Page 4s-auday May 23, 1981-The Michigar Daily Atlanta to get summer camps; probecontinues 4 ATLANTA (AP) - The federal government announced a $460,000 grant yesterday to help Atlanta keep its children safe in summer day camps, and police said they had contacted a man they wanted to question about one of 27 young blacks killed since July 1979. Police searched for two black men missing for several days. Neither case has been added to the list of 27 being in- vestigated by a special police task for- ce. AND 'THE task force began com- paring some unsolved strangulation cases to the slayings in an effort to learn more about the cause of death. The federal grant was announced here by Charles Rinkevich, head of a federal task force seeking ways the U.S. government can help the city cope with the murders. The money, which boosts the federal grants in connection with the killings to $3.4 million, will be used to help Atlanta and surrounding Fulton and DeKalb counties run youth recreation programs. In addition to direct money outlays, the FBI has been aiding in the investigation, and other agencies have been providing services. OFFICIALS IN Atlanta and the two counties originally requested $1.2 million to help them run the "Safe Summer" day camps. The city's deputy administrative of- ficer, Richard Monteilb, said Atlanta officials were "increasingly confident" they will be able to provide the range of programs needed. He said the city budget would be combed for more funds to make up the difference, and appeals would be made to area businesses and the Atlanta Children's Foundation. When 78,000 schoolchildren - most of them black - stream out of Atlanta schools next month, the city plans to have supervised play programs in operation from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. each weekday. . Asphyxiation by strangulation or other means was the cause of death in 16 of the task force cases. Law officials in several metropolitan area counties have been asked to share their files. "They (the task force) are looking to see if there are any patterns in asphyxial deaths they're not familiar with," said DeKalb County police spokesman Chuck Johnson. "They don't think these other cases are related; they're just studying them." In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Pope's condition still 'guarded' ROME - Doctors yesterday removed the last 14 stitches from the gun- shot wounds in Pope John Paul II's abdomen, but said he continued to run a slight fever that caused them to extend his "guarded" prognosis. The pontiff is. now eating strained eggs, cooked fruit, soup and fruit juices and is watching a black-and-white television in his room, said a Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Pierfranco Pastore. Doctors said thepope expressed a desire to visit other patients in the hospital yesterday morning but that they would not permit it. However, they said the pontiff was allowed to take a stroll outside his room and into ad- joining rooms and along hallways of his private suite. His desire to move around more was a clear indication of his impatience with being confined, doctors said. Two American women wounded in the attack were reported in good spirits and making satisfactory progress at Rome's Santo Spirito Hospital. Meanwhile Italian investigators say they have all but given up hope of getting truthful information rather than "fanciful tales" from Memhet Ali Agca, the man charged with shooting the pope. Violence continues in Belfast; new hunger strikers emerge BELFAST, Northern Ireland - Roman Catholics rampaged through Belfast and Londonderry yesterday, showering police with hundreds of firebombs and bottles to protest the death of two more IRA hunger strikers, Raymond McCreesh and Patrick O'Hara. The day's victims included an 18-month-old baby hit by riccocheting sniper's bullet and an 11-year-old girl and a 40-year-old man. who both died of injuries suffered earlier in the week. The Northern Ireland Office reported hunger striker Brendan McLaughlin in grave condition yesterday on the eighth day of-his fast. They said he was suffering from a bleeding perforated ulcer that could kill him without the medical treatment he was continuing to refuse. Another IRA prisoner, Kieran Doherty, 24, had refused breakfast, joining the fast to back IRA demands for political prisoner status, according to MazePrison officials. In the middle of Ulster's continuing agony, results from local elections held Wednesday showed Protestant extremists scoring impressive gains, a development that threatened to further polarize the province's divided Catholics and Protestants. 'Yorkshire Ripper' sentenced LONDON - Peter Sutcliffe was sentenced to life in prison yesterday for the Yorkshire Ripper murders of 13 women, eight of them prostitutes he claimed he had a "divine mission" to kill. The 34-year-old truck driver showed no emotion when the jury returned the verdict, rejecting his plea of madness. Sutcliffe, who also confessed to trying to kill seven other women, stared stonily ahead as the judge, Sir Leslie Boreham, recommended he serve at least,30 years and told him: "I have no doubt that you are a very dangerous man indeed." After nearly six hours of deliberation, the jury of six men and six women by a 10-2 majority found Sutcliffe guilty of murdering each of the 13 women found brutally hammered to death, mutilated and stabbed between 1975 and 1980. Crowds outside London's Old Bailey Central Criminal Court cheered as news broke that the swarthy, medium-built Yorkshireman received the stif- fest sentence a British court can impose. Britain has no death penalty, and the mother of one victim said she hoped other prisoners would kill him. Reagan and Schmidt end talks WASHINGTON - President Reagan and West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt ended two days of talks yesterday in basic agreement on how to deal with the Soviet Union, but differing on trade and economic issues. Schmidt, saying the time is right for nuclear arms talks, told President Reagan it is "crucial for the United States to live up to its obligations as a world power." In a final statement, the leaders agreed that "equal weight" should be given to building up long-range nuclear missiles in Europe and beginning negotiations with the Soviets on mutual cutbacks in such weapons. But, appearing at the National Press Club, Schmidt sharply disagreed with the U.S. Move to limit imports of Japanese automobiles and said American interest rates are too high. Butz pleads guilty to federal tax FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP)-Former Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz, calling the experience a "nightmare," pleaded guilty yesterday to a felony charge of federal tax evasion for under- stating his 1978 taxable income by more than $148,000. The 71-year-old Butz faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. "I RECOGNIZE, your honor, that what I've done is wrong. I'm guilty of the crime charged," Butz told U.S. District Judge Jesse Eschbach. "There is no justification for what has happened." No sentencing date was set. Esch- bach apologized for the delay, but said he was in "no position" to say what the sentence might be. U.S. ATTORNEY David Ready filed the one-court charge, alleging that Butz's 1978 tax return stated his income as $97,814 with a tax due of $39,621, when in fact his taxable income was $245,928. The tax owed, Ready said, was $113,678. Eschbach accepted Butz's plea after making sure Butz knew he could demand the government go through the grand jury process to bring charges. BUTZ, DRESSED in a dark suit, would not comment on the proceeding as he left the courthouse. Two reporters who tried to get into an elevator with him weretold to leave.~ evasion In the crowded courtroom, Butz, flanked by two lawyers, said the in- vestigation by the Internal Revenue Service and the subsequent charge "has been a nightmare for me and my dear wife, Mrs. Butz." Butz, who served as agriculture secretary during the Nixon and Ford administrations, apologized for the of- fense, saying, "I'll continue to live with this every hour of every day as long as I live." BUTZ TOLD Eschbach he waited un- til very late to file his 1978 return and was hampered by a busy schedule. Butz said he was in a high tax bracket and decided to understate his income because "I was not in a strong cash flow position as of April 15. I could have borrowed the money. I didn't." Butz said the unreported income came "almost entirely from lecture fees." HE IS A sought-after speaker and has his own syndicated radio program. Eschbach said a sentencing council of three federal probation officers, in- cluding the one who made the report, would make a recommendation to Eschbach. He said he sympathized with Butz's desire to conclude the tax case in one day, but added, "in fairness to counsel and in fairness to the court, I cannot impose sentence today even if I accept his plea."-