10 Wednesday, October 28, 1992 Estimate your taxes now! Legal Services for Students 148 Burge 864-5665 funded by Student Senate DOMINO'S PIZZA NOBODY KNOWS LIKE DOMINO'S How You Like Pizza At Home. SIX DOLLAR INSANITY $6.00 OPEN FOR LUNCH 841-8002 We accept Sun-Thurs 11am-1am Fri-Sat 11am-2am 832IOWA and checks. (25¢ service charge) Get a 15" Large Pizza with cheese and 1 topping for just $6.00 Available for Carry Out or Delivery to KU Resident Halls, Fraternities, Sororities and Scholarship Halls Only. Not Valid with $3.00 Service Guarantee. No coupon necessary, just ask for $6 Insanity. Offer Expires November 29, 1992. Valid at participating stores only. Not valid with any other offer. Customer pay sales tax where applicable. Delivery areas limited to ensure safe driving. Our drivers carry less than $20.00. THIS SATURDAY 1 PM MEMORIAL STADIUM "BE THE 12TH MAN!" THIS IS YOUR TEAM: • RANKED 18TH IN THE NATION (AP) • CURRENTLY 1ST IN THE BIG EIGHT • HEADING TOWARD FIRST BOWL BID SINCE 1981 GET YOUR TICKETS NOW! GET YOUR TICKETS NOW! • SPECIAL PRICES: KU FACULTY/STAFF/STUDENTS - $5 (OPEN SEATING - PLEASE PRESENT KUID) TICKETS AVAILABLE ON WESCOE BEACH WED-FRI, 10 AM TO 2 PM OR STOP BY THE ALLEN FIELDHOUSE TICKET OFFICE M-F, 8 AM TO 5 PM OR CALL 864-3141 CAMPAIGN'92 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Economic woes pose stiff obstacle for Bush In two states, Washington and New York, the incumbent president has even slipped below 20 percent in some recent overnight tracking polls, according to pollsters in both parties who are not involved in the presidential campaign. WASHINGTON — The nation's economic worries and desire for change are proving stiff obstacles to a comeback for President Bush, who is making late progress in a handful of traditional Republican states, but in others has stalled or even slipped. The Associated Press They predicted Bush ultimately would fare better in those states, but said the numbers underscored the president's troubles in the final days before the election. Several pollsters interviewed yesterday said Bush's standing was remarkably stagnant in national surveys because so many voters were convinced he was not the best choice to run the economy. "The economy is the key issue, and President Bush has not focused to the voters' satisfaction sufficient attention to answering the question. How is the second term going to be different and better?" said pollster Lee Miringoff of New York's Marist Institute. One alarming sign for Bush: Polsters in New England say Clinton has stretched a tiny lead over Bush in "The feeling was that he wasn't paying as much attention as they wanted him to pay to the central thing — which is jobs and the economy," said Andrew Kohut, director of surveys for Times Mirror Center for The People & The Press, which polled 1,200 voters twice in 10 days this month and found no movement toward Bush. New Hampshire to double digits in recent days. New Hampshire last supported a Democrat for president in 1964. Also, pollsters trying to gauge the impact of Ross Perot's unsubstantiated allegations of a Republican smear campaign say that movement away from Perot was found Monday night in polling in Wisconsin and Michigan, with Clinton the beneficiary. Interviews yesterday with a dozen pollsters across the country and recent national survey data offered ample evidence of the obstacles Bush faces in generating a last-week comeback, and only a few encouraging signs for the president. Even with good economic news yesterday, pollsters said, it likely was too late for Bush to repair his image on the issue of most concern to voters. Perot camp attacks Clinton beat that opposition down." DALLAS — Ross Perot's running mate, James Stockkale, says demonstrations by Bill Clinton and other protesters hurt the U.S. war effort in Vietnam, costing U.S. lives and prolonging the captivity of prisoners such as himself. "Those comrades of mine that died — the extra 10, 15, 20 thousand—that blood is on your hands, you war protesters," Stockdale said. "You strung it out. You didn't stop it a minute." Orson Swindle, the leader of Perot's support organization who also is a former POW, said he, too, thought the protesters' efforts encouraged the North Vietnamese. Stockdale said, "Every time in prison, we would hear that they had one of these big galas of the sort that Clinton was arranging here and there in the world. 'Huh, we're'day. 'Another year in this place. We're not going to get out of here until we bomb Hanol.' And they couldn't do that until they The United States bombed Hanoi for two weeks beginning in December 1972 to bring North Vietnam to peace talks. After the peace accord was signed, the last U.S. forces left South Vietnam in 1975, and South Vietnam surrendered to the communists. Clinton has said that he strongly opposed the war and took part in several protests against it, including organizing a "teach-in" while at Oxford University in England. Stockdale, a bomber pilot who won the Medal of Honor for his leadership of POWs, was the most senior Naval officer to become a war prisoner in Vietnam. He was held for eight years, including four in solitary confinement. Swindle was a POW for six years. "Judging from too many conversations with our North Vietnamese captors, they were extraordinarily encouraged by the protesters," Swindle said. Asked if Stockdale were speaking for Perot, campaign spokesperson Sharon Holman said only that the comments reflected Stockdale's views. "It's a personal opinion," Swindle said. "I'm sure Admiral Stockdale was expressing a personal opinion. We lived through it and suffered for it." "As a former POW, he would feel strongly" about anti-war protests, she said. Perot stiled out of the spotlight yesterday, a day after an explosive news conference in which he elaborated on his allegations of GOP dirty tricks against his candidacy. Stockdale was visiting editors at newspapers in Denver, Kansas City and Oklahoma City. In Kansas City, Stockdale spoke to a miller for several 10 minutes. His wife, Sybil, told supporters that Perot had called the Stockdales in July before he withdrew from the presidential race and told them of his plans. She said Perot told him he was withdrawing because the Republicans planned to embarrass the Perots' daughter. Create a HALLOWEEN Jayhawk Costume YOU COULD WIN A TRIP! You could win a trip for two anywhere Continental Airlines flies in the continental USA! Create a Halloween Jayhawk Costume and show up at The Village Inn, 9th and Iowa at 6:30p.m., Friday, October 30th. Our panel of judges will select 5 finalists who will move on the next day to competition in front of the KU- OSU football game crowd and the Late Night with Roy Williams crowd. If you're judged the best, you win: ·A trip for two anywhere Continental Airlines flies in the continental U.S. ·Hotel accom modations. ·Spending cash from KLZR. (Some restrictions apply.) It can be scary, fun, outrageous...Use our imagination.