Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 23, 1990 Hugo survivors continue struggle to repair damage in S. Carolina LANE, S.C. (AP) - The forgotten victims of Hurricane Hugo are still struggling to survive in roofless trailers along gravel back roads in coastal Williamsburg County, or in modest cinderblock homes on the outskirts of tobacco towns. Life for hundreds - some say thousands - of South Carolina's rural poor is not much better than the day after the killer hurricane struck.' The storm, which crashed ashore last Sept. 21 at Charleston, claimed 29 lives and caused an estimated $5.9 billion damage when it cut a swath hundreds of miles wide through the state. After Hugo, 24 of the state's 46 counties were declared federal disaster areas. While relief immediately flowed to coastal areas, counties dozens of miles inland - many of them rural and populated by poor blacks - were ignored in some cases. Four months after the hurricane, there are few offers to help, even though workers and building supplies are still needed, said Edna Hampton, the Hugo outreach coordinator for Williamsburg County. Officials estimate as many as 4,000 structures were destroyed or heavily damaged in that county, one of the poorest in the state. "Before the storm came, some of the homes were half liveable," she said. "Now they're not liveable. People are a little bit discouraged. We feel forgotten in a sense." She has been trying to locate people who may not have applied for disaster assistance yet. Illiteracy, lack of communication and transportation and suspicion of government have kept many rural residents from seeking aid, she said. In her small cinderblock house on the outskirts of Kingstree, Audrey Epps fights back tears as she remembers how the storm smashed the windows and tore the roof off her home. Ms. Epps and her 78-year-old invalid mother, Zeal, had to seek shelter in the only room of the five- room house that didn't leak. She lost clothing and personal effects. Ms. Epps lost her job because the pharmaceutical company where she worked third shift was shut down by storm damage. She can't find another third-shift job and can't afford to pay someone to look after her mother during the day. When she worked nights, a relative stayed with her mother. Nor does she have the funds to adequately repair and refurnish her home. She received $2,750 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, but supplies to fix the roof alone came to $1,800. The ceilings and walls are waterlogged and still need repair. Plastic sheeting covers broken windows, keeping in heat from a wood-burning stove. "I didn't want a beautiful home. I only wanted a house I could live in," Ms. Epps said recently. Recovery from the storm won't be measured by how well the state's beaches are restored or how many tourists return, but by how all of the state's people recover, says J.T. McLawhorn Jr., president of the Columbia Urban League. LaRouche's mail fraud and conspiracy convictions are upheld in federal court I RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - The tax and mail fraud conspiracy convic- tions of political extremist Lyndon LaRouche were upheld yesterday by a federal appeals court. In a unanimous ruling, the ap- peals panel rejected claims of proce- dural flaws in the trial of LaRouche, who ran for president in 1980 and 1984 and has endorsed theories of high-level conspiracy against him by world leaders. LaRouche, through a spokesperson, proclaimed his inno- cence and that of his associates and said the case would be appealed fur- ther. Former Attorney General Ramsey Clark, chief attorney for LaRouche's appeal, argued that U.S. District Judge Albert Bryan of Alexandria al- lowed only 34 days from arraign- ment to trial and failed to adequately question jurors on how much they knew about the defendant. But the appeals panel found no abuse of discretion in Bryan's refusal to delay the trial. "When Judge Bryan denied the de- fendants' motion for a continuance, he possessed a highly relevant piece of information: the defense waited 18 days to move for a continuance," the panel said. "Defense counsel's pro- longed silence leads to the reasonable inference that 34 days was not a clearly insufficient period of time be- tween arraignment and trial." LaRouche was convicted in De- cember 1988 on 11 counts of mail fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and one count of conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison. "This is a pure and simple trav- esty of justice," LaRouche said through a spokesperson. "This trav- esty will be overturned some way eventually. We will continue to fight it. I am innocent and my co-de- fendants are innocent of any of the criminal charges brought against us." LaRouche said the courts have decided that "innocence and justice are irrelevant and that the expediency of serving the demands of an out-of- control Justice Department are more important." MSA Continued from page 1 "My obligation is to pursue ev-£ ery possible avenue to make sure those students (who received seats which were invalidated) get those seats," Johnson said. "As much as any other student, I want the student government to run on its own," he added. "But the stu- dent government process failed here." Given that failure, Johnson said he had "no qualms at all about going to a higher authority." As of yesterday, Duderstadt had not informed -the office of student services as to what role it might play in the investigation, Henry Johnson said. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Barry seeks rehabilitation WASHINGTON - Mayor Marion Barry, facing a cocaine possession charge, flew to Florida for treatment yesterday while political speculation intensified back home concerning arpossible City Hall campaign by Jesse Jackson. Barry's spokesperson, Lurma Rackley, said the mayor had checked into a center in West Palm Beach, Fla., to be treated for alcoholism. She had said the day before that details about his health would be kept private but "the most serious problem is alcoholism." With Barry gone from City Hall for at least 30 days, talk and maneu- vering in connection with the November election picked up speed. A Jackson associate said of the civil rights leader who moved to Wash- ington last year, "I know he's getting a lot of pressure to run. I don't know if he's going to." Speaking only on condition of anonymity, the source said "a lot of the pressure is coming from Marion's people." Szoka accepts Vatican post DETROIT - Cardinal Edmund Szoka, known for his cost-cutting and fund-raising success as archbishop in the nation's fifth-largest diocese, yesterday accepted a papal appointment to bring his financial know-how to the Vatican. A Vatican announcement said Szoka will head the Prefecture for Eco- nomic Affairs of the Holy See, which draws up the Vatican's budget. Szoka announced his acceptance of the position in a news conference at Sacred Heart Seminary. Pope John Paul bI and Szoka discussed the Vatican post in December during one of the Archbishop's visits to Rome. The prelate has been serving on a special commission studying ways to overcome the Vatican's chronic budget deficit. Sometime in June, Szoka will succeed Cardinal Giuseppe Caprio resigned the post for reasons of age. Until then, Szoka said, he will continue his duties in the 1.5 million member archdiocese and offer advice in choosing his successor. Mich. court orders release of adoption papers in Dodge case LANSING- A Dearborn woman won a key legal round yesterday in her fight to prove she is a long unknown daughter of wealthy automobile pioneer John Dodge. The Michigan Court of Appeals ordered Wayne County Probate Court to release the adoption records of Frances Mealbach who claims to be a Dodge descendent. Mealbach, in a haunting story that spurred a book and an episode on NBC-TV's "Unsolved Mysteries" television show, learned upon her fa- ther's death that she was an adopted child. Mealbach filed her petition for "determination of heirs" in 1984, say- ing she Siamese twin of Dodge's daughter, Frances Dodge. Dodge, an early and successful automobile manufacturer, left a com- pany worth about $52 million. The carefully drafted will set up a trust for his children, with the trust money to be divided among the heirs. Israeli police free Husseini JERUSALEM - Faisal Husseini, a leading Palestinian activist and potential peace negotiator with Israel, was freed from jail yesterday. The United States had called his detention an obstacle to Middle East diplomacy. Husseini was freed after three days of questioningeabout suspicions that he belonged to a "hostile organization" and gave other Palestinians $450 to buy military uniforms. Husseini lives in Arab east Jerusalem, which Israel has annexed. No charges were filed, but police said the investigation would continue. At a news conference in east Jerusalem later, Husseini said he was arrested because Israel did not want him in a Palestinian delegation expected to hold preliminary peace talks with Israeli officials in Cairo. Shamir has said he does not want Palestinians from east Jerusalem included because that would undermine Israel's claim to the city. EXTRAS George cuts Nancy's rug WASHINGTON - President Bush has pulled the rug on Nancy Rea- gan, replacing a $49,625 floor covering that she had installed in the Oval Office just 18 months ago. "It was not terribly attractive. The president (Bush) did not like it," said Larry Hokanson, president of the Houston company that made a $28,550 rug to replace the one purchased for Mrs. Reagan. The redecorating included new-draperies with a multiple-swag valance, a Chinese-style mahogany coffee table, reupholstered high-back armchairs for in front of the fireplace and a pair of new, three-cushion sofas. The fabrics are blue, gold and ivory. "Most presidents put their own imprimatur on their office," Alixe Glen, White House deputy press secretary, said yesterday. White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said Bush was "pleased with his new decorations." The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $28.00 in-town and $39 out-of-town, for fall only $18.00 in-town and $22.00 out-of-town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. PHONE NUMBERS: News (313) 764-0552, Opinion 747-2814, Arts 763-0379, Sports 747-3336, Cir- culation 764-0558, Classified advertising 764-0557, Display advertising 764-0554, Billing 764-0550 E XTONAL STAFF: BOMB Continued from page 1 looked and had small conversations and then they just walked past," said Burton. Beginning with the call the Ge- ology department placed to the po- lice, the investigation took 50 min- utes, Tieman said. He said a detec- tive in the department plans to fur- ther investigate the case and the un- known caller. ASSAULT Continued from page 1 "He wasn't slurring his words or giving any hint of drunkenness," Caldwell said. At yesterday's arraignment, Brown stood mute as his attorney, Michael Moran, requested a prelimi- nary hearing for January 31. The court charged Brown with "assault of an officer with a deadly weapon without intent to kill," an offense which carries a 4-year maximum sentence and/or a $2,000 fine. Neither Brown nor his attorney would comment on the case. You can ... advertise your skills, _ 0 a 0 get rid of an unwanted pet, and l = ' ,_ ;,, , i r find fulfillment, A .. i, .K .. 1 r DECORATING BLUES? We're here to help. It's a new Write: Help Me! advice c/o Michigan Daily, column in 420 Maynard the Daily. Ann Arbor, M1 48109 -1 ;" . ' :.. 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(313) 761-2680 Editor in Chief Managing Editor News Editors Adam Sdrager Steve Knopper Mguel Cruz, Alex Gordon, David Sd~wartz Sports Editor Associate Sports Editors Mike Gil Adam Benson,SieveBlonder, Richard Eisen, Lory Knapp, Taylor Lincoln Opinion Page Editors Elzabeth Esc, Amy Hannon Arts Editors Andrea Gadd, Alyssa Katz Associate Opinion Editors PhlipCohen, Camile Cdatosi Film Tony Siber Sharon Holand Music Nabee Zuberi Letters Editor David Levin Books Mark Swartz Weekend Editors.Alyssa Lusgman, Thetre Jay Pekia Andrew Mils Photo Editor David Lubliner Weekend Staff Jim Poniewozik Graphics Coordinator Kevin Woodson News: Karen Akerlof, Joanna Broder, Jason Carter, Diane Cook, Laura Counts, Marion Davis, Heather Fee, Noah Finke, Tara Gruzen, Jenirirlk, Ian Hoffman, Britisaty. Tern Jackson, Mark Katz, Christine Kloostra, Krsine LaLonde, Jennifer Miler, Josh Wisek, Dan Poux, Amy Quick , Gil Renberg, Taraneh Shati, Mike Sobel, vera Sngwe, Noelle Vance, Ken Walker, Donna Woodwei. Opinion: Jonathan Fnk, Christia Fong, Deyar Jamil, Fran Obeid, Uz Paige, Henry Park, Greg Rowe, Kathryn Savoie, KkM Springer, Rashid Taber, Lus Vazquez, Dma Zalaihno. Sports: Jamie Burgess, Steve Cohen,.Theodore Cox, Jen Durst, Scot Erskine. Andy Gottesman, Phil Green, Aaron Hinin, David Hyman, Bethany Kipec, Eric Lemont John Niyo, Sarah Osbum, Matt Ronnie, Jonathan Samnick, David Schechter, Ryan Schreiber, Jeff Sheran, Peter Zellen, Den Zoch. Arts: Greg Balse, Sherril L Bennett, Jen Bilk, Mark Binel, Kenneth Chow, ShealaDurant, Brent Edwards, Mke Fisdier, Forrest Green, Sharon Grimberg, Brian Jarvinen, Mke Kuniavsky, Ami Mehta, Mike Mditor, Carolyn Pajor, Krisin Palm, Annette Petrysso, Jay Pinka, Gregod Roach, Peter Shapiro, Rona Sheramy. Photo: Jennifer Dunetz, Amy Feldman, Julie Hoinan, Jose Juarez, Jonathan Liss, Josh Moore, Samantha Sanders, Kenneth Smdler, 4' f J a i 5 a i t E t i ':: , d - Wg--r.. ~avrnriin, 1 A Bn'sraW.Wannrnm _ _ 'v c ,