The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 8, 1982-PageJ =, Mudslide rescue efforts continue in California SANTA CRUZ, Calif (AP) - Critical water shortages and thick mud thwar- ted rescue workers yesterday as they struggled to unearth landslide victims and repair destruction from a storm that killed 23 people and caused an estimated $200 million damage. President Reagan declared five nor- thern California counties - Contra Costa, Marin, San Mateo, Santa Cruz and Sonoma - major disaster areas, making them eligible for help from federal agencies. IN BEN LOMOND, 10 miles to the north, efforts continued to locate up to 20 people believed killed when their homes were buried in a massive mud- slide. Officials of the state Office of Emergency Services said the storm and mudslides tht followed destroyed 100 homes in Santa Cruz County, 70 miles south of San Francisco, damaged 300 others and displaced 1.800 residents. County Administrator George Newell estimated property damage at $100 million. More than half the county's 190,000 residents were asked to conserve water or were without it. Thirty-six roads were closed or limited to emergency use. California 17, the main route into the countyw as closed to non-residents. THE STORM severed a 24-inch water main that supplied this city's reservoir. It could take a week to repair the damage, Newell said. "We don't want people coming here rubbernecking and sightseeing," said Newell, who noted sightseers were con- suming precious water. "People will be allowed in on Highway 17 if they can prove they live in the county." Newell said all industry and restaurants in Santa Cruz were closed to help conserve water and that emergency suplies of water for firefighting were being hauled in from Campbell and San Jose. I p rDaily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS A freshly cut ribbon hangs inside the doorway.of the University's new Emergency Services section of the Ambulatory Care unit. The new facility, officially dedicated yesterday by President Harold Shapiro, is one of the more advanced emergency units in the country, hospital officials said. xpert wiess teee In A tlai ATLANTA (AP) - The bodies of two young blacks were most likely dumped into the Chattahoochee River from the bridge where Wayne Williams was first spotted by police, an expert witness testified yesterday at Williams' murder trial. Williams, 23, is accused of killing 27- year-old Nathaniel Cater and 21-year- old Jimmy Ray Payne, whose bodies were found about a month apart in the same general area of the river north- west of Atlanta. CATER AND Payne were two of the 28 young blacks killed in a 22-month string of slayings that haunted this Southern capital. No arrests have been made in the 26 other deaths. sing topographical maps, aerial vta s la Ityings case photographs and a 10-foot-long scale debris" in the river there and because it model of the bridge, water expert Ben- would be difficult for someone to shove jamin Kittle described for the jury what a body out into the current from the would happen to a body dropped into bank. the river. Williams, a black free-lance Kittle, a U.S. Army Corps of cameraman and self-styled talent Engineers hydrologist, said his two scout, first came to police attention studies of the river's flow indicated that when he was stopped at the Jackson a body found where Pyane's and Parkway Bridge May 22, 1981, two days Cater's were discovered could have before Cater's body was found down- been dumped into the river from one of stream. Payne's body had been found five locations, in the same area April 27. HE SAID HE narrowed the Kittle had alleged earlier that Cater's possibilities to two - the James body was dropped from the bridge, but Jackson Parkway. Bridge and the Kittle's testimony was ' the first in- riverbank just upstream from where dication that they believe Payne's body Payne's body was found. may have been dumped from the same Kittle said he decided the riverbank location. location was unlikely "because of the Researcher says criminal behavior Y 0 P b .a P S h S c ii linked to gene make-up WASHINGTON (AP) - problems would be eliminated if the Measurements of brain .waves and treatment programs were voluntary. other physical characteristics can Sales said he was not familiar with predict whether children are likely to Mednick's latest work, but said he has become habitual criminals years later, been impressed with his earlier resear- a psychologist said yesterday. ch in Copenhagen, where the studies Sarnoff Mednick, professor of concerning the future behavior of psychology at the University of children are centered. The U.S. Southern California, said his research National Institute of Mental Health has has shown that some people have a helped finance the programs. genetic predisposition to commit "Obviously the social implications crimes. are significant and troubling, but scien- THE WORK IS controversial because tifically it appeared to me to be ex- it raises the question of what should be cellent research," he said. done with individuals who are identified as likely threats to society. Charles Sims, staff counsel with the American Civil Liberties Union in New York, said ida telephone interview that any move to require these people to un- dergo treatment would be uncon- stitutional. ;American law, he said, is based on conduct, rather than any assessment by the state as to the prospect of future behavior. BRUCE SALES, a lawyer and psychologist at the University of Arizona, said the constitutional AT A MEETING of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Mednick described several studies underway in Copenhagen. In a continuing study, Mednick has measured brain waves, heart rates, and electrical properties of the skin in 9,000 children, and has been watching the children as they grow. Those three measurements can predict criminal behavior as much as 10 years in advance, he said. He did not provide specific figures concerning the accuracy of those predictions. I-__ __ _ _ E 1 " r L v I ridaa 1981! ii 'is -'_"f f I w LIVE ENTERTAINMENT featuring DICK SIEGEL III