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- NATION, Page 27CAMPAIGN NOTESBankrupt Address
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- George Bush received a personal reminder about the sour
- state of the economy last week. The Houstonian Hotel and
- Conference Center, where the President rents a suite to use as
- his official residence and where he plans to stay during the
- Republican Convention in August, filed for bankruptcy under the
- weight of a $28.7 million debt. The Houstonian's owners say the
- hotel will continue to operate normally. That's good news for
- Bush. Because Texas does not have a state income tax, the
- President can continue to reduce his tax bill by filing his
- returns from Houston.
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- The Invisible Man
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- He looms like a pale ghost from an earlier political era,
- moving from table to table at a campaign function. When he
- lingers near one table, there is an uncomfortable silence before
- someone from a group of reporters asks, "Care to join us,
- Senator?" Twenty-four years after he ended Lyndon Johnson's
- hopes for a second term by getting 42% of the vote in the New
- Hampshire primary, Eugene McCarthy is running for President
- again, and no one seems to care.
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- Ignored by the Democratic National Committee and the
- press, the genial ex-Senator from Minnesota, now 75, has mounted
- a one-man campaign, roaming the state on a schedule known
- mostly to himself. Though McCarthy picked up only 211 votes in
- the Democratic primary last week, he says he's staying in the
- race. He says that "if the networks ever interviewed me, it
- might help with recognition."
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- Baker to the Rescue?
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- The last time George Bush found himself in deep political
- trouble, he turned to James Baker for help. In July 1988 Michael
- Dukakis had a 17-point lead in the polls, and Bush's campaign
- was in disarray. Baker took over in August, and within the month
- Bush pulled ahead and stayed there.
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- But this year, Bush aides say, a return appearance by
- Baker is out of the question -- at least for now. For starters,
- Baker is busier now as Secretary of State. Further, Bush resents
- the notion that he needs handlers. Aides believe that the
- President would have to be behind by at least 15 points before
- he could bring himself to call Baker again for help. "For Baker
- to come back," said a Bush lieutenant, "things would have to be
- a lot more desperate than they are now."
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