®l?f SaUgßarHfri IN THE NEWS Tip Stones from the state , nation and world Hurricane Roxanne Hits GuH Coast of Mexico MEXICO CITY Reborn Hurricane Roxanne took aim Sunday at Mexico’s southern Gulf coast, bearing down with 85-mph winds on areas the storm side swiped with heavy winds and rain days earlier. Roxanne, which had been downgraded to a tropical storm, was a category 1 hurri cane on Sunday, the weakest on a scale of 1-5. The U.S. National Hurricane Center issued a hurricane warning from Progreso to Tampico. Richard Pasch, a forecaster at the hurri cane center, said Tabasco and Campeche states on the southern Gulf rim could be inundated after having been pounded by Roxanne and by Hurricane 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 poten tial for some serious flooding” in Tabasco and Campeche. At 2 p.m. EDT Roxanne was located about 125 miles north of Ciudad del Carmen and moving southeast at about 7 mph with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph, he said. Hurricane-force winds ex tended 115 miles from the center. Russian Commandos Free 5 Hostages From Tour Rus MOSCOW Firing into the air, Rus sian commandos swarmed out of the night and onto a tour bus near the Kremlin early Sunday, freeing four South Koreans and a Russian driverheldhostage for lOhoursby a rifle-wielding assailant. The gunman died in the attack. About 20 commandos attacked the bus before dawn, unleashing a barrage of gun fire and tossing stun grenades that exploded with searing flashes. Several commandos crawled aboard the bus through its win dows. The five freed men were hustled from the bus looking shaken and dazed. The gunman had released some 20 other hos tages in the hours before, and the Interfax news agency reported that all were unhurt. The dead gunman was Russian, Mos cow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov said. He gave no further details. The gunman had de manded $lO million, then lowered his de mand to $1 million. The commandos made their move at . 2:45a.m., just as the Kremlin chimes rang the largest crowd in NCAA Women's soccer history will converge on Fetzer Field December Ist. PHOTO; 1993 NCAA Championships, Current Record: 5721 first come, first serve. The University of North Carolina, All-tournament prices are as home of the proud tradition that Is Tar follows: Adults $14.00, Children age 12 Heel women’s soccer will play host to and under $4.00. the 1995 NCAA Championship. Don’t wait to purchase your tickets The top four teams in the country to the 1995 Championships.. call the will converge on Fetzer Field December Carolina Ticket Office now at 1-800- 1-3,1995, to determine the national 722-HEEL, or return the attached champion. application, today. All-tournament ticket packages for Seats will be assigned strictly on the 1995 NCAA Women’s Soccer the basis of purchase date! All seats Championships will be sold in advance will be reserved. December Ist may and they are going fast. seem far away but a Fetzer Field sell out is just around the comer. 1995 NCAA. r-- : 01 Please mail this application and payment to: j | 1995 NCAA Women’s Soccer, c/o The University of North Carolina, | Please make checks payable to UNCAA. I ?*”** Adult @ sl4.°° = | | Address I City Children @s4.°° = | (12 and unders | VISA or Master Card # Plus Shipping & Handling $2.00 j | TOTAL | WOMEN'S SOCCER ! Exp. Date / / ! DIVISION I CHAMPIONSHIP * I QAA 714 UCCI 1 b. an apparent signal to them, since the chimes do not usually ring after midnight to avoid awakening Muscovites. The hostages—some 25 South Korean tourists had been visiting Red Square and the Kremlin Armed with an AK-47 assault rifle, the gunman seized the bus with the tourists aboard Saturday evening. The gunman bad released the hostages in several groups, including all the women on the bus, until just the five men were left, police said. Hussein Runs Unopposed In Iraq's First Referendum BAGHDAD, Iraq From the mo ment they entered polling stations Sunday, Iraqi voters were swamped with pro- Saddam Hussein propaganda in an effort to guarantee the Iraqi leader a landslide victory in the nation’s first presidential referendum. The massive effort should work. Saddam was the sole candidate in Sunday’s elec tion, which Washington has dismissed as a sham. Iraq’s state-run newspapers, along with its television and radio stations, have inun dated voters for weeks, urging them to vote for Saddam. On Sunday, the ||t campaign moved to W the polling stations. : Outside a school in % downtown Baghdad, seven large posters told peopletovote“yes” | for the man who has Iraqi leader SADDAM ruled since 1979 HUSSEIN s victory in without ever facing the referendum was a a general election, foregone conclusion. Voters walking toward open ballot booths saw more large pictures of the president inside the school, some with the slogan “Long Live Saddam Hussein.” At one point, 25 women and children marched through the balloting room clap ping, carrying Saddam posters and shout ing: “Yes, Yes, for Saddam Hussein.” Saddam’s first wife, Sajida, and his daughter, Hala, cast votes at a school in Baghdad to show their support. Hala is the only one of Saddam’s three daughters by Sajida still in Baghdad. The other two, Raghda and Rana, fled to Jordan with their husbands Aug. 8, a defection that rocked the beleaguered Baghdad regime. Saddam’s supporters worked hard to make polling places even as far away as Karbala, aholy ShiiteMuslimcity in south ern Iraq with a tradition of dissent, look like campaign rally sites. The paper ballots said: “Do you agree that Saddam Hussein should be the presi dent of the Republic of Iraq for another seven years?” Voters used pens to mark “yes” or “no.” Few voters bothered to fold their ballots as they carried them into anotherropm STATE & NATIONAL and placed them in a wooden box. The many ballots that were visible were all marked “yes.” The government was expected to an nounce the results of the referendum late Sunday or early Monday, but Saddam’s victory was a foregone conclusion. Washington has ridiculed the ballot, especially Iraq’s claim it marks the begin ning of a process that will bring democracy to a country ruled by Saddam alone for 16 years. Saddam appears to be holding the vote to show the world that he remains popular, despite the massive problems that he and his government face. U.N. trade sanctions imposed after Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 have devastated Iraq’s economy, leaving many of its 20 million people beggared and hungry. Mexican Elections Smooth Despite Threats of Violence OCOSINGO, Mexico—Threats of vio lence forced the postponement of voting Sunday in some areas of Chiapas, home of an unresolved peasant rebellion, but most citizens elected local and state officials peacefully. There was fear that violence could en danger peace talks between the govern ment and the Zapatista National Libera tion Army, the rebel group that staged the Jan. I,l994uprising in the southern Mexi can state. In the municipality of Ocosingo, the scene of some of the worst violence of the rebellion, the state governor’s office post poned voting until Nov. 5. The office refused to delay voting in 11 other municipalities, however, as the cen ter-left Democratic Revolution Party, or PRD, had also requested. “The state is a bubbling soup of contra dictions,” said Amado Avendano, a pro rebel political leader. “The elections are just throwing gasoline on the fire, because no one’s going to be happy.” The vote was postponed after a pro- PRD peasant group had threatened to bum polling stations. They said some peasants had to walk up to 10 hours to get to voting precincts and that precincts were located to favor the well-entrenched Institutional Revolution ary Party, orPRI. In the municipality of Tila in the north, opposition party members said late on Sat urday they had no confidence in the elec tions and were prepared to take over their local government if the PRI declares vic tory. There are 1.6 million registered vot ers in the state. Results were not expected for several days. Violence is common in Chiapas, Mexico’s poorest and southernmost state. In Tila, probably the most violent munici pality, at least 20 people have been mur dered this year, some hacked to death with machetes. FROM WIRE REPORTS BOG Names Alvin Schexnider Chancellor at Winston-Salem State THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BOONE—A top administrator at Vir ginia Commonwealth University will be the next chancellor ofWinston-Salem State University. Alvin Schexnider, 50, was approved by the UNC-system Board of Governors Fri day during a meeting on the Appalachian State University campus. “It’s been a longtime desire of mine to work at a historically black institution,” said Schexnider, who earned a bachelor’s degree from such a school. He attended G rambling State University in Louisiana before earning master’s and doctoral de grees in political science from Northwest ern University. Schexnider will take office on Jan. 1, succeeding Gerald McCants, who has Black Men Ready for Million Man March ■ Participants in today’s rally started gathering at the Mall site early Sunday. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON, D.C. Black men converging on the nation’s capital for today’s Million Man March described it as a undying, uplifting event that transcends its controversial originator, Nation of Is lam leader Louis Farrakhan. “It’s not about a march, a man, words. It’s about a movement,” the Rev. Vernon Gay said after a Sunday sermon urging the men of Lincoln Congregational Temple in Washington to attend. The event, actually more of a rally and prayer meeting than a march, is termed “a dayof atonement and reconciliation.’’Sup porters describe it as a call for black men to take responsibility for their own lives and families and to dedicate themselves to fight ing the scourges of drugs, violence and unemployment. Organizers asked women —and men who can’t come to the rally—to stay home from work or school to mark a “holy day” and to avoid spending any money as a demonstration of black economic power. No one knows how many will take part. The idea originated with Farrakhan, and he has been its chief organizer, with the help of ousted NAACP chiefßenjamin Chavis Jr. But the march has attracted a wide coalition of support, including Jesse Jackson, Rosa Paris, several black mem- When You’re Considering An Analyst Position in Investment Banking, Consider One More Tiling. Consider the investment bank that is uniquely in tune with the abilities and aspirations of the people who comprise it. Where high professional standards are reflected in principled every day practices. Where the talent of each individual is an integral part of the team effort. And where those who choose to accept the challenges set before them grow both personally and professionally. In Short, Consider the Investment Banking Division at Goldman Sachs. Investment Banking Division Financial Analyst Program Information Session Monday, October 23,1995 Spanky’s Restaurant 7:oopm Reception to follow. Please dress casually. All undergraduates are welcome to attend. Goldman Sachs, an equal opportunity employer, does not discriminate in employment on any basis that is prohibited by federal, state or local law. UNCsystem President C.D. SPANGLER said Schexnider is qualified to be chancellor. served as interim chancellor since Cleon Thompson Jr. retired June 30 after a decade at the post. Schexnider taught at Southern University, Syra cuse University and the Federal Execu tive Institute in CbaiiottesviUe,Va., before going to VCU. The native of Lake Charies, La., first joined Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond in 1979 as associate dean of the school of Back balm support the march in spite of the controversial LOUIS FARRAKHAN. bers of Congress, mayors and minis ters. Many say it’s unfair now to char acterize it as Fanakhan’s event “It was his idea, he dropped the seeds,” said Clarence White, a postal worker who traveled from San Antonio, Texas, for the rally. “But it’s no longer his. It’s ours.” Scattered early arrivals —black men of all ages as well as several women—milled about the event site on the National Mall. Several exchanged greetings of “Brother!” or “Hey, black man!” Vendors hawked T-shirts and hats that said “One in a million,” and city crews began closing some streets along the Mall. Three members ofthe Coalition for Jew ish Concerns appeared on the Mall with signs that said “David Duke and Louis Farrakhan—two sides of the same coin.” They became involved in a brief shouting match with some black passersby. Farrakhan’s remarks have infuriated Jews, Catholics, gays, feminists and oth ers. He has called Judaism a “gutter reli gion” and recently defended his use ofthe term “bloodsuckers” to describe Jews or others who open businesses in minority communities and take theprofitselsewhere. Farrakhan canceled all his public ap- Monday, October 16,1995 community and public affairs. He left five years later to become the assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs at the UNC- Greensboro. He returned to Virginia Commonwealth in 1987 as associate vice president for aca demic affairs and professor of public ad ministration, and in 1991 he added the tide of vice provost for undergraduate studies to that of vice president. While at VCU, Schexnider has helped develop Project BEST, a partnership be tween the university and the Richmond public schools. “Alvin Schexnider is a seasoned and resourceful administrator who is excep tionally well-qualified to lead Winston- Salem State University in the years ahead,” said UNC-system President C.D. Spangler. pearances Sunday to prepare for the rally. Huge speakers and giant video screens were being set up on the grassy Mall Sun day afternoon, and yellow tape marked the spot behind the Capitol where organizers planned to erect a stage. Crowds were expected to begin con verging on the Mall soon after midnight Some city subway stations were opening at 12:30 a.m., five hours earlier than usual, to accommodate them. Activities start at 5 a.m. with prayer and African drumming, followed by speeches, music and more prayer throughout the day. Weather forecasters predicted a sunny and breezy day with temperatures in the 60s. Helena Ramirez came to look over the site but said on Monday she and her daugh ter would stay home, offering support to the men. “I think it’s been too long since there’s been something for young black men,” she said. No one knows how many men will arrive. City officials say they are preparing for 500,000 to 1 million. Organizers pre dict more than 11,000 buses will bring men to the rally. Reaching the goal of 1 minion would take more than one out of every 10 of America’s black adult men. The 1963 civil rights march led by Martin Luther King Jr. President Clinton will be out of town Monday. Deputy White House Chief of Staff Harold Ickes reiterated the president’s support of the march’s goals and his oppo sition to the “bigoted, hateful, anti-Semitic, sexist comments of Louis Farrakhan.” Goldman Sarlis 5