8 Friday. October 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan DUKAKIS Continued from p. 1 rather than in more overt ways. Dukakis stressed the importance of education and educators to a crowd that included many high school students and teachers. He outlined a student loan program that would be paid back through small paycheck deductions once the recipients began attending a university scholarship program to encourage students to become teachers. Dukakis conceded that he should have responded to Bush's attacks earlier in the campaign. One questioner focused on Vice President George Bush's public attacks on Dukakis. "Hindsight is 20-20," he said. "I don't particularly enjoy spending my time cutting up the other guy." Joe Steinbacher, Kansas City, Mo., resident, got a good view of the candidate from his seat. "I am very much impressed to see this man this close and listen to his answers, which are common sense, good answers," he said. "This man is honest, and it comes through." Deborah Morale, Kansas City, Mo., resident and the first questioner of the evening, asked Dukakis how he could help people like her, who faced a large hospital bill with no insurance. Dukakis answered by outlining his universal health insurance plan. Morale said she was satisfied with his answer. Gary Pantherie, finance director for Jackson County, Mo., said he was concerned about the plight of migrants because of Reagan's policies. He said he thought Dakakis' terms as governor would help him share concerns of local government. The Dukakies arrived at the auditorium about 8:45 p.m. Dukakis said he planned to be in the Kansas City area on Tuesday. Catherine Wheeler/KANSAN Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis and his wife, Kitty, exit a plane at the Kansas City Downtown Muncipal Airport. A crowd of about 250 greeted them. Dukakis supporter speaks to 250 at Missouri airport KANSAS CITY, Mo. Michael Dukakis' visit to the city paid him political democrats over the edge and given them a mandate in the race. By Debbie McMahon Kansan staff writer Bill Waris, Jackson County executive, said Missouri had almost reached that point when he spoke to about 250 Dukakis supporters yesterday at Downtown Municipal Airport as they waited for the candidate's arrival. "I think all of us know the importance of western Missouri in this election," Waris said. "We've said it before, and we'll say it again that if we can come out of St. Louis even, even in the state, we can carry it with a big plurality in western Missouri because this is where the election is going to be won. "The state of Missouri is going to return to the Democratic column all the way, up and down the line." Dukaiks arrived at the airport about 4 p.m. Dukaiks did not speak to the crowd, but he shook hands with several of the supporters. Most people waiting for Dukakis' arrival said that the latest polls showed Republican presidential candidate George Bush in the lead. But the people said they thought the governors governor still had a good chance to win the election. John Humphrey, a candidate for the Missouri state senate, 47th District, said the presidential election would be ("Dukakis) should have come out a little more hard-hitting," Humphrey said. "But he has picked up steam since the last debate. This crowd needs to fire him up." "Dukakis jumped through every loop we asked him to jump through." Medley said. At least 30 people in the crowd were representing the National Education Association. Leila Medley, political specialist for the association, said Bush didn't attempt to visit the demonstration procedures, so they gave their support to Dukakis. Poll shows gains by Dukakis The Associated Press NEW YORK — Republican nominee George Bush led the presidential race by nine points, 51 percent to 42 percent, in a national poll yesterday, but many voters expressed dissatisfaction with both major-party candidates. Bush's lead over Democrat Michael Dukakis in the poll, taken Sunday through Wednesday, was similar to an eight-point Bush margin in an ABC News-Washington Post poll. Those polls found a closer race then the 13 and 14-point Bush leads among likely voters in two polls during the weekend, and consider-merging the 13-point margin an NBC-Journal poll revealed after the Oct. 13 debate. Bush promotes U.S. trade, decries Dukakis' campaign ads The Associated Press SANTA CLARA, Calif. — George Bush accused Michael Dukakis yesterday of "trying to scare the American people by putting Japanese flags" in his television commercials, saying he wanted to gain world markets for U.S. exports as bringing them and not shrinking from competition. measures In a white, circus-sized silent at Applied Materials Co. in California's Silicon Valley, the Republican presidential nominee said he would promote U.S. trade, but not with protectionist Angeles, Bush and his wife, Barbara, toured a Holocaust museum and the vice president told a courtry audience. "We owe the dead and survivors alike a promise of vigilance." "It doesn't make sense to stick our heads in the sand, as some in the other party have suggested, and try to build walls around America," the vice president said. "It doesn't make sense to launch a trade war and plunge America and the world into a recession. The Bush campaign earlier dismissed seven members of an ethnic advisory panel who had been involved in the investigation. raise my voice and the full force of federal law when it is violated against every hate group, descrerate and demagogue, brown-shirt, cage, wherever it is. The villain is the same. "And it is beneath the dignity of the pres- idency, and of the voters, to try to incite fear of foreigners as a cheap means of winning a few votes." "We have no room in our communities for hidden Nazi fugitives or war criminals," Bush said at the center. "Every last one of them must be found and brought to justice." As he campaigned in the West, Bush also repeatedly vowed opposition to federal gun control. At the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los "Bigotry is not welcome. As president, I will A handful of hecklers infiltrated the endorsement rally in a Tacoma hotel exhibition hall, and at least four of them were hustled out by police. 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