ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: MONDAY, June 6, 1994                   TAG: 9406060071
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: A-1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: WARREN FISKE and MARGARET EDDS STAFF WRITERS
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


ALLEN URGES NORTH SUPPORT

As Gov. George Allen and other top Virginia Republicans pleaded for unity the morning after nominating Oliver North for the U.S. Senate, national party leaders bemoaned the situation and hinted at future agitation.

Central to the furor is former state Attorney General Marshall Coleman, who has suggested he will enter the Senate race as an independent to try to thwart North.

At a "unity breakfast," Allen prompted a standing ovation by declaring that "Marshall Coleman should resist the temptation to get into this race."

Coleman, who was the GOP nominee in the 1981 and 1989 gubernatorial races, has collected enough signatures to get on the ballot as an independent candidate. He is expected to announce his intentions this week.

A few hours after Allen's admonishment, U.S. Sen. Robert Dole, the Senate minority leader from Kansas, said that he will meet with Coleman on Wednesday or Thursday.

North's nomination "makes it very difficult for some in the Republican Party," Dole said on the CBS program "Face the Nation."

Dole did not endorse Coleman, who he said had requested the meeting. "I don't know what he has to say, but I will meet with him," Dole said. He added that he has not heard from North.

Another Senate Republican appearing on the program - John McCain of Arizona - also shook his head over North's nomination. "From a clear political standpoint, our chances of winning that seat are dramatically diminished," McCain said.

McCain said he respects the wishes of the Virginia Republican Party and intends to support the nominee.

North shrugged off both men's comments.

"Do I look bothered?" North said at a campaign rally in Richmond. "Those candidates are not running in Virginia. I'm running for the people of Virginia."

"This is not about what they want," said state Republican Chairman Patrick McSweeney. "It's about what we want."

North's at-times bitter opponent for the nomination, former federal budget director Jim Miller, also called for healing Sunday. After spending weeks blasting North as unfit for the Senate because of his three overturned felony convictions stemming from the Iran-Contra scandal, Miller said the former Marine was "battle-hardened and ready to go."

Responding to press questions, Miller was less specific about what he'll do in the North campaign. He'll participate "as appropriate . . . if I can do something constructive," he said.

North, who after the Richmond rally embarked on a highway tour of western parts of the state, tried to grab the initiative in the campaign by calling for a series of debates.

He challenged "all comers" to four "real, live Lincoln-Douglas debates" after the June 14 Democratic primary. In the primary election, Democratic state Sen. Virgil Goode of Rocky Mount, Richmond lawyer Sylvia Clute and Lyndon LaRouche follower Nancy Spannaus are challenging incumbent Sen. Charles Robb.

Former Democratic Gov. Douglas Wilder is circulating petitions and has hired a staff to run as an independent in the fall, meaning the debates suggested by North could be four-way affairs: North, Coleman, Wilder and the Democratic nominee.

North called for the debates to exclude questions from the media and to start as soon after the Democratic primary as possible.

Keywords:
POLITICS



 by CNB