6A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 11, 199b NATION/WORLD Dole's campaign niay be the last of WWII generation Clinton says budget should be balanced N From JFK to George Bush, WWII vets sat in the Oval Office 'Nwsday LAFAYETTE, La. - As a photo op, it didn't quite rival Boris Yeltsin doing the twist. But -it still was a sight to behold: Staid Bob Dole, short on sleep and hoarse of voice, shedding enough of his Midwestern reticence to get down and boogie, sort of. The Republican presidential nomi- nee, 73, was campaigning in the steamy bayous of Lafayette, and a joyous Cajun band and vocalist were belting out music that made you want to set down your bowl of jambalaya, loosen your collar, stamp your feet and shimmy. Dole obliged in his own dignified way, first swinging his left arm in time to the kinetic beat, then advancing to a conservative shuffle. He moved toward his wife, Elizabeth, who was clapping in time to the music. He took her hand and, caught up in the exuberance of the moment, she swayed a little, too. And so Dole steps off the political stage with a bit of a dance, his personal last hurrah and perhaps the last hurrah for his aging generation; neither he nor anyone else from the World War II era is likely to run again for the United States' highest office. Dole personifies a generation "tempered by war," as President Kennedy put it, that is dis- solving into history. Not that this is unique, says Allan Lichtman, professor of history at American University in Washington, D.C. Another war generation came and went in the second half of the 19th cen- tury. After Lincoln, "Virtually every pres- ident through (William) McKinley had had a role in the Civil War," Lichtman says, but that distinction ended abruptly in 1901 when McKinley was assassi- nated, hurling Teddy Roosevelt into the White House at age 42. What followed was what Lichtman calls "a tremen- dously creative period of new ideas and new policies known as the Progressive Period, bringing us women's suffrage, the direct election of senators, pure food and drug laws, the Federal Reserve Board." What comes now is the start of another generational cycle. "The question," says Lichtman, The Washington Post WASHINGTON - President Clinton declared yesterday that if he "could do one thing" in his second term it would be to balance the federal bud- get, an accomplishment that has eluded every chief executive for nearly three decades but one that Clinton pro- nounced "easily achievable." Clinton said he believes a plan to eliminate the deficit can be c passed within 1 wn,, the first year of his second balanced term, although he did not set a that woui date by which the budget the door could be bal- the incremental progress we've made in health care reform." Clinton told retiring ABC broadcast- er David Brinkley: "I think psychologi- cally and, in fact, economically it i, very important for America to have balanced budget." Budget deficits are projected to increase again next year after several years of shrinking, but Clinton did not idpass a budget Id ... open s of explain how he would reach a bal- anced budget that includes a tax cut without more restraints on the growth of populo programs like Medicare and Medicaid than he has been willing to accept. His renewed resolve on the deficit comes less than a year AP PHOTO Defeated Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole gives a "thumbs-up." As Dole leaves politics, he closes the door for a generation of American leadership. author of the recently published "Keys to the White House;" "is this: Will the rise of the new generation bring on a new burst of creativity in policy-mak- ing and break up the logjam that we've seen for many decades?" Beginning with Kennedy in 1960 and ending with George Bush in 1992, presidents of Dole's generation over- saw such profound postwar changes as the end of racial segregation, the wax- ing and waning of the Cold War, the population explosion, the advent of Medicare, Medicaid and the welfare state, legalized abortion and the mod- ern feminist movement. "It will now be up to the new genera- tion to deal with future consequences of all these things," says Andrew Polsky, professor of political science at Hunter College in Manhattan. The age gap didn't affect the outcome of the Clinton-Dole matchup so much as the fact that Dole was out of his element, away from the political arena in which he was most effective, Polsky says. anced and college to offered no details other Americam than insisting that such a Pre budget include two of his campaign pledges: tax incentives for college tuition and expanded health care coverage for the uninsured. Asked if he were "able to accomplish only one thing" with the mandate vot- ers gave him last week, Clinton responded, "I would pass a balanced budget that would ... open the doors of college to all Americans and continue t all esident Clinton after a bitter partisan stalemate with the Republican Congress over how balance the budget resulted in two partial shutdowns of the federal gov- ernment. Clinton then hit the cam- paign trail to hammer away at the Republican budget plan - which proposed a balanced budget by 2002 - as Draconian and dangerous to the country. .. . . . . . I1I1 .,® EYE EXAMS AND EYE GLASSES STUDENT DISCOUNTS I I Grade A NoteTakers are Seniors and Grad Students. They at complete lecture notes. These notes can make great suppler Anthro Blo 364 Go S 10 Antr a (#k,. f '. arS ran 4zrl iii L tu0 I+ . 1 L00 IP 1 I. Rintat !503 German 101 POLO RALPH LAUREN CALVIN KLEIN eyewea r GIORGIO ARMANI AL.LSTAR -Chem 210 Hist 218 Econ 101 Phys 15 Econ 102 Ph 2 A6~ -.Englsh 313 Ehs 1 D Psych 35Q ___._ __ .loMen_'sStd. 220 - --_-_ We are gatnenng opinions in a survey or te campus climate for UM students with physical disabilities. Our goal is to use this information to improve the university climate for all students with disabilities, people like yourself and those students who will come after you. All research is being conducted in cooperation with the University Office of Services for Students with Disabilities (Sam Goodin, director). *iiei~"2CONVLENIENT LOCATIONS1 BOOKSTORE 549 E. Unversity I 17. t^. 741-9669 ~~~ ~~ ~~~~317~5Stat. PIT" 665-4990 -I Im, I f '.'3 Y '.2 WN