Friday, May 10, 1974 THIE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Buckley talks to Flint grads 'U' senior goes home after 45 day con ordeal University senior Michael Kubinski re- turned home yesterday after a 45-day ordeal during which he was led across the country as the victim of a bizarre confidence game. Kubingki, president of Sigma Chi fra- ternity and an honors student due to graduate last weekend, had been bilked out of more than $3,000 before police Wednesday arrested the conwoman, who had led him on a wild goose chase in- volving tales of national security and political intrigue, in Arlington, Va. AT THE TIME authorities took the pair into custody, Kubinski was reported in good physical condition but "emotin- ally upset." He is now "resting" at his Center Line, Mich. home, his brother Edward said last night. "Mike is all riight but very tired," Ed- ward said. "We haven't talked much about the incident." He added "it would be up to Mike to decide if he wants to talk about it." The conwoman, Barbara Merrella, has flim - flammed nearly a dozen college students since she escaped from a Colo- rado prison over a year ago. MERRELLA, a heavy-set 27-year-old, uses a complex, almost unbelievable scheme in which she leads her victims around the country to attend a series of nonexistent meetings allegedly of vital national importance. In doing so, she travels at the victim's expense but receives little else in the way of material gain. Merrella has a prior record of 17 arrests and seven con- victions on various fraud charges. Even after Kubinski's safe return, the police are at a loss to explain why her confidence game has been such a suc- cess. By CHERYL PILATE SpecialTa The Daily FLINT - National Review Editor and noted political columnist William Buck- ley delivered a rambling 20 minute speech last night as the featured guest speaker at the University's Flint cam- p-is commencement ceremony. Speaking to 179 attentive graduates, the well-known conservative writer cov- ered a wide variety of topics ranging from Lyndon Johnson to the Almighty Redeemer. HE ENCOURAGED the graduates to "fuse rationalism with utopia" hecause "depending on utopian desires alone cold only result in disappointment." His occasional oblique references to the corruption of the office of the presi- dency were well received by the audience. Declaring his disenchantment with Johnson's "Great Society" and the Nix- on administration, Buckley said, "The President whose ascendancy was hailed as a return to order after the previous ineffective administration has been be- leagored by the malfeasance of those around him. The American public has ssffered a great disillusionment and they are justifiably angry." Taking off on a tangent, Buckley re- fered to his profound belief in the powers of religion. "I KNOW MY Redeemer lives," he decllred. "This faith is a source of strength to nse." Occasionally, Buckley deviated from his serious philosophical discourse in an attempt to inject a light-hearted tone into his address. "This is not a world of tranquitlty," he said. "However, it is unlikely that the editors of Readers Digest are moon- lighting at an underground paper." Switching back to a more serious tone he added, "But I do not believe that it is inconceivable that the President of the United States will be removed from office." DESPITE THE occasional light re- marks, pessimism characterized most of Buckley's address. "If your concerns are like mine," he told the graduates, "you worry if the spirit can be stabilized without being castrated. I worry because so many of as believe ourselves powerless to dis- possess ourselves of our contemporary ,,.uclams." Reminiscing on the politically turbu- lent 60's, he concluded by blaming the disappointment and disillusionment of recent years on the ideological "we will overcome" 'attitude of youth. Although Buckley's speech did not lavish praise on the graduates, they ap- plauded vigorously at the end of his address. Intreduced to the audience as "an art- ist of the language," Buckley is an author of two books and serves as host of the television program Firing Line. Ar rnoto THE MAN who claims to be the world's foremost expert on cursing, Dr. Rein' hold Aman, leans on a stack of foreign language works that he examines in his study of swearing in different languages and cultures. Aman takes pleasure in trying to figure out what expletives have been deleted from the Watergate transcripts. Dir ty word expert 'eats up' Nixon tascript explei ves MILWAUKEE (fM - Dr. Reinhold steam, to keep from getting ulcers and on ethnic slurs, he said. Aman takes a different view of the Wat- from keeping frustrations bottled up in- Americans are among the least re- ergate transcripts than the pastors and side," said Aman. fined cussers, largely because their pro- politicians who have criticized President "It should be used properly," he cau- fane vocabulary is 25 or fewer words, Nixon for the salty language used in the tioned, adding that most people don't Aman said. White House, appreciate the finer points of cursing. Among his favorites curses are Yid- "I just eat it up," said Aman, a pro- He said the unsophisticated curser dish's "May all your teeth but one fall fessor of medieval German literature aims insults at a foe's physical charac- out so you can get a toothache," the and an expert an swearing who can give teristics rather than gauging his cultural rhymed insults of the Turks and the sing- expletivesin dan and thousands of other and educational background before us- ing exchanges between Eskimoes. AMAN, who teaches at the University ing the verbal rapier. "Tell me what swear words you use of Wisconsin - Milwaukee, sees swearing ONLY A LOW-BROW swearer relies and I will tell you who you are," he said. as a sasay ~me hm an~s s nos stam -,._...".. as a necessary means of letting oft steam in almost every language. "I don't advocate swearing," he said. "I don't encourage my children or stu- dents to swear. I personally swear be- cause there are so many things that bug me. That's why everyone swears, and almost everyone does." Far from being shocked at the lan- guage, in the White House transcripts, Aman finds it lacking in the very words he's interested in. "MOST OF THE time they are omit- ted, although you can sometimes pre- dict what - should be there," he said, "I've been sort of trying to fill in what it can be. "I wish I could get all the expletives. That would be lite winning at a lottery or something" Aman, 38, has plenty of experience in dealing with non-deleted .expletives. He has published several scholarly works on profanity patterns throughout the world and compiled dictionaries of cusswords to help explain the background and meaning of curses. "SWEARING is a means of letting off Fish story: Shoppers decry sale of alleged dolphin meat By STEPHEN HERSH Patrons of the local Kroger super- market at the Westgate shopping center the other day were incensed at discover- ing packages of food labeled as "dolphin" meat. They complained bitterly of the barbarity involved in selling such pro- duce. Barbarity would be the right word if the flesh in question were that of the mammal that scientists are finding to be in some ways as least as intelligent as humans, DOLPHIN LANGUAGE is so complex that people have not as yet been able to deciper it. Dolphins can learn to speak a little English. In laboratories they have been taught to say such words as "hello," and those that hang around docks can some- times be heard uttering dirty words picked up from dock workers. Margaret Howe, a marine scientist, taught a dolphin to retrieve whichever of five differently colored balls thrown into his tank that she indicated verbally. D u r in g one exhibition she shouted, "Peter, get the orange ball." But Peter retrieved the blue ball. So she yelled, "Peter, get the orange ball" And ap- parently because Peter was bored with the game and wanted to be jive, he re- trieved the three other balls and refused to get the orange one. DOLPHIN MEAT sold at Kroger's? Eating the flesh of an animal who has a sense of the absurd is serious business. The consumption of dolphin should per- haps be confined to situations where the Grim Reaper, in the avatar of starvation, is looking one straight in the eye. Some philosophers have condoned even the consumption of human flesh in these situations. It is said that once a person acquires a taste for human meat, no other food is quite satisfying. A taste for dolphin could carry with it the same difficulty, although this may be the case only for dolphins who acquire a taste for dolphin. The Standard Fish Market in Detroit, which supplies Kroger's with its fish, offered assurances that the product which the store labels as "dolphin" is See STORE, Page 13