8- The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 21, 1997 NATION/WoRLD Town hit with floods, fires The Washington Post GRAND FORKS, N.D. - Ravaged first by record flooding and then by huge fires that spread unchecked in the swamped downtown district, most of this beleaguered North Dakota city was under mandatory evacuation orders and a 24-hour curfew yesterday. Authorities threatened to use National Guard troops to arrest residents who have refused to leave their homes. With the city's water supply danger- ously contaminated and its sanitary sewer system collapsed after the Red River of the North spilled over some dikes and saturated others until they collapsed, tens of thousands of resi- dents continued fleeing to emergency shelters. But authorities said hundreds - perhaps thousands - of holdouts remained in the flooded downtown area, parts of which were left with nothing but burned-out shells of high-. rise buildings from raging weekend fires that for the most part were inac- cessible to firemen because the flood water there was 10 feet deep. One four-block area of downtown had an eerie look that was reminiscent of Dresden, Germany, after World War II, with at least 11 multi-story build- ings destroyed or damaged beyond recognition. The skeletons of the gut- ted buildings rose from the muddy river overflow and, in some cases, con- tinued to smoulder despite the torrent Kerrey puts CPI 0 issue in stark generational terms AP PHOTO North Dakota National Guard troops patrol Demers Avenue in downtown Grand Forks, N.D., early Saturday morning after dikes and sewers collapsed throughout the town, causing three feet of water to flood the streets. of water surrounding them. Grand Forks Fire Chief Richard Aulich said most of the blazes had been contained, but firefighters were still extinguishing "hot spots" using boats, helicopters and an oversized fire truck from nearby Grand Forks Air Force Base that can operate in water 8 feet deep. Aulich said the cause of the fires was unknown, but he suspected that damaged gas pipes had ignited. Incongruously, it is in this area where emergency management offi- cials say a large number of residents are refusing to leave, despite the wors- ening and potentially dangerous water and sewer conditions and no supply of fresh food. Grocery stores and restau- rants have been inundated and are closed. Rescue operations with boats were stepped up yesterday afternoon as authorities pleaded with residents to hang white sheets from their roofs to identify inhabited build- ings. "1 have no idea how many people are left downtown, but there is a very high level of concern for those people. We are going to have to get them out," Jim Campbell, Grand Forks emer- gency management director, said at a news conference at a makeshift opera- tions center at the University of North Dakota campus. Because of continuously rising water, the operations center had to be moved twice in the last three days, and Campbell said even the university's relatively high ground is now threatened. Officials said 3 1/2 square miles within the city were completely under water, ranging from a few feet to more than 10 feet deep. Campbell said that if residents downtown continue to ignore the evacuation orders, "We'll forcibly remove them for their own protec- tion." He said some of the residents seri- ously endangered themselves by going to rooftops Saturday to watch as heli- copters and fixed-wing aircraft dropped water on nearby burning buildings. Senator says small decrease in Inflation index will aid future WASHINGTON (AP) - To Sen. Bob Kerrey, the debate over devising a more accurate measure of inflation isn't a mathematical abstraction. In his view, the matter boils down to whether older Americans - political giants in Washington - will accept los- ing some of their federal retirement benefits to help a new generation attend college without swamping themselves in debt. The key element pushing that ques- tion is a proposal before the administra- tion and Congress for a slight reduction in the Consumer Price Index, or CPI. "We've got to say to people over 65 this adjustment is critical if we are going to be able to continue to say our middle class is growing," Kerrey (D- Neb.) said at a Senate Finance Committee hearing. "I think we need to say to people over the age 65, that unless we make the adjustment, there are going to be American children who graduate from high school who will not be able to send kids to college." The hearing was focused on the Clinton budget proposal's tax incen- tives for education and ways to reduce the crushing debts of college students, which can reach $90,000 or more upon graduation. Kerrey said these debt levels are destructive to society. He proposed financing additional college grants and other aid with savings generated by reducing the CPI. Posing the issue as a choice between the generations puts a novel and dra- matic spin on the long-running debate over the Consumer Price Index. The index is used to make annual cost-of- living adjustments for Social Security and other retirement programs and to adjust the income tax to remove the impact of inflation. In December, a panel of promi- nent economists led by Michael Boskin found the CPI overstates inflation. Panel members recom- mended reducing the index by 1.1 percent annually, a change that would generate an estimated $1 tril- lion in budget savings over 12 years. That enormous sum could be redi- rected toward a variety of goa* ranging from tax cuts to social pro- grams. A CPI reduction is a major unre- solved issue in this year's budget talks, with Senate Finance Comnmittee Chair William Roth Jr. (R-Del.) advocating using savings from a C0I reduction to finance deep tax cuts. ' lso favoring CPI reduction is Sen. Dniel Moynihan (D-N.Y.) the finance comimittee's rank- ing Democrat. I Talk of adopting th' Boskin com- mission's CPI reduction has riled powerful lobbies for enior citizens and labor unions and even became a theme in last year's p sidential cam- paign as Presi dent linton blasted Republicans for Wanting to cut Medicare spending. David Certner, jAARP's senior economics coordinator, said the over-50s advocacyl group suppo* an accurate Cons mer Price Index but believes it shqkild be righted by the Bureau of abor Statistics, which publishes it. To Certner, politicians like K rrey are using the argument over CPI's accuracy for other purposes. "It's nice to be Able to argue accu- racy, but clearly he has been in favor of a cut beforei the CPI debate," Certner said. "Td say CPI should lowered to pay ;for education, th does not say anything about the accuracy of CPUI' In 1994, Kerey and former Sen. John Danforth (R-Mo.) headed a bipar- tisan entitlement and tax reform panel that in 1994 recdmmended a number of long range charges, including a CPI cut. Certner's American Association of Retired Perso s has calculated t trimming the PI, as Boskin propos would lead td a $5,000 reduction in benefits for th# average Social Security recipient over a decade. Without the change, Kerrey con- tends, the federal budget rapidly will become consumed with mandated spending for seniors and other benefits programs. Currently, 66 percent of the budget goes to mandated spending. In fi years, that 4ill be 70 percent. Seen tI way, Kerrey regards the CPI change as critical to the long-term health of the budget andthe economy's future expan- sion. R7 & - - -- ---------------------- -- - ---- ,:. ;, ' C L A 1 R L* A '4 I C O N T R OLT For Hair That's Truly Unruly i A revolutioncsry new collection of haircare products to totally pr tect against the fkizzies. I * This powerful n discipline is available in six nique formulations. " Individual prod cts.., " provideh umi ity resistance; " repair broke cuticles; or e mend up to % of split ends. " Frizz Control Ives hair shinier, smoother, an more manageable. --- - - - - - - - - f