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For prescriptions, home health care supplies, vitamins, cosmetics, Hallmark cards, gifts and more...we're your neighborhood drug store! This coupon entitles you to 25% Off any one item. Hallmark, Cosmetics, or fragrance products. Offer Expires September 30,1992 Offer Expires September 30,1992 McCall's SHOES SPORTSWEAR ACCESSORIES MENS·WOMENS·CHILDS· Special Group 25% TEE SHIRTS NIKE L.A. GEAR Others SAVE UP TO 50% McCall's SHOES SPORTSWEAR ACCESSORIES *VISA *MASTERCARD *DISCOVER *AMERICAN EXPRESS CAMPAIGN'92 829MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWNLAWRENCE OPENTHURSDAY NIGHTS AND SUNDAYSTOOD But the gain may not last for long, one survey says Convention boosts Bush NEW YORK — The Republican National Convention helped President Bush squeeze up to 17 points out of Bill Clinton's lead in the polls, but one survey released Saturday suggested the gain may be short-lived. Newsweek said Clinton led Bush 53 percent to 39 percent in a Gallup poll Friday of 750 registered voters nationwide. The poll had a four-point margin of sampling error. That 14-point lead in the first poll taken entirely after the convention was just three points less than Clinton's lead in a Newsweek poll taken a few days before the Republicans gathered in Houston. The Associated Press While Clinton stayed steady at 53 percent in Newsweek's poll, his support fell 10 points in CBS-New York Times polls and seven points in Los Angeles Times polls. Both polls were of registered voters nationwide, and had margins of sampling error of five and three points respectively. Clinton and Bush narrowed by 15 points in the Los Angeles Times poll Thursday and Friday and 14 points in the New York Times poll Thursday. The Washington Post reported in yesterday's editions that in its poll taken Thursday and Friday, Clinton led Bush 49 percent to 40 percent. That nine-point lead compared to the 26-point margin Clinton had in the latest pre-GOP convention poll taken for the Post, a difference of 17 points. The latest Post poll had a margin of error of four points. The murky mix of good and bad news for Bush in last week's polls differed strongly from the picture a month ago, when the Democratic National Convention gave Clinton a poll vault of Olympic proportions, as much as 26 points. Bush was expected to get a smaller but substantial bounce in the polls from his convention. His support was low to start with and by convention time he had no opposition for the nomination. Historically, the last five incumbent presidents seeking re-election got an average bounce of 9 points. Bush, as vice president, gained 13 points on Michael Dukakis after the Republicans convened four years ago. Clinton's lead, which had ranged from 17 to 30 points in various polls. was swelled by the pullout of Ross Perot. Many Perot supporters identified themselves as either independents, conservatives or both, and the Republicans succeeded in wooing many of them back, according to the Los Angeles Times poll. That poll found Bush's job approval rating at 53 percent after his nomination, up from 44 percent the previous week and the highest since November. Bush gained a 13-point lead on Clinton as the candidate who would do the better job holding down taxes, but Clinton led by 10 points as the one to handle the economy, the Los Angeles Times said. Newsweek said Bush's approval rating Friday was 38 percent, virtually unchanged from the previous week Since the polls have been tracking each other fairly closely for weeks, the Newsweek poll indicated that the Democrats' swift counterattacks Thursday night and Friday morning might have erased much of the increased favorability Bush built in Houston. Two of three voters in the Newsweek poll said they considered the tax-cut plan Bush revealed Thursday "just politics" rather than a serious proposal. Clinton lashes back at Republicans The Associated Press CHAUTAUQUA, N.Y. — Bill Clinton said yesterday that President Bush invoked a "deeply offensive" political play in questioning Democrats' commitment to God and said Republicans should be ashamed of their "off-the-wall" attack linking his values to Woody Allen's. Clinton, counterattacking as he and running-mate Al Gore wrapped up their Rust Belt bus tour, said Republicans were floundering because Democrats had a superior economic plan to put Americans back to work and help raise their children. Bush, seeking to shore up Republican strength in the key Midwest battleground, told a cheering crowd at the Illinois State Fair that Clinton would be a "rubber-trash president that will rubber stamp this spend-thrift Congress." "We're not going to let that nightmare happen." Bush shouted. He told reporters that Clinton had started to "whine and complain" in the face of a stepped-up Republican campaign. Clinton, arriving in Erie, Pa., early yesterday, defended his wife Hillary in the wake of a number of attacks on her by speakers at the Republican National Convention. If Bush "wants to run against my wife, it's OK with me if he wants to be first lady, but I don't want to live with him," Clinton told a crowd. Wrapping up his bus tour yesterday before a crowd of about 15,000, the Democrat returned Bush's fire on the "family values" issue, a leading theme of last week's Republican National Convention. The GOP, Clinton said, has a "great gap between talk and action" on this issue. In another development, a CNN-USA *Today* Gallup poll released yesterday found Clinton ahead of Bush by 10 points, 52 percent to 42 percent, in a survey of 750 registered voters Friday and Saturday. The week before the convention, the poll had Clinton ahead by 19 points, 56 percent to 37 percent. The margins of error were four points for the latest poll and three points for the earlier one. 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