Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 2, 1972 ' 1 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 2, 1972 SUPPORT MORE VISIBLE: Nixon gains on Kelley and Griffin campus start final campaign By The Associated Press They seldom wear campaign buttons and their bumper stick- ers do not stay in place for long, but supporters of President Nixon have' surfaced on college cam- puses where they were not seen four years ago. "It is'becoming respectable to support Nixon this year," ex- plained Ray White, chairman of the Nixon group at Stanford Uni- versity. At Harvard and Columbia, Wis- consin and Michigan, places where Nixon supporters main- tained a very low profile during the 1968 campaign and where student unrest was strong, his supporters now set up literature tables and canvas dormitories for pro-Nixon voters. "I still get snide remarks and funny looks when I wear a Nixon button," said Bill Schuck, head of Harvard-Radcliffe Students for the Re-election of the President. "But there is not the possibility of physical harassment that ex- isted a few years ago. Now it is more social segregation." Nixon workers at the Univer- sity, of California in Berkeley- 120 persons in a student body of 28;000-last month set up a table in Sproul Plaza to distribute cam- paign literature. The plaza was the birthplace of the free speech movement and site of several clashes between police and stu- dents during the heyday of anti- war activism. "It is no fun being for Nixon at Berkeley," said Steve Bur- dette, a Nixon supporter. "You are really in the trenches here. You have to fight for the privi- lege of advocating what you be- lieve." There has been no actual fight- ing at the Nixon table, but there have been frequent shouting and shoving matches. Where did Nixon's campus sup- porters come from? Where were they four years ago? "It was socially unacceptable to be for Nixon four years ago," said Burdette. "With the decline of radical politics, it became ac- ceptable. Nixon's policies have had a lot to do with it. Even the radicals have to admit he has done some good thing%." Nixon's trips to China and Mos- cow and the virtual end of the draft during his administration repeatedly were cited by Nixon partisans as actions viewed fav- orably by their campus col- leagues. "People are becoming more moderate, politically and in many other respects," said Schuck. "It -is part of a shift in their over-all philosophy." At Indiana University in Bloom- ington, a basically conservative campus with a patina of liberal- ism, fear of Democratic presi- dential nominee Sen. George Mc-' Govern was credited with driving many Nixon supporters into the open. Nixon workers on most cam- puses conceded that a majority of students will probably vote for McGovern. But invariably they added that more Nixon support- ers than expected had been lo- cated. Every uranium atom that splits in nuclear fission releases two or three neutrons. One neutron may split another uranium atom. Therefore, uranium in fission may produce enough neutrons to off- set the loss of those which leak out or are absorbed by impurities or non-fission reactions. This is called a chain reaction. "DID YOU KNOW that the 13 "man" County Board of Corn- missioners has been expanded to a 15 person board with 2 new student districts?" KATHY FOJTIK Dem. Commissioner Pd. Pol. Adv. , . _.._ By The Associated Press State Attorney General Frank Kelley and Republican incumbent Robert Griffin prepared themselves for the final days of campaigning in the state Senate race yesterday. Hoarse and almost exhausted af- ter a 16-hour day of campaigning, Kelley late Tuesday night wound up the outstate portion of his battle for Griffin's U.S. Senate seat. As he stood in the nearly de- serted airport at Battle Creek, Kelley said he thought the day's campaign - which carried him to Pontiac, Saginaw, Flint, Battle Creek and Kalamazoo-had been a success. Kelley plans to concentrate the final week of his campaign in the southeastern area of the state. In Detroit Tuesday Griffin de- nounced as "another political ploy" a challenge by Kelley to more de- bates, similar to their confronta- tion Monday at the Detroit Eco- nomic Club. Referring to that meeting, which many observers judged a draw, Griffin said, "I think if the debate proved nothing else, it pretty well established that we wouldn't need 15 or 20 of them." Yesterday Republicans w e r e charged with using a federal build- ing dedication for political pur- poses. Griffin spoke at the dedication of the new Patrick McNamnara fed- eral office building in Detroit, but Sen. Phillip Hart (D-Mich.) did not appear, claiming he had been in- vited too late. 'A Hart assistant said he had "a lot of questions about the motivation" for not in- viting Hart to the ceremony until Monday. See Pulitzer Prize Winning Columnist J A C K ANDERSON FRIDAY, NOV. 3 at 8:00 p.M. HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS ($1.25) on sale at the Union or at the door I Get SeAlling Results! 'r\'t DAILY CLASSIFIEDS, U -I 11. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily BECOMING A HOLLOW BAMBOO DEVELOPING EXERCISES IN MEDIUMSHIP by AMBER FAITH 0 TODAY-4:00 P.M. ANGELL Second in series: Dimensions of Religious E L HALL, AUD. B xperience SPONSORED BY OFFICE OF RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS NEXT THURSDAY: The Amateured Archtype in Psychic Phenomena-Amber Faith Lr PEOPLE not Parties Sit on the Board of U0 Cotmissioners In the Community On the County Board Action and Experience Count Liz knows how to get things done. Her record shows it: as an organizer for CESAR CHAVEZ; as founder of Ann Arbor War Tax Resistance; on the U of M Women's Commission Subcom- mittee on Grievance Procedures. LIZ'S COMMITMENT TO CHANGE AND SOCIAL JUSTICE IS DEEP-SEATED AND GENUINE. WITH LIZ. IT'S A PROVEN