r' Page 2-The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 1, 1986 Floods cause damage in IN BRIEF-, COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS I More storms swamp state Il and (AP) - Floods kept hundreds of people away from their homes yesterday in Illinois and Oklahoma, where damage estimates from a spate of heavy storms rose above $60 million. In Montana, the Milk River remained well out of its banks for a fifth day along a stretch of nearly 100 miles, and was rising downstream, and water from a creek engorged to a mile wide surrounded the small town of Saco. HIGH WATER, winds, tornadoes and lightning also contributed to damage in areas from Kansas to Michigan, and forecasters said more rain was on the way. "We've got a lot of flood water. But otherwise, we're doing pretty good," said Howard Watson, director of the Kingfisher City-County Civil Defense in Oklahoma, which oversaw the evacuation of 300 residents. One person was feared drowned in Illinois, and the Montana flooding had killed one person and hundreds of head of livestock. THE MISSISSIPPI River was above flood stage along the Wisconsin border, and was high enough near Dubuque, Iowa, that the riverboat Delta Queen had to lower- its smokestacks to get under a highway bridge. "We're stuck in a weather pattern that just doesn't seem to Okia. want to go away. It's drawing a lot of Gulf moisture right over us," said National Weather Service meteorologist John Hughes in Michigan, where at least nine rivers were out of their banks Tuesday. A number of Michigan cities and counties reported their wettest Septembers on record. Damage was estimated at $30 million in northern Illinois, where 9 to11 inches of rain has fallen on Lake and McHenry counties since September 22, more than three times normal for the entire month. IN HARDEST hit Gurnee, a suburb north of Chicago, water was reported 3 to 4 feet deep and the Des Plaines River was about 4 1/2 feet above flood stage, said weather service forecaster Jim Lebda. The Illinois flooding forced authorities to close some schools and evacuate 170 people from a private psychiatric hospital in Des Plaines, and snarled traffic at O'Hare International Airport and throughout the Chicago area. In Oklahoma, in addition to the evacuations at Kingfisher, up to 100 people were evacuated during the night at Guthrie, north of Oklahoma City, said Civil Defense Director Jim Dixon. Officials said high water from Cottonwood Creek split the town in two, and getting from one side to the other meant a 40-mile detour. The town's schools were closed Tuesday. Associated Press Shawna Fulks wades through a flooded street near Kingfisher, Oklahoma, carrying a basket of clothes. More than seven inches of rain has caused flooding in the area, forcing many residents to evacuate their homes. Women's diet Special diets help women fight disease NEW YORK (AP) - Women can help fight obesity, osteo- porosis, cancer and menstrual difficulties with new diet guidelines that emphasize iron, Health Fitness calcium and low-fat foods and avoidance of tobacco, the American Dietetic Association said yesterday. . The plan distills recom- mendations to fight particular diseases in an attempt to ease "the confusion caused by the barrage of single diet-disease recom- mendations cast upon the public in recent years," said Anita Owen, president of the" association. IT INCLUDES calcium and exercise for osteoporosis, iron to compensate for menstrual flows, and fat restrictions and a ban on smoking to fight cancer. Experts at the association's news conference cautioned that evidence linking diet to prevention of cancer and osteoporosis is weak or indirect, and that diet is only one of many factors leading to some diseases. The news conference was financed by the National Dairy Board. THE GUIDELINES, which generally resemble recom- mendations from other groups for fighting particular diseases, include: -Eat a daily variety of three to four servings of low-fat dairy foods, two servings of low,-fat meat or meat alternates, four servings of vegetables and fruits, and four servings of whole grain breads and cereals. -Limit total fat to no more than one third of daily calories, and select a variety of saturated, polyunsaturated and mono- unsaturated fats. Choose low-fat meat and milk. -Eat at least half of daily calories from carbohydrates, especially complex carbohydrates like those in beans, peas, pasta, vegetables, nuts and seeds. -Eat a daily variety of fiber- rich foods, such as fresh fruits with skin, vegetables, whole grains and legumes. -Include three. or four daily. servings of calcium-rich foods, such as low-fat milk, yogurt and cheese, broccoli, sardines or canned salmon with bones, and collard greens. -Include plenty of iron-rich foods daily, such as lean meat, liver, prunes, pinto and kidney beans, spinach, leafy green vegetables, and enriched and whole-grain breads and cereals. Women should maintain a "healthy body weight," and dieters -should generally eat no less than 10 calories per pound of body weight, the guidelines say. Relentless thunderstorms continued to dump rain yesterday on flood-weary Michigan, pushing at least nine swollen streams over their banks, officials said. Meanwhile, at least five families in Mattawan in southwest;. Michigan were homeless yesterday after high winds, and possibly a tornado, knocked over their mobile homes Monday night, Mattawan police Chief Judy Alban said. The rains that started Sept. 10 have deluged Michigan almost every day for three weeks, causing more than $323 million damage in 22 central Lower Peninsula counties. "It's a mouth dropper," said Vassar city spokesperson, Marcia' Warner about the new flooding. "Nobody can really fathom it. If they really thought about it, it would be truly depressing. But right now it's just unbelievable." Yesterday, water was starting to creep over several city streets that were submerged during earlier flooding this month, Warner said. Meanwhile, almost every weather service reporting station in the state has reported record rainfall amounts for September. U. S. trade deficit p1u es WASHINGTON - The U.S. trade de icit shran dramatically to $13.3 billion in August after hitting a record high the month before, the government said yesterday. Analysts said the 26.2 percent improvement may be signaling that the worst of the problems are over. But in less optimistic news, the government reported that its chief economic forecasting gauge fell for the third time in the past four months and new-home sales suffered a fifth consecutive decline. The various cross-currents are pointing to an economy that remains mired in in lackluster growth with few signs of vigor, analysts contended. While the trade improvement was seen as encouraging, economists cautioned it was not signaling that exports and imports were headed back into balance anytime soon. Analysts predicted the deficit for this year will top $170 billion, far ahead of last year's $148.5 billion record. Senate approves drug bill WASHINGTON -The Senate yesterday voted 97-2 to approve a sweeping election-year bill to combat illegal drugs, including a beefed-up enforcement program that would make greater use of the- military. The Senate bill, and a House-passed measure passed Sept. 11; reflect Congress' response to increasing voter concern about drugs. The two bills differ in specific provisions, but are similar in thrust, proposing a broad approach that would pour money int' enforcement, education, rehabilitation and crop eradication, and would withhold aid from recalcitrant producer countries. The final form of a drug bill this year is likely to be resolved in a House-Senate conference. House Speaker Thomas O'Neill (D-Mass) called the Senate bill "better than nothing" and said the House might accept it to "get a foot' in the door." The Senate bill does not include a death penalty provision. The - House bill would allow capital punishment for individuals involved in a continuing criminal enterprise, who intentionally caused the death of another individual. Fire-damaged mansion may hold tomb of religious leader BENTON HARBOR, Mich.-A historic mansion damaged severely by fire sparked by lightning from Michigan's recent thunderstorms may contain the tomb of the controversial founder of the House of David religious colony, officials said. The fire burned through the roof and destroyed most of the second: floor of the ornate, 58 year-old Diamond House on Monday, Benton Township Fire Chief Bruce Garrett said. No one was injured in the blaze, but valuable photograph.s, books and other literature on the history of the colony, founded in Benton Harbor in 1903, were destroyed, Garrett said. "It's hard to estimate a cost," Garrett said. "It's almost priceless. It's filled with beautiful antiques." The founder of the once-thriving religious colony, Benjamin, "King Ben" Purnell, was buried at the 25-room Diamond House, according to files at the Herald-Palladium, Benton Harbor's local newspaper. House passes spending bill WASHINGTON-The House approved yesterday an emergency spending bill designed to keep the government operating while Congress and the president wrestle with long term spending' legislation. The eight-day speding measure was approved 315-101 and sent' to the Senate as the government was preparing to shut down in case Congress failed to authorize spending for fiscal year 1987, which begins today. The Office of Management and Budget notified federal agencie yesterday that workers would report to their jobs today, but be sent'. home if a spending bill was not imminent by noontime, said OMB spokesman Ed Dale. The administration would accept u simple extension of government spending authority, as long as it was not loaded up with amendments opposed by the president, Dale said. Vol. XCVII =--No.20 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Editor in Chief....................ERIC MATTSON Associate Sports Managing Editor.......RACHEL GOTTLIEB Editors .................DAVE ARETHA, News EditorA..........JERRY MARKON MARK BOROWSKY C it RoEHRSTYMRIDEL RICKKAPLAN r'eatures Editor..............AMY MINDELL ADAM MARTIN NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, PHIL NUSSEL Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Nancy SPORTS STAFF: Paul Dodd, Liam Flaherty, Braiman, Marc Carrel, Harish Chand, Dov Jon Hartmann, Darren Jasey, Julie Langer, Cohen, Tim Daly, Rob Earle, Ellen Christian Martin, Eric Maxson, Greg Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Lisa Green, McDonald, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Jerry' Stephen Gregory, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Muth, Adam Ochlis, Lisa Poutans, Jeff Rush,. Levy, Michael Lustig, Kery Murakami, Peter Adam Schefter, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Oerner, Eugene Pak, Martha. Sevetson, Wendy Douglas Volan. Sharp, Susanne Skubik, Naomi Wax. Business Manager.......MASON FRANKLIN Opinion Page Editor...............KAREN KLEIN Sales Manager..........DIANE BLOOM Associate Opinion Page Finance Manager.....REBECCA LAWRENCE Editor...............................HENRY PARK Classified Manager......GAYLA BROCKMAN OPINION PAGE STAFF:. Rosemary .Ass't Sales Manager........DEBRA LEDERER Chinnock, Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Ass't Classified Manager..GAYLE SHAPIRO Mooney, Caleb Southworth. DISPLAY SALES: Barb Calderoni, Irit-, Arts Editor......................NOELLE BROWER Elrand, Lisa Gnas, Melissa Hambrick, Alan' Associate Arts Editor.....REBECCA CHUNG Heyman, Julie Kromholz, Anne Kubek,' Music.................................BETH FERTIG Wendy Lewis, Jason Liss, Laura Martin, Scott - Film.................................KURT SERBUS Metcalf. Renae Morrissey, Carolyn Rands; a Virus may cause form of skin cancer NEW ORLEANS (AP)-A common virus may be responsible for the emergence of a once-rare form of skin cancer called Kaposi's sarcoma that frequently afflicts homosexual victims of AIDS, according to a study released yesterday. The germ, known as cytomegalovirus, or CMV, is common among all adults, but especially so among male homosexuals, who may be repeatedly infected with the virus. DR. W. LAWRENCE Drew of Mount Zion Hospital in San Francisco presented evidence that he said supports his contention that CMV joins forces with the AIDS virus to cause Kaposi's sarcoma. The discovery of a rash of Kaposi's sarcoma cases among young homosexual men five years ago was one of the first clues that the AIDS epidemic was beginning. Until then, the rare cancer has been largely confined to elderly men in Africa. In 1981, the cancer was the initial indication of AIDS in46 percent of homosexual patients but in only four percent of intravenous drug abusers, the other major group at high risk of the disease when they share infected needles. THERE WAS ALSO significant difference in their rate of CMV infection. Ninety- four percent of homosexuals have been exposed to the virus, compared with 64 percent of intravenous drug abusers. "There was a real clue there to the cause of Kaposi's sarcoma," said Drew. HEALTH & FITNESS ..IN ENGINEERING Reflections on Beauty Achieving Beauty Through Education ' t * Special Image and Health programs available for your group or organization. " Xia Fashion collec- tions for active and professional women. " Evening presentation available for sororities and other groups interested. * color analysis. " therapeutic European facials and skin care clinic. " wardrobe building. 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