Monday, November?, 1988 The Battalion Page 11 paigi om page 1) :t. It follows thitj| gative campaign®; i campaign did k ds have mostly,;, n a defensive posit;:: that although marf; ed in those poliliti ey have been gaJ cal advertising ks that subtlemessap pact on voters, ecognizes that iti , ing, but they cBonis said. “Ini; hree-fourths oftk;; eed that there wj; ng and 49 percet; t fault. he campaign, fi; n voters off. Whi onsciously accepi it affect them .* subliminal mes^ e remember it. ij rendously. re media-literate;!« nomes is on sever: used to seeing cos be able to pick «j reasons, Americi s election. .land why peoples' s, except that tkfj y’re subtle." er. she said dot| live campaigning § ipact on voters oiti that it makes a W; ie said. “WeallhM n abilities. We s* n the oppostion." she predicts thw ig will contributefi;: he expects a vole:f 35 to 40 percent:’ icans voted on eis on by 52 percent: ic American pojE ted the presider itical analyst,fir,i with a dirty taste;:!, said. ym ise guage groups and? , S ' Murphy said. for the Lawyer'sCj dieted New York! te swarm of nd NaturalizationSi nigrants about thil ily little fanfare rants are pr nent. “People nu)| now, and theyi ines for civics dij ly for permanent! ir course fromanf nd written exam™ ven to permanent! gaily. Democrats urge to give Bentsen AUSTIN (AP) — Texans cast bal lots Tuesday in a race that has a Texan on each presidential ticket and Democrats urging people to vote twice — legally — for Sen. Lloyd Bentsen. Vice President George Bush, who moved to Texas in 1948 and still calls Houston home, led in every opinion poll taken since mid-summer despite Bentsen’s position as Democratic running mate to Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis. Dukakis campaigners insisted in the final days that they vvere narrow ing the gap. And polls showed Bent sen well ahead in his second race, for re-election to a fourth Senate term, which is allowed under a 1959 law passed so Lyndon Johnson could seek re-election to the Senate and run for the White House. Down the ballot, heated campaigns are being waged for the unprece dented six openings on the Texas Su preme Court, and Texans also will be choosing 150 members of the state House and half the state Senate. With 29 electoral votes, Texas is the nation’s third-largest Election Day prize and serves as a power base for Bush. His campaign has been pushed by every leading Texas Re publican, including Gov. Bill Clem ents, U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm and for mer Sen. John Tower. Dukakis tried to revive the 1960 “Boston-Austin axis,’’ when John F. Kennedy chose Johnson as his run ning mate, by selecting Bentsen to run with him. But several Democratic politicians said Dukakis’ choice of Bentsen instead gave voters a chance to vote for both Bush and Bentsen and block straight-ticket Republican voting. “I think Bentsen is having a very obvious effect on the coattails. If any Democrat survives a close race, it will be because of Lloyd Bentsen,” said Democratic state Rep. Stan Schlueter. In that Senate race, Amarillo Con gressman Beau Boulter campaigned hard but was outspent by Bentsen. According to Sept. 30 campaign fi nance reports, Bentsen had raised about $8.5 million to the Republican challenger’s $1.5 million. Boulter began his campaign by criticizing Bentsen for ‘‘riding two horses at once” with his dual candi dacy. nfil “If any Democrat sur vives a close race, it will be because of Lloyd Bentsen” Democratic state Rep. Stan Schlueter As the campaign drew to a close, Boulter also accused Bentsen of turn ing his back on Dukakis and concen trating on his re-election bid. “He has no commitment to any philoso phy under the sun as far as I can see. He is the most elitist, special-interest, backroom powerbroker politician this country has ever seen in its history,” Boulter charged. Throughout the campaign, Bentsen pointed to the state law that wouldn’t allow him to withdraw from the Sen ate race without giving the office to the Republicans. And besides, he ar gued, Texans enjoy having him as chairman of the powerful Senate Fi nance Committee. Jack Devore, a spokesman for Bentsen’s Senate campaign, said Boulter’s last-minute criticism was a desperation move. “He seems to be coming apart at the seams,” Devore said. U.S. House Speaker Jim Wright of Fort Worth faced no opposition, and Democratic officials said they hoped their candidates would pick up one or two seats in congressional races to expand their 17-10 lead. Some of the closest race’s looked to be those in Boulter’s Panhandle dis trict, where Democratic state Sen. Bill Sarpalius faced Republican Larry Milner, and in the south-central dis trict of Republican Rep. Mac Swee ney, who was challenged by Demo crat Greg Laughlin. Due in part to negative national publicity given the Texas Supreme Court after its refusal last year to even hear the $11 billion judgment against Texaco Inc. in its battle with Pen- nzoil, this year’s court races have been unusually heated. Resignations by Democrats al lowed Republican Gov. Bill Clem ents to appoint three GOP justices this year, including Chief Justice Tom Phillips. The remainder of those terms, plus three other regular open ings, are up for election. The chief justice candidates — Texans 2 votes Phillips and Democratic Justice Ted Z. Robertson — each raised more than $1.8 million for their races and both flooded the airwaves with tele vision commercials. The big-money aspects of the Su preme Court races also were illus trated by a political committee orga nized by plaintiffs’ lawyers. Fund for a Democratic Texas, to give $1 mil lion to help Democratic court candi dates. Republicans also are matched against Democratic incumbents in two of the three races for the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, and a Libertarian faces a Democratic in cumbent in the other race. In other races being decided Tues day: — Two seats on the Railroad Com mission are at stake. Kent Hance, first Republican to serve on the 100-year-old commis sion, was appointed last year by Clements to fill a seat vacated when Democrat Mack Wallace resigned. The two remaining years of the term are at stake in the upcoming election, in which Hance faces Democratic challenger Clint Hackney, a state rep resentative. — All 15 seats on the State Board of Education are up for grabs. The old elected board was abolished in 1984, after passage of House Bill 72 and its school reforms. However, the legislation called for the board to re vert to an elected panel in four years. — Three proposed amendments to the Texas Constitution also must be decided. Propostion 1 would require that all the money Texas gets from the fed eral government as reimbursement for highway projects be used to pay for those projects. Proposition 2 would establish a so- called “Rainy Day Fund” where state revenue would be set aside and saved for appropriation in years when tax revenues fall short of meeting ex penses. Proposition 3 would set up a “Growth Fund” and allow trustees of the state’s two education funds and two state-employee pension funds more investment flexibility, includ ing investment in the growth fund. BUSH VICTORY '88 RALLY Join the Winning Team 7:00 p.m. TONIGHT 701 Rudder Tower Please Join GEORGE BUSH, JR. AND SEN. PHIL GRAMM at the TEXAS A&M HANGAR at EASTERWOOD AIRPORT TODAY 3:30 p.m. Paid for by TAMU Victory ’88 The MSC MBA/Law Committee presents The MBA/Law Symposium "Destined for Success" Nov. 9, Wednesday Representatives from: Harvard and Chicago Business & Law Schools Georgetown, Notre Dame & Cornell Law Schools Wharton Business School Business & Law schools in Texas 10am-4pm, 1st floor hallway, MSC Nov. 12, Saturday Business and Law professionals speak on career development issues 9:30am-5:30pm, 211 MSC M COMM Register in MSC Hallway, Blocker ad Student Programs Office 10am 3pm October 3l-Hovember 11 $5 in advance/$8 at the door Call 845-1515 for more information T T E E