O)A Tk^ I AinF irt Chit.. AAw. rln . f%-*-L nr 4A 4 AAd 2A - T e Michigan Daily - Monday, october 19, 1998 NATioN/ oRLD Death toll rises as storms hit southern Texas HOUSTON (AP) - More bodies in Brookshire, 35 miles west of took refuge after 3 1/2 feet of water were pulled from floodwaters in cen- Houston. forced them out of their home. tral Texas as torrential storms contin- No other injuries were reported, but "We were trying to put things up and a ued a deadly march east across the authorities across southeast Texas spent floating tree hit the front door and broke state yesterday, killing one man the day evacuating families by boat after it open,"Snow said. "The water rushed in whose mobile home was swept away as much as 15 inches of rain fell in some and started pushing all the furniture by a twister. areas overnight. against the back wall" At least 10 people died in the "Just virtually every county road is As the wall began to crumble, Snow weekend storms. The latest victim, an impassible;" Sheriff Randy Smith said. rushed his family up to the attic, broke a unidentified man, died yesterday "It's just everywhere." hole in the roof and scrambled out. They when a tornado swept through Waller Four shelters were opened in Waller were rescued by boat. County just after sunrise, demolish- County for victims of the rising waters. In central Texas, residents began clean- ing mobile homes and snapping trees Pat Snow, his wife and three children ing up from floods caused by more than 12 inches of rain. A A man and two women were "A THROBBING SUCCESS. washed away in in San Antonio, TUMULTUOUSLY PERCUSSIVE." while an 8-year-old girl was swept - DETROIT FREE PRESS from a car in Pflugerville, northeast of Austin. Another man was killed when a tornado slammed into his mobile home near Corsicana, 220 miles northeast of San Antonio. On Sunday morning, a woman author- ities believe was swept from a car by ris- ing waters was found in northwest San Antonio. Two other flooding victims' bodies were later found. A man was found along Alligator Creek farther north in Comal County. In Harris County, still saturated from flooding last month spawned by Tropical Storm Frances, creeks and bayous escaped their banks. Strong winds and rising waters damaged several homes. Former A2 Rep. dles at a x5 IMPOR POST RS T'e Associsted Press Former Rep. Perry Bullard, who G RO OVEYAR D wrote landmarkstatelegislation uphold- ing personal liberties, has died. He was 320 South State St. - Ann Arbor 56. (LOCATED ABOVE DECKER DRUGS-213-7685) Bullard, a Democrat who represent- Mon- Sat (noon - 8) & Sun (1-6) ed Ann Arbor in the state House from BUY ONE USED CD 1972 to 1992, died Thursday in his home in Wayne County's Canton GET ONE F R E E Township of an apparent heart attack. Bullard was known as one of the Wit 5CO5PON5oNLY - EXPiRES N55EMBER 36 more liberal Democrats even in a liberal time. "He was very witty, extraordinari- ly bright," Lansing Mayor David Hollister said yesterday. "He had a very profound respect for law and was a fighter for civil liberties" Hollister said he, Bullard, and state Rep. Morris Hood, a Detroit Democrat who died on Oct. 7, were part of the so- called Kiddie Caucus, a group of young Rport Bindng liberals that worked together in the v*o " Legislature in the 1970s and also hung 6cweout together outside of the Capitol. "Morris, Perry and others like them saw their work as a career. They had integrity. A lot of new people coming into politics now do it out of Sself interest,"Hollister said. CANON In his two decades in the state COLOR LASER Legislature, Bullard made his biggest NO an mark as chair of the Judiciary Committee, sponsoring bills such as the Open Meetings Act and the state ill Freedom of Information Act. "He had a fundamental and pas- C CI P V 1 N G sionate commitment to democracy," 611 Church Street Lana Pollack, who served in the state Senate when Bullard was in the Phone:6659200 Far:930-28(1 House. Continued from Page 1A AROUND THE I President rejects Jo WASHINGTON - President Clinton rej Paula Jones yesterday, leaving her lawyers s hopes of heading off a courtroom clash bet sources close to the talks. Jones had offere she received $I million from the president a estate magnate Abe Hirschfeld, who alread) would end what he considers an embarrassi But in a telephone call yesterday afte Bennett, told Jones lawyer James Fisher t because it required the president to pay to to Hirschfeld, a millionaire who parachu 123-count indictment for tax evasion, a Bennett made no counter-offer and sugges last $700,000 proposal would remain on th yesterday night hoped to make another bi said one person monitoring the talks. Yet few involved were optimistic that tomorrow's oral arguments before the 8th 1 Minn., where both sides are to debate whi should be reinstated. Fed Ex union votes for strike approval MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Leaders of the Federal Express pilots' union voted unanimously yesterday to seek strike authorization from members. Ballots will be sent this week to the 3,200 members of the Fedex Pilots Association. The union hopes to com- plete the balloting by Nov. 20. If two-thirds of the union pilots are willing to walk out, the union could call a strike during December, which is the Memphis-based company's busiest sea- son, when daily volume often exceeds 4 million packages. The union said in a statement they were forced to take the vote because of a lack of progress in contract talks. The company's pilots, more than 90 percent of whom belong to the union, have never had a contract since they became unionized in 1993. They say career compensation for FedEx pilots is 37 percent below their top rival United Parcel Service, while retirement compensation is 213 percent AROUND THEI NATION nes settlement jected a $2 million settlement proposal by crambling to put together another offer in ween the two sides tomorrow, according to d to drop her sexual harassment lawsuit if nd another $1 million from New York r y had promised to give her that much i ng national spectacle. rmoon, Clinton's chief attorney, Robert that such a plan was unacceptable, both o much and because it would indebt him ted into the case uninvited and faces a source familiar with the situation said. ted that Jones should not assume that his e table, the source said. The Jones camp d this morning. "There's still a chance," a compromise could be found before U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. P4 ther Jones's lawsuit, dismissed in April, below United Airlines. FedEx chief executive officer Ted Weise countered the company has a proposal on the table that would put pilots "in the very top echelon of the airline industry in every major cate ry." Teacher gives birth to student's child TACOMA, Wash. - Former elemen- tary school teacher Mary Kay Letourneau, sent to prison for raping a former student, has given birth to a girl, believed to be her second child fathered by the boy. Letourneau and her daugh , Georgia, were doing fine, St. Joseph Medical Center officials said Saturday. The girl was born Friday night and weighed between 8 and 9 pounds. The former Highline School District teacher is serving a seven-year, five- month term for second-degree child rape for having sex with the boy. She was brought to the hospital from prison Friday and released Saturday.* WORLD ~ a town about 20 miles southeast of Alexandria, the ministry said. The train went off the rails when the driver changed tracks "at high spee' the statement said. China, Taiwan hold high-level talks BEIJING - China and Taiwan held their highest-level contact since 1949 yesterday when a Taiwanese negotiator met with President Jiang Zemin, marking dramatic end to the first round of talks between the two governments since 1995. Koo Chen-fu, a billionaire Taiwanese businessperson and high-ranking member of Taiwan's ruling Nationalist Party, huddled with Jiang for more than 1 1/2 hours, 30 minutes longer than planned, at a guest house in western Beijing. Both Taiwanese and Chinese officials described to talks as pleasant. - Compiledfrom Daily wire reports. Christian Right, was goi protest at the victim's fu occurred Friday. Walters said that while specifically conservative ri tions - were the most out nents of the LGBT comm sexuals could still take par "To be queer and faithful tradiction," Walters said. Chris Kolb, Ann Arbor' mayoral candidate and an city council member, at crowd following Walters. Kolb, a University alum audience how influential d had been in his life. "I came here as a fright and left feeling confident b positive influence of t office," Kolb said. Kolb said that while thet ly a time of happiness an hard to feel that way this ye Shepard's untimely death. "There's been such an o sorrow and anger, but thisi for us to do something,' K( Kolb encouraged thost angry to get involved and decision making to others. "The homophobes wh decisions of our lives want dirty little secret back into Kolb said. "But it's not dirt) going back in because if I And I'm not going to lose After Kolb and Jim To the University's LGBTA c the University announced t two of its LGBT scholarsh E. Frederic Dennis, the of the University's LGBT addressed the crowd. His 'An Out Individual i Individual: An Out Com Strong Community;' called to action. "It is through our visib ness, that we claim ou Dennis said. "We ... des owed equal rights.: Most students at the rall Dennis' message, assertin tance in the LGBT com vival. "It shows that there's presence on campus," A Ben Fife said. "It's importa visible" Dennis also stressed th of speaking out against demonstrating pride withi; nity. After his speech, Denr the rally by inviting all pr through a make-shift clo out as gay, lesbian, bisex dered or a community ally of the crowd accepted his{ ng to lead a ineral, which Christians - ght organiza- spoken oppo- unity, homo- t in religion. l is not acon- s Democratic openly gay ddressed the inus, told the he University eed gay boy ecause of the he LGBTA rally is usual- d joy, it was ar because of utpouring of is motivation Alb said. e who were stop leaving o make the At least 46 killed in Egyptian train crash CAIRO, Egypt - A train jumped its tracks at a northern Egyptian station yesterday and careened through people and buildings alongside the tracks, killing 46 people. Another 101 people were injured when the locomotive and the first two passenger cars toppled over and plowed through bystanders and shops, said Nabih Yousef Shaltout, a local health official. Shaltout said most of the injured were passengers on the train, while most of the dead were town residents. Egyptian television showed a crane moving toward one of the overturned train cars while scores of riot police fended off hundreds of wailing people. Residents flocked to the local hospi- tal to give blood, the official Middle East News Agency reported. Others at the site used their clothes to stanch the bleeding of the injured; the agency said. The train was traveling from the port of Alexandria to Kafr el-Sheik when it derailed in the station of Kafr el-Dawar, The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms b students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for falt term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. 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