xt7bvq2s7h8q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bvq2s7h8q/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-11-02 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, November 02, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 02, 1972 1972 1972-11-02 2020 true xt7bvq2s7h8q section xt7bvq2s7h8q UCky Thursday, November 2, 1972 an independent student newspaper ‘-
I<€rnel Vol. LXlV No. 46 University Of Kentucky
Twelve pages Lexmqton, Kentucky 40506
W
s 900 e ec Ion ue . .
P 1* t“ In acadenf
By TERRY TUCKER The committee’s report had originally 5 ’3 . . ,. -
Kernel Staff Writer called for the elimination of the University “My" Black} k S outstanding woman
The Student Senate last nightapproveda General Studies Requirements, but this ' ’ .;;- professor "f ”‘0' d'ed Tuesday due to
special election for the College of Nursing portion was deleted subsequent to a floor ' Iflle‘ICS sustained m an automobile ac—
to replace Senator Wendy McCarty. MS discussion of the matter. is *- Udem’ . . , .
McCarty is resigning her seat in the (‘LARIFYING FOR the senators what e? t» BlaCk was a'nzlSSIstantprofessorln [KS _
Senate. the acceptance ofthe. report would mean, 6 i $.33 _ 3:5; 66.33% college Of 509861 professions and» béd been
According to the Senate Constitution, a committee chairman Mark Paster said 3 on at. L k for two years. I nor to this She “d3
senator who cannot serve out his or her that students who seek to effect such a i “8‘? eff“ Director Of PUP” Personnel farm“)? years
term is succeded by the runner-up in the change will now have the weight of the e ”i F ayette ("”.“‘:‘". and a some}! case W V
preceeding Senate election. In Ms. Mc- Senate behind them. §3 ”” “fr ker ”T ,“ “th160,? -D. ( and
Carty’s case. however, there was no run- The Senate then accepted the proposed * ”xi? ,6 } hllddelphld' She “d5 also antlnstructor at
ner-up. and the constitution provides that revisions of the University Senate Rules i I’M” Tuskeegee‘ “15mm.“ Alabama. anda high
in such situations a special election must submitted by the Student Senate Ad Hoc Raind :“hoo! teacher m North( .irollna. Aldbdmd —‘
be held. Rules Committee. Among the revisions rops°°" and “it“? . . .
APPLICATIONS FOR STUDENTS who Proposed by the Rules Committee were the Richard Long and Stephen [)unifer .Bl“\(.h RFt H? H, a ”A degree ”m.“ 7
wish to run are available in the Student addition of a student member to the are just as tired of the rain as the North (arolma (ollegeanda master s
Government office and at the College of University Senate Advisory Committee on "‘5‘ 0f “5- (Kernel PM") h." Barr." degree from Atlanta {niversi‘y' I)
Nursing Student Services office. The Continued on Page 6, Col. 4 ""rs“ . Duringvher .1)“ “("56 Sim compl (d an
deadline for filing is 5:00 p.m., Monday, 'mpr9:_“6‘1‘) “it 01h ”aide: :2: 6‘:-
- . - . comp IS men s. . e r iv e
SilireZigii]:tg:cmn WI“ be held during BI‘GCkenrldge ahead Distinguished Service Award. (‘ollege of — -
Social Professions in 1972. She was also
0 listed In Who's Who among students in
The Student Senate also voted last night N'xo n I N U" n Ie ad p O II American colleges and univerSIties.
to endorse efforts to eliminate the SHE WAS PRESIDENTofa local PTA.
Breadth, Depth, and Basic Skills Republicans Richard Nixon NL'NN. A FORMER governor a member of the Martin Luther King
requirements from the College of Arts and Louie Nunn are winners in of Kentucky. will defeat Walter Scholarship committee and secretary of
and Sciences. The action come as the Fayette County in the “Dec“ Huddleston by 50 percent (‘entral Kentucky's Mental Health
Senate accepted the report and recom- presidentialand senatorial races. to 44 percent in the county. the Association. She was a board member of #
mendations of its General Studies Com- respectively, according to a survey said. the Children‘s Bureau and Blue Grass
mittee. recent survey complied by a UK In the sixth district (‘omprehensive Health Planning (,‘ouncll.
_ .. statistics class for WLAP raido congressional race. Democrat and also faculty sponsor for the Black
.‘ station. John Breckenridge will be a Student ['nion.
1 .6 The results find that President decisive winner over Republican She was appointed by L'K President (1115
. ,6 $5“). ‘6‘ Nixon will receive 64 percent of Labe Jackson in Fayette County. Singletary to serve on the Planning __
* 'g.‘ 36-6/0. “*3 ‘ the Fayette Countians‘ votes. :39 percent to 29 percent, the (‘ommittee of ('K's (‘ommlssion for In _
:. awe -W- ,5“ .‘ ; .1? compared to 31 percent for his survey claimed. stltutional Growth. and Governor Wendell
. ’ ‘6 6* 5-5» opponent, Sen. George TIIF POLL. (‘ONDLCTFD by Ford appointed her to serve on the (‘hlld
MM ’99... McGovern. Dr. Lynn Lamotte. assistant Welfare (‘itizcns Review (‘ommlsswn
'1'" ”“" fl ’ . .-. (‘ontinued on page (3. (‘ol. I ('ontinued on page 5. (‘ol. 2
. . o; x}: .
' .. . . .
-‘ a, ,. ..--:6 W6 - a
. 3w -. Student power
’t. neg. ‘ . :
=6“ ~ __ ‘ .. - o o 0
«~ 2 6f” we Merger would. give UK community representation —
.. a ,5“ a By (Jill. ARNOLD commission and helped write the merger stud obscures local Issues by focusing on
g “ 6” Kernel Staff Writer charter. He spoke to about 20 students at party differences
-. , If the proposed Lexington-Fayette the Zeta Tau Alpha sorority house lost If the merger is not adopted. said __
6 '3 5 j I!” ; County merger is adopted. UK students night, ‘ l’i‘ogg. Leiclngton will be clasSIerd .‘is a _
6i [-1 ' f may be able to elect a student represen— Distilcl fourls one of the twelve districts first class city. SlflCC the population has
f. 3 :_5 i ”a tativein the new government.said Fayette in the proposed merger It cncompasscs |Il(.'l‘(‘£l.\('(l to ou-r 100,000 The city would
’ “ 6,; County Treasurer Jerry Frogg. several areas with a high proportion of then be forced to operated under the same
. "‘ ,2: in" 66g 6 . The proposed merger. which will be student residents. such as Linden Walk. laws as Loliisvlllc‘s Loinsvillc ln Kcn-
decided by popular vote Nov. 7. would Maxwell and other streets. tucky's only first-class city
NO luck merge the. Lexington city government with "MT .\I.l. l,.\\\ .s‘ for firstclass cities In
the Fayette County government. A new. Each district In the proposed merger K} were written for Lollisvlllc.” Frogg
Some p009” just don‘t have any single government. the Lexington-Fayette would clect one representative to thc hillll ”Th9?“ fit l«t‘-‘\'lngl0" llkl‘ 8 wrong
luck. This unidentified motor urban-county government. would take its urban-county council In addition. three Sth‘d 511" H I‘nder merger. “(“d N
cyclist is getting a parking "6“" place. resprentzlticcs would be elected (ll large. ”Pt‘rilllllfl 11nd" OUT (WWI lilW-S ”
from [K officer John keel. "IF l‘K STl'IHINTS got together they Htouc. POINTFI) out that all of the Blacks will also have the opportunity to
(Kernel ”hm“ by (‘harles Turokl could have a representative on the urban- candidates would be non partisan. or not elect representatives to the council
county council from (ll-“tr“?! four.“ said affiliated with any political party This "Districts one and thrcc .‘II‘C
Frogg. Frogg W858 member ofthe merger would eliminate "party politics”. which he (V‘mllnm‘d 0" Page ll. ('ol. I
W
(‘loudlncss and ii possibility of _
Supporting Nixon'.‘ You aren't alone' Nixon showers and thundcrshowers ilrc
. supporters are surfacing on college campuses . l()r(‘('fl\l for today There Is it till
I" S'de : across the nation as political views becomc more 0 "is I d e : pcrccnt mum... ”f precipitation
moderate. It’s “becoming respectable" to ma“). dropping [,6 3,, pcrccnt
support Nixon. For more details. see page 3 tonight 'l‘cmperatures will I -'
‘ the upper (50's today. dropping
the mid 50's tonight
/ 5-

 The [Walt mo 159; Assistant Mnudqmq ( di'Ol Ka'll‘ M((ar'hy I l
Kentucky E.:‘;,t:::. “M :.>:.:::::: M“ :53? 02:5: 12:13.: Ed I for I0 is
fili'ni‘ni tailor Gu'q Hartmann Assistant Mauaqmq Editor Mike Board
Kernel “WW (""0' Mil-r “0'an (alumnus lrplt-st‘nl m3 09mm.“ so the moon not in. Uiiwri it»
o o o o O ' ' .
A palhy :5 motor problem in fighting strip-mining
“As we neared Lotts Creek. we groups being questionable, the con- over ~14 years of age tend to oppose is clearly against strip-mining. The
noticed the mountains were marred cerned student has reached an im— strip-mining in their areas by wide other candidates seem to waver on
near their tops. At first it looked to be passe~unless he forms his own margins, while those under 45 oppose the issue, citing the degree of the
the work of the highway department. group. which would certainly follow it less strenuously.“ slope and possible restoration as
but soon the differences became the same downhill trends as EAS. And remember, these are only the being important in making a deCls10n. .
- apparent. The results of a poll printed in the results of a poll. Answering yes or no (‘oncern is definitely at 3a new low.
- Too many mountains had been Oct. 8. Louisville Courier-Journal & to questions about strip-mining is far Whatshouldlma big issue in3our state
scarred. Bare roch gleamed through Times. show that only 50 percent of from being involved in the issue. when considering a senatorial can»
the fall trees. sometimes in long. those living in the top 10 coal- ()f the us. Senate hopefuls. «those didatc is buried beneath interest in
continuous slashes. It was also ob- producing counties of KentUCky Op- who have a chance to actually bring federal spending and campaign
vious the bare. steep cliffs were not pose strip-mining. about action on the problem), only contributors. Meanwhile. the Strip-
the work of nature. The poll also reported that "Those William Bartley of the People's Party ping goes on and, who cares?
These were the first signs we saw of
strip mining. reported Roger 3 3 mmgwmm.
Drury in the Oct. 26, issue of the 3 3 a.‘-’- L-ifl"f;"."'-f"11 ‘3". $3-53 '55 ‘ ‘ 1 -- '- . W2.“ mm?
. 3 3 3 3 - _V_3 '3. -r\-3_' \._= “3“. v.3.“ \-¢:W -;.,.‘.,3.‘. '3—3. .35]. 3‘33. “M'fi' . ‘ti 7 3'33. ‘3‘, ‘37:”
f“ ’3‘“- \gisss Nikiikffivfmf‘fixilwwfl‘ifiiil’mgvi"hm/Iifli’A‘r/AMW i
Inven though concern about the W W

3 3 3 ~V W _ \ WWVVVVVVTV—

issue seems to have dwindled. Strip‘ , ‘ £4" \ 3 33 3* ‘

mining is still a big problem in 3.3.}, \ 3, , ['3 3 304 "‘2_ ' ‘ 3:33.33 k

Kentucky. Publlcuy of the atrocmes 33 53:53:93 33 3333 3Q 33 \ ‘3: 3. ,::;.~3.~3.‘3.‘3. 3

‘ has (lied down and apparently. so has ~r:o:o,",'0:°:o:o:i ‘ : aft? #2 a. f’f,’ =- ~‘ «inuztbttstxt

. . - ., .3- mun» i s‘ e 81:- 3‘ .‘.‘.’u~.‘.}:‘

dLll\( opposition. 3,;.:,',0,\0.0,o,o‘ 3,; 33333 3 .4 , \ ts 33 3_33 i.~¢¢,~.:..o,...t3

Why is there so little concern about §,',':o:o:o:o:o;o:\ st ’ "‘33‘3‘3 Q 3 ‘ “3‘ 3 {§:9:~‘,~3::.:o::.:o‘\

strip-mining on the UK campus? :0:O;o:o:o:o:o:0,' 3? ( _ 33 3,0,, 3 ' I \Z‘. '\ tsztjofiggobiggt -

Students havea sterotyped reputation t:¢:¢:¢}:::°:':‘ \f ,3/ Q “‘3; 3,;\ :°:°:,'o;°:‘::o:°:j\

for being environmentalists. but our “:0???" 3 A‘» V ,3" :32 3 “$333 0::;;s:0:0:’o"'

campus. at least. does not conform to ’ \\ h V ‘ ” i. '91 \‘\ ‘1‘: ' ‘.'

expectations. The Environmental ég‘f ’A E 3 Cjt '3 3 $333 3 33%;}:

, Awareness Society has very few 3 >3 j ‘m; .33 ‘ 7.3," :94, ‘3 \‘33 . j‘~,,«3;—"-“‘
active memberstactive being defined WE, IE: ‘3 ( m g " a \ Jill 3,33333 -3 ,-_3
as "those who attend meetings”i. ' "35 ' ' ,%‘~—_=.-.3.1 . tar—=3“ . .v. ........ a...“ - 3’31'?‘ ”WEED.
r s , ,- ‘ .' . “qu1574 (\3 , \\\\\3 ‘\\\,,'T,\\. ._ @ \3‘“":\"\\|' ' {Ila A) 3’ i
[lying to get in touch with anyone ,3 a» i \.33 M / .. N 3. \ t3 . \ 3m N‘Kttll'
involved in Save Our Kentucky tan :6" '4 1““ m. ll’3/3‘ m Q Q} (‘i\3 33 . l ”m (R)! L, 33“,]
anti—strip-mining groupi is a hassle ;':,,,,f32— 7; - J 3!"!y3giii __ __;_; 393il___ i i“ 3‘, 3 -'_ i i '3. J
. which would discourage even a rabid ’l?‘ .—IE§'A«H 9 “En __‘ a; O "
adversary. ’SPEAK UP—l CAN’T HEAR YOU!”
The efforts and effects of these two
StUdents ’08, If the basic nature ofcollege football as a up a few things during the season in order second billing to editors! ). But didn‘t i
, student function is not enough reason for a to be a champion. I would like to say expect a lot to come from it. Last time a
far stadium seats redefinition of the ticket policy by the Coach, “If the losing effort this year is to paper interviewed me. the one-column
insenSitive athletic departmentmaybe the be blamed on the team, then you better story contained seven errors, thus
. fact that today‘s students could become startgetting rid of the undedicated players qualifying as fiction.

It was with great interest that I listened tomorrow's contributors is also worthy of which Kentucky sure has a bunch of." .
Saturday to Mr. Cliff Hagen (Assistant (‘OnSideration It'sabeautiful article. It‘s even true and
Athletic Director at L'Ki listing the ThomasJ.Mar0nick So you ‘Believers' better believe that accurate. Hell, it isn‘t even riddled with
priorities for football tickets in L'K‘s new DepartmentofBusinessAdministration Kentucky is about to close out another typos. Joel Zakem not only read my book,
stadium. According to Mr. Hagen the losing season and that it is time for a he understood it and caught its purpose
priorities are: (1, present Stoll Field F d o h coaching change Time to get the politician and meaning. He not only visited me and
season ticket holders, (2, “Blue and White e up W't out of football. Hey, by the way coach Ray, rapped (and turned down a beer.
Contributors" desiring better seats, (3, II . . . ll if you had thought of it earlier you could authoritarian authorities please note). he
l'K Alumni, i4) new people in the city Pallt'CIUn Ray have thrown your hat into the ring for this listened, and went back and wrote what he
desiring seats for [K football games. years presidential election. Who knows? heard. I even like the pictures; I mean. I

I think I can honestly speak not only for With all that ‘We Believe' you could have reckon that's about as good as I can look.

My question to Mr. Hagen is, what about myself but also for thousands of UK been elected. huh, a 97-pound weakllng who cuts h'SfNin
I'K students? As I sat in the first row of the football fans. We fans are fed up with John A;;§}anh°" ha” and heard. And Hartmann. He 5 m
end zone and listened on my pocket radio 'the Politician‘ Ray and all his ‘the team ‘ ' umor the wrong end or the busmess.
to find out what was ha ening I had no has pride.‘ ‘The team has character' and ff °
doubt about the 333365553 priority for the rest of his everyda.V bull he gives the o "it pra'ses That‘s a competent uptown newspaper
students at Stoll Field last. All Mr. Hagen tans. you‘ve got; one of two or three in the state.
did was reinforce the obvious and prepare l‘Iitht-r coach Ray and his staff don't Kernel reporter That's a competent, not to mention
students for more of the same from an know enough about football or Kentucky is beautiful article on that writer, what-
unenlightened athletic department. still recruiting the third and fourth other Wednesday. Oct. 25,wasa charcoal gray sisname. Thanks—and more importantly,

college rejects. If these are socalled top day; a Castle of ()trantoish day; a day congratulations, Friends.

it would seem that since college football "0W1 football players. then this losing designed by Alfred Hitchcock. The Recycle...and Write 0n!
is a sport of students it should also be a season has to be blamed on John Ray and weather was ugly. I was still suffering andrew offutt
sportfor students and thatfirst priority for his so—called coaching staff. It looks as from those ()akland A blues. Two IIaldeman. Ky.
seats should be given to students. Most though Ray does not make the team manuscripts came home to roost, and
major universities provide their student practice hard enough as evidence by the there‘s no sadder occasion for a working
bodies with seats in the middle of the same silly mistakes the team makes week writer. Or even a playing writer. (Editor‘s "0‘91 andy Mill“ is Ken- ‘
grandstands. often on both sides. Why then after week. But also came some copies of the Oct. 19 tucky‘s only professional science fiction ,
UK's policy of relegating the end of the Kernel, and wasn’t it lovely! I had a lot of writer. An interview story on him and his
grandstand on one side. and of course the A championship team is a team with fun up here with those two dudes, Zakem latest book appeared in the Oct. 19 Ker-
end'zone. for students? dedicated players who are willing to give and Hartmann (Power to the Writer; nel.)

 'I‘III‘I Kl-INTlt‘KY KERNEL, Thursday. November 2. 1972—3
Ralph Nader: .
In the public interest x 9999V“"‘”'°°°""°"999- -
O . L)
b . .35 varieties of Donuts 0
Opinions differ on insurance guides :0: ii ‘ —————-———’5 V°”e”es °’ ’C9 Cream 0‘
J V
. = _ OPEN—7 DAYS A WEEK 0
WASHINGTONAState insurance commissioners Commissioner Berton Heaton of Minnesota. in a O i 6 A M _ 12 p M 20: 2 '
have sharply different opinions on the auto and life detailed analysis, noted that he has reason to b ' ' ' ' O F F 0
insurance Shopper‘s guides distributed by Penn- believe"loss leaders"may not be detected to keepa : , “4 Wm purrnasm' : =
sylvama Insurance Commissioner Herbert S. company off a high ranking position. He cited 0 . DONUT KASTLE dozencionuis Q
Denenberg. In the four months since I requested Bankers Life of Des Moines, Iowa, number one on i : M : '
these opinions from 51 state insurance com- the Pennsylvania list. as having, in the past ten 0 l 85 SOUlhlond Dr' 0
. missioners (including those of the District of years “sold only a handful of the kind of policy used = h ~ -- .. .. .. ‘ ‘
Columbia and Puerto _ Rico), 32 have replied. for comparison in the guides.“ O 9 O O 9) G§°d Thr” @ 9 9 O Q
Thirteen were negative on the Pennsylvanian‘s Most enthusiastic for the Shopper's guides are " " ' " QV‘ H " " " ' “"
Shopper's guides, nine approved of the idea, six New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts whose . a . , - .-
were reviewing the guides and four had not seen or commissioners intend soon to undertake similar fill ’ *_"—W"I‘T\§
heard of them. projects. New York Commissioner Benjamin R. .—// k\
Critical insurance commissioners, such as those Schenck referred to criticism of specific features of ll/ . =
of West Virginia, the District of Columbia, Idaho, the Pennsylvania guides but added that ”Com' 4l REGULm s DI
Kansas. Missouri and Minnesota, described the missioner Denenberg‘s response—‘if you can write ' , - 1
guides variously as incomplete, confusing to the a better guide. please d0’—is right on the point." Arbys -
consumer, neglectful of service and selectivity Denenberg, of course, if fully aware of the ,1
differences, and capable of being misused by high criticism, having been a leading insurance scholar , FOR i
ranking companies and their agents to encourage for years at the University of Pennsylvania‘s I.
policy holders to cancel their existing polices. Wharton School of Business. He intends to update Mn‘ '1
Commissioner Edward Lombard of the District of and further refine his guides. Overall, the various III” I
Columbia was the sharpest of Denenberg’s critics, state insurance department responses indicate that III! I
declaring, “We never compare ourselves to any Denenberg's guides and provocative disclosures 8:“ _ ' ‘4
other particular state but arrive at our decisions as are pushing other commissioners to make longer- % W” H ““5 LOUPON 0%
technicians since this department is not used for neglected decisions about how much more usable -*;:;::w:f-T:¥i : “WW —————;-1
personal politically-inspired purposes." information they should provide the consumer.
Ommenl .
Nixon reflects American corruption ‘ 4'?
. back to the barracks trying to shoot the other GI s. -
By DAVID SEATT When the MP‘s got there he begged them to kill never goes
All this namby—pamby talk for McGovern is just a him, said he couldn‘tforgive himself for killing that
little out of hand. I hate to even bother with putting little girl. We carried him to the psycho ward in I
down the McGovern hysteria, since Nixon’s going to hand irons with armed guards. to Wa Is It
win it anyway. But somebody has to tell these Nixon never told the kid to shoot the little dink.
people that we don’t like what McGovern’s got to And besides, Nixon more or less said that even guys
offer. like William Calley were really sort of heroes and
People don‘t really care about the broad “social that he would pardon them. ,
issues", or even about scandals like the Watergate McGovern says a lot of these heroin addicts were It'll]:
incident. or secret campaign contributions, or the caused by Nixon's war. I knew this Puerto Rican GI ROAST
Russian wheat cheat, or the undoubted corruption who came back hooked on the stuff—said killing all (I “a“
that is a part of the Nixon government. those Charlie‘s was too much for him back in ‘69. \ ’ Sandwich
__.___————— Okay so he was a weaklmg—Nixon didn t push that ‘ ‘ C \" , (/1,
David Sew” needle into his arm. Too bad for his wife and kids. ” \ - 3 2 s "“00”
is 0 graduate student bubwhat can you expect from a junkie? . . a"5‘
, , Nixon s a good manager. And government is like _
m busmess business: you need a good manager. Nixon \ "
_____.__..____ managed to drop more tons of bombs on Indochina v
' Corruption is as American as apple pie. Why not than were dropped in the Johnson years! More than > I'.
have a President who reflects what the country were dropped in WWII and Korea combined! That‘s / i
really is? McGovern tries to appeal to us as if we quitea technological and logistical achievement for \ /
were all individuals standing on our own two feet. its own sake—like landing on the moon. I . /
But most Americans belong to some Big Daddy or All this production effort didn't go for nothing. 4 ‘\ ‘
another: corporation, university, labor union. Figure our costs at 20,000 dead and figure our total
military. We depend on a little collusion here, revenues are their deadNotcounting what must be
special interest there to keep beer in the really high body counts in Cambodia. Laos and
refrigerator, right? North Vietnam under Nixon were killed at least
McGovern‘s big problem is that he‘s not en- 525,000 Asians in South Vietnam. Without knowing
tertaining and this country wants entertainment. I exactly how many were our gooks and how many 3l6 New Circle Road
don‘t want to hear Vietnam, taxes, unemployment were their gooks, let's call it a gross profit of _
and corruption in my leisure time. 505.000 deaths.That!:ind of ratio is good business no 212 SOUlhland Drive
Take Vietnam. Most of us made it through the matter what your game is. McGovern doesn‘t even
service without getting zapped. right? So Nixon mention this kind of cost-benefit analysis. warm
knows that 20,000 Americans dead on his account McGovern is for the elitists who want to change ,“ K
really don’t mean much to us-just a statistic— things just when everything is looking fat. Nixon is F" l;
corpses don‘t vote. Survivors do vote. so Nixon for keeping things the way they areAnd that's what \ RE on I
plays on the old ultra-vengence motive and says most Americans want TV. movies, golf. going to ; GULPR ,
he‘ll never give amnesty. Nixon knows how to play football games. love-making, hitting the bottle. Arby's - l
his cards. ' reading a few magazines. riding a bike for the i
McGovern wants to blame Nixon for all the ecology kick, going to parties or just looking heavy. FOR '
disabled veterans from the Nixon war years. What’s McGovern is a marketing failure. He isn't putting l.
he crying about? All those guys are getting fat out what the American consumer market wants to ll
disability checks every month. hear. Nixon is a marketing genius. He says “peace .
I knew this dude in my company in the Army who with honor" and keeps his advertising copy light ’5
went nuts over having blown away a child back in and inoffensive. ‘ l
, Vietnam. The GI kept trying to commit suicide. One Now if you McGovern freaks will kindly leave me w m Tms c0uecw flA
night after chow he went out to a discount store, alone. the Monday night game is coming on the tube % - “WQ
bought himself a Smith & Wesson .38 cal, and came now —’"—’—‘
l
I

 t—TIII‘I KI‘INTl'CKY KI‘IRNEI., Thursda). November 2. I972
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'- ‘1 " *- ROOM. 5: MIN P'Cf}? am on: IF ORNIA.

 THE KENTl'CKY KERNEL Thursday. November 2. [972—5 !
l I c
H s becoming respectabie’ rva.
v! MAW/v Jon/0M! .
0
Support for Nixon su rfaces on campuses ”WW “W"
By TERRY RYAN birthplace of the free speech being in school and getting an to work." said David Verst‘elt.
Associated Press Writer movement and site of several education. Politically, people ”Wide"! 0f the Young
They seldom wear campaign clashes between police and have become more moderate. Republicans at Princeton
buttons and their bumper students during the heyday of r\TlNl)lr\-\\ l'NlVERSlTYlh [Inll'emn-V
stickers do not stay in place for antiwar activism. ' Bloomington. 'd basically C0” Nixon workers on most came
long. but supporters of President “IT IS NO fun being for Nixon servative campus with a patina puses conceded thata majority of ——
Nixon have surfaced on college at Berkeley.“ said Steve Bur- of liberalism. the candidacy of StUdehtS Will probably \‘Ott‘ t0!“ ' mm
campuses where they were not dette. a Nixon supporter, “You Democratic presidential nominee McGovern. BUt invariably they _
seen four years ago. have to fight for the privilege of Sen. George McGovern was added that more Nixon 5UP' '6ka 64‘8” 6445”
“it is becoming respectable to advocating what you believe." credited with driving many porters than expected had been
support Nixon this year.” ex- There has been no actual Nixon supporters into the open. located.
plained Ray White, chairman of fighting at the Nixon table.but “Alot of people are working for “WE HAVE FOl'Nl) that there
the Nixon group at Stanford there have been frequent Nixon because they are afraid of are qut0 8 W 0t Republicans and
University. shouting and shoving matches. McGovern," said Steve Pennell. conservative people on campus," '—
Where did Nixon's campus president of Young Voters for the said Ben Brink. vice president of 6
AT HARVARD AND Columbia, supporters come from? Where President at Indiana. ”More Young Votersforthe President at 7'
Wisconsin and Michigan. places were they four years ago? people are against McGovern Stanford. “They often think they
where Nixon supporters main- than for Nixon." are the only one on campus and
taincd a very low profile during “IT WAS SOCIALLY unac- Nixon workers on many 50 the." keep (iUlet- What We are
the 1968 campaign and where ceptable to be for Nixon four campuses d0 h0t wear their trying m do is get Doom“ t0 .0
student unrest was strong, his years ago.“ said Burdette. "With “Four'More Years" and “Nixon acknowledge that they are for the _ ,
supporters now set up literature the decline of radical politics. it NOW“ hUttOhS when canvassing President." 0‘ 00!
tables and canvas dormitories for became acceptable. Nixon's dormitories and fraternity 1’ I .
pro-Nixon voters. policies have had a lot to do with houses seeking OUt possible Nixon t
“i still get snide remarks and it. Even the radicals have to supporters. Unless asked. cane JOB
funny looks when l weara Nixon admit he has done some \‘assers at Harvard. Berkeley .. '
button."said Bill Schuckhead of things.“ good and Stanford will not identify OPPORTUNITY M '- 5 =
llarvard~ltadcliffe Students for Nixon‘s trips to (‘hina and themselves as Nixon workers. 5 ‘
the lte—elcction of the President. Moscow and the virtual end of the .l'NLlKE Slt'tithl‘IRN '5 WANTEtriAvrnitous youth oriented
“But th