News Digest fears* Omaha selected to host vice-presidential debate OMAHA — The presidential campaigns of George Bush and Michael Dukakis Wednesday agreed to stage the campaign’s only vice presi dential debate here, and city officials say they anticipate few problems preparing for the Oct. 5 event. Gov. Kay Orr said she received a telephone call from Bush campaign chief Jim Baker at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday notifying her that Omaha was selected to host a debate between Democratic Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas and Republican Sen. Dan Quayle of Indiana. “It was a wonderful phone call and this is going to be a wonderful event for Omaha and the state of Nebraska,” she said. “We arc thrilled,” said Omaha Mayor Wal ter Calingcr. “We had every confidence that the debate would come to Omaha.” City officials say they do not anticipate any major problems in preparing for the debate. “We’ve done all the planning that’s neces sary and we’re ready to go,” Calingcr said. “We intend to have a first-class debate and showcase Omaha and Nebraska to the rest of the nation. The debate will be held either at the City Auditorium or the Ak-Sar-Bcn horse racing complex, because the Broadway musical “Cats” had already booked the Orphcum Thea ter, Calingcr said. Bentsen, campaigning in Texas, said he was pleased with the Omaha site. “As 1 indicated last week, I’m a Big Red fan, so Omaha sounds great to me,” he said. “I look forward to meeting the junior senator from Indiana because I think we really ought to measure and compare our records of experi ence and accomplishment in the U.S. Senate.” State Democratic and Republican leaders expressed pleasure with Wednesday’s an nouncement. Mrs. Orr said she didn’t want to take full credit for the development, but believed com ments she made Tuesday “pushed the ball over the goal line ... we have a debate.” “I’ve been working on this debate for one and one-half years. I’ll let you all figure out what changed since yesterday,” she said. Tuesday, Mrs. Orr had said Democrats were to blame for delays in naming Omaha as the site. Mrs. Orr said she talked to Baker’s staff Tuesday and had been told that Paul Brountas, chairman of Michael Dukakis’ campaign, be lieved Omaha was unacceptable. But state Democrats disagreed, saying Mrs. Orr’s comments almost lost the debate for Omaha. “I’m especially pleased that it worked out even aftcrGov. Orr’s outburst yesterday, which certainly hurt more than it helped our chances of getting a debate, said State Sen. Don Wesely of Lincoln, co-chairman of the Dukakis cam paign in Nebraska’s 1st District. “The fact is that the Dukakis campaign had never objected to Omaha as a debate site and I’m glad that the Dukakis people have decided to overlook the governor’s unfortunate out burst," Wesely said. Chambers to remain candidate for U.S. Senate State Sen. Ernie Chambers will be a candidate for the U.S. Senate on the New Alliance Party ticket Nov. 8. Chambers, who had been given until 5 p.m. Wednesday to withdraw his name from the ballot, failed to appear at Secretary of State Allen Beermann’s office to decline the U.S. Senate nomination. “By his failure to do anything, he stays on the U.S. Senate ballot and comes off the legislative ballot as per the court order,” Becrmann said about the Omaha legislator. Chambers, no stranger to making reporters play the waiting game, didn’t leave his office at the state Capitol until after 5 p.m., leaving Beermann and reporters waiting on the second floor. Chambers gave reporters a copy of an affidavit of declination of nomina tion with the word “void” written across it and a note that said, “This is what I would have filed, had I chosen to decline the U.S. Senate nomina tion.” He had sought lo be on the ballot both as the candidate for the U.S. Senate and for the scat he’s held in the Legislature for 18 years. But Nebraska Supreme Court Chief Justice William Hastings is sued an opinion last week that Cham berscouldn’tdoboth. He gave Cham bers the deadline which, by statute, is 55 days before the Nov. 8 general election. Chambers had asked Hastings lo extend the deadline, but Hastings denied that request Monday. Chambers said Hastings was “wrong and unfair in view of how long he sat on the opinion.” The hear ing on Chambers’ arguments in the stale Supreme Court was August 23. The opinion was issued Sept. 8. The affidavit given to reporters by a quiet Chambers took yet another shot at the Hastings opinion. It said Hastings' opinion was contrary to the constitution and laws of the state of Nebraska. ■ ..i m • .... Chambers has acknowledged that he could accept the U.S. Senate bid and easily mount a successful write in campaign for his legislative seal. He has scheduled a Thursday morn ing news conference in Omaha. Last week, Chambers said his ulti mate aim was to be on the ballot for both the U.S. Senate seat and the Legislature. Chambers was nominated for the U.S. Senate seat at the New Alliance Party convention in July. — . .. ...—■i * Gilbert batters CANCUN, Mexico — Hurri cane Gilbert, one of the most de structive storms ever, slammed into the Yucatan Peninsula Wednesday, shattering windows, drenching the land and cutting off the Caribbean resorts of Cancun and Cozumel. Thousands fled from the storm, which has killed at least 14 people elsewhere. The Jamaican Embassy in Washington said the storm left 500,000 people homeless in that island nation. The hurricane’s 160 mph winds ripped over Co/.umel island earlier Wednesday. Ham radio operators in the area said Gilbert knocked down a radio and television com munications lower, uprooted trees and blew the roofs off buildings. The winds leveled slum areas in Cancan on the Mexican mainland, where many people live in card board shacks, the operators said. In Quintana Roo state, huge waves lashed at Caribbean resoit beaches, and trees were downed by the punishing winds, Mexican offi cials said. “The sound of the wind outside is horrible,” said receptionist Pablo Torres at the Hotel Carrillos in £ancun in a telephone interview as the storm approached. “You couldn’t leave even if you wanted to.” There were no immediate re ports of casualties in Mexico. The National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables, Fla., said a hurri cane watch was in effect along the Texas coast from Brownsville to Port Arthur and along the coast of northeast Mexico from Tampico north. At 6 p.m. EDT Gilbert was centered near latitude 21.3 north, longitude 88.8 west and approach ing the north coast of Yucatan, about 60 miles east-northeast of the provincial capital, Merida, the statement said. The storm was about 600 miles southeast of Brownsville. Gilbert’s winds had decreased to 140 mph as it moved over land, but the center said wind speed was expected to rise once tne storm moved back over the warm Gulf of Mexico waters. It said the hurri cane was moving west-northwest at 15 mph. Gilbert is a Category 5 storm, the strongest and deadliest type of hurricane. Such storms have maxi mum sustained winds greater than 155 mph and can cause cata strophic damage. Only two Category 5 hurricanes have hit the United Stales—a 1935 storm that killed 408 people in Florida, and Hurricane Camille, which devastated the Mississippi coast in 1969 and killed 256 people. Jamaican Prime Minister Ed ward Seaga called the storm "the worst natural disaster in the mod em history of Jamaica.” Shootout ends hostage crisis, 3 hijackers killed MASERU, Lesotho — South Afri can police killed three hijackers and arrested the fourth in a shootout Wednesday night that ended a hos tage drama in which the gunmen seized a bus carrying 71 pilgrims headed to see the pope, South African officials said. One of the hostages, a young woman, was killed, and 11 passengers were injured, the officials said. The report of the shootout came from South African police headquar ters. Lesotho’s military government had requested South African help in handling the hijacking. Police said the shootout occurred when the hi jackers tried to drive the bus through the closed gales of the British High Commission in Maseru. The hijackers began shooting, and South African officers relumed fire. Police said the casualties among the hostages were ‘‘apparently caused by the wild firing of the hijackers.” They said no policemen were injured. The shooting broke out about 20 minutes after Pope John Paul II ar rived in Maseru, eight hours behind schedule. The hijackers earlier had demanded to meet with the pope and Lesotho’s king, Moshocshoc II, a government official said. After nightfall, gunfire was heard at the site where the bus was parked, and flares lit up the sky. Reporters were blocked from getting close enough to the scene to determine what was happening but saw ambulances take bloodied victims to a hospital. Police ordered journalists at the scene to disperse and then chased them away with whips. The bus was hijacked Tuesday night en route to Maseru. Before the shootout, helicopters and armed cars blanketed central Maseru as 100 armed soldiers and police set up roadblocks and kept spectators at least four blocks from the bus, parked outside the British High Commission. Voters not strongly committed National poll shows movement to Dukakis NEW YORK — Gov. Michael Dukakis and Vice President George Bush were essentially tied in a national poll released Wednes day, with 48 percent supporting Dukakis for president and 45 per * cent backing Bush. The ABC News-Washington poll was conducted Sept. 7 gh Tuesday, finishing two days after two other polls that had found an eight-point Bush lead. That indicated some movement to Dukakis in those last two days. An ABC-Post poll released a week ago had also found an eight point Bush lead, 51-43. That poll was done Aug. 31 through Sept. 7. Pollsters have stressed that many voters are not strongly com milted to either candidate, allow ing for a unusually fluid race. The new ABC Post poll, of 1,092 likely voters, did not delve into underly ing issues. A Los Angeles Times poll also released Wednesday put the race at a 47-47 tie. It was done Friday through Sunday, the same period as a Gal lup poll that found Bush up, 49-41. A CBS News-New York Times poll done Thursday through Sunday was the other to find an eight-point Bush lead, 47-39. The ABC-Posl poll had a mar gin of sampling error of approxi mately plus or minus three percent age points. The CBS-Times poll also was given a three-point mar gin; Gallup’s and the Los Angeles Times’, four points. NelSra^kan Editor Curt Wagner 472-1766 Managing Editor Diana Johnson Assoc News Editors Jane Hlrt Lee Rood Editorial Page Editor Mike Rellley Wire Editor Bob Nelson Copy Desk Editor Chuck Oreen Sports Editor Steve Sipple Arts & Entertain ment Editor Mlckl Haller Diversions Editor Joeth Zucco Sower Editor Graphics Editor Darryl Mattox Photo Chief Eric Gregory Assi Photo Chief David Fahleson Night News Editor Amy Edwards Asst Night News Editor/Librarian Anna Mohrl Art Directors John Bruce Andy Manhart General Manager Dan Shaft II Production Manager Katharine Pollcky Advertising Manager Robert Bates Sales Manager David Thiemann Circulation Manager Eric Shanks Publications Board Chairman Tom Macy 475-9868 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144 080) is published by the UNL Publications Board No braska Union 34, 1400 R St., Lincoln, NF Monday through Friday in the tall and spring semesters and weekly in the summer ses sions, except during vacations Subscription price is $45 tor one year Postmaster Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St..Lincoln. 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