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Cover artist: Bob Larkin
One reviewer said “Kampus was written in the 70’s during a time when just about every college campus in America was in turmoil. It was the time of the “Free Speech” movement as students passionately protested against the Vietnam war and the hippy and the radical rose as a force for social change. We had one U.S. President hiding in the Oval Office because he feared hostile demonstrations should he show his face in public and his successor, Tricky Dick, was on his way to being the first U.S. President to resign and required a pardon from Chevy Chase Gerald Ford to avoid criminal prosecution. It was a tumultuous time. Frederick Pohl put it this way in his introduction to this book: “There was a ferment in American life not seen since the days of the Great Depression and it expressed itself most visibly and worrisomely in the schools and universities of the nation.”
Blurb: “1984 is the good old days. On America's campuses, professors hawk their courses, dozens of political groups compete in violence and computer-dating means having sex with a computer. It may not be all grind, but isn't it fun and games - as one senior finds out when he kidnaps his favorite professor - and kills him for his knowledge.
You are looking at the college of tomorrow where yesterday's radicals are the Establishment. And tomorrow's students invent the ultimate revolution.”