2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 12, 1995 MATCH Continued from page 1 harder (for a suspect) to explain." In an exclusive interview Tues- day with the Detroit Free Press, Mitchell claimed he is innocent of the purse snatching and assault charges leveled against him. Mitchell also said he has an alibi for a series of sexual assaults occurring within the city. Senior Assistant Public Defender Greg Margosian, the court-appointed attorney for Mitchell, had no com- ment to yesterday's DNA develop- ments. Police have dismissed an anony- mous phone call they received last August in which a man claimed to be the serial rapist. The caller was upset that he was being described by the police as a Black 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, which took place Oct. 13, is older and has described her attacker as a Black male. She has given police the best-known description of her at- tacker to date. "Last I heard, the task force is not putting a whole lot of stock in that phone call as being that of the serial rapist," Scheel said. "Now whether they've proceeded doing any kind of voice analysis in comparing that with Mitchell's, I don't know." Although Mitchell is a prime sus- pect and in custody, Scheel refused to comment on whether the woman had identified Mitchell from a police line- up. Mitchell, 33, waits for his Feb. 13 trial date in Washtenaw County Jail on $50,000 bond for unarmed rob- bery and assault charges. If found guilty, he could be behind bars for a maximum of 15 years. The pretrial date for Mitchell is set for Jan. 19 at the Washtenaw County Courthouse. Joe Burke, chief assistant at the prosecutor's office, said some plea negotiations may occur before the trial date, but "I doubt that will hap- pen in this case." Mitchell has said little to the me- dia or in the courtroom in his defense and is expected to say little at the pretrial. "It's generally not something that (defendants are) asked questions at," Burke said. "It's really a pretty per- functory kind of thing." Mitchell was arrested Christmas Day afterataxi cabdriver spotted him walking on the city streets. The driver noticed that Mitchell matched the physical and the clothing descriptions released by police in response to an assault and mugging attempt the day before in the 1800 block of Dexter Avenue. Mitchell was not charged in a 1992 Inkster rape case because there was insufficient physical evidence left at thatcrime scene to compare with DNA samples taken from Mitchell. The Michigan State Police Crime Lab, which conducted the 1992 DNA tests on Mitchell, kept DNA results from his blood samples on file. DNA tests on the 1992 sample reportedly matched four of five rapes attributed to the serial rapist - in Eberwhite Woods, on Longshore Drive, on Miller Avenue and on West Stadium Boulevard of Ann Arbor. No body fluids were found on the fifth victim in the Oct. 13 rape, lead- ing police to suspect a condom was used. Investigators and prosecutors said they are reluctant to use or even com- ment on the Inkster samples because of potential legal problems. Those samples were taken by another police department. Pope embarks on stamina-." testing 1 1-day Asian tour Los Angeles Times VATICAN CITY - Have cane, will still travel. Feeling well enough to joke about his health, Pope John Paul II set off for Asiaon an overnight flight yesterday to launch an 11-day tour that will test his stamina while extending his church's honor roll of revered Catholics. In the Philippines, the first stop on a four-nation tour that is his first to Asia in five years and his longest pilgrimage since 1991, the pope will preside at weekend ceremonies in Manila marking his church's 10th World Youth Day. On Monday, the 74-year-old pon- tiff goes to Papua, New Guinea, then on to Australia and Sri Lanka, launch- ing local Catholics on the road to sainthood at beatification ceremonies in all three countries. Meeting young people and honor- ing potential saints are papal favor- ites, but on the 63rd foreign trip of the pope's 16-year reign, the international focus will be as much on his health as on the altar. Last April, the pope broke his right leg in a bathroom fall, the latest in a quickening numberofmedical alarms: He tripped on his robe and fractured his right arm in November 1993 and had a large noncancerous tumor re- moved from his intestine the year before that.} Slow recovery from surgery to repair the leg forced the pope to can- cel a planned October visit to the United States, and he has seemed to Readih4glaily BIKE Continued from page 1 riety of ways - including equipment donations, construction of accessible playgrounds and other environments, renovation of summer camps and vol- unteering at local organizations. While on tour, members of the Journey of Hope cycle teams also will participate in PUSH America's Kids On the Block puppet show for el- ementary school students. Using life- sized puppets, they will try to help children understand disabilities and abilities of the disabled. The tour team will cover about 75 miles per day, relying on a net- work of sponsors for lodging and food. They will ride across deserts, over mountains and through rain and heat. The team expects to raise more than $300,000 for the projects and programs of PUSH America. They hope to reach more than 30 million people with their message of accep- tance and understanding. Petrilli has committed himself to raising $5,000 in support of PUSH America. He is personally respon- sible for obtaining all the money his ride will raise by writing letters to his family, friends and parents of his fraternity brothers in request of support. Petrilli said he hopes he will be aided further by random donations from people who hear about what he is trying to do. He also plans to solicit Groceries t14 t7 R: JJ s - ° o osq Keg Beer Wine e Liquor a Junk Food SUIT Continued from page 1 through the grievance. "We have been working with the individuals involved in the matter," Baker said last night. "We would re- gret it if they were to pursue any sort of litigation against the University." In a statement from Detroit attor- ney George B. Washington's office, Mitchell and NWROC member Donna Stern affirmed their intentions to go ahead with plans to sue the University. "The protest ... will continue, de- manding full back pay for the work- ers, the firing of the supervisor and the end to the continuing racial ha- rassment at the Dental School and throughout the University," the state- ment read. Stern said the lawsuit, if neces- sary, could be filed as early as tomor- row. "We don't think that the news of their jobs will affect our plan of ac- tion," she said. "They have not been told whether or not they would get back pay or whether or not their racist supervisor would be fired." The protesters will meet at 4 p.m. on the Diag to decry racism and the University's actions. They will then march to the Dental School, where they plan to picket. "Our rally is aimed at getting the University's attention and at present- ing the public with ourlawsuit against the University," Stern said. donations from businesses. Acquiring a suitable bike for the trip also falls upon Petrill's shoul- ders. The equipment is expensive, and Petrilli is seeking its donation from shops in his hometown of St. Louis. Petrilli learned his application to become a team member had been accepted in late December. His fra- ternity brothers are excited about Petrilli's coming ride. "Any time any of members can do anything to help out our national phi- lanthropy, it's outstanding," said Pi Kappa Phi President Matt DeFore. Pi Kappa Phi alum Barry Stern participated as a financial coordina- tor in the Journey of Hope last year. "It's a tough challenge. Mike's SENATE Continued from page 1 By forcing lawmakers to live by the same rules they write for others, Republicans are also trying to bring pressure on them to stop writing regu- lations and reconsider some of the ones they have enacted - a goal not universally shared by Democratic supporters. "If Congress has to live by the same regulations as everyone else, there is the hope we'll be more atten- tive to what we do," said Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas). Propelled by strong bipartisan sup- port, the bill was on track for enact- ment last year until it crashed into a pre-election wall of Republican stall- ing tactics in the Senate. But it was CHECHNYA Continued from page 1. into the war and are controlling him. The campaign, which has also left thousands of civilians dead and made refugees of nearly a third of the 1.2 million Chechens, came under its first serious attack in the Duma, the lower house of Russia's Parliament. "The country is in crisis," said Boris Fyodorov, a pro-reform law- maker. "We have no executive au- thority, we have no army. The army leadership has shown the army's total inability to act." But after a moment ofsilence for the dead in Chechnya, it quickly became clear that most lawmakers want to avoid a head-on conflict with Yeltsin. They ruled out debate on the motion of no- Vatican observers to have aged dra- matically since the accident. Although he conducted a reduced round of Christmas and New Year'0 activities at the Vatican without ap- parent distress, the pope still walks with difficulty, often using a cane or leaning on his crosier. The pope's public appearances have been reduced for this trip, and he will sit at parts of Manila ceremonies where he stood at a parallel youth event in Denver in 1993. Still, the pope's own emphatic view is that he is fit. "Tell those who are interested back in Poland that things are not going badly for the pope," he told Polish pilgrims at the Vatican last Friday. overcome a lot in life. He'll make it over the highest mountain on the hot- test days. He's a strong, tough, great guy," he said. Both DeFore and Stern said that they would like to go andcheerPetrilli on when he gets to the tour sites in the Midwest. Petrilli is eager to begin. "I'll be spreading the message that people with disabilities have abilities, that cancer can be overcome, that no mat- ter what adversity people face they can go on and lead full lives." To make a tax-deductible do-@ nation to Petrilli'sJourney of Hope, write to 903 Lincoln Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Checks should be made out to PUSH America. given first-place billing by GOP lead- ers this year, and Democrats supported it, even as they tried to expand its reach to include some other reforms* that Republicans wanted to postpone. The Congressional Accountabil- ity Act would end long standing ex- emptions under which Congress and its agencies, such as the General Ac- counting Office and Government Printing Office, escaped provisions of 11 employment-related laws. As a result, Capitol Hill came to be known as "the last plantation," as Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio) characterized it as long ago as 1978. Laws from which Congress ex- empted itself ranged from the New Deal-era Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 to the 1993 Family and Medical Leave Act and included confidence and a proposal to give Par- liament power to stop the conflict, but put two milder initiatives on the agenda* for tomorrow. One would spell out sharp restric- tions on the army's use in combat on Russian soil. The other would rule out additional funds for the Chechen war in the 1995 budget. Oudayev, a former Soviet bomber pilot, warned at his news conference that the Chechen con- flict could spread to other ethni- cally charged areas. "You will never solve this prob- lem militarily," he said. "Even if you erase every village and raze the Caucasus Mountains to the ground, still the people's ingrained desire for freedom and the right to life cannot be taken away." 662-1313 235 S. State St. [at Liberty] ARE YOU A AA7 LEADER? LS&A Student Government currently has vacancies. If you are an LS&A student with a little spare time and a lot of enthusiasm, we invite you to apply for membership as a voting representative. To get started, just stop by our office in the Michigan Union and pick up an appointments application. LS&A Student Government is located on the fourth floor of the Michigan Union in room 4003. Appointments applications are available in the display envelope just outside the office. Please fill out the form in its entirety and slide under the door, and you will be contacted shortly thereafter to schedule an interview. 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