The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 12, 1995 - 9A HurricaneR(xnn wep dj Sh thernMexc x TULUM, Mexico (AP) - Uproot- a f 4 ~ing trees, toppling streetlights and lev- eling a concrete stadium, Hurricane Roxanne swept through a southern Mexican provincial capital yesterday during a daylong march across the Yucatan. - ~ * Roxanne's75-mphwindstorethrough & Campeche, a state capital of 175,000 people. There were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries in the city or any- where else in the hurricane's path. Three thousand residents sought shel- ter from the storm, and television foot- age showed people wading through waist-high water. The storm headed southwest last night, sending shrimpers and oil work- ers fleeing to shore before it hit the city ofCampeche, on the western Gulf coast of the peninsula, flinging tin roofs into r .the air. The U.S. National Weather Service {l .said Roxanne would probably gain strength as it heads west over the Gulf . *of Mexico and menaces a broad swath of coastline. Ivador Argua looks for personal belongings in his collapsed bungalow In Tulum, near Cozumel, on Mexico's Yucatan AP PHOTO The oil-rich lowlands of Mexico's enlfsula yesterday. After bashing the resort Island of Cozumel, a weakening Hurricane Roxanne plowed Into the lowlands. southern Gulf Coast are still recovering OP rivals target linton more bli l II'o'.h lg.. .. . .""... I from floods caused last week by Hurri- cane Opal, which killed at least I1 people in Mexico before veering north to hit the Florida Panhandle. The U.S. National Weather Service posted a hurricane watch the Gulf on Mexico's eastern coast as far north as Tuxpan, about 350 miles south of the Texas border. Before the hurricane hit, Campeche state Gov. Jorge Salomon said about 150 shelters were ready to receive 15,000 people, offshore shrimpers had headed to port and rail and highway traffic were disrupted by approaching winds and rains. "We are taking all the precautions necessary," he said. The Weather Service said that by 10 p.m. (11 p.m. Ann Arbor time), Roxanne's center was about 70 miles northeast of Ciudad del Carmen. The hurricane has lost force since it hit Tulum on the Yucatan's Caribbean side late Tuesday with 110-mph winds. Telephone links with the island resort of Cozumel remained cut yesterday, and plane and ferry services were still suspended, leaving hundreds of tour- ists as well as some 35,000 local resi- dents isolated. Gov. Mario Villanueva of Quintana Roo state, however, said there were no deaths reported. He reported minor dam- age on Cozumel. Authorities said a coastal storm surge with flood tides up to six feet above normal could still be expected, possibly with battering waves, both along Gulf coastlines of Campeche and neighbor- ing Tabasco states. Flash floods and mudslides were possible in eastern Mexico and parts of Central America. The state oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos suspended most Gulf op- erations and pulled some 3,500 work, ers off rigs in the Campeche Sound, which provides the bulk of Mexico's crude oil. Along the Caribbean coast, residents spent the day sweeping shattered glass from storefronts and restaurants and re- pairing ripped tarpaper roofs with ham- mers and nails. Rain fell sporadically. In Tulum, fallen palms blocked the road leading to its famed cliffside Mayan ruins and the two bamboo sentry huts at the entrance were abandoned. MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) - greeing with one another more often ian not, the Republican presidential ndidates used their first televised fo- rn yesterday to preach the virtues of nwer taxes and less government and ie dangers of giving President Clinton second term. If the goal of Bob Dole's rivals com- ig into the forum was to knock the OP front-runner off stride, none ap- eared to succeed. Dole delivered a risp account of why he believed he as the best candidate in the field and ffered a detailed defense of his conser- ative credentials. At every turn, Dole said Clinton was gfending the status quo against a new ppublican Congress trying to balance 1e budget, cut taxes and shift power torn Washington to the states. "We must elect someone who knows ow to make that change," Dole said. "I ill not permit the slow decline of anerica - a country that I love." The well-mannered forum got off to a >ugh start when the studio abruptly lost poweroand the early candidates in the lineup had to forge ahead amid the dis- traction of on-again, off-again lighting. In advance, it appeared that Texas Sen. Phil Gramm was ready to aggres- sively go after Dole, using a pre-forum rally to suggest that Dole was a politi- cian all too ready to break his promises. "How are we different from Bill Clinton if we don't keep our prom- ises?" Gramm asked at his rally. But the Texas senator made no such comparison during the televised forum, and never mentioned Dole by name. His toughest criticism of the Senate majority leader came when Gramm pledged not to "cut deals with Demo- crats in Washington because you know cutting deals with Democrats in Wash- ington is not going to bring back the American dream." Several others also took issue with Dole, at least indirectly. "We do not need to replace their set of professional politicians with our set of professional politicians," said com- mentator Pat Buchanan. Depv defy Los Angeles Times WASHINGTO the Gold Rush to ti workers ofJohn St fornia has seen m migratory races fr But a new C shows that, as slows from a run t are moving out of are moving in. The figures als percentage of Am where-from acr the country -v those people over In the 1950s and ered around 20 p Economistsand credited the tren tion, continuede the growth of two a falling national But while the staying put, Calif and getting out.' ing out of Califo Hansen, who pro The census n 635,000 people le states, while just 3 in - a net loss o migration lull state of 31 million. The figures do not N - From the 49ers of include international migration. he Depression-erafarm Of departing Californians, about half :einbeck's novels, Cali- remained in the West, almost a quarter ost of the nation's great moved to the South and smaller numbers om the finish line, headed to the Midwest and Northeast. ensus Bureau report The California out-migration reflects American migration a downturn in the state'sjob market that o a crawl, more people can be linked to massive defense cut' Fthe Golden State than backs and government regulations that made California unattractive to indus- o show a decline in the try, said Michael Boskin, a member of nericans moving any- a California government task force ross the street to across studying the state's economy. with 16.7 percent of State leaders have, to some extent, r the age of 1 moving. seen the error of their ways, and 1960s, mobility hov- California's job market is improving, ercent. Boskin said, citing a recent prediction d other academics have in the quarterly "UCLA Economic Fore- d to an aging popula- cast"that jobs in California will soon be economic insecurity, created about twice as fast as jobs in -income families and other states. Daniel J.B. Mitchell, a birth rate. UCLA public policy and management rest of the nation is professor who helped produce that re- ornians are picking up port, agreed that the fall of the aero 'People are just pour- space industry in Southern California rnia," said Kristin A. has affected out-migration significantly. duced the report. Declining jobs and subsequent out- numbers show that migration also have hurt California's ftCaliforniaforother real estate industry, bursting the 99,400 people moved industry's "L.A. bubble economy," f 236,000 people in a Mitchell said. arting Californians AP PHOTO Republican presidential hopefuls pose prior to a televised forum in New Hampshire last night. From front row left are: former Tenn. Gov. Lamar Alexander, Sen. Bob Dole (R-Kan.), publisher Steve Forbes, Rep. Bob Doman (R-Calf.) and commentator Pat Buchanan. From rear row left are commentator Alan Keyes, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), Grosse Pointe businessman Morry Taylor, Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) and Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas). "I think it will take a candidate from outside Washington, D.C., to beat Bill Clinton," said former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander. Given the format, which allowed for no interaction among the candidates, the rival camps said it made little sense to level direct attacks. "If you were talking about someone else you were wasting your time," said Tom Rath, a senior Alexander adviser. "So they all competed for the Mr. Con- geniality award." Each treated their eight minutes of air time as an extended campaign commer- cial,an opportunity to press staple themes. , ...a..v t,+,j.. .. . I a- i*o "There is no time, no part of the globe, free from evil. The crust of the earth is soaked with the tears of the suffering." Dr. Eleonore Stump, "The Mirror of Evil," God and the Philosophers If there is an all-powerful, all-know- ing, perfectly good God, how can the world be full of evil? Dr. Eleonore Stump, noted author and professor of philosophy at St. Louis University will discuss "The Problem of Evil" at The Veritas Forum. A time of Q&A will follow. Thi ire Ont 19 I d ' f 1t..La icti r nnnrrl . ,: . -. ,::