The Michigan Daily- Thursday, September 15, 1988 - Page 3 Hurricane hits Yucatan Peninsula Y i d t . Y t d S t y { ^ t f 4 ; t i s i i :: . 4 \ { } 4j 9 a~ DAVID LUBUNER/Daily Preacher Mike is back LSA junior Chris Curran (left) argues fundamental religous philosophy with Diag mainstay Preacher Mike yesterday. Hispanic speaker urges minorities to take lead CANCUN, MEXICO (AP) - Hurricane Gilbert, one of the most destructive storms ever, slammed into the Yucatan Peninsula yesterday, shattering storm windows, drenching the land and cutting off the Caribbean resorts of Cancun and Cozumel. Thousands fled from the storm, which has killed at least 14 people elsewhere. The Jamaican Embassy in Washington said the storm left 500,000 people homeless in that island nation. The hurricane's 160 mph winds ripped over Cozumel island earlier yesterday. Ham radio operators in the area said Gilbert knocked down a radio and television communications tower, uprooted trees and blew the roofs off buildings. The winds leveled slum areas in Cancun on the Mexican mainland, where many people live in cardboard shacks, the operators said. In Quintana Roo state, huge waves lashed at Caribbean resort beaches, and trees were downed by the punishing winds, Mexican officials said. "The sound of the wind outside is horrible," said receptionist Pablo Torres at the Hotel Carrillos in Cancun in a telephone interview as the storm approached. "You couldn't leave even if you wanted to." There were no immediate reports of casualties in Mexico. The National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables, Fla., said a hurricane watch was in effect along the Texas coast from Brownsville to Port Arthur and along the coast of northeast Mexico from Tampico north. "Residents in these areas should be ready for quick action should warnings be required" yesterday, the center said in a statement. At 6 p.m. EDT Gilbert was centered near latitude 21.3 north, longitude 88.8 west and approaching the north coast of Yucatan, about 60 miles east-northeast of the provincial capital, Merida, the statement said. The storm was about 600 miles southeast of Brownsville. Gilbert's winds had decreased to 140 mph as it moved over land, but the center said wind speed was expected to rise once thestorm moved back over the warm Gulf of Mexico waters. It said the hurricane Cor Wos as of Wedxneday. 5&~m. 450 Location: 20.2 N., 86.0 W. Moving 15 mph, west northwest 175 mph maximum winds -400 35° Atlantic Ocean Yucatan Penisula 34* T sDOMINICAN REP PUERTO RICO 20* Sunday ®o' Satuda ©o " 15' 850 Wo 750 70* 650 600 AP Hurricane Gilbert, complete with 175 mph winds, barrelled across the Gulf of Mexico yesterday and headed toward the Yucatan Peninsula. was moving west-northwest at 15 mph. Gilbert is a Category 5 storm, the strongest and deadliest type of hurricane. Such storms have maximum sustained winds greater than 155 mph and can cause catastrophic damage. Only two Category 5 hurricanes have hit the United States - a 1935 storm that killed 408 people in Florida, and Hurricane Camille, which devastated the Mississippi coast in 1969 and killed 256 people. Oil companies evacuated thousands of workers from rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, reports from New Orleans said. Residents along the gulf coast of Texas, 560 miles to the north, stockpiled food and supplies and prepared to evacuate. The government oil monopoly Pemex said it evacuated 5,000 workers from platforms in the Campeche Sound on the gulf side of the Yucatan Peninsula and closed down all wells in the sound. The peninsula ports of Campeche, Celestum, Progreso, Sinzal, Ucaltepen, Tel-Chac, Cancun, Puerto Morelos, and Ciudad del Carmen were closed, the government news agency Notimex said. Airports in Cancun, Cozumel and Chetumal were also closed, it said. BY ANNA SENKEVITCH AND NOELLE SHADWICK Don't surrender any goals. Because if you want to do something, if you have intense enough a desire, then you can achieve it. Speaking yesterday on the third day of Hispanic Heritage Week, Dr. Alicia Cuaron, president of Cuaron and Gomez Inc., urged women and ninorities to aim for leadership positions, and to persevere by 1ducating and training themselves and naintaining a strong sense of ethnic and gender pride. She addressed University students, staff, and faculty at the Kuenzel Room of the Michigan Union and at Stockwell residence hall. "GENERALLY, people who want to be leaders can become leaders.... Leadership is learned," Cuaron said during her evening lecture held at Stockwell. Cuaron, a first-generation Mexican-American who grew up one of six children on the border of El Paso, Texas, talked frankly about her "non-traditional" career pursuits - in community and national business and government - which have pioneered opportunities for other minorities and women. After teaching at elementary and college levels for 23 years and serving on boards to the Red Cross, the United Way, and in the state of Colorado Supreme Court nominating 'Generally, people who want to be leaders can become leaders.... Lead- ership is learned,' -Dr.Alicia Cuaron, Hispanic Heritage Week Speaker committee, Cuaron decided to found her own company. "If you want to get somewhere, you have to do it yourself," she said. With only $3,000 to start, she has made her Colorado-based company into a thriving business with a $5 million income each year. In her afternoon lecture, she gave results of a 17-month Department of Labor study on the nature of the American work force in the 21st century. ACCORDING the the report, 60 percent of all women will be working within 12 years - with an 85 percent increase in the number of Hispanic women and a 16 percent increase of Black women. The study indicates a move from a manufacturing-based U.S. economy to one dependent on service industries, requiring workers with higher skills in math and science. Women and minorities, who will make up the workforce, will have to persevere through more education, getting their masters and doctorate degrees, she said. EMPLOYERS will have to make accommodations to this new workforce by offering day care facilities, and more flexible work hours. The welfare system will also have to be renovated, she said. Though she stressed the importance of academics in career success, Cuaron explained that the keys to obtaining power are to have desire for a particular goal, to be confident, and to network. "You have to have passion, get all that energy and focus it on what you want to do," she said. "There's nothing wrong with wanting money because its how you use it not who has it." She suggested developing a set of objectives as means of more effectively achieving a goal. "Develop good time management and have faith in yourself. Look at your innate talents, and examine your strengths. You've got to make a difference," Cuaron said. Crowds shoot for lottery BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Four blocks from the Indiana state line, a crowd formed yesterday at the Way-Low Foods store in Niles as would-be millionaires forked over money for a shot at a $24 million Michigan Super Lotto jackpot. Store owner Bob Hettinghouse said most of the ticket buyers were from out of state. CLASSIFIED ADS! Call 764-0557 How ,; f1it'to stan out Amacrow. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today 0 Speakers Black Student Welcome - Susan Taylor, editor in chief of Essence magazine will speak at 7 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheatre. Sponsored by the Black Student Union. Reception following. English Colloquium on Critical Theory - Eric Rabkin will speak on: "Fantastic Portraits of Fantastic Portraits: Verbal Transformations of Visual Art." Rackham, West Conference Room. 8 p.m. Meetings Palestine Solidarity Committee - Kick-off meeting. Michigan Union, room 4203 at 8 p.m. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation - Mass Meeting for the Mitzvah Proejct. Michigan Union Pond Room, 6:30 p.m. Business Intern Program - Mass meeting and information session. Rackham Auditorium at 6 n m. meeting for campus campaigns for Michael Dukakis and Lana Pollack. State Attorney General Frank Kelley will speak. Hutchins Hall, room 100. 7 p.m. Union of Students for Israel - Mass meeting. Michigan Union, room 2209. 7:30 p.m. The A'merican Express! Card gets an outstanding welcome virtually anywhere you shop, whether it's for a leather jacket or a leather-bound classic. Whether you're bound for a bookstore or a beach in Bermuda. So during college and after, it's the perfect way to pay for just about everything you'll want. How to get the Card now. College is the first sign of success. And because we believe in your potential, we've made it easier to get the American Express Card right now. Whether you're a freshman, senior or grad student, look into our new automatic approval offers. For details, pick up an application on campus. Or call 1-800-THE-CARD and ask for a student application. The American Express Card. Don't Leave School Without Its Greeks for meeting. Sigma p.m. Peace - Mass Nu, 700 Oxford. 7 I Society of Women Engineers - Kick-off meeting. EECS, room 1200. 6:30 p.m. Furthermore Memorial Service for Anatomical Donors - Chaplains of Pastoral Care Services at the University Hospitals will hold a memorial service for the families and friends of persons whose bodies were donated to medical science. Washtenong Memorial Park, 3771 Whitmore Lake Road. 2 p.m. Born Yesterday - Comedy presented by the Ann Arbor Civic 11 X41,44,. .