2- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 10, 1998 NATION/WORLD Storms and floods ill 13 in Tijuan TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) - Soldiers and rescue butc workers scraped away mud and debris yesterday after erst ElNino-fed floodwaters roared through a border shan- In tytown, killing 13 people and forcing hundreds to flee pile their homes. "1 Three teenage girls were killed after fast-flowing mud front swallowed their family's car at the foot of the eastern anotl town of Mexico Lindo, or Beautiful Mexico. Swirling In floodwaters dragged a girl from her house to her death. large Some 500 people took refuge at shelters because their alon, neighborhoods were buried in mud, water and debris. were North of the border, Californians took advantage of "I a break from the storms that have battered the West dam Coast for a week. They cleared roads, cleaned catch Cour basins and drains and rebuilt sandbag barricades. A Sunshine bathed Southern California, which saw up to bags 2 feet of rain in some areas. and Forecasters said the next storm was expected to blam blow ashore farther north last night, with the buil brunt of the bad weather hitting Oregon and N Washington state. Calif But California was still far from drying up. over Seven-foot waves coupled with a 6-foot-high tide " pounded San Clemente beach homes and ate away the d 100' feet of sand at Broad Beach. The nearby coor beach retreats of Steven Spielberg, Danny M DeVito, Frank Sinatra, Goldie Hawn, Jack od e Lemmon and Dustin Hoffman weren't threatened, and DRUGS Continued from Page 1 problem. There are a whole lot of early intervention programs that we can deal with." Sage Eastman, communications director for the Michigan Republican Party, said the bills will protect taxpayers' rights. "This is a case of tough love, but we have to make sure the taxpayers' dollars are used appropriately," Eastman said. "What I think the bill will do is cut down on wasting taxpay- ershard-earned money." Both Berryman and state Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D- Salem Twp.) said they will enter today's hearing with caution since the issue has the potential to back them both into a corner. "It's one of those pieces of legislation that they use to set you up," Smith said. "It's a safe yes for everyone because one Malibu home was destroyed and four oth- were seriously damaged. "We A San Clemente yesterday, resident Greg Rhys d sandbags only to see the sea carry them away. We ci There's nothing you can do. I've given up on the t of my house,"neighbor Al Lundberger said as still with I her huge wave crashed against his beach house. Northern California, the waters of the state's N est natural lake crept higher and threatened homes g the shore of Clear Lake. Five hundred families forced to flee their residences. f the lake goes up, most homes would suffer severe down walls age," said Wilda Shock, a spokesperson for Lake into homes inty's Office of Emergency Services. The moss cross Northern California, residents hauled sand- borhoods it to weakened levees, swept floors clean of mud areas were braced for more rain. Seven deaths have been depended o ned on the storms and more than 1,400 houses and In Aguaj dings have been damaged or destroyed. onto the rc ear Tijuana, 600 soldiers helped two Baja nephews. fornia cities that were hammered by heavy rain "The cur the weekend. cars. The w, We are not in chaos. We can work very well with the morning disaster," said Guillermo Ruiz de Teresa, national Rosarito dinator for civil protection. It was tf ore than two inches of rain during a six-hour peri- five years. nding Sunday sent runoff waters through Tijuana during sev sections of Rosarito, overturning cars, tearing January ani there's no consequences." Although the Committee on Education voted unanimously to send the bill to the Senate floor, Smith pointed out that a num- ber of groups have opposed the bills from the beginning. "The Michigan Higher Education Assistance Authority and the Michigan Higher Education Student Loan Authority were opposed to the bills,' Smith said. "The authority has adopted a position of no support for the bills." Kinesiology first-year student Kelley Peters said this legis- lation worries her because it would not give students a second chance to redeem themselves after making poor decisions. "It would be detrimental' Peters said. "If they don't need it, take it away. But for first time offenders, give them the aid." But even if these bills pass, University students might not lose substantial funding, Smith said. TES ire not in chaos 3n work very w the disaster." -- Guillermo Ruiz d ational coordinator for civil pdr and dumping mud, rocks, cars and businesses. t serious damage was to newer, po n outlying sections of Tijuana. A inaccessible until yesterday an n helicopters to get food and med e de la Tuna, Alejandra Campos of of her mother's home with rent was rising until it was starti aters did not calm themselves unti g, she told The San Diego Union police arrested 15 people for lo e area's worst storm-related de More than 30 people were repo eral weeks of torrential rains be d early February 1993. SCOREBOA Continued from Page i. seating, rather than being entirely. The scoreboards are symb football seasons, said Rac ond-year student Jeff H adding that they may also be charms. "There's too much tr those old score boards - the great upsets against Oh said Holzhausen, who don Michigan football game known as Superfan. "I thin a certain mystique a Michigan Stadium that sh messed with. You would scoreboards would be tho good luck after this year." A playback feature coul the attendees' experiences, sophomore Jason Granet. "I think that Michigan fans, after this season, are watching the football gam very good fans," Granet think they can have an anti ing scoreboard with mo tures. "If you build it to look lik cal scoreboard ... it won't from Michigan Stadium,. added. Mathematics Prof. Phili who serves on the board, sai been no discussion of new the board's meetings this yea "I don't think it was a w formed point to be broug month," Hanlon said. PARKING Continued from Page 1. Gramlich did a study of th income tax," Hill said. The i study served as a model of c between the city and the Un said. The income tax study w success, Hill said. He adde officials began to see studies Policy students as a valuable inexpensive information. Meanwhile, the studies ga' hands-on experience, Hill sa "The students got to w actual project rather thans dreamed up in a textbook," The city commissioned th August for $6,500. Greenbe fee covered the group's expe the students worked for cour Greenberg estimated that consulting firm would have+ siderably more than fourt amount paid for the study b dents. The study reports that 181 the city's parking customers ing lots for purposes conn the University. The study also gives a brie of the systems in I1 oth including Boulder, Colo., L Grand Rapids. According to Ann Arbor's rate of 60 cent for parking meters is co lower than the average. M charged at least $1 per hour. Ann Arbor Parking Autho for parking violations are a average. rail Ys Cke" i~k i aROUND THE NATION Army sergeant refused sexual advances \WASHINGTON - One of the first women to serve in the Army's elite Old efl Guard testified yesterday that the service's top enlisted man repeatedly demanded sex from her, assaulting her in his locked Pentagon office on a Sunday afternoon and later on a public path near the Lincoln Memorial. Staff Sgt. Christine Fetrow said she resisted the embraces of Sgt. Maj. otTeresa Gene McKinney but feared the sergeant major of the Army would "ruin m career" in retaliation. McKinney pursued her for four years, Fetrow sai , once cautioning her: "I'm a very powerful man that makes thing happen - good and bad." and debris Fetrow was the first of an expected 50 witnesses to testify against McKinney in a court-martial. If convicted, he could face 55 years in prison and be stripped of his orer neigh- rank and retirement benefits. The trial, expected to last four to five weeks at Fort t least two Belvoir in Fairfax County, Va., could provide a window on what some studies have d residents said is widespread sexual harassment of women in the military. ical help. McKinney, who was removed from his Pentagon job in October, is charged scrambled with 19 counts of harassing and assaulting six different military women. two young Defense lawyers have said that none of the witnesses is more important than Fetrow, a military police officer who was placed in a classified witness pr ng to crush tection program after she agreed to testify. l about 5 in -Tribune. bg. Sharton takes stand tin Pagones was among those who raped ath toll i jn Brawl trial Brawley. irted killed ,7 Testifying in a defamation suit tween late POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. - Almost brought by Pagones, Sharpton asserted 10 years after a New York grand jury dis- that he believes he acted well within a missed as a hoax Tawana Brawley's long tradition of civil rights leaders ® claim that she was gang-raped by racist advocating for victims of racial injustice white law enforcement officers, the Rev. . Al Sharpton took the stand yesterday ina Lli i r esident replaced defamation trial to defend his right to hails from Ute 1s have believed and widely broadcast the tols of past black teen-ager's story. HINSDALE, Ill. - Valdas Adamkus kham sec- Sharpton's appearance marked a dra- soon will be an American president. olzhausen, matic high-point in a trial that has Adamkus plans to retain dual citizen- good luck dragged on for three months, filling an ship even as he takes the helm of a coun- antique Dutchess County courtroom try that abuts the Baltic Sea: Lithuania. It edition in with racially incendiary charges reminis- is his native land - the land he fled I still see cent of a decade ago when Brawley's more than 50 years ago. iio State," story horrified the nation. In October, he successfully challeng s a cape at After laboring for 10 years to graduate Lithuania's residency requirement for s and is from race-based street politics to main- presidential candidates. Then, with the ik there is stream Democratic politics, Sharpton help of votes from other Lithuanians bout the acknowledged he never quizzed Brawley abroad, won a five-year term as head of ouldn't be on details of her story, saying, "I would state. think the not engage in sex talk with a 15-year-old After his inauguration later this ught of as girl." He also acknowledged that he month, Adamkus will begin work in a could not produce evidence to bolster his 14th century palace in Vilnius, the capi- d improve televised claims in 1988 that a then- tal. Previous tenants include Czar said LSA assistant district attorney named Steven Alexander I and Napoleon. football very into e. They'reAROUND THE WoKtD said. "I que-look- dern fea- For the most superstitious here, El e a histori- Perli ian COaSt LC Nino appears to be seeking revenge take away brunt of El Nino on the nation that first spoke its Granet name. ICA, Peru - Elsa Apasa stood next to Scientists have flocked here p Hanlon, a pile of sticks where her home used to observe the effects. Rains have turn d there has be in a shantytown called Hope. the country's largest desert into an instant displays at But the hand of El Nino pounded Eden where flamingos wade in pools of ir. this city of 275,000 last week. water. ell-enough Yesterday, the city had been so thor- ht up last oughly devastated by freakish Professors: united floods that an estimated 120,000 people are homeless. currency isunsta le The desperation in Ica under- scores the reality that this nation is FRANKFURT, Germany - "ground zero" of the phenomenon German economic professors appeal known as El Nino, which involves to European leaders yesterday to pst- e possible an immense patch of warm water in pone the debut of a common currency ncome tax the Pacific Ocean that shifts toward for the continent, saying financial con- ooperation Peru's coast every few years and ditions are "most unsuitable" for the iversity, he affects weather worldwide. This euro. winter, El Nino has been blamed for A petition signed by more than 150 as a great torrential rains in California, a crip- professors and published in the d that city pling ice storm in Canada, scorch- Frankfurter Allgemeine and London's by Public ing heat in Brazil and a Washington Financial Times was just the latest source of winter so far without snow. warning from Germany's leading Peruvian fishermen were the ones experts that Europe should delay t ve students who coined the term El Nino - the euro's Jan. 1 debut. id. boy-child - because it often begins ork on an to manifest itself around Christmas. - Compiledfrom Daily wire reports. something Hill said. I1 e study in I I :rg said the nses while The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by -se credit- students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are a private $85. 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Ryan Posly, Aaron Rennie, Aaron Rich, Joshua Rich. Deveron Q, Sanders, Anders Smith-Undall, Julia Shih, Gabriel Smith, Prashant Tanraskar, Ted Watts, Michael Zilberman, Curtis Zimmerman. PHOTO Margaret Myers, Warren Zinn, Ed STAFF: Louis Brown, Mallory S.E. Floyd, John Kraft, Emily Nathan, Sara Stillman, Paul Talanian. COPY DESK Rebecca Berkcun, Editor STAFF: Alison Goldman, Jason Hoyer, Debra Uss, Amber Melosi, Jen Woodward. ONUNE Chris Farah, Editor STAFF: Mark Francescutti, Marquina Iliev, Elizabeth Lucas, Adam Pollock. fGRAPHICS Jonathan Weitz, Editor STAFF: Alex Hogg, Michelle McCombs. Jordan Young. .11 -a ,, ~-a - -& .1 . .,.P~Y~?U a ~ *IY31YY~' 1, YYfY After graduation, make your career move...to SCO. You'll find your place in high technology at SCO®. At SCO, we're the leading supplier of UNIX® system soft- ware for business critical environments. 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