liSgi 1 locks th{ rson says, ening belt available. tfety, east uckle pas. °f similar THE BATTALION ^esday, December 16, 1970 College Station, Texas Page 5 McGovern wants power )j the presidency in 1972 leeds- amous RACE VERY WASHINGTON UP>—Sen. George McGovern, impelled by ff hat he calls the frustration of pewerlessness in the Senate, will soon become the first man to de clare for the presidency in 1972. But there may be political frustration ahead as McGovern begins an open campaign to over come the lead he concedes Sen. Edmund S. Muskie holds over a crowded field of Democratic prospects. When the South Dakota sena tor makes the official declara tion next month, it will be but a formality. For more than a year he has waged an obvious if un announced drive for the 1972 nomination. “We’ve been working for over a year now, trying to see wheth er there was a basis for a candi dacy,” McGovern said in an in terview. “I’m pretty well con vinced there is.” It is a small one. One national poll ranks McGovern seventh on a list of eight potential candi dates, the choice of two per cent of rank-and-file Democrats. But the 48-year-old senator in sists he can overcome the long odds. “Fm inclined to discount the polls at this point,” he says. All they do is give an indica tion of what your recognition factor is.” That indication can hardly be heartening. But, McGovern says, once he declares for the nomination a na tionwide cadre will rally to him. “What I’m told is that if I’m serious about running, they’ll be serious about supporting me.” He goes on: “My chances of getting the nomination depend on working on it over a long pe riod of time. I don’t think any one is going to get it handed to him this time.” Compared to his most formid able prospective rivals—Muskie, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Hubert H. Humphrey—McGovern is lit tle known, and he concedes he has an educational job in front of him to make his views known to the country. And, because of his small rec ognition factor, the presidential primaries loom particularly im portant to McGovern. He needs a strong showing to prove he can win, and to attract support from the professional Democrats, now lining up with Muskie. “I’m going into a number of primaries, but I haven’t decided which ones,” McGovern says. “If you can’t do well in a number of primaries, you can’t do well in the fall.” The first primary is in New Hampshire — solid Muskie terri tory. McGovern does not rule out a New Hampshire race, but says he would not expect to win there. There is political peril in that, for if McGovern enters, Muskie would have someone to run against, and almost certainly someone to defeat. And that would make New Hampshire a far more valuable prize. With all of these factors a high wall against his chances why does he bother? “I suppose the thing that im pels me to be a candidate,” he says, “is that I just can’t take the frustration any longer of sit ting there in the Senate where you can see the mistakes that our national leadership is mak ing, but are powerless to do very much about it. “I have no trouble at all un derstanding the sense of frustra tion and powerlessness that af flicts citizens across the country because I feel the same sense of it through these continuing poli cies that are weakening the na tion, and I feel unable to do something about it. “The chance to do something about it is in the presidency,” McGovern says. McGovern also claims he can do a better job than other pros pective candidates in sharpening and defining the issues for the run against President Nixon. For a decade, he says, he has been speaking “more accurately and more prophetically” about Southeast Asia than his rivals, as well as about the problems at home. McGovern says the Vietnam war remains “the transcendent issue in American politics today.” urn ■ve the t each iter Besses s M.AiIIS Sriii MIS ftliiAilVS y o< * l0V> Double Luck — Cut CANE6U* iMPEftRL , ^ >f TttStfWCES QooD.THqPS- FPi-sqr i m»i-T(JE5 fwd Wed. DECEMBER 'pPU DECEMBER 2.4-. GREEN BEANS6c’“.88€ MKHMflLlCWE'KME) 1 piE$ ag* iJELi-0 "“"K-riq* PUMPKIN 15 R CHEKE "SST 19* yrms IQ* pieiiB 39* pers m ^ 89* foil iSsssi PlNERPPLE®^'^^ PtpteS. 19* #£4^ ^ CORN »“v 6-»49c \ CELERY 19c | COCOANUT UMiT JPlFFfSe W'TH *5 00 OR MOPE PURCHASE. ^ 'SHOP OUR COM PL ETESELBqioi OF SWBTPREMIUM BRORP BRBRStED BUTTER Bqu TURKEYS TOMlIPKEY^ SLIPERTBSTE CrRFpE ' I HENHIH4V5 HANDURAS EACH ftair uhu DECKER OCEAN SPRAY TEXAS RAKING l CRANBERRIES ? 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