, the chancellor is viewed as a reliable and predictable ally by U.S. officials, who were un- easy at the prospect of a Scharping- led government that would have in- cluded the left-leaning Greens. Kohl portrayed himself as a rock of stability and warned voters that Scharping would have to govern with the Greens, who advocated a $12-a- gallon gasoline tax, and with the former east German communists. As the wealthiest and most popu- lous country in Europe, Germany al- ways draws intense foreign scrutiny when it goes to the polls. Since the end of the Cold War and German reunification four years ago, domes- tic politics here have assumed even greater importance because of the widespread assumption that few of the continent's problems -from eth- nic warfare to plutonium smuggling - can be solved without German leadership. Kohl's challenge now is to tackle those issues with the slim- mest of mandates. Scharping, 46, had attempted to portray himself as a cen- trist who could control the left-lean- PERRY Continued from page 1 One indication of the political sen- sitivity of Perry's visit: Whereas Brown brought 25 corporate chief executives with him to promote deals, Perry has taken two key senators, Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Sam Nunn (D-Ga) and the committee's ranking Republican, John Warner of Virginia. "I will stress that the military rela- tionship is bounded by the political context, which includes human rights, and that security problems caused by proliferation damage the mutual se- curity interests and bilateral relation- ships," Perry told reporters on the plane from Kuwait to Beijing, Reuter news agency said. Perry will encounter a military in flux. The 3.2 million-member a School of Art graduate student. "My male colleagues can stay ang work in the studio until 4 a.m. be- cause they don't have to think of how they're going to get home. I can't freely go, because I'm always having to think, 'How am I going to get home at 1 a.m.?"' However, fear seems to be fo- cused on campus, rather than in the community. "This is something I don't spend lot of time thinking about. I don't liv in town, and I guess because the rapes have been committed here, I some- how feel distant. I guess it's a dumb attitude, but I feel insulated," said Ann Arbor Township resident Kate Carras. Jim Shields, an Ann Arbor resi- dent, said more ought to be done to catch the serial rapist. "This rapistis criminally insane. He's committnb predation, which is a whole new level of crime and thinking," Shields said. "Perhaps it would be interesting to bring the FBI into the case to invs- tigate." ing impulses of his often fractious party brethren. He invited compari- sons to himself with President Clinton - as an energetic, prag- matic moderateu 4 from a younger generation--but his emphasis on the ailing Ger- man economy fizzled when un- employment dropped and the country began to boom again. The Scharping challenger's best hope in unseating Kohl would likely have involved accepting tacit parlia- mentary support from the former Communists, a compromise Scharping vowed he would not make. Projected results gave the com- bined Christian Democrats and Chri* tian Socialists 41.7 percent of the vote, and their liberal Free Democrat partners 6.6 percent; the Social Demo- crats 36.8 percent; the Green Party 7 percent; the Party of Democratic So- cialism 4.3 percent; and a variety of fringe parties a total of 3.6 percent. Although the ex-communist Party of Democratic Socialism won less than the 5 percent generally needed for parliamentary representation, *t was strong in four areas and is eti- mated to have won 29 seats overall Parliamentary. "I really believe that they'll have to take us more seriously now, given our success"Scharping said. People's Liberation Army is reexam- ining its strategy, outdated equipment and relationship to The Communis Party - issues that have intensified in the five years since the suspension ofU.S.-Chinese military cooperation. Chinese military leaders also have an agenda for this trip, and sources in Beijing say it has little in common with Perry's. First, they want to mend the rifts that followed the 1989 crackdown on pro- testers. SomeobserversseePerry'svisi as a vindication of China's supre leader, Deng Xiaoping, who in 1989 shrugged off foreign criticism and the damage to relations as temporary. "Surely at the level of symbolism, Perry's visit says we're putting the past behind us," said Jonathan D. Pollack, senior advisor for interna- and the damage done to relations as temporary. ,.Mi THERE'S A NEW . : . i .. .. .. .. aa t LN Cleveland The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Fnday during tne fall ana winter terms oy students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 7640554; Billing 764-0550. J NEWS David Shepardson, Managng Editor EDITORS: James R. Cho, Nate Hurley, Mona Oureshi, Karen Talaski. STAFF: Robin Barry, Jonathan Berndt, Cathy Boguslaski, Jodi Cohen, Lisa Dines, Sam T. Dudek, Kelly Feeney, Ryan Fields, Josh Ginsberg, Ronnie Glassberg, Jennifer Harvey, Katie Hutchins, Michelle Joyce, Amy Klein, Maria Kovac, Frank C. Lee, Andrea MacAdam, James M. Nash, Zachary M. Raimi, Shari Sitron, Andrew Taylor, Lara Taylor, Michelle Lee Thompson, Maggie Weyhing, Josh White, April Wood. Scot Woods. GRAPHICS: Jonathan Bemdt (Editor), Andrew Taylor, Julie Tsai. EDITORIAL SamGOoodstin,Flint wainess, Edito . ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Julie Becker, Patrick Javid. STAFF: Eugene Bowen, Allison Dimond, Jed Friedman, Craig Greenberg, Ephraim R. Gerstein, Adrienne Janney, Jeff Keatirnb. Joel F. Knutson, Jim Lasser, Jason Lichtstein, Walter Perkel, Elisa Smith, Jean Twenge. SPORTS Chad A. Safran, Managing Editdr EDITORS: Rachel Bachman, Brett Forrest, Antoine Pitts, Michael Rosenberg. STAFF: Paul Barger, Roderick Beard, Eugene Bowen, Scott Burton, Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Ryan Cuskaden, Marc Diller, Jennifer Ouberstein, Darren Everson, Ravi Gopal, Dan McKenzie, Rebecca Moatz, Melanie Schuman, Tom Seeley, Brian Skiar, Tim Smith, Barry Sollenberger, Doug Stevens, Michelle Lee Thompson, Ryan White, Heather Windt. ARTS Melissa Rose Bernardo, Torn Eliswine, Editors EDITORS: Mat Carlson (Fine Arts). Jason Carroll (Theater). Kirk Miller (Books), Heather Phares (Music), Lz Shaw (Weekend etc.). Alexandra Twin (Film). Ted Watts (Weekend, etc.). STAFF: Thomas Crowley, Andy Dolan, Ben Ewy, Brian Gnatt, Josh Herrington, Scott Plagenhoef, Joshua Rich, Dirk Schulze, Sarah Stewart PHOTO Evan Pebris, Editor STAFF: Tnnva Broad, Mike Fitzhuah. Mark Friedman. Doualas Kanter. Josh Kolevzon, Jonathan Lurie, Judith Perkins, Kristen -1 w S I i