4 Page 6 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 4, 1983 Nicaraguan Military commanders from El Saturday at a ranch Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala City. It was also atte announced yesterday they will take Paul Gorman, hea "common action'' and are prepared to Southern Command in "use force" against leftist-ruled The military chief Nicaragua. situation and conditi Although there was no mention of the Central American Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista gover- the extracontinental nment by name, the wording of the joint threat that att communique that was made public democracy and the C yesterday left no doubt of the target. peoples' vocation fc The decision was made at a meeting statement said. foes unite near Guatemala nded by Lt. Gen. ad of the U.S. Panama. s "reviewed the ion prevalent in region, in view of Marxist-Leninist empts against Central American or liberty," the It also said they agreed to revive the Central American Defense Council, a defense organization set up in 1963 at the urging of'the United States to fight subversion in the region allegedly promoted by the Communist regime in Cuba. The Central American Defense Council had previously been inactive since a 1969 border war between Hon- duras and El Salvador. Dance Fever! LEARN TO DANCE-STUDY WITH SOME OF THE FINEST UNIVERSITY DANCE INSTRUCTORS CLASS LESSONS * TAP DANCE-WEDNESDAY-5:30 pm. to 7:00 p.m. Lisa Ryan, Instructor " BEGINNING BALLET-MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY-7:45 p.m. to 9:15, p.m. Christopher Flynn, Instructor * INTERMEDIATE/ADVANCED BALLET-MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY- 7:45 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. Christopher Flynn, Instructor * JAZZ DANCE-TUESDAY AND THURSDAY-6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Charles Gullo, Instructor " MODERN DANCE-TUESDAY AND THURSDAY-6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. WHERE? UNIVERSITY DANCE BUILDING (Central Campus Rec. Bldg.) WHEN? 10 WEEKS, BEGINNING WEEK OF OCTOBER 10th COST? $6.00 a class lesson, plus $5.00 initial reg. fee REGISTER? AT THE DANCE BUILDING-9 a.m. to 4 p.m. OCTOBER 3 to 7 MORE INFORMATION! CALL 763-5460 or 764-6118 A Part of P.A.C.E., School of Music Preparatory and Community Enrichment Program Waters from the raging San Francisco River rush through the copper mining town of Clifton, Arizona, Sunday. The southeastern Arizona community of 4,200 was ripped in half and much of it was swept away. Yesterday, the town was without electricity, water or phone service except for a microwave line from a sheriff's office. Worst disaster in memory leaves 11 dead in Arizona 4 Think Ru Think EfS_ $9.95... ir's a fact. gWhW Maude's, long noted for many delectable dishes and her BBQ nibs... now offers her Barbecue Rib specialty at substantial savings. Enjoy Ann Arbor's #1 Ribs with choice of side, rolls and butter for only $9.95. Maude's... a place for ribs From AP and UPI TUCSON, Ariz. - Heavy rain fell again yesterday in normally arid southeastern Arizona, adding to devastating floodingsthat left 11 people dead or missing as officials sought federal help for victims of the state's worst natural disaster in memory. "The state has not seen a disaster like this before," said John Paulsen, spokesman for the state Division of Emergency Services. "But fortunately, at this point, the river systems have crested." THE NATIONAL Weather Service forecasted scatteredshowers through today in southeastern Arizona, but said no heavy rains were anticipated. The weekend floods left thousands of people homeless or stranded and destruction estimated in the millions of dollars. Normally dry rivers meandering through the desert were swollen to record levels by up to 6 inches of rain in southeastern Arizona, surged over their banks and washed away buildings and bridges. TUCSON, the nearby cotton farming town of Marana, and the mining com- munity of Clifton near New Mexico were the hardest hit by three days of heavy rains. Marana Mayor Bill Schisler said his town was virtually deserted but that residents had accepted the evacuation ''like little troopers." "Twenty-five percent of Marana is under water and in another 25 percent water is up to the doors," the mayor said. "THE ONLY THING we could salvage was our kids," said Fred Ramone, 24, who left his flooded home in Rillito for nearby Marana, then had to be evacuated again from Marana to Tucson. "My family got out - that's the main thing," he said, adding that he lost his home, car and farm animals to the floods. In Marana, the water spread out in a 3-mile swath, filling a 100-foot-wide riverbed that usually stands dry, drowning cotton and sorghum fields and flooding over a thousand homes. Ap- proximately 2,000 residents were evacuated, and power was expected to be out for several days, authorities said. An overflowing wash forced officials to evacuate portions of the Arizona Training Center at Coolidge, which houses 300 mentally retarded people. Jerry Dandoy, director of developmen- tal disabilities for the state, said there was no extensive damage and a total evacuation was not expected. In Clifton, about 100 miles northeast of Tucson on the San Francisco River, more than half the town had been swept away, leaving the 4,200 residents without electricity, water or phone ser- vice. In Cochise County, an earthen dam ruptured Sunday, creating a shallow lake between one-half and' 2 /-miles wide and approximately 30 miles long, said Lt. Larry Dever of the sheriff's of- fice. Two rescue workers were killed Sun- day morning when their Department of Public Safety helicopter crashed near Marana, officials said. The chopper was rushing to Catalina City, where a pregnant woman could not be taken to Tucson by ambulance because of flooding. A 25-year-old Tucson man was presumed drowned after his truc stalled and was swept down Tangu Verde Wash east of Tucson on Saturday night and a 37-year-old Apache Jun- ction man was missing after being swept away Sunday while standing along the banks of the Santa Cruz River near Casa Grande. In addition, two Navy crewmeri died Friday when their plane crashed in Mohave County, four people were swept off the roof of a pickup truck near Ash Fork in northern Arizona, and a woman was killed in a Phoenix automobil collision that officials attributed to storms. in the heart of downtown Ann Arbor Special good thru October 31. 314 S. Fourth Avenue Ann Arbor 662-8485 ' """f .. ''. ic: I"*.* I \ "{ I N 'f " T 1 ' 14 .. ., .r all w' I y: r t,; _ .. .. M L. .: . r" s r" "," .t:? . y, ,,R r j S ' ' ' '. t " ..t; .. e .'? ., "I 4 mThe D ailg T all Come Home To The Daily This Fall 4 Subscribe to Tle Michigan Daily to Weeen 4 E ; PLUS: Our Newest Feature WEEKEND Magazine See your Jostens' representative for a complete selection of rings and details of Jostens' Creative Fnancing Plans. 1I ill 9& - I