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74% of Students Support Clinton In Election Poll

Bush Backed by 14% in Survey

And, as in any ethnic group, Patel says, it ispossible that many conservative voters will crossparty lines to vote for Clinton.

Mark H. Kim '94, co-president of the AsianAmerican Association, says that it would be hardto make a general statement on the results for"Asians and Pacific Islanders" since the categorycontains such a wide variety of groups.

Kim says his organization has not discussed thepresidential candidates in its meetings.

Regardless of how the poll results are brokendown--by sex, year, house or ethnicity--Clintongets the nod from every grouping.

And that comes as no surprise to Gregory S.Chernack '94, president of Harvard-Radcliffe forClinton-Gore. "We're exactly where I thought wewould be when we signed up 700 people atregistration this fall," Chernack says.

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"All along, we wanted to break 70 percent, andI think that three out of four Harvard voters forClinton is a very impressive number," he adds.

But Stephen Y. Ko '95, president of Studentsfor Bush, says that a lot of Clinton support is"soft support" that could switch in the final daysof the campaign, especially considering theclosing of the Clinton-Bush gap in recent nationalpolls.

"Things can change," Ko says. "A week is alifetime in politics."CrimsonNancy E. Greene

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