Page November 1,19! Friday Page 5 November 1, 1996 rom Page 1 Clinton keeps lead while Dole targets toss-up ootball team is w, Bowen said, lave a young tea ich. State is in a buildinj ven said. “I suspeci i.” ire favored to win ints. en left OSU, he dii *l ai noi in ims. In his first if A&M, Bowen eled to '»«c»HE»tombta V wlth ill team play in tli( iur. t atl 1 Final Four," he said, the two universities t have several differ Oklahoma A&M,” lie heir former student elves Aggies.” A&M faculty mem- es from OSU, he said phical proximity and mic programs drat \&M, and vice versa, es have several differ Bowen said. A&M is r to OSU. The Okla ;s have similar brid ling designs, he said M, they have very itecture,” he said. Dm Page 1 ms advancing to the nship this weekend working with their . Teams not advanc robot they built fa it the competition, nd events for visiting ie laboratory tours, bits, educational pro speakers, am members will be 0 Merit Plus Scholar larships will be acti- ; recipients’ enroll- WASFIINGTON (AP) — Presi- Ident Clinton entered the cam- ' paign’s final weekend leading in ” more than enough states to win a second term, but locked in a tight race with Bob Dole in the Moun tain West and across the South, according to a 50-state Associated 'ress survey. Benefiting from leads in Pacif- . , „ f ii • Ie states and the industrial belt i ^ j J’ ii l) ,* ) ic f; rt ° t V ™i stretching from New Jersey to Illi- ois, Clinton was clearly leading 25 states and the District of a combined 314 electoral votes. . , . ... Dole could bank on fewer 1 than a d ozen states and 100 electoral votes. ‘‘Bob Dole is the underdog,” GOP Chairman Haley Barbour said Thursday in a considerable under statement. “But he can still win.” As Dole sought a dramatic comeback and Clinton bid for an Electoral College landslide, the key in the closing days was a dozen tossup states in which nei ther candidate could claim a comfortable lead. This group included several tra ditional Repub lican strong holds that have eluded Dole throughout the fall: Florida, Ari zona, Indiana, Virginia and South Dakota. Other battle grounds includ ed Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, Nevada, Mon tana and Colorado. Republicans put Louisiana on this list, too, though Democrats said Clinton's lead is comfort able there and nationally. “I can not remember approaching Election Day with a map that has been so positive and so truly national for a Democratic presi dential campaign,” said Clin ton’s deputy campaign manager, Ann Lewis. Dole vowed to prove the skep tics wrong, and said that begin ning at noon Friday he would campaign virtually non-stop for 96 hours in pursuit of 270 elec toral votes. “I will give it all I’ve Clinton got,” he vowed at a Miami event. It will take quite a bit. Even if Dole won every tossup state, he would still be short of victory. Aides said their long shot strategy for getting to 270 counted on win ning all the toss ups and one of two scenarios: defeating Clinton in California, or in all of three Midwest battlegrounds — Ohio, Michigan and Missouri. Clinton held sizeable leads in each state. Most Republicans were show ing a loyal front. Still, there was evidence in states where Dole trailed badly that GOP officials were worried about the impact further down the ballot. Clinton’s electoral strategy is anchored on the coasts: He leads comfort ably from Maine to Mary land in the East and in Wash ington, Oregon and California to the West. Most remark able, however, has been his consistent lead in the industrial states. Dole has conceded New Jersey, Pennsylva nia and Illinois and trails by eight points or more in Missouri, Michigan and Ohio, depending on whose polls are to be believed. On the other hand, Dole leads mostly in smaller, traditionally Republican states: Oklahoma, Idaho, Utah, Mississippi, South Carolina, Nebraska and his na tive Kansas. A handful of other states appeared to be trending Dole’s way in the final days, in cluding North Carolina, Alaba ma and, most importantly, Texas, according to officials in both campaigns. Schwarzkopf Continued from Page 1 Schwarzkopf, graduated from the U.S. Mil itary Academy and spent his life as a pub lic servant. ‘‘When the man died, his total estate was $3,000,” he said, “and yet by every measure he was a great success in life.” The leadership his father lived by is still present in the military, Schwarzkopf said, and respect for military leadership is on the rise since Desert Storm. ‘‘Everywhere I go I see a renewed respect for military leaders, and also for the people in the ranks,” he said. “I see a great respect for anyone who serves the country in the armed forces today, and that’s good news.” For A&M graduates planning a career in the military, more good news is that Schwarzkopf said there is a tremendous amount of respect for the officers A&M produces. “I’ve always been very impressed throughout my military career with the Texas A&M graduates that I’ve run into,” he “I see a great respect for anyone who serves the country in the armed forces today, and that's good news.” Norman Schwarzkopf Retired Army general said. “One of the finer schools, I think, that produces officers for the United States Army is Texas A&M.” And Schwarzkopf said he has one major piece of advice for future Army officers. “Stay focused on doing your duty, and don’t worry about who gets the credit,” he said. Young people should not take for grant ed the opportunities they have living in the United States, he said. “In most countries you live in in the world today, by this time, your future has already been predetermined for you,” he said. “But that’s not the case in the United States of America. You can literally be any thing you want to be. And because of that, people can dare to live their dream.” Saying that he is honored to have such captive audiences among young people, Schwarzkopf emphatically rejects the sug gestion that he might enter politics in the twilight of his career as a public servant. “Given the state of government in Wash ington, D.C., I’m personally convinced that I can continue to serve my country and probably serve it more effectively out of politics than in politics,” he said. ‘T’ve served my country all my life, and I’m go ing to continue serving my country for the rest of my life.” gWENSEN^ BIG MEAL DEAL $5.99 IT'S ALMOST MORE THAN YOCI CAN EAT! 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