OPINION Little future seen for Ross Perot Don Peters Oh Ross, why did you come back? Things am vastly differ ent this time around, ('all tho campaign "Perot: The Sequel." And like most sequela, them is a high chance of it being a total flop. When ho slipped out tho presidential back door in July, it caught many — mostly cam paign supporters — by surprlso. After pledging to run If his groupies got him on all SO state ballots, Perot decided he didn’t want to be president bad enough. Must have been all those nas ty questions the media was ask ing. Baddd media. You should know better. Well, three months lutor. Perot is on every ballot. His en tourage remains (somewhat) faithful, and he’s thrown his 10-gallon hut buck into the ring. Question is, why? Or better yet. how has this Tolkein-char actor-gone-huywiro captured the American public’s adula tion? Why he’s running is simple enough to answer Most presi dential typos who put them selves up for public slaughter do it for ono, or a combination of throe reasons: • They think they can win. • They have a point to make. • Thoy have really, really big egos. On tho first, Perot is a non starter. The colloquial term is "snowball's chance.” Back be fore his July bow-out, maybe he could have wheedled his way into the White House, Now. his credibility shot all to hell, Perot’s popularity is running in tho single digits. I ui 0Mf a M I KtiMM-lof \ fk r ,MC No, Ross is back in for the latter I wo reasons. Ho rollshos the spoiler roll, though ho de nios it. Ho wunts to tweak the noses of Bush and Clinton. And — I'll bo gracious hero — he wants to air his controversial views, because he truly be lieves in them. As for his ego — none come much bigger. He plays his ever shrinking constituents on a string, confident they will stick with him no matter what ho does. Tho scary purl is that he's right. What is it about Ross that ap peals to tho American public? It isn’t his frightening ideas for deficit control, his wiggod-out plan for fighting the drug war or any of his other amorphous campaign planks. No. Most of his support comos from the fad he’s not a "politician.’’ which in these days of anti-incumbency back lash is good for some percent age points, even if you are an egomaniac who’s idea of em ployee supervision would make Lon Mabon blanch. And to give credit where it’s deserved. Perot hus also suc cessfully tapped the quirky American political legacy that loves a rogue. By being the Iconoclast, the outsider, the very Imago of the knight slaying bloated political dragons. Perot has once again reaffirmed that Americans root for the underdog No matter how strange his ideas, Porot attracts supporters because he's different, an odd ball out of the status quo. His biggest political advantage Is that he's not Bush or (Hinton In a land, as Bill Murray said in Stripes, where your ances tors were kicked out of every decent country in the world, being different wins votes. Hero’s a prediction: Perot will run a campaign of a kind novor soon before. He’ll Ixi In cluded in the television debates because to shun him would only add to his outsider image He'll probably even land a few pre-plannod debate zlngers on the two fuvorites. Throughout the campaign. Bush ami Clinton will treat him like u mosquito; annoying, but one who'll suck a little of your blood if you lot him got too close. Perot's popularity will continue to hover uround 10 percent. C-omo Nov 3, Perot will lose Badly. In the post-election In terviews he'll crow about "making a point." or "showing the two parties they can't Ig nore the American public." And then he'll slink back to Texas, never to be a political factor again. Omt Peters is freelance editor of the Kmeruld. rrr< vra-TTMtirtriT STY13333.1332^ SPRINGFIELD SCIENTIFIC SUPPLIES Scales Chemicals Lab Equipment 9-6 Mon-Fri • 10-5 Sat 726*9176 1124 Main St. Cash For Textbooks Mon -SjI Smith I ;imil\ Bookstore 768 E. 13th 1 Block From Campus 345-1651 Hewlett Packard HP-108B...$29.95 HP-32SIL.S59.95 Sharp EL5096...$12.95 TDK SA60 $1.99 MAXELL to 90 UDXLII CASSETTE TAPES SONY UX90 $1.89 G*t results. Advert Is* In the ODE Do Your Share! • The tlorm f«m>«l svr\ it. r eliminated paper eup use by 22 «»/. refill a hie tmiRft. • The K.MI! K selling refutable nui^ «* cimI, offering; beverage discounts v%ith Ihrir use. • Net I me waste before you buy - pre-cycle OKI »*»N Dam V I MI MAI D .S|H»nsutnl ■*> : \ m ^uvskii m\ is«. iv-< DELUXE BURRITO corn chi)* & /{> oz ilnnk COM P A N Y I resit, I it, / ust Mexican I ood ***«,,.t «nii>.n.-,. .it t* Will.tnu'ttf u>,11 ■•} J j)®aaia 91 30 PM n With I Friday October 9 Taylors College Side Inn THE PAR SIDE By GARY LARSON at '«*mm Years later, Harold Zimmerman, the original Hook hand" of campfire ghoet stories, tails hie grandchildren the Tale of the Two Evil Teen-agers.