C0LLE.GE LIFE 0 On the Trail In New Hampshire, drudge work offers credit and experience n the historic New Hampshire prima- ry of 1968, college students went Clean for Gene, trooping through the snowbanks to stop the Vietnam War, and every fourth year since, students have migrated to New Hampshire for the important first primary. Their level of en- thusiasm and partisanship has always var- ied, though, and students this year not only haven't rallied around a near-unanimous choice like Eugene McCarthy but haven't fastened on favorites like 1984's Gary Hart and Ronald Reagan. Instead, the college vote appears to be splintered among a half- dozen Democratic and Republican hope- fuls. Meanwhile, students' passion on is- sues such as the Vietnam War (1968) and the nuclear freeze (1984) has given way to more earthbound concerns such as reduc- ing the federal deficit-and getting aca- demic credit for the drudge work of stuffing envelopes and canvassing voters. Student participation is crucial to the I IRA WYMAN FOR Door-to-door for Haig: This time, college support is splintered among many i 1988 presidential race. "It's not the votes," explains Bob Boorstin, campus coordinator for Mike Dukakis. "It's the manpower." On weekends, campaign caravans arrive in New Hampshire from campuses all over New England-especially university-rich Boston. The students are put to work lick- ing envelopes, phoning voters and knock- ing on doors for their candidates. The hard work isn't always rewarding. One Dukakis phone-banker accidentally called Nackey Loeb, the hard-right publisher of the Man- chester Union-Leader-and received a curt brushoff. Another student, going door to door, handed a flier about Dick Gephardt to a plumber, who in turn asked the student to distribute fliers for his plumbing busi- ness and his church. Despite such indignities, campaign offi- cials claim more students are on the New Hampshire primary trail than in 1984- perhaps reflecting the sheer number of candidates in the field. "This time it's any- one's race," explains Ed McCabe, chairman of the Young Republicans at the University of New Hampshire in Durham. Few of the New Hampshire-bound students have par- ticipated in a presidential campaign be- fore. Laura Hastings, who placed more than 20 MIT undergraduates in New Hampshire primary campaigns during January, says that not one had any previ- ous political experience. What gets these raw recruits out of bed? This election year has failed to produce hot- button political issues like the nuclear 41 Organizers Learn the Game of Politics C aran Ware wants to be pres- ident someday. To learn politics, the Northwestern junior is starting in the trench- es as a volunteer in Jesse Jack- son's presidential campaign. And she expects a payoff for her efforts. "I would like to be a delegate in the Democrat- ic convention if at all possi- ble," Ware says. Similarly, senior Allen Greenberg is vying for a Pennsylvania dele- gate's spot in behalf of Paul Simon by spearheading a city- wide campaign effort in Pitts- burgh from the Carnegie-Mel- lon campus. Northwestern junior David Almasi coordi- nates student campaigners in Chicago when Jack Kemp vis- its the area. Almasi also wants something in return: "It's get- ting in on the ground floor of something that could be really big. If you do it right, it could turn out very, very well." These politics majors are what are known on campuses as "political junkies." But now that the football bowl games have been played and first-semester finals are a fad- ed memory, technogeeks and art-history majors alike are slowly turning their attention to trade protectionism, zero options-or, in other words: Campaign '88. Even at col- leges where there seems to be little campaign-related activ- ism, appearances can be de- ceiving. Unlike politics in the late 1960s and the early 1970s, says Berkeley politi- cal-science professor William Muir, students no longer have a "we / they" attitude about the individual candidates. "Students know that there are not just good guys and bad guys. They know the is- sues are complex, and there- fore they are more inde- cisive and unresolved," says Muir. "The Reagan adminis- tration has forced students to look at the other side." Indeed, however fledgling the efforts, organized support for every declared candidate is cropping up on most campus- es. At the University of Mis- souri, for instance, 24 students backing Bob Dole's bid are using video parties to recruit undecided voters. Committee members hold parties in their dorm rooms and at sororities and fraternities, during which they show a 20-minute taped presentation on Dole. Organ- ized support groups exist at Duke for at least seven candi- dates-including Libertarian Ron Paul. Paul's supporters, who form Duke's most active and energetic group, deluged the campus with information 22 NEwSWEEKONCAMPUSMARCH 1988 4 22 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS MARCH 1988 /