Priest admits to molesting 28 children in the 1960s NEW BEDFORD, Mas*. (AP) — A for mer Roman Catholic priest admitted Monday he molested 28 children at three Massachusetts parishes in the 1900s in one of the largest child sex abuse cases of its kind. Prosecutors said 125 men and women had come forward willing to testify that fames R. Porter had molested them when they were children. They said several had complained to church officials at the time, without results. The pleas culminate a case that sur faced in May 1992 and helped to focus the Roman Catholic Church's attention on sexual abuse by priests. "I hope that every victim of sexual abuse someday in their ordeal can have a day like this," said John Robataille, one of Porter's victims. When Superior Court fudge Robert Steadman asked Porter why he pleaded guilty, he replied: "Because I am guilty. your honor." Initially, he had pleaded innocent. The former priest, who remains free on bail, was hustled from the courthouse and did not respond to reporters' ques tions His attorney. Peter DeCelleke, said Porter. 58. felt “tremendous guilt.” “He's obviously very nervous. He feels that he's reached a positive decision, a decision that will allow him to proceed with the rest of his life." Porter pleaded guilty to 27 counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14. seven counts of unnatural acts on a child under 16. six counts of abom inable and detestable (Times against nature and one charge of assault ana battery. Porter could be sentenced to more than 200 years in prison. Sentencing was set for Dec. 6. Some of Porter's victims, now in their 30s and 40s. sat in the courtroom and cried softly as court officials read a litany of Porter's crime*. "I've done my 30 years and now it’s his turn," one, George Hardie. said later. District Attorney Paul Walsh said that In compiling the case against Porter, inves tigators found that parents of molested children had complained to church offi cials. who moved Porter from one parish to another, but otherwise took no action Porter began his service to the church in Massachusetts in 1960 and worked at parishes in North Attleboro. Fall River and New Bedford. In 1967, he left Mass achusetts and entered a treatment pro gram in New Mexico for pedophilia. He was assigned to a church in Bemidji. Minn., but left in 1970. Several victims formed a group called Survivor Connections and demanded that the church make it a policy to immedi ately investigate any sexual abuse com plaints involving clergy; remove the per petrator if the charges are true; and report the complaints to civil authorities The Diocese of Fall River, where Porter worked in the 1960s. has since adopted such a policy and last year reached an undisclosed out-of-court settlement with 68 people who said they were Porter’s victims. A spokesman for the diocese declined comment Monday. Prosecutors said Porter molested his victims in his church office, rectories, a changing room beside the altar, a summer camp and a junior high school locker room, and threatened that "God would get them" if they informed on him. Porter left the priesthood in the early 1970s and now lives in Oakdale. Minn. He is married and has four children. Porter was convicted last year in Min nesota of molesting his children’s babysit ter and received a six-month prison sen tence. School of MUSIC & Department of DANCE OCTOBER CONCERTS Clip and Save this Calendar! For more information on any School of Music event, caR 346-5678. To confirm concert times and ticket prices, call the Music Hotline at 346-3764 for a taped message. Fri. GAMELAN SEKAR JAYA 10/8 World Musk Series • pm. Beal Hal Music and dance of Bal with the San Francisco Bay area's renowned Baines* gametan orchestra. Free lecture-demo at 2 pm $10 General Admission; S8 students & seniors Tims. OCTUBAFEST 10/12 Low-brass vaudevie and classics! Guests include Oregon Tuba Assn, and tie Silver Fox Bayou Band. • pm Beal Hal $4 General Admission. $2 students & senior citizens Wed. BETTY BUSCH, Horn; SARAH MILLER, Piano 10/13 Guest Artists • p.m. Beal Hal Music wntten by 20th century women composers. $5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens Thur. SCHUBERT ENSEMBLE OF LONDON 10/14 Chamber Musk Senes I pm. Beal Hal Music by Dvorak. Schubert, and Judith Weir. Free lecture at 7:15 p m.. Room 196. Reserved seats $8, $17, $20, avaiable at the Hult Center (687-5000) Students $5, $9 at the door. Wed. JAZZ ARRANGERS CONCERT 10/20 UO Jazz Ensembles I p.m. Beal Hal. FREEI Fri. SUITES, SONATAS, AND SETTS 10/22 Renaissance and Baroque dance music, with Barbara Baird, Lisa Arkin, and guest dancer Linda Tomko. I pm Beal Hal $5 General Admission. $3 students & senior citizens Mon. JAZZ COMBOS I 10/25 UO Jazz Ensembles S pm Beal Hal. $4 General Admission. $2 students & senior citizens Wed. CHORAL CONCERT 10/27 UO Chamber Choir, University Singers I pm Beall Hal. $4 General Admission, $2 students & senior atzens Thur. SCANDINAVIAN MUSIC RECITAL 10/28 Featuring guest artist Gordon Epperson, celo; also with Barbara GonzAlez-Palmer, Martin Tobias, and Enne Bailey. • pm., Baal HaiL FREEI Fri. HOMECOMING CONCERT 10/29 UO Symphony, University Singers, Oregon Jazz Ensemble, Oregon Wind Ensemble. I p.m., Baal Hall. FREEI Sun. UO BAND EXTRAVAGANZA 10/31 Oregon Wind Ensemble, Oregon Jazz Ensemble, Green Garter Band, and UO Marching Band 2:30 p.m., Hull Center $6 Reserved Seats. Cal 687-5000 for tickets. Wife maims man, pleads insanity WASHINGTON (AP) — The Virginia woman who cut off her husband's penis will try to prove in court she was temporarily insane at the time, her lawyer said. Attorney James l-owe said Lorena Bobbitt was repeatedly beaten and raped by her husband, John Wayne Bobbitt. After he attacked her in their Man assas, Va., apartment on June 23, she was seized by an “irresistible impulse" that caused her to reach for a knife and cut him, Lowe said in an interview in the November issue of Vanity Fair magazine. Mrs. Bobbitt faces trial Nov. 29 on a charge of malicious wounding. Lowe said he will argue that people who have been repeatedly abused or beaten often have an altered mental state. Mrs Bobbitt told police she mutilated her hus band aAer he raped her when he came home drunk from a night out with a friend. Bobbitt has been charged with marital sexual assault and his trial is set for Nov. 8. He denies the charge. Both Bobbitts face up to 20 years in prison if convicted. Mrs. Bobbitt told the magazine she is appalled that some women have hailed her as a feminist heroine for striking back against alleged abuse. "Nobody knows what I went through," she said. "Nobody knows anything about me." She said that after her husband assaulted her, she went to the kitchen to get a glass of water. "it was just so many things together. I was scared.... I was physically hurt.... The first thing I saw was a knife, when I turned. I grabbed that knife and, um, I went to the bedroom, and he was there, I guess, and he kind of. like, moved or some thing. I don't know. And I took the sheets off and I cut him." She said she wishes she had never done it, but can’t say for sure if she feels remorse, or if she feels Bobbitt deserved it. Mrs. Bobbitt said she met her husband at a bar for enlisted men near the Quantico Marine base where he was posted. After they married, their relationship deteriorat ed quickly into physical and sexual abuse, she said. She said she became pregnant once, but Bob bitt told her she would not be a good mother and forced her to get an abortion. lames Sehn. a urologist who helped perform the nine-and-a-half-hour operation to reattach Bob bitt's penis, said. "He has a working organ. It's very possible he’s already had sex, and I wouldn't be surprised." Bobbitt has declined requests for interviews. Missina qirl found asleep in her house l.AKE WORTH. Fla. (AF) — No while rabbits or walruses were blamed, but a five-year-old girl whose disappearance set off a frantic police search turned up sleeping behind a looking glass. Police mobilized 15 patrol cars, a canine unit and a heli copter in a two-hour effort to find Fawn Davis afier her moth er reported her missing Monday. said Palm Beach sheriff’s spokeswoman Teri Barbera. Officers had searched the house twice and were talking to the mother. Denise Weiinann. when Fawn emerged sleepily from her nap. "She apparently was rolled up in a ball behind a mirror in the laundry room," Barbera said Tuesday. Unlike her counterpart in Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, Fawn didn’t blame rabbits, queens or even Tweed ledee. She just wanted to know if she was in trouble, her mother said. “I didn't know whether to hug her or beat her up." Get results! Advertise in the ()D£! re you looking for someone to walk with for exercise and fun? Student Health Center Walking Group First meeting: Thursday, October 7, 4:00p.m. Where: Room 21 at Student Health Center Call Tania at 346-4456 for more info.