News Digest r * ■Three other executives also must testify in the case of a couple who died in a car wreck. THEManranTEnpagaa WASHINGTON - A Texas judge has ordered the CEO of Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. and three other executives to appear in the case of a couple who died when the tread allegedly came off of their Firestone tires, said a lawyer involved in the case. A lawyer for relatives of Patricio and Nidia Leal, who died in the accident last May, said he wants chief executive officer Masatoshi Ono to explain in a deposition when the Tokyo based company knew that there were problems with die Firestone tires that are being recalled. Ono told The Wall Street Journal in an Aug. 18 story that the company knew there were problems with Wilderness tires when used under “severe condi tions” and moved to improve the model before the recall. “The question that jumps up is, ‘What did you know and when did you know it?”’ said attorney Bob Patterson, who requested the deposition. “And what changes were they making to try and stop die problem?” Patterson said Texas State District Judge John Pope issued the order on Friday for Ono and Firestone executives Gary Crigger, Christine Karbowiak, and Robert Wyant to be deposed Sept. 15 in Nashville, Tenn., where Firestone’s headquarters are located. Patterson said attorneys may also use the executives’ deposi tions in other cases of accidents involving the tires. More than 100 lawsuits were filed nationwide against the tire makers before the recall Congressional staff are scheduled to meet Monday with Firestone executives in Nashville. A spokesman for the House Commerce Committee said it will be asking when the company knew there was a problem with the Wilderness AT, ATX and ADCII tires. Bridgestone /Firestone recalled about 6.5 million P235/75R15 size Firestone ATX, ATX II and Wilderness AT tires, often found on Ford Explorers, on Aug. 9. The Leals were killed in May 1999 near Brownsville, Texas, while traveling in a Ford Explorer equipped with now-recalled Firestone ATX tires, Patterson said. \ The Leal trial is scheduled to begin Oct 16, the first case to go to trial since the recall, said Sean Kane, president of Strategic Safety, a group researching the "The question that jumps up is, What did you know and when did you know it?" Bob Patterson attorney tire problem for attorneys who are suing the company. A spokeswoman for Firestone, Cynthia McCafferty, said she had no information on the case, but the company does n't generally comment on pend ing litigation. However, she added, Firestone officials will comply with any judicial order Remains returned to surviving tribe THE ASSftMATEn PRESS BERKELEY, CaBt -The return of Ishi's remains to his Indian homeland 80 years after scientists removed his brain in the interests of science has drawn new atten tion to the quest to retrieve ances tral bones from museum base ments. Ishi, it turns out, is an excep tion. Ten years after Congress ordered Native American remains returned to their tribes, only 10 percent of the up to 200,000 remains estimated to be in public collections are even officially inventoried, federal records show. With more than 8,000 Indian remains, the collection of the University of California, Berkeley, is third only to those at the Smithsonian and Harvard. So far, however, the school has returned only an amulet and an earthen ware jar While a variety of factors lie behind the delays, two stand out: Institutions have been slow to reveal tb^ir holdings tn Indians as they try to match bones to tribes, and federal officials have been slow to do anything about the data that have been turned in. Ishi walked out of the wilder ness of Northern California in 1911, the last survivor of his tribe. He was taken in by researchers and lived out his days at a muse um wnere ne demonstrated ms skills for curious crowds. When Ishi died in 1916, his brain was removed - against his request not to be autopsied - and his body cremated. His brain was sent to the Smithsonian, where it remained largely forgotten until a group of California Indians began search ing for him in 1997. Although Ishi was known as the “last of the Yahi," the Smithsonian ruled that Ishi had ties to a surviving tribe, which decided to reunite his brain with his cremated remains for burial in a secret ceremony near Mount Lassen. The 1990 federal law requires all federally funded agencies and museums to return remains. Inventories were to be com pleted in 1995. After an extension and a threat of fines, Berkeley finally finished its inventory of remains on June 30. About 17 parent of Berkeley’s remains have been determined to be affiliated with a particular tribe, meaning they can be claimed. Three requests are pending. Despite the headaches, Sullivan believes overall that the law is working. “What’s happened is there’s finally a national standard that recognizes these human rights,” Sullivan said. Firefighters worry windy weather may worsen dangerous wildfires ■Weekend forecast blamed for creating afirestomn in South Dakota's Black Hills. THPtaanRUTtnpnesa HELENA, Mont - Firefighters were on their guard Sunday as more windy weather threatened to worsen wildfires that already had turned hundreds of thou sands of acres of forest to ash. Wind already was blamed for creating a firestorm in South Dakota’s mountainous Black Hills. Fire officials worried that 30 mph wind forecast Sunday could cause problems for some of the 10,000 people battling the 23 major wildfires in the forests of western Montana. “Tbday is supposed to be a big day for wind,” said Venetia Gempler of the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho. “We are expecting to have a significant growth in fires because of this wind.” Montana fires burned an additional 13,000 acres Saturday, as blustery weather swept through the region, but officials said some of that was land within the perimeters of fires that had not been charred by the flames’ first pass. “We did get some growth on the fires, but nothing incredibly huge,” said Connie Myers, an information officer for crew bat tling a group of blazes that had blackened more than 260,000 acres in and around the Bitterroot Valley. That was not the case in Western South Dakota, where a fire in the heart of the Black Hills National Forest, northwest of Custer, exploded from 30,000 acres on Saturday to an estimated 90,000 on Sunday. The Forest Service said it expected more "explosive fire behavior” Sunday. rirengmers were rorceu on that fire’s north side Saturday because the wind created firestorm conditions. Three out buildings and a tractor were destroyed in the sparsely settled region and two homes were dam aged, officials reported. The few people in the region woe urged to evacuate an area of 300 square miles, forest officials said. Fire lines along the eastern side of the blaze were being strengthened because a cold front moving into the region was expected to bring northwesterly wind. There was a possibility that the wind could help crews work ing on a 110,000-acre range fire in south-central Washington. It had burned 16 structures, including one home. “We are expecting to have a significant growth in fires because of this wind " Venetia Gempler National Interagency Fire Center That fire, near Prosser, Wash., was 50 percent contained early Sunday, and the wind was expect ed to blow out of the west, which “would be blowing the fire back on itself,” said Laura Vander Meer of the state Emergency Operations Center. Montana's Gov. Marc Radcot said Sunday that die federal gov ernment shared some of the blame for the fires. The fire danger, he said on “Fox News Sunday,” was some thing “that the administration knew about, that all of us have known about for a long period of time.” But Racicot denied that Western governors were using the issue of die fires to hurt A1 Gore’s presidential campaign. "That’s patent nonsense,” , Racicot, a Republican, said. “Anyone that would politicize this issue with the tragedy that’s con fronting die people of the West, virtually all of them, would be outrageous. It’s totally inappro priate to cast it in those terms.” C Questions? Comments? Ask lor the appropriate section editor at (402)472-2588 ore-mail: dn#unl^du Sarah Baker Bradley Davis Dane Stkkney Kimberly Sweet Samuel McKewon Matthew Hansen Josh Nichols Lindsay Young Danell McCoy Heather Glenboski Melanie Falk Andrew Broer Gregg Steams Tanner Graham DanShattil Russell Willbanks, (402)436-7226 Don Walton, (402)473-7248 Nick Partsch, (402)472-2589 jgm Assistant Ad Manager Nicole Woita VassMed Ad Manager Nikki Bruner ^^^^Circuiation Manager Imtiyaz Khan Z Fax Number: (402) 472-1761 World Wide Web: www.daiiyneb.com The Daily Nebraskan (USPS144-080) ublished by the UNL Publications Board, 20 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, NE 68588-0448, j^Mtiay through Friday during the academic vyeanweekly during the summer sessions. *The public has access to the Publications Board. ^sppaders are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan By calling (402) 472-2588. \ v . Subscriptions are $60 for one year. % Postmaster Send address changes to aCMythe Daily Nebraskan, 20 Nebraska Union, f ^\1400 R St, Lincoln, NE 68588-0448. Periodical postage paid at Lincoln, NE. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 2000 ^_DAILY NEBRASKAN Omaha man picks winning lottery ticket THE ASSOCIATED PRESS OMAHA, Neb.—A mistake by a convenience store clerk couldnt have had a better outcome. The winning PowerbaU ticket was sold for Saturday^ $ 14 million jackpot at the Comer Food Mart in south Omaha. “He wanted a Pick 5 but I hit the wrong button for it and got PowerbaU instead,” said Greg Poth, who was working at the food mart Friday night. “I talked him into buying it and he won.” Poth said he remembered the customer. Poth said the winner buys $10-15 worth of lottery tick ets twice a week. TODAY Partly cloudy high 89, low 72 TOMORROW Partly cloudy high 80, low 72 Rebels free five hostages THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JOLO, Philippines - Five for eign hostages released by Muslim rebels walked into freedom Sunday looking stunned, some in tears and leaving family members still captive in the jungle on a remote Philippine island. The Abu Sayyaf separatist guerrillas released four women and one man after Libya agreed to pay $1 million for each, negotia tors said. The rebels were still holding seven other Westerners and 12 Filipinos. But freedom was bittersweet for the former hostages. “We’re not happy because there are peo ple left behind,” said French citi zen Marie Moarbes. “It's not fin ished yet for us.” The freed hostages were Sonia Wendling of France, South African Monique Strydom, German Werner Wallert, and Maryse i Burgot, a French journalist “My son is still there. You don't expect me to be happy," Wallert said. Strydom's husband also remains a hostage. Wendling, rubbing her eyes in apparent disbelief, said she could never forget her four months in captivity. “I don't know how to describe the experience,” she said. All but die journalist were kid napped April 23, while vacation ing at a Malaysian diving resort and brought by boat to Jolo, an impoverished island near the Philippines' southern tip. Burgot was seized with two other French television journalists last month when they visited the rebel camp. Still in captivity are one French, one German, two Finns and one South African kidnapped from the Malaysian resort, the two French journalists and 12 Filipino Christian evangelists. "We’re not happy because there are people left behind. It’s not finished yet for us." Marie Moarbes French citizen -1 Can you handle the truth? Dailyneb.com The Associated Press ■Rush traps four people in elevator MOSCOW-Fire engulfed the Ostankino television tower, the world’s second-tallest freestand ing structure, trapping four peo ple in an elevator and knocking out most TV channels in the Russian capital Sunday. Firefighters have had trouble fighting the fire, which started about 1,520 feet above ground, due to die difficulty of hauling equipment, including chemical fire extinguishers, up so many flights of stairs. The towerfe spire is narrow at that point, and the cramped quarters hampered movement Yellow flames licked from the glassed-in platform as darkness fell on the dty. Rescuers battled to locate the stuck elevator where three fire fighters and a female elevator operator were trapped about 860 feet above ground, said Nikolai Sarychev, a fire department spokesman at the scene. ■VoKZueb ^ astopminktersinCabinet CARACAS, Venezuela - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez appointed three “revolu tionary* women as top ministers Sunday, in what had previously been a male-dominated Cabinet Chavez picked Blancanieves Portocarrero to replace Lino Martinez as labor minister. Portocarrero had served as vice president to a special assembly which drafted a new constitution tailored to Chavez's specifica tions. Former Commerce Minister Juan Montilla will be replaced by Luisa Romero Bermudez, presi dent of the state import-export bank, and Deputy Health Minister Analisa Osorio Granado will take the job of environment minister. ■Connecticut Man guns down three people h rtfrr i^n fKjuiriiui himrnlf DeTore snooung nirnseiT WATERBUn% Goon. - A man went on a killing spree Saturday, gunning down three people, including a firefighter who was collecting money for charity, before shooting himself to death, police said. The gunman knew all three victims, but authorities hadn’t determined why he targeted than. One victim was a neighbor and another was the mother of an ex-girifiiend. The shooting spree began when the suspect, identified as Mark Cote, 29, got into an argu ment with Brian Miller, 30, who lived in the same multiple- family home as Cote, police said. The two had an ongoing dispute, but police would not say why they were arguing Saturday. Flaherty said Cote shot Miller while his neighbor was sitting in his car; dragged him out and shot him again before fleeing in the car In a pulled quote that ran in Friday’s Daily Nebraskan about a rally featuring human rights activist Angela Davis on the north capitol steps at noon today, a par enthetical phrase was inserted that could be misinterpreted. Mary Dickinson, spokeswoman for Nebraskans for Justice, said: “We want to raise awareness of the unjust incarcerations of 30 years.” She was referring to two men who she believes are political prisoners, Edward Poindexter and David Rice, who changed his * name to Mondo we Langa while in prison. U"P REGIMES... -can change your lifa in an instant. Perhaps you would uki to coninar tha pomlny of mating an adoption plan I for your child. Our caao workers can answer your questions confidentially. Kyra would like to visit with us, please call today. 4600 WlkyRoul, Sit. 314 • Ltaooln, NE 68510 I Inlemel Nebraska MflU L $9.95/month dial-up