NATION/WORLD *Two Bush brothers enjoy stealing the show The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 19, 1998 - 9A NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The brothers Bush, George W and Jeb, plopped into their seats and stared with wry smiles into a bank of televi- sion cameras. "Will the real governor Bush please stand up?" somebody cracked. Neither man budged. There was no need. They're both the real thing. And in the eyes of some, George Bush's boys are the stars of the GOP George W, the governor of Texas, and Jeb, the governor-elect of Florida, stole the show at the Republican Governors Association's opening day. r "They are our future," said Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating. For nearly 30 minutes, the Bush brothers held forth on the Republican Party's future and their future as America's latest political dynasty. They were chummy. "I love him a lot," George W, 52, said of Jeb, 45. They were funny. "He's the tall one and I'm the short one, right?" the Texas governor asked. They were teasing. "How old are you?" "A lot younger than you," Jeb told his brother. The Florida Bush was getting even: Earlier, George W jabbed a finger at his brother and told a reporter, "Throw him the tough questions! He's new on the national scene. See what he can do." And they were self-confident, bor- dering on cocky in the case of George W Asked if he believed he would make a good president, the Texas gov- ernor smiled his father's slanted smile and said, "You know me well enough to know the answer is yes." He didn't answer the Big Question: Will he run for president? "I haven't made up my mind yet and I'm going to make it up later on;' said Bush, elected to a second term Nov. 3 with 69 percent of the vote. That's what he said. But he sent a different signal with everything he did: George W. was relaxed, witty and charming - making eye contact with national reporters, referring to them by their first names. "Behave yourself" he admonished the entire group before the first question was asked. Indeed, he literally winked and nodded when he told journalists, "I understand there is a time frame" for announcing a presidential campaign. "I understand I'll have to send signals. Just kind of hang in there with me." Bush said his main concern is the impact of a presidential campaign on his family. He is expected to decide by April whether he wants to try to be the first child of a president to win the White House since John Quincy Adams. His father served from 1989 to 1993. Texas Gov. George W. Bush gestures as his brother - Florida's govemor-elect Jeb Bush - looks on during a joint news cot- ference in New Orleans yesterday. They are attending the Republican Governors Association meeting. .Democrats seek to strengthen ties to entrepeneurs *Dems aim for high- tech new economy Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON-Battling for the political allegiance of the burgeon- ing high-tech industry, an alliance of entrepreneurs and Democratic * office-holders yesterday launched an effort to design an agenda for accelerating America's transforma- tion into an information-based "new economy." Sponsored by the Progressive Policy Institute - a Democratic think tank with close ties to President Clinton - the "New Economy Task Force" aims to increase cooperation between Washington and high-tech companies on issues from education Wto patent policy - and at the same time deepen the links between cen- trist Democrats and this increasingly powerful and politically active indus- try. "It's a constituency that is getting much more into politics," said Al From, president of the Democratic Leadership Council, a political group that founded the Progressive Policy Institute. "But I don't think it's a constituency that has settled on one side or the other." Indeed, the timing of the confer- ence underscores the steady escala- tion in the competition between political groups on the left and right for support from the high-technolo- gy industry, particularly in California's Silicon Valley. Even as the policy institute was promoting government-industry partnerships with computer, com- munications and biotechnology executives in Washington, the liber- tarian Cato Institute was preparing to open a conference in San Jose, Calif. today titled: "Washington D.C. vs. Silicon Valley." That conference will reflect the widespread skepticism about gov- ernment interference that has defined Silicon Valley's politics for 'most of its existence. The gathering is partially underwritten by the Microsoft Corp., which is locked in a bitter antitrust battle with the Justice Department. "The Beltway strategy is alternat- ing threats of regulation and bribes with subsidies," said Solveig Singleton, a Cato Institute official. "But in the long run, these both have all kinds of pernicious effects." By contrast, the PPI conference embodied a recent receptivity in the high-tech industry to a centrist Democratic message that empha- sizes fiscal discipline, opening mar- kets abroad and support for public education. "I don't detect here a lot of sup- port for the right's view that the dawn of the information age means the twilight for government," said Will Marshall, executive director of the policy institute. "We see an opportunity for a much more con- structive partnership." Even so, perhaps the most striking aspect of the policy institute's con- ference was how heavily both the entrepreneurs and elected officials emphasized the limits of the part- nership they're seeking. While the business leaders repeat- edly said they wanted Washington to increase its spending on worker train- ing and basic scientific research, as well as accelerate efforts to reform public education and open markets abroad, several made clear they did not believe the high-tech industries needed major new government initia- tives to prosper. "Maybe we are already seeing this (growth) without having to do a lot more stimulation," said Regis McKenna, a prominent Silicon Valley marketing consultant. Even Sen. Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) the Senate minority leader and co- chair of the task force, struck a cau- tious note. In assessing the role of government in the new economy, Daschle said the task force should study first "how do we do the least possible harm" and only second "how do we foster it." WRITE FOR THE DAILY. CALL 76-DAILY. 5 Time Jeopardy Champion! BOB HARRIS Teaching everyone's favorite class... How to stuff all that knowledge into "u m