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ALLEN'S SEAHAWKS CAMPAIGN WINNING, SPLIT AMONG WOMEN

          "After four weeks and $5 million, potential Seahawks
     owner Paul Allen's campaign to build a new football stadium
     is winning at home but still lagging among women," according
     to Rebecca Boren of the SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER.  A new
     poll for the Post-Intelligencer and KOMO-TV "shows that
     women are evenly divided" over the $425M stadium complex,
     with 46% "saying they will vote for Referendum 48," and 46%
     "saying they won't."  The statewide poll of 800 "likely
     voters" showed the stadium measure ahead 48-44%, with a
     margin of error of +/- 3.5%.  Allen's "Our Team Works"
     campaign said "it plans to spend a lot more money ... wooing
     female voters to his cause."  As the vote nears, the two
     opposition campaigns "intend to continue their modest
     advertising efforts and their own get-out-the-vote drives." 
     "No on 48" is bringing consumer activist Ralph Nader to
     speak against the stadium in Seattle and Vancouver.  Our
     Team Works "plans a major weekend effort" to get-out-the
     vote (SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, 6/12).  
          WHO IS PAUL ALLEN? In Seattle, Linda Keene profiled
     Allen, and wrote, "Above and beyond football, Allen is
     leaving his civic footprint on almost every aspect of
     Northwest life -- the arts, environment, recreation, medical
     research, education and the economy as he invests in a host
     of companies. ... Despite his growing civic role, he remains
     an enigma.  Allen rarely makes public appearances or
     conducts media interviews -- and he is dodging the campaign
     limelight like an all-pro running back.  Allen has addressed
     the public just once -- to a camera for a stadium
     commercial" (SEATTLE TIMES, 6/11).
          NOW THAT'S A CAMPAIGN: The campaign in support of
     Referendum 48 "will exceed" $5M by Tuesday's vote, making it
     "the most expensive campaign" in WA state history, according
     to David Schaefer of the SEATTLE TIMES.  Previously, the
     most expensive campaign was Slade Gorton's '94 re-election
     to the U.S. Senate, which cost $4.8M.  Schaefer: "But what
     makes the Referendum 48 total even more significant is that
     the money was spent in less than two months, while other
     campaigns occupied as much as a year" (SEATTLE TIMES, 6/11).

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