8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 5, 1995 HURRICANES Continued from Page1A 11 cal climate of the western Sahel, and therefore the hurricane activity in North America, Masters said. Overgrazing and overpopulation in the Sahel could result in more frequent andprolonged droughts, supressinghurricaneformation. "Africa's loss is our gain," Masters said. Scientists do not know exactly how hurricanes form, but they're likely to occur "when a low-pressure system develops over waters with temperatures greater than or equal to 80 degrees Earenheit," said Joe MacDonald, a se- iior Engineering student who studies hurricanes as a hobby. Another factor that facilitated hurri- cane development this year was warmer water temperatures in the North Atlantic. But these high temperatures were the result of normal yearly variation, not a permanent climate change, said Dennis Baker, associate professor ofatmospheric, oceanic and space sciences. Many scientists hypothesize global warming could raise ocean temperatures and increase both the frequency and in- tensity of hurricanes, he said. But that change would take decades to occur, so possible global warming was not a factor in this year's hurricane season. El Nino, a pool of warm water that naturally forms in the equatorial Pa- cific about every seven years, has ex- actly this effect. For the last four years, El Nino has been present, creating winds in the upper atmosphere which have dissipated many forming hurricanes. The disappearance of El Nino this year contributed to the rise in hurricane ac- tivity, Masters said. Masters said that the current predic- tion model, used to track hurricanes in the last two years, is twice as accurate as the previous one. This has enabled the National Hurricane Center to make more accurate forecasts about hum- cane strength and movements, reduc- ing the number of lives lost. While this year's busy hurricane sea- son has done billions of dollars in prop- erty damage because of high coastal property values, in recent years "deaths have gone down because of early warn- ing systems," MacDonald said. Sometimes these early-warning sys- tems still fail, as they did with Hurri- cane Felix this summer, Masters said. Felix was expected to hit the Carolina coast and residents were warned to evacuate, but the hurricane never hit. "Sometimes," Masters said, "hum- canes just go and do what they want." sTaTe Tt E ET2~eT SPORTS AP PHOTO, r--# r~t~ete ootceazewt ,4Aae Residents of a trailer park in Jonesboro, Ga., flee floodwaters brought by Hurricane Opal as they carry off belongings. INVENTORY LI UDDATION 50% t o75%FF I/ oa sis A *.Rollerblade. OPAL Continued from Page 1A roads were too crowded to leave. "There's extensive damage on the beach," Stroud said. "We're still get- ting a lot of wind, the electricity is out and we're losing some of the shingles off the house. We can see a structure burning down on the beach." In Mexico Beach, a small town 25 miles east of Panama City, there were reports that 12 houses washed into the Gulf, said city council member Eadie Stewart. "They don't really expect there to be much left," Stewart said, fighting back tears. In Panama City Beach, the end of the city's new 1,500-foot concrete pier crumbled into the Gulf of Mexico. Waves crashed over the bathhouses on top of the pier, which is normally 15 to 20 feet above water. Several homes on stilts along Panama City Beach also were damaged, said David Miller, directorofthe Bay County Emergency Management Agency. "I've been through a couple of hurri- canes, but this one is really bad," said Horace Crowson of Panama City Beach. "The shingles are coming off my house now and I can see that the trees are bent over and are nearly touching the ground. It's pretty rough." In Destin, west of Panama City, there were reports of cars floating down the Supposedly this one is going to make the other one look likea - Don Wheeler Hattiesburg, Miss., resident streets, boats piled atop each other and damaged buildings. The storm ripped the roof off a high school gymnasium. Opal knocked out electricity to about 357,000 people, or half ofGulf Power's customers, said company spokesman Steve Higginbottom. He said it might take up to a month to restore electricity to remote areas. Many residents in Pensacola still hadn't finished repairing homes and businesses battered in early August by Hurricane Erin's 94 mph winds. In Pensacola Beach, Don Wheeler took one last look at his home, which sustained $30,000in damage from Erin, before fleeing for Hattiesburg, Miss. "Supposedly this one is going to make the other one look like a sissy," he said. "I'm afraid ... we're going to have an awful lot of damage. We'll just come back and rebuild." State emergency officials mobilized 700 police officers and 3,500 National Guardsmen to prevent looting and help with the cleanup. The Federal Emer- gency Management Agency sent in re- lief teams and was planning to fly in water and other supplies. Gov. Lawton Chiles asked President Clinton to declare a major disaster for Florida, clearing the way for federal help with cleanup and rebuilding. Many state officials and Panhandle residents compared Opal's power to Hurricane Camille, which hit the Gulf Coast in 1969 with sustained winds of 200 mph, killing 256 people in Missis- sippi, Alabama and Louisiana. Opal fluctuated throughout the day between a Category 3, a storm with sustained winds up to 130 mph, and a Category 4, with winds up to 155. The last Category 4 hurricane to hit Florida was Andrew, which laid waste to a swath of South Florida in 1992, killing 55 people in Florida and elsewhere. In Metairie, La., a hurricane gust whipped a sheriff's deputy into the air and slammed him to the ground as he and other deputies tried to take down a 50-by-20 foot American flag in fr6nt of a shopping center. The deputy was hos- pitalized with internal injuries and sev- eral broken bones. At Cape Canaveral on Florida's East Coast, NASA postponedtoday's launch of the space shuttle Columbia for a day because of Opal. m 4 DAYS THURS. & FRIDAY OCT. 5&6, 9:30 AM-8PM SATURDAY OCT. 7,9:30 AM-6PM SUNDAY (IF ANYTHING IS LEFT!) 12-5 PM CLOSED AFTER SUNDAY 330 S. STATE STREET IN THE NICKELS ARCADE (313) 761-7615 Read Weekend, etc. Use the List I I I 4 Why not start your career at the world's leading independent software company? Right now, we're looking for programmers to develop, support and enhance systems and network management datahae and annlications develonment MS-DOS/Windows and networking technologies. 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