2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 16, 1995 NATON/WOUR Hurricane Roxanne revisits Mexican coast MEXICO CITY (AP) - A reborn liurricane Roxanne took aim yesterday at Mexico's southern Gulf coast, bear- ing down with 85-mph winds on areas the storm had sideswiped with heavy winds and rain just days earlier. Roxanne, which had been down- graded to a tropical storm, was a cat- egory 1 hurricane yesterday, the weak- jst.n a scale of 1-5. The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami issued a hit icane warning, from Progreso to Tampico. Richard Pasch, a forecaster at the hurricane center, said Tabasco and Campeche states on the southern Gulf rim could be inundated after having been pounded by Roxanne and by Hur- ricane Opal a week earlier. "The big problem is that the dams are right at the top and the grounds are saturated," Pasch said. "There is a po- tential for some serious flooding" in Tabasco and Campeche. At 5 p.m., Roxanne was located about 135 miles north of Ciudad del Carmen, moving away from that island shrimping port and nearly stationary with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph, the weather service said. The storm was expected to move slowly south or southwest, possibly weakening slightly and touching the Mexican coast at some point yesterday night. Hurricane-force winds extended 115 miles from Roxanne's center. The hurricane, which has meandered erratically in the Gulf ofMexico during the past three days, was expected to turn more to the south, he said. "This storm has made a big loop," Pasch said. "The waters have been stirred up a bit by (the) hurricane cross- ing its own path." The National Weather Service said the Mexican coast within the hurricane warning area could get 6-8 inches of rain and that storm-generated tides could be 4-6 feet above normal. In the Gulf city of Campeche, streets were flooded yesterday and rain was heavy, said Juan Yahvela, a reporter for the newspaper El Sur de Campeche there. Winds were picking up by late yesterday afternoon.. "What we have is very high waves," Yahvela said in a telephone interview. "(The hurricane) wants to stay in Campeche to vacation. It wants to eat shrimp." Roxanne killed at least six people and has driven tens of thousands from their homes since slamming into the resort island of Cozumel on Tuesday with 110-mph winds. President Ernesto Zedillo on Satur- day visited storm-damaged areas of Campeche and Tabasco states, where thousands of people remain in shelters. Health authorities were trying to keep an outbreak of cholera from spreading out of control in the flooded lowland areas of the southern Gulf coast. Campeche Gov. Jorge Salomon Azar told the government's Notimex news agency that more than 100 cargo trucks were trapped by storm damage to a major highway linking Yucatan Penin- sula to the rest of Mexico. He said repairs might take several days. Roxanne is the Atlantic storm season's 10th hurricane. The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami was also keeping a broad area of cloudiness across Cuba to south Florida under watch, said James Lewis Free, a specialist there. He said "conditions appear to be fa- vorable" for the development of a cy- clone there. .. '.ir... Nunn says U.S. has terrorist targets WASHINGTON - Sen. Sam Nunn, one of the top authorities in Congress on security and terrorism, warned yesterday that the United States has many inviting and inadequately protected terrorist targets and should pay heed to Japan's painful experience with the Aum Supreme Truth cult. Nunn (D-Ga.) said a study by his staff shows that the Japanese cult, which is accused in the deadly nerve gas attack on Tokyo's subways earlier this year, was working to develop biological weapons and the means to deliver them. He said the organization also was seeking nuclear technology. "This gives us the message that we really have a real vulnerability out there when groups like this that are willing to do the unthinkable are also able to get unthinkable destructive power in their hands," Nunn said on the CBS program "Face the Nation." He said that before the subway attack, U.S. intelligence had detected no sign of anything awry with Aum Supreme Truth and that the intelligence services could not be depended on to provide adequate warning of such threats. CIA seeks speedier analysis of pictures fromw Spy satellites WASHINGTON - The sophisti- cated system of U.S. spy satellites pro- duces more images than can be pro- cessed and analyzed as quickly as intel- ligence officials want, congressional and administration sources say. Faced with what one key official de- scribed as the need to decide whether to collect less or analyze more, the intelli- gence community has decided it must upgrade its processing operations. Central Intelligence Agency Direc- tor John Deutch is studying a plan to consolidate the image-analysis opera- tions of the numerous military and in- telligence agencies that order the satel- lite pictures. Now, every day at 3 p.m. in the first floor ofa windowless building in north- ern Virginia, a dozen people represent- ing individual organizations in the in- telligence community sit around a con- ference table and decide which targets the spy satellites should focus on dur- ing the next 24 hours. The targets are passed to officials at the National Reconnaissance Office, whose staff controls the four or five sophisticated electro-optical and radar satellites that race around the world in low orbits. Each spy satellite spends just min- utes over target areas, a senior intelli- gence official said. Bosnia is targeted every day now but other targets are studied as demanded. English may become Ohio's sole lagage FIN DLAY, Ohio - Like a prosecu- tor eager to share damning evidence, state Rep. George E. Terwilleger shoves a grainy Polaroid across his desk. Some people might strain their eyes to spot some irregularity in this shot of a government building and a placard read- ing, "Department of Human Services- El Departamento de Servicios Humanos." But Terwilleger sees such signs-of- the-times asproofofmulticulturalchaos to come. In April, he introduced a bill that would make Ohio the 23rd state to declare English the sole language of government. Abruptly, the self-described "famr boy" found himself slugging it out on the local front of a "culture war" issue that has also seeped into the 1996 Re- publican presidential race. Don't Panic! If you think you're pregnant... call us-we listen, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 769-7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours. Fully confidential. Serving Students since 1970. Op, A M :F > f . 3 ARE YOU ANXIOUS OR ENRLL OW!1-800 -300-PREP DEPRESSED AT SCHOOL? Professional help is available. Call Counseling Referral Network for a private, affordable, and confidential consultation. 665-8528 ' ... ................... ... ........._,.. - Fighting ebbs in Bosnia after exhausting battle BANJA LUKA, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Fighting ebbed yesterday in north- western Bosnia where up to 50,000 exhausted Serbs were struggling to sur- vive after fleeing advances by govern- ment and Croat forces. In a bitter twist in the 3 1/2-year- long war, many of the refugees are now at Omarska, site of one of the most notorious prison camps set up when Serb rebels overran much of Bosnia in 1992. A field hospital has been treating both civilians and soldiers wounded in the latest fighting. Aid workers say some older refugees are dying, apparently exhaustedafterbeing uprooted by rapid shifts in front lines in northern Bosnia in the past six weeks. The U.S.-brokered truce that started Thursday was largely observed through- out the country, U.N. officials said yes- terday. The Muslim-led Bosnian gov- ernment claimed on Saturday that it was halting its offensive, amid reports Serbia had to threaten to send in the Yugoslav army. Government army commanders met for five hours in the Bosnian capital late Saturday and dispatched a senior of- ficer to the bitterly contested north- west, apparently to ensure that govern- ment troops there observed the truce, army sources said. Islamic scholar wins German prize BERLIN - A pre-eminent scholar of Islam accepted Germany's top liter- ary prize yesterday, saying that critics who claim she condones Muslim ex- tremism have only hurt her efforts to bridge a dangerous cultural divide. Since Annemarie Schimmel was named the award recipient in April, hundreds of German intellectuals have signed petitions or letters in protest, primarily for her apparent sympathy for Iran's 1989 death threat against British author Salman Rushdie. Rushdie's novel "The Satanic Verses" was deemed blasphemous by Islamic clerics. Rushdie has been living in hiding ever since. At yesterday's ceremony, Schimmel, a 73-year-old Harvard University professor emeritus, ac- cepted the Peace Prize, saying that she rejects "the sinister holy war" against Rushdie, but also simplistic Western preconceptions that equate Islam with intolerance. - From Daily wire services What kind of career can you have at J. P. Morgan? You'd be suprised. Exceptional talent in a wide variety of disciplines is the key to success for a leading global financial ser- vices firm like ours. To attract the talent we need to achieve our busi- ness goals, we offer outstanding career opportunities in technology, human resources, internal manage- ment consulting, financial accounting, and internal auditing. Of course we also offer career opportunities in finance. We place a heavy emphasis on teamwork, fostering an environment in which profession- als work together to produce consistently excellent results. In the financial markets, people create the margin of success. And at Morgan, we aim to bring out the best that people can offer The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for tall term, starting in September.via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $165. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 7640552 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 7640550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu EDITORIAL A Rosenberg, Editor n h f f If you are interested in one of these areas, please write to: Corporate Recruiting J.T Morgan & Co. Incorporated 60 Wall Street New York, NY 10260 (Please indicate area of interest) Also, for more information about the varied career paths available at J.. Morgan, visit us on the Internet at ittp://www.jpmorgan.com, or NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, 1isa Dines. Andrew Taylor. Scot Woods. STAFF: Stu Berlow, Cathy Boguslaski. Kiran chaudhri, Jodi Cohen, Sam T. Dudek, Jeff Eldridge, Lenny Feller. Jennifer Fried. Ronnie Glassberg, Kate Glickman, Jennifer Harvey, Amy Klein, Stephanie Jo Klein, Jeff Lawson, Laurie Mayk. Will McCahil. Heather Miller, Gail Mongkolpradit, Laura Nelson, Tim O'Connell. Lisa Poris, Zachary M. Raimi, Megan Schimpf, Maureen Sirhal, Matthew Smart, Michelle Lee Thompson, Katie Wang, Josh White. CALENDAR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James Nash, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Adrienne Janney. Joel F. Knutson. STAFF: Bobby Angel. Patience Atkin, Zach Gelber, Ephraim R. Gerstein. Kefen Kay Hahn.Judith Kafka. Chris Kayo. Jeff Keating. Jim Lasser. Ann Markey, Erin Marsh. Brent McIntosh, Scott Pence, David Schultz, Ron Steiger, Jean Twonge. Matt Wmsatt, Adam Yale. SPORTS Antoine Pitts, Managing Editor EDITORS: Darren Everson, Brent McIntosh. Barry Sotlenberger, Ryan White. STAFF: Donald Adamek, Paul Barger. Nancy Berger, Scott Burton, Dorothy Chambers. Nicholas J. Cotsonik. Susan Dann. AVi Ebenstein. Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein, Chaim Hyman, Andy Knudsen, John Lermi, Marc Lightdale, Chris Murphy, Moftse Polakov. Jim Rose. Jed Rosenthal. Danielle Rumore Brian Sklar, Marc Snyder, Dan Stillman. Doug Stevens. Dan Van Sak. ARTS Heather Plares, Alexandra Twin, Editors EDITORS: Dean Bakopoulos (Books). Melissa Rose Bernardo (Theater). Jennifer Buckley (Weekend, etc.). Brian A. Gnatt (Music). Kari Jones (Weekend. etc.), Emily Lambert (Fine Arts). Joshua Rich (Film) STAFF: Matthew Benz. Eugene Bowen, Mark Carlson. Christopher Corbett, David Cook, Thomas Crowloy, Ella do Leon. Lis Harw in. Josh Herrington, Kirnberley Howitt, Elizabeth Lucas. Jennifer Petlinski, Elan Stsuros, Matthew Steinhauser, PrashglW Tamaskar, Ted Watts,.Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Jonatha Lurie, ditr ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Mark Friedman. STAFF: Tonya Broad. Damian Cap, Mark Friemn.No onKchanantha, Stephanie Grace tLim, Elizabeth Lippman. 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