WE irian Un One hundred four years of editorial freedom 2o VN.5 .P2rape suspect: 'I am not the man' By FRANK C. LEE Daily Staff Reporter A suspected serial rapist claims he is innocent in an interview with a state newspaper published yesterday. Ervin D. Mitchell Jr., 33, sits in the Washtenaw County Jail on $50,000 bond awaiting trial on as- sault and purse snatching charges. "I am not the man," Mitchell said. "I honestly, truly believe I'm going to be the fall guy because of so much media hype." In an interview Monday with the Detroit Free Press, Mitchell said he believes he has been made the scape- goat in one of the most intensive man- hunts in Ann Arbor history. He also said he did not assault and ttempt to mug a local woman Dec. 24. W'itchell was bound over for trial on thosecharges and will be inWashtenaw Circuit Court again Feb. 13. He did not take the stand in his own defense at his preliminary hear- ing held Jan. 4. Blood samples taken from Mitchell in 1992 rape case in Inkster, Mich., a Detroit suburb, were kept on file by the Michigan State Police *rime Lab in East Lansing. Those samples have reportedly connected him to three sexual assaults and a rape-homicide in Ann Arbor over a period of three years. For legal reasons, Ann Arbor po- lice and the prosecutor's office have refused to comment on whether or not the Inkster samples will be used to charge Mitchell in connection with e series of sexual assaults. Law enforcement agencies have not gone on record to comment on the Inkster samples. Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Phil Scheel, spokesman for the multi-agency task force assigned to find the serial rapist, said results from more recent DNA tests could be available later this week. Those samples were taken from itchell by Ann Arbor police after his rrest on Christmas Day. Mitchell said the police did not wait for blood tests to accuse him of being the serial rapist."The way they treatedme it was -bottom line-you are the man and ain't no blood going to matter," he said. "We're going to get you regardless because there are too many possibilities that you fit." Scheel refused to comment on hether or not Mitchell had an alibi on e dates of the assaults, but Mitchell told the newspaper that he does. Mitchell gave the interview while in jail against the advice of his court- appointed attorney, Sheila Blakney, because he was tired of being tried in the media. "I find a lot of times people are telling me 'hush hush,' - it's only for my own good," he said. "I'm tired f hush' because of the circumstances I'm falling into. I got so tired of sitting back and not saying anything about the situation." Firing of 3 employees uestio'nd By JOSH WIHTE Daily Staff Reporter Labelling the University an "over- blown, overgrown company with a strict policy of systematic racial dis- crimination," activist S hante Driver and others are mobilizing in what they de- Wcribe as a fight against racism. Dring a National Women's Rights Organizing Coalition forum at the Michigan Union last night, about 40 members of the community discussed the firing of three.Black employees at tk nl "tlCirr)XAT v tm Priest tapped as interim 'U' ombudsman Red Wings alumni lend a helping hand A University Hospital employee yesterday demonstrates computer equipment to Hospital in a benefit sponsored by the Red Wings Alumni Association. a child at C.S. Mott Children's Conflict rages in Grozny as Chechen cease-fire unravels By RONNIE GLASSBERG Daily Staff Reporter The University has named a lesbian Episcopal priest as interim ombuds- man, replacing Donald Perigo, whose non-renewed contract expired Dec.31. Jennifer Walters has served as co- pastor of the Church of the Incarnation in Ann Arbor since August. She took office Monday and will continue serv- ing at the church and work as ombuds- man until the position is filled. "I just hope that, to the extent that a person can, to be helpful to students and to be an available, effective helper," Walters said. "I think as ombudsman, a lot of my role is to provide some kind of human contact to people who often feel they are just a number." Walters said she will work 20-30 hours per week as ombudsman and another 20-30 hours each week at the church. Perigo, who worked at the Univer- sity full time, also had additional re- sponsibilities in the Dean of Students Office not connected with his role as ombudsman. The ombudsman's role is to assist students with problems involving the University, acting as a mediator be- tween the two parties. For the past two years, Walters worked as assistant ombudsman at Michigan State University, where she is a doctoral candidate in philosophy and ethics. She has lived in Ann Arbor since 1990, and had commuted daily to East Lansing. Walters' partner works at the Uni- versity Medical Center. They have a 2- year-old adopted son. She holds a doctoral degree in min- istry from the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass. Walters was one of the candidates for director of the Lesbian Gay Bi- sexual Programs Office, "As a part of that process I had met her. There was a lot of interest in her even then," said Dean of Students Royster Harper, who oversees the office. "I feel like we are very, very fortunate." A search com- mittee of seven to nine members, composed half of students, will rec- ommend the new ombudsman, Harper said. "I want to be thorough and give the committee a chance to be more in- volved than would normally be the case," Harper said. Both Harper and Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford have talked about restructing the ombudsman's office into a student as- sistance office. "I haven't ruled out restructuring, I haven't ruled it in," Harper said. "We have talked about extending the func- tion so that retired faculty members could work in the office. We are going to move toward a more comprehen- sive student assistance program." Harper said she hopes to have a See OMBUDSMAN, Page 2 The Washington Post GROZNY, Russia - On the first day of what Moscow announced would be a unilateral 48-hour suspension in its assault on Grozny, Russian artillery continued to pulverize the city center and Russian and Chechen snipers traded small-arms fire from mid-morning to evening. Thus, the end of the first month of Russia's military campaign against the renegade republic of Chechnya ended as it began at dawn on Dec. 11 - marked by violence, distrust, confu- sion and questions about who is giving the orders. "What cease-fire?" said a grinning Chechen fighter as he picked his way through the heaps of rubble, smashed glass and tangled power lines strewn about Avturkhanova Prospekt, a few hundred yards from the presidential building. "We don't believe anything the Russians say." The principal effect of theKremlin's declaration was to limit the Russian bombardment to the area directly around Grozny's main square and presi- dential building, where shells were crashing every minute or so at midday. Other neighborhoods, which have been blasted with mortars, bombs, rockets and shells since the New Year's Eve attempt to storm the Chechen capital began, were spared yesterday. From all indications, Russian ground troops maintained their posi- tions several hundred yards from the pemains a Chechen stronghold. And following the early morning, perhaps a result of heavy fog, the fighting in the center picked up as the day wore on. It was impossible to tell which side shot first after the cease-fire began at 8 a.m. local time (midnight Monday EST), although it was hardly surpris- ing that small-arms fire should con- tinue with the two sides separated by so little ground. The Chechens seemed fully to expect a renewed Russian on- See CHECHNYA, Page 2 I EARLY SHOTS FIRED IN TAX BATTLE ON CAPITOL HILL Gephardt says plan will include flat tax The Washington Post WASHINGTON-House Minor- ity Leader Richard A. Gephardt (D- Mo.), in another bid to steal the Repub- licans' thunder, said yesterday he is developing a proposal for a modified flat tax of 10 or 11 percent to replace the graduated income tax system. Gephardt's plan strongly resembles an approach advocated by House Ma- jority Leader Richard K. Armey (R- Tex.), although Gephardt insists his proposal would be fairer to middle- and lower-income taxpayers. Democrats have sought to reposi- tion themselves politically since Re- publicans sweptto power Nov. 8 prom- ising major spending and tax cuts and dramatic changes to government pro- grams. Both Gephardt and President Clinton proposed middle-class tax re- lief measures to rival those contained in the GOP "Contract with America." "I'mhappy to see that Mr. Gephardt now recognizes the power of my flat tax idea, and welcome him to the de- bate," Armey said. "The flat tax is clearly in America's future, and if the minority leader's statement is not just political posturing, Congress can re- spond in a bipartisan manner to the public demand for a simpler, flatter, more fair tax code." A flat tax would greatly simplify the tax structure by eliminating most deductions and applying a reduced across the board tax to all wages, sala- ries and pensions. Gephardt contends that Armey's 17-percent flat tax would be a major boon to the rich because it exempts capital gains, interest and all other unearned income. Wealthier people would end up paying a lower effective tax rate than middle-income taxpayers. Gephardt's disclosure during testi- mony before the Ways and Means Committee highlighted a long day of congressional activity on the fiscal and budget front. Pressure continued to mount for Armey and other House leaders to alter their balanced amendment proposal to drop a requirement for a three-fifths "supermajority" to raise taxes. And the House Appropriations Committee be- gan confronting the challenge of slash- ing spending to help pay for the Repub- licans' proposed tax cuts and to gradu- ally balance the budget. Rep. Bob Livingston (R-La.), new chairman of the Appropriations Com- mittee, dramatized the challenge by brandishing an alligator skinning knife nicknamed a "Cajun scalpel" during a meeting. But despite the chairman's showmanship and his pledge to cany out the goals of the "Contract With America," he and other members made clear they were opposed to indiscrimi- nate budget-cutting. In what some took as a thinly veiled reference to the House Bud- get Committee, which will take the lead in outlining the Republicans long-term budget goals, Livingston said that "it would be a mistake to come up with grand numbers and grand goals without being able to reach them." Fed chairman questions math in GOP budget Newsday WASHINGTON - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan threw cold water yesterday on Republican ef- forts to rekindle "supply-side" budgeting when government agencies calculate the financial impact of tax and spending proposals. Speaking before an un- usual joint hearing of the Senate and House budget committees, Greenspan warned that inflation and in- terest rates might rise if the financial markets decided that the Republican-con- trolled Congress was using budgetary numbers rooted in wishful thinking rather than in sound economics. "The current, relatively straightforward scoring sys- tem has served us well," Greenspan said. 'The current, relatively straightforward scoring system has served us well.' -Alan Greenspan Federal Reserve chairman Greenspan's predecessor as Fed chairman, Paul Volcker, also warned lawmakers that they must "resist the siren song of expediency pressed by those with other agendas" or face the risk of higher budget deficits, soaring interest rates and reduced prospects for savings and investment. The issue, while arcane, is important because Republi- cans are trying to fill large budgetary holes through what critics say are conflicting pledges to cut taxes, increase defense spending and balance the budget by-2002., Under current budget law, tax cuts must be offset with spending cuts, so the way the budget scorekeepers make their calcu- lations has become almost as important as the tax proposals themselves. Current "static" methods of budgeting count most See GOP, Page 2 House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (D-Mo.) outlines his proposal for a flat tax yesterday. Middle Class Bill of Rights' President Clinton, waging a counter-offensive on the GOP, visits a Midwestern community college to promote his "Middle Class Bill of Rights." Page 3. 'U' Flint campus bans smoking in facilities, vehicles INSIDE ARTS= .4 i2Tb TIC ~TUThTIl C'tIhT C'... (AA 1 GOAnon 1....he .+ nt f, ti .,+ t "'Thp aI rnnrar nnlp n kp the h. 4.a rApr