The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 21, 1999 - 7 East Coast slowly rebuilds ter Hurncane Floyd TARBORO, N.C. (AP) - Rotting livestock carcasses and floating sewage created a mount- ing public health threat today across eastern North Carolina, still flooded days after Hurricane Floyd forced tens of thousands of people from their homes. At least 34 people were confirmed dead in North Carolina, with the number expected to rib. "As the waters go down, we certainly do expect there will be more individuals found," said John Butts, North Carolina state medical examiner. And still more rain lay ahead. With about 6,500 people already in shelters and 1,500 oth- ers believed stranded, forecasters said 1 to 2 inches of rain from Tropical Storm Harvey could fall beginning last night, enough to cause new flooding and keep the rivers high. Floodwaters have virtually shut down the I tern third of North Carolina, an area of l8,000 square miles and 2.1 million people. State officials said 30,000 homes were flooded and 1,600 damaged beyond repair. The damage may exceed the $6 billion total for Hurricane Fran in 1996, North Carolina's costliest natur- al disaster. President Clinton toured Tarboro, one of the hardest-hit towns in an area drenched by 28 inch- es of rain from two hurricanes in two weeks. "I urge you to keep your spirits up and know we're going to be with you every step of the way," Clinton told 500 people in this historic town of 11,000, flanked by tobacco and cotton fields. He also announced loans to help farm- ers rebuild and replace lost livestock. "When things like this happen to some of us, we know they could happen to all of us," Clinton said. "We know we have a responsibil- ity as members of the American family to help you get back on your feet again. Thomas Andrews, 76, of Tarboro, said: "If they can do all this, it will be well worth it. I've never seen this much devastation in Tarboro and Edgecombe County in all my life." Health officials worked to stave off disease, which became a growing threat because of hundreds of thousands of dead hogs, chickens and turkeys, drinking water tainted by overflow from sewage plants and animal waste lagoons, and floodwaters fouled by fuel, farm chemicals and manure. "There are a large number of different risks out there right now," said Johanna Reese of the state Division of Environmental Health. "The most immediate one we have is lack of safe drinking water." Contaminated water could cause a host of gastrointestinal illnesses, and dehydration from severe vomiting or diarrhea could be fatal in children, the elderly and people with weak- ened immune systems, Reese said. "A lot of these people are down already. They're already weak, so they're at a greater risk," she said. National Guard helicopters and trucks deliv- ered clean drinking water to several counties. Crews in Jones County brought in two industrial-size incinerators so workers today could begin burning the hog carcasses whose stench has filled the air. Some of the animals had been dead five days and could become a I mm ~ m AP PHOTO Workers from the Department of Transportation pile 10,000 sandbags in Conway, S.C. to protect a sewage pumping station yesterday. I Wife of former Soviet leader dead at age 67 .. TUDENT EDITORIAL ASST. needed dies. & Thurs. mornings. Addti. afternoon el palso needed. Call Kim at 763-5800. TUDENTS! NOW HIRING for Fall Term unch shifts. $6.60-7.00/hr. to start. Work tudy OK. Also Office Assistant needed. Apply in person or call Michelle at 764-7536 Michigan League Buffet, 911 N. University. S DENTS/WORK STUDY students L ers Club Dining hiring for fall term. $1.8Q - 8.90 to start. Catering opportunities & meal benefits. Apply in person (551 S. State, corner of S. State & S. Univ.) or call 764- 1115. STUDENTU.COM IS NOW hiring notetakers!!! You can earn up to $300.00 per semester/course by taking notes for us! It interested apply on-line @www.notesu.com STUDY BUDDY wanted for my 12 yr. old son. Assist him with homework and getting to after school activities. 3 days a week. Must own car. Call 936-2357 or 769-3083. SUBSTITUTES NEEDED. NAEYC Accredited Early Childhood Center is in need of substitutes for the school yr. Work w/ young children in an enjoyable setting. Work according to own sched.$7/hr. Call 668-0887. TEACHERS/TUTORS pt needed National In-Home Service Great Part Time Job. 734-844-0078 or toll free 888-817-5225. TEMPORARY PART-TIME position (15 hours a week) to include data entry, mailings, aii website development/editing. 95+% aracy with a key speed of 50 wpm, excellent customer service skills and telephone manner, problem resolution skills, punctual, mature and flexible personality, ability to work independently and prioritize daily work loads and timeframes. Experience with Microsoft Office 97, Microsoft Access and FrontPage skills are essential. If you would like to apply for this position, please submit your resume to: University of Michigan Health System, Interactive Marketing; 300 N. Ingalls Room 4E14; Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0475 or email your resume t ,kturner@ umich.edu WORK THE HOURS you choose, for the wages you decide. This 16 page booklet with 99 different businesses could put you on your way. Just send name, address, $8.95 + $1.00 S&H to: DK Franklin Enterprises, 3119 Equinox Rd., Dept. 112, Dover, PA 17315. WORK-STUDY OR for course credit: We are looking for students to assist us with ongoing health, aging and gender research projects at ISR, $8-sI I/hr. Duties to include respondent interviewing, data coding, data entry, mass mailings and general office duties. If you are interested in hands on learning of the social research process and are computer literate, please call 763-5890. EEO Employer. 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Info: call 1-800-446-8355 www.sunbreaks.com , , The Washington Post Raisa Gorbachev, 67, whose stylish, forceful, and glamorous performance as the wife of the last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, made her a light- ning rod for attacks on his programs of economic and political reform, died yesterday of leukemia at University Hospital in Muenster, Germany. Mikhail Gorbachev led the Soviet Union from 1985 to 1991, first as gener- al secretary of the Communist Party and then as Soviet president. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1990, survived an attempted coup by communist conserxa- tives in 1991, and resigned the presiden- cv at the end of that year when the Soviet Union voted itself out of existence. Raisa Gorbachev was a presence in his life in a way that was unprecedented in the Soviet experience. She appeared with him publicly at home and abroad, served as his eyes and ears on her travels, and was one of his closest advisers. Her activities, readily accepted in the West, were much criti- cized in the Soviet Union. She was practiced in diplomacy but created a minor furor during a 1987 summit between Gorbachev and President Ronald Reagan. After tour- ing the White House with first lady Nancy Reagan, she described it as "an official houst. I would say that, human- ly speaking, a human being would like to live in a regular house. This is like a museum." Reagan was furious. In "My Turn," her memoir, she said, "It was- n't a very polite answer, especially from somebody who hadn't even seen the private living quarters!" Nancy Reagan also said Mrs. Gorbachev was given to lecturing rather than carrying on a conversa- tion. The alleged chill between the two first ladies was widely reported, but by all accounts they put their dif- ferences behind them. Raisa Gorbachev came a long way from her humble origins. She was born Raisa Maksimova Titorenky on Jan. 5, 1932, in the village of Rubtsovsk, Siberia. Her father was a railroad engineer and she grew up in various parts of the Soviet Union. A brilliant student, she graduated from high school at the head of her class and studied philosophy at the elite Moscow State University. There she met her future husband, a law student from a family of peasants. They mar- ried in 1954, so poor they had to borrow a pair of white shoes from a friend to complete her m.+ 2hrihl outfit The next year they moved to Stavropol, a provincial capital in the Caucasus, Gorbachev's native region. He began his Gorbachev climb through the bureaucracies of the communist party and the Soviet state. Raisa Gorbachev earned a doctor- ate in sociology from Moscow's Lenin Pedagogical Institute, with the thesis "The Emergence of New Characteristics in the Daily Life of Collective Farm Peasantry (Based on Sociological Investigation in Stavropol Territory)." She taught at the Stavropol Agricultural Institute. JEWISH ACADEMY of Metropolitan Detroit a new Jewish high school opening in one year, is seeking graduates of non- Orthodox Jewish day high schools in North America who are willing to share insights aid experiences from their day high school education. Help us make history by bringing into being another fine coeducational Jewish college preparatory day high school. Give us a call, (248) 592-JAMD (5263). Leavea message and our Head of School, Rabbi Lee Buckman, will return your call. THEATRE DEPT. work study positions av- lable! LOBBY STAFF: Assist with p4n services in various theatres on campus for a variety of fabulous perf. events; mainly eves. & wknds. TICKET OFFICE: Sales/customer service in the Mich. League ticket office; weekdays with some eves. &: wknds. PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS: work in the backstage areas: scenery, props, costumes, lighting & sound (no previous production knowledge required); mostly weekdays with some eves. & wknds. Call 764-0450. WANTED. Enthusiastic, responsible, and flexible sq.ns to work with the traumatically brain i ed in a semi-independent living environment. We offer flex. hrs., competitive wages & benefits, PIT & F/T positions avail. The ideal job for college students. Interested applicants contact Jason at Residential Placement & Consultants. Phone 677-3222. Fax 734-677-3348. WE ARE LOOKING for energetic and reliable work-study students to help us with clerical work in our division. We offer flexible hours and good pay. Contact Yvonne Sturt -- Division of Rheumatology; Call 647-8173 or email ysturt@umich.edu WEKLY HOUSE cleaning. Walk from us. $10/hr Flexible. 971-3321. WELCOME BACK STUDENTS. Wendy's is seeking people to work in our friendly team environment. Ask how you can earn up to $9.00 per hour. Apply in person. U of M League 911 N. University. U of M Union. S. State St. Stanton & Associates is committed to a diverse workforce. WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAIL. The Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum needs k Study students for several positions iW. Explainer Guides, Education Assistants, Camp-In and Try-It Assistants, Museum Store Clerks, Exhibit Maintepance, Office Assistants, and others. Flexible scheduling avail., incl. eve. or weekend hours. Explore career opportunities, establish professional references, and work in a fun and challenging environment with plenty of "Hands-On" experience! For more info., contact: The Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum, 220 E. Ann St., $8/HR. FOR S & 7 yr. old boys. Burns Park area. Must have car. 3-6:15 pm Tue. &Th. 9 am -12:15 pm., & 3-6pm Fri. Start immed. Call Marcia 663-1455. AFTER SCHOOL CARE for a bright, happy 5 yr. old. Must have car. 3-6:30 p.m. Tue./Thur./Fri. Wines school area. $8/hr. 769-7245. AFTER SCHOOL CARE provider fornice 11 & 13 yr. old. girls. Fridays. Other days possible. NE Ann Arbor. Need own car. $8+/hr. 761-9813 eve. AFTERSCHOOL CHILDCARE Needed 3-4 afternoons. Refs. & good driving record req. Call 973-9162. AM CHILDCARE & LIGHT Housekeeping. In our home near U of M stadium. M-F 7-9am. $9/hr. Non-Smoking. Refs. req. 761-6253. ASSISTANCE WITH A sweet toddler needed. P/T, flex. hrs. in our home, on the bus route. Call Rita 761-2423. BABYSITTER for 4 yr. old boy needed. West of Ann Arbor. Wed and/or Fri 2:15- 6pm. In home near Wagner & Huron River Dr. desired. Near location if in West Central A2 is possible. Contact 996-3608. BABYSITTER NEEDED for 9 yr. old girl after school. Car needed. Call 668-1332. BABYSITTER WANTED for 6 and 10 year olds. Evening times, mostly on the weekend. Call 662-3062. BUSY HOUSEHOLD is looking for an extra pair of hands after school to help with cooking and childcare. Any afternoons. Great pay. Also looking for occasional sitting. Own car, non-smoking. $10/hr. 741-9860. CHILD CARE NEEDED for one toddler (19 months). Monday- Friday 3-6, plus variable hours. Call Alex or John 995-5539. CHILDCARE NEEDED for 3 great children, ages 6, 7,& 9 every Thurs. from 2:30 p.m.-6 p.m. Additonal evesd wknd. hrs. avail. Car req. Call 662-1706. CHILDCARE WANTED. Seeking responsible childcare for good natured 2 yr. old girl. 6-8hrs./wk. M-W, 4-6PM; Th 10- 12. Time flexible. $6/hr. Call 668-0314. EXP. CARE GIVER needed for 13 and 10 yr. old. Tu, Th, Fri, 3-5:30/6:30. Possiblity of additional hrs. Good pay. Non-smkr. w/ reliable trans. & refs. Please call 769-2875. IN MY HOME care for 1 yr. old; 2 hrs./day; several wkday afternoons; exp., loving Educ. Mai. only 665-7234. SPANISH-SPEAKING CHILD CARE Wanted. Faculty couple desire child care in their home for 1I yr. old daughter and 12 yr. old son, 2-3 afternoons/wk. from about 4pm- 6pm and occas. other times. Applicants should be energetic, cheerful, & creative w/ children. Home is about 6 blks. from central campus & campus bus line. Spanish-speaking is req.; the children are accustomed to Spanish & English. $11I/hr. Please Call Margaret or Glenn at 663-4849. annuncements FREE Service compares TEXTBOOK Prices from Varsity, Bigwords, Barnes & Noble, and more than 10 others to find the best deal on your books. Just click through to buy. www.VivaSmart.com ACCURATE PSYCHIC on campus! Indiv. sessions, parties, events by appt. Student disc. Call Nanci Rose Gerler 996-8799. Liberian refugees permanent residency s tatus remains shakey On Sept. 12, Cottage Inn, Pizza House, Faz's Pizza, and Pizza Bob's partici- g ated in a fund-raiser at hi Kappa Psi to benefit Habitat for Humanity. Con ratuiations to Pizza Bob s for selling the most slices. GET PAID 2 SURF THE NET! Endless income possibilities. www.alladvantage.com ID # EAN-028. HUNDREDS OF INSTRUMENTS-Not just Guitars-from around the world, + strings, accessories, books. 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Phi Kappa Psi Pizza for Humanity 120-Announcements 1x2 POSTERS Outrageous College Humor www.posterworld.com SUPPRESSED DEAD SEA Scrolls Research: http://www:geocities.com:80/ Athens/Rhodes/703 I/deadsea.html WASHINGTON (AP) - In his daydreams, high school freshman Louis Joe tries out for the basketball team, joins the chess club and eventually becomes a doctor. In his nightmares, he walks through a dark forest, crawls over corpses and relives his escape from war-torn Liberia. "I would rather die than go back to Liberia," says the 14- year-old Maryland honor student, asserting he'd end up "either dead or poor." In one of the longest-running immigration sagas of its kind, Joe and 10,000 to 15,000 other Liberians have been living in the United States under temporary legal status since 1991. Given extension after extension, they are being granted another reprieve from a pending Sept. 28 deportation order, a White House official said yester- day. He would not say how long the new extension would be. But their permanent status remains in limbo, and in the end they may still have to return home. "My future is still uncertain," said Joe after learning of the planned extension, which is expected to be officially announced later this week. The previous extensions were granted to the Liberians as the civil war dragged on, but with the fighting officially over since 1997, the U.S. government believes the African country is becoming safe enough for their return one day. To most, going back seems like a death sentence nonethe- less. "Here I can get an education ... There the schools aren't even open yet," said Joe, who lives in Ellicott City, : com- munity between Washington and Baltimore. "Without that, I'm nobody. I'll have no life." AUTO Continued from Page 1 microsensors presented at the symposium have a varietyca practical applications in automobiles. They can be used in infrared imaging for seeing through fog, built into accelerome- ters to set off airbags and can even be used in engines for sens- ing pressure to decrease pollution, "It is currently under study to come up with new ways of mea- suring chemical elements in exhaust gas and the content of oxides of nitrogen, a major smog producing gas," Terry said. The symposium will also focus on the economic factors influencing the flat panel display and automobile markets. Presentations of data will be made on the economy of these industries and how to bring more jobs to Michigan. Coordinators said based on the success of past symposiums, they expect attendance of more than 200 people. The registration fee for attendees is $345, although the fee for University faculty and students is only $75. "This is quite a reduced rate because we want to encourage facul- ty and students to attend," said Rice. Tb:;L -1 -Fp,;Aip n*vof all nrPContntynne a rnnvof rthe FEMALE PREF. to share 2 bdrm., 2 bath condo. Ldry, $390 + half utlilties. Great Loc. Avail. Oct 15. Call 677-2824. LOOKING FOR ROOM. Male grad student needs housing. Available ASAP. (313)965-3404. a AP PHOTO Fourteen-year-old Louis Joe looks on during a Liberian demon- stration across from the White House on Sunday. His father, Robert, teaches special education. His mother, Louise, a credit investigator for a private company, says keep- ing a job is tough when there's no guarantee she can stay where the family has established a better life. This is the essence of the argument among Liberians who want to remain in the United States - perhaps forev- er. It's not so much that they believe they'll be killed, but that life in Liberia will be so much less than what they have here. "This is quite a reduced rate because we want to encourage faculty and students to attend." - Barbara Rice Center for Integrated Microsystems Administratve assistant presentations on CD, access to all speakers, exhibitors, lun- cheons and admission to a meeting of the Society of Automotive Engineers on Friday. For information regarding registration, contact the University Conference Management Services at 734-764- 4276. The Ypsilanti Marriott is located on Huron Street near I- Ztickets &tre~ personaII CANCUN & JAMAICA SPRING Break Specials! 7 Nights Air, Hotel, Free Meals, Drinks From $399! Aof 6 Small Businesses Recognized For Outstanding Ethics! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386. EARLY SPRING BREAK specials! Bahamas Party Cruise 5 Days $279! Includes Most Meals! Awesome Beaches, Nightlife! Panama City, Daytona, South Beh Flnridai$129! snrinv'breaktravel cnm * * * # ADOPTION: CALIFORNIA TV and wife (Ph.D.) promise baby war and secure future. 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