Hurricane SUvivors begin to rebuild NAVARRE BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Nearly a dozen people were found hud- dling in the wreckage of their homes on the narrow barrier island where Hurri- cane Opal charged ashore, rescuers said Saturday. At least two people were con- sidered missing. Rescuers using dogs and sensitive listening devices searched for a 51- year-old man who had called 91 ito say he was riding the storm out Wednes- day, said Tom Carr of the Federal Emer- gency Management Agency. Carr said the man's Navarre Beach house had been washed away. A 17-year-old girl who also called 911 was unaccounted for, too, but Carr said authorities did not know where she had been or where to look for her. Neither person's name was released. The death toll rose to 19 when a man died Friday after a tree fell on him as he cleared debris from his yard in DeFuniak Springs, authorities said. Rescuers searching the eastern end of Santa Rosa Island known as Okaloosa Beach on Friday found 10 or 11 people who had weathered the storm in their houses and condominiums, said Raul Chavez. a rescuer with the Miami Metro- Dade Fire Department. They were taken to the mainland. As the search wound down, residents of Navarre Beach and next-door Pensacola Beach, at the other end of Santa Rosa Island, returned for the first brief visit to their homes since Opal. "It's gone. It's flattened. It's a pan- The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 9, 1995 - 7A Earthquake rocks Inn Indonesian island; at least 100 dead r AP PHOTO Steve Hering turns away from the rubble that was once his home Saturday In Navarre Beach, Fla. About 75 percent of the town's homes were destroyed by Hurricane Opal's storm surge. cake. There's nothing there," Peggy Sparkman told her sister by cellular phone as she caught her first glimpse of her summer cottage on Pensacola Beach. The only thing left was the new roof she put on after Hurricane Erin two months ago. Elsewhere, along Florida's Pan- handle, life was returning to a sem- blance of normality. Power was back for all but 150,500 of the 572,000 Flo- ridians who lost it after the storm, but thousands more as far north as North Carolina were still blacked out. In Gulf Breeze, only a mile across Santa Rosa Sound from Pensacola Beach, it was a normal Saturday for most people as they washed cars, mowed lawns, and played softball. Mail was delivered and trash picked up. The only "It's gone. t's flattened. t's a pancake, There's nothing there" - Peggy Sparkman Florida resident, describing the remains of her beach cottage SUNGAIPENUH, Indonesia (AP)- A huge earthquake wrenched the island of Sumatra before dawn Saturday, kill- ing at least 100 people, injuring hun- dreds of others and destroying or dam- aging at least 10,000 homes and build- ings. Ten miles from the epicenter, most of Sungaipenuh's 40,000 residents slept in the open or huddled in front of bon- fires as temperatures dropped to 50 degrees early yesterday. The damage around them gave tes- timony to the force of the magnitude- 7 quake: skeletons of brick-and-mor- tar houses, cracked ground, downed trees, crumpled bridges, mounds of mud from landslides, a collapsed mosque. "It is beyond my thoughts. Why should it happen to us, as if like a punishment," said Sunardi, a farmer in a village outside Sungaipenuh whose teen-age son was killed. "Our community was so peaceful and everything was perfect," he said. The earthquake struck at 1:09 a.m., when most people in this remote valley in south-central Sumatra's Jambi prov- ince were asleep. Tremors were felt hundreds of miles away in Singapore and Malaysia. "We were all in deep sleep when the house started to shake and sway," said Ngatimin, a municipal worker who, like many Indonesians, uses only one name. "I heard hysterical cries and screams . The lights went off and we were scrambling to get out in pitch darkness." Rescuers, hampered by heavy rains and poor communications, reo covered 74 bodies from under the rubble of buildings and mounds of mud in Sungaipenuh and in nearby villages. Ariana Yasin, chief of the Meteoro- logical and Geophysical Agency in Jambi city, told The Associated Press by phone that at least 100 people are believed dead. The governor's office said yesterday that 1,990 people were injured, 673 of them seriously. Many people suffered broken bones and breathing difficulties. after being crushed by wooden beams of homes. "We desperately need more doctors. Otherwise, the toll could rise," said Dr. Marman at one of Sungaipenuh's two hospitals, which were overwhelmed by the injured. A battalion of 800 soldiers, two am- bulances and army doctors and para- medics rushed to the stricken area to help search for bodies and survivors. "We have to dig carefully, but we are racing against time," said a police offi- cial contacted by telephone in Sungaipenuh. He spoke on condition of anonymity. The Health Ministry also sent five ambulances, 41 doctors and paramed- ics. In Japan, the Association of Medi- cal Doctors for Asia said it would send a medical team. The soldiers and relief workers car- ried medicine and food, including sacks of rice and instant noodles. At least 10,000 homes and buildings were destroyed or damaged, the official Antara news agency said. signs of a storm were piles of tree limbs and leaves in yards. In Laguna Beach, outside Panama City, a sign at the Carousel grocery store beckoned passers-by: "WE ARE OPEN. WE HAVE GAS." "All of our advertised specials are in effect. Everything is normal," said the store's owner, Charlie Lahan. Elsewhere in Panama City Beach, brooms, rakes and shovels were in use as residents cleaned up. Members of the National Guard patrolled past shuttered surf shops and damaged buildings. A few joggers and sightseers strolled the littered beaches. "Our house is fine so we're just doing some beachcombing," Bernard Hoffberg said as he walked along Pensacola Beach picking up shells. Okaloosa County sheriff's. spokesman Rick Hord said there had been four arrests for curfew violations but no looting. "It's a burglar's paradise, but every- body seems to be looking out for every- body else's property," he said. Police arrest Tokyo cult member in mail bombing A Leader urges followers to give themselves up to officials TOKYO (AP) - Obeying his leader's call to surrender, a cult mem- ber suspected of sending a parcel bomb that maimed an aide to Tokyo's gover- nor turned himself into police yester- day. Masahiro Tominaga, a former doc- tor, said he gave himself up because he did not want to cause any more trouble for the cult, Kyodo News Service re- ported. The Aum Shinri Kyo cult is accused of carrying out a nerve gas attack on Tokyo's subways last March that killed 12 people and injured 5,500, and a string of other crimes. Shoko Asahara, the cult's jailed leader, has reportedly urged followers who are still fugitives to give themselves up. Police said Tominaga was arrested after surrendering, but they would not elaborate. The parcel bomb sent to Tokyo Gov. Yukio Aoshima exploded May 16, hours after Asahara was arrested. Aoshima was not in his office, but his secretary lost several fingers on his left hand when he opened the package. Authorities are currently deciding whether to apply a controversial anti- sedition law to the cult. The law, which has never been applied to an organiza- tion, would ban the group. Fearing disbandment, cult officials have tried to improve their image, and some analysts think Asahara's call for surrender is part of that effort. Four other cult members are also suspected of having been involved in the bomb attack, according to news reports. All have already been arrested on other charges. Police say the cult was developing large amounts of chemical, biological and conventional weapons to attack urban centers and overthrow the gov- ernment. On Friday, police arrested Fumihiro Joyu, the acting leader of the cult since Asahara's arrest. His arrest leaves the group essentially leaderless. The Michigan Daily: Jbir student newspaper for 105 years. Reason #7 1 Sometimes Calling Domino's Pizza is the Only Thing You And 6 Your Roommate Agree On. c' ( N -* - "' >4'. f! . , . , 4t^^{ . __ - , At_. . . .( y ', 4 { E> ,j4 _ t_., j - 4 <.. . ::r-t'........ :;:%:t '. stn k . .: ;.f i: .'' Don't fight. Call Domino's Pizza. 761-1111 1031 E. Ann St. 761-9393 1200 Packard i1~T1~U1Z4± I~l][I~IJ~U ____________ I$9 IZZIIL' Ilook - I, C . p-rI I