/ Page 8 November 4, 199( q out of Kuwait.” indards in an organi d, is also a key part of ip formula.” thing called letting stand what is expect Schwarzkopf said “In :eed, they must knoii isure of success is.” part of the “leader- 1,” he said, is estab tude to learn withir tion. ;ot to be willing listakes,” he said. our mistakes." ide to learn also in -s allowing people ibs on their own said, ders do not tell pec pie how to do ther job,” he said. Schwarzkopf The Battalion >N " 96 Page 9 Monday • November 4, 1996 Races to Watch On the eve of the election, a few races capture attention WASHINGTON (AP) — It will be midafternoon in California when the polls close in Indiana and Kentucky and Bob Dole dis covers if his upset dreams have ny chance at reality. It won’t be long after when Newt ingrich has a decent guess at whether he will still be emphasized his bt louse speaker come January. lief that anyone ca; be a leader. now, or will be leader,” he said. Schwarzkopf said there is i such thing as a ural and | “very ordinary pie who have pre nary situations, epare yourself an; Across America, Tuesday’s ballot is crowded with rucial contests. The presidential race is the headliner, “Every single out nd there are elections for 34 Senate seats and all 435 of you out there;; ithe House. Eleven states are choosing governors, and in at ast 28 states the balance of power in legislative hambers was in question. Not to mention impor- int local contests and a record number of ballot uestions, like a California effort to repeal state af- born leadefmiative action programs, and proposals in 13 leaders art totes that will test the staying power of the strug- ling term-limits movement. In all this election-night mayhem, there are several p&red themselve; fates and individual races that offer a glimpse into na- onal trends — from the fight for the White House and bngress to whether Christian conservatives or orga- nes when someantlized labor get the upper hand in turning out voters in ler ... you can step tfgeted contests. Here are 10 races or places to watch: . . KENTUCKY erts, a junior genera Even with a win over President Clinton in this ir who attended the id the principles ' discussed were ap > life. a lot of very goo lit home to me," It tossup state, Dole would have a long way to go for his upset. But Dole cannot afford to lose the state. Down ballot, a GOP win over Democratic Rep. Mike Ward would calm Gingrich’s nerves and dampen Democrat ic chances of retaking the House. GEORGIA A must-win for Dole, and a pivotal state in the battle for the Senate. Democrat Sam Nunn is retiring, and Re publican Guy Milner had late momentum in a tight race. Democrats need to gain three seats to win the Senate; losing here would make the climb steeper. OHIO The polls close at 7:30 p.m. EST, and by then Dole will know if he has a prayer. No Republican has ever won the White House without carrying Ohio. Democ rats hope to defeat GOP Reps. Martin Hoke in subur ban Cleveland and Frank Cremeans in the state's more conservative southeast corner. These are critical tests of the $35 million AFL-CIO campaign to put the House back in Democratic hands. NORTH CAROLINA SENATE Four-term GOP Sen. Jesse Helms in a rematch with 1990 Democratic challenger Harvey Gantt, who is black and a former Charlotte mayor. Race was again an issue in the end. Helms never wins by much, and is banking on high Christian conservative turnout. "We need this seat to have a realistic shot of getdng the Senate back,” says Democratic pollster Mark Mellman. FLORIDA Until a tightening of the presidential race in the final week, Clinton aides were picturing an electoral land slide — in part because of the Democrat’s lead in this usually Republican presidential state. A Clinton win here “and the so-called Republican lock on the Elec toral College is shattered,” said Clinton deputy cam paign manager Ann Lewis. The Tampa-area seat of re tiring Democratic Rep. Sam Gibbons is a GOP target. ARKANSAS SENATE Clinton’s homestate factors big in Republicans’ hopes to increase their 53-47 Senate majority. GOP Rep. Tim Hutchinson led late in the race to replace re tiring Democratic Sen. David Pryor. Democrat Win ston Bryant hoped for Clinton coattails. NEW HAMPSHIRE Democratic state Sen. Jeanne Shaheen was favored to become the state’s first woman governor — and the first Democrat elected to that job since 1980. Republi can Bob Smith, an anti abortion leader in the U.S. Senate, was in a tough race against former Rep. Dick Swett as Democrats looked to break the state’s GOP tradition up and down the ballot. ARIZONA Not since Harry Truman in 1948 has a Democrat car ried this state in a presidential race, a marker Clinton had high hopes of shattering until the race tightened late. One of several Western states where Ross Perot’s count could make a difference in the outcome. Freshman GOP Rep. J.D. Hayworth was one of la bor’s top targets, and was strug gling to hold his seat. WASHINGTON The defeat of then-House Speaker Thomas Foley headlined the 1994 Republican rout here. The six House seats gained by Republicans two years ago are the major battlegrounds, and late Republican mo mentum appeared to dampen Democratic hopes for a big swing back in their favor. Democrat Gary Locke was favored to become the first Chinese American governor of a mainland state. CALIFORNIA At the start of the campaign year, Republicans sug gested affirmative action would be a major national issue. It wasn’t, in part because of the popularity of re tired Gen. Colin Powell, who declared himself a Re publican and warned his new party against focusing on affirmative action, and because of Dole’s decision to put the GOP’s ambassador of minority outreach, Jack Kemp, on the GOP ticket. Dole did return to the issue during his late California push. Some Republicans believe the anti-affirmative ac tion initiative on the California ballot this year will in crease conservative turnout. The results are likely to go a long way in shaping future debate on the issue. Profiles of Major Presidential Candidates (AP) — If Bill Clinton is re future I will try ant tlected, he would be the first De- 1 Corps and theresto: nocrat since FDR to be elected to wo consecutive presidential terms. Clinton was inaugurated as the 2nd president of tire United States f district appraiser, in Jan. 20, 1993. He won the 1992 his salary is consoligeneral election with 370 electoral ving two positions rates and 43 percent of the popular ixpayers’ money, h( rate in a three-way race, rugh more jobs has? The 1992 election also gave the i to help him fulfil lemocrats control of Congress as ooth positions. Clinton, the first baby boomer pres to offer taxpayer dent, ticked off an ambitious list of rvice at the leasgoals, including a government over- st,” he said. haul of the health care system. ; voter registratior ‘‘‘But his first two years in office ents who have com /ere marred by many legislative incorrectly has beer efeats and near-misses, crease student vote Clinton’s popularity fell after Vinnsaid. republicans took over both the s County tax offici louse and Senate in 1994 for the Bryan Parkway of rst time in nearly 40 years. Since such services as vot ten, he has moved toward the po- i and the renewal o deal center. He declared the “era f big government is over” and set heriff’s race, chal asks voters to con ~ cation and busines s proof he is osition. The incum 26 years of experi him. Clinton id. “But we normal t too wrapped upil nt to remember ill season is not all rwen active a more modest political agen da. He has also endorsed many traditionally GOP ideas such as a balanced budget and tough-on-crime measures. Clinton got his first taste of presidential politics in 1972, when he worked as Texas director for George McGovern’s campaign. He lost his first bid for a House seat in 1974 but was elected at torney general in 1976. Clinton ran for governor of Arkansas in 1978 and won a two-year term. He lost a bid for re-election in 1980. He was elected governor again in 1982, was re-elected in 1984 and sub sequently in 1986 and 1990 to four-year terms. (AP) — After serving in Congress for nearly 35 years, Bob Dole set his sights on one final election prize: the presidency. After losing in the 1980 and 1988 primaries, Dole announce his third bid for the White House in April 1995. But the campaign was in jeopardy at first, with a loss to conservative commenta tor Pat Buchanan in the New Hampshire primary. Dole would also lose the Arizona and Delaware primaries to publisher Steve Forbes. Still, Dole prevailed in the Su per Tuesday primaries and had a lock on his party’s nomination by March 1996. While attending Washburn University, Dole was elected to the Kansas House, serving 1951- 53. He was elected Russell Coun ty attorney, serving 1953-61. Dole was elected to the U.S. House in 1960, serving four terms Dole before winning a seat in the U.S. Senate in 1968. He served in the Senate from 1969 to 1996, including twice as Senate majority leader. He resigned from the Sen ate in May 1996 so he could concentrate on his presidential bid. “I will seek the presidency with nothing to fall back on but the judgment of the people, and nowhere to go but the White House or home,” he said. He was Republican National Committee chairman, 1971-73. Dole ran for vice president in 1976 with President Ford, and also campaigned unsuccessfully for the Republican presidential nomination in 1980 and 1988. (AP) —When Ross Perot ran for president in 1992, he did it as an independent hoping to change “politics as usual.” Now that Perot’s running again, he’s doing it his own way — politics as unusual. The Texas billionaire has run a campaign mostly through televi sion with paid half-hour specials, talk show interviews and commer cials — no surprise from the man who started a windstorm in 1992 by offering to run for president on CNN's “Larry King Live.” Despite getting 19 percent of the popular vote in 1992, Perot’s standing dwelled in the single dig its four years later. Perot spent much of his time on political issues before seek ing the presidency, like champi oning the cause of U.S. prison ers of war in Vietnam. After his 1992 run, Perot fought hard in 1993 against the North American Free Trade Agreement. Perot Take If you took the test today how would you score? Come find out. ■ T: durii Take a 2 1/2 ~ or 3~hour test, proctored like the real urlD * thing. 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