PaUmeyer: The man Aggies love to hate By Suzie Brawley Reporter Karl Pallmeyer is the man Aggies love to hate. Infamous for his opinionated columns published in The Bat talion, he has created for him self a reputation of hating ev erything, and anyone Aggie. But far from being distressed by the animosity aimed at him, Pallmeyer loves it. A senior journalism major from Merid ian, he thrives on the attention he receives, hate mail and all. “People know who I am, and that’s nice,” Pallmeyer says. If Pallmeyer’s overlong bowl- cut hair and chubby body make him look like an overgrown Buster Brown, he acts more like Dennis the Menace. True to his image, he’s as troublesome around the news room as around campus. He’s been known to string tele phones and notebooks from the ceiling, and recentlv, in re sponse to the Libyan crisis, Pal lmeyer constructed his own “Line of Death” across the newsroom in a search for pri vacy. Whatever his personal ideo- syncrasies, Pallmeyer says he likes to think his sometimes- wacky wit and flippant col umns make a difference. He says he wants to do more than cause controversies. He agrees with the writings of Henry David Thoreau who said, “He serves the state best who opposes it.” By calling at tention to problems, he hopes to inform students of things that affect them so they can do something about them. This year Pallmeyer decided to run for student body presi dent because he says he wanted to get student government more involved in the real issues. Pallmeyer, whose platform also included opening a bar on cam pus and divestment of Univer sity assets in South Africa, was turned down because his grade point average was too low. Stu dent government could be great, he says, but so far it hasn’t been. Pallmeyer says he enjoys the feedback he receives. About 70 percent is negative, he says, but at least he knows people read his column. If they don’t agree with him, they can write and say so, he says. He receives some positive feedback from students he sees on campus, but says most peo ple will complain because “that’s just human nature.” Pallmeyer began his writing career in 1984, in the fall of his junior year, with a column on the Gay Student Services’s continuing fight for recognition on campus. His column crit icized the recognition process encountered by the GSS by com paring it to the formation of the Meridian Hometown Club. Pal lmeyer had organized the MHC the year before, with only four of the 15 members being from Meridian. That was the beginning. The second column was more humorous than the first. Pallmeyer proposed a bar be opened in the Memorial Stu dent Center after he visited the Texas Student Union in Austin. The editor’s note for that story — written as a joke — acciden tally ran, saying Pallmeyer was a communist, atheist and alco holic junior journalism major. With that, the Pallmeyer per sona was born. Pallmeyer continued writing as a guest columnist for The Battalion, although at first he was afraid of running out of ideas. As it turned out, he couldn’t get them down fast enough. When ideas come to him, Pallmeyer says, things just happen. Last summer, he was hired by The Battalion and he says re sponse to his column was supri- singly heavy for that time of year. “It was very encouraging,” he says.