: 14 Fridar, -April 6, 1984 1"tr- 1V T rif THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -4 Continued from. Page 1 pect tender literary pats on the shoulder from whoever is writing this muck. You gird yourself for the verbal onslaught. "You Sin Sick, Lust Crazed fanatical fanatic . . . You have had your chance to repent of your dirty lusts and dirty GOD mockings and you have not so you will drop dead from a heart attack . . . You poor, poor, poor wicked God mocking fanatic." Enough. The mind reels. The stomach is getting a tad queasy. Surely this blather is better left to paper shred- ders or bonfires. What odd braggart works here? What sensitivity wishes to subject his guests to these attacks on his craft, his honor, his soul? What dubious sense of humor gets a kick out of papering his walls with this venom? The man with the humor is through the next door, where the slightly larger office makes the anteroom appear pris- tine and sterile by comparison. It's an office that could give a battalion of clean- ing women a sabbatical from unemploy- ment for at least a year. Thankfully, there is a tiny path throught the flotsam covering the floor. The desk, studded with a model airplane or two and carpeted with papers, is so cluttered that a postage stamp would have trouble roosting. Be- hind the clutter and the three sets of pens in their marble bases, sits Art Buchwald, America's premier political humorist, a man who has written over 5,000 columns since he started churning them out — thrice weekly — in 1949; who was de- nounced by Pravda as being in the pay of the Nixon White House; whose writings made LBJ blanch; and whom Russell Baker, Buchwald's only contender in the newspape. humorist sweepstakes, has called "incomparable and brave. There is no mistaking Buchwald. His face is as famous as his humor: round, a bit pudgy and puckish. On the day we got together, he was somewhat under the weather so there wasn't too much puck coming forth. But it was still obvious that inside this slightly fat man there was a neo-Jonathan Swift doing his best to come out. The times have been good to Buchwald. He has been blessed with a string of presidents so easy to skewer that his fictions sometimes take a back seat to reality. "The world itself is a satire," he said. "All you're doing is recording it." Of the presidents who have been in office since he has been doing his Wash- ington column, Buchwald said that from a humorist's vantage, "Johnson was good, Kennedy was good, Carter was o.k. Noth- ing great. Carter used to say a lot of things, but nothing happened. It was a time in which nothing ever happened. "Nixon was the best,",Buchwald con- cluded. For instance, when Nixon was going through his phase of spouting superlatives ("This is the greatest week in the history of the world since the Crea- tion") Buchwald did a column in which this speech habit became contagious. As his family was sitting down to dinner, Buchwald's wife announced, "I hope everyone has washed his hands because I THE IMPISH WORLD OF ART BUCHWALD It sure beats working for a living ... have cooked the greatest meal ever served in the Western Hemisphere." "That's good," said Buchwald, "be- cause I've had the hardest working day anyone has ever had since Gutenberg in- vented the- printing press." His 15-year-old interjected that "We had the worst test in school today since the Spanish Inquisition." And his 14-year-old daughter brag- ged that she had enjoyed "the greatest Coca-Cola I've ever drunk in my life . . ." With Reagan, Buchwald has had a field day. This, after all, is the White House that brought him Bonzo the chim- panzee,- voodoo economics and a president who "sells Reaganomics with the same sincerity that he sold appliances" when he was shilling for General Electric. After reading his latest book, While Reagan Slept, touts Buchwald, "you no longer have to ask yourself: • Is the world safer today than it was under Amy Carter? • Does David Stockman use catsup on his tofu? • Why don't the banks give you the same respect when you can't meet a car loan that they give to Poland? • Why does the government want to sell Yellowstone National Park and buy Times Beach, Missouri? • Is a limited nuclear war better than no war at all? Surely, Buchwald is the only person who has tried to explain Reaganomics to a youngster in terms of jelly beans. "For years, people have been eating more jelly beans than they put back in the jar. We have a deficit in jelly beans. Now what President Reagan hopes to do by 1984 is to have as many jelly beans in the jar as we consume. "The problem is that the government still has to borrow a large amount of jelly beans to take care of its obligations, so it is paying a higher rate for jelly beans than the banks can offer." "That doesn't ssem right," said Buchwald's nephew John. "The President doesn't like it either so he's ordered another severe cutback in his jelly bean budget. For example, schoolchildren will no longer be served jelly beans with their lunch." John went off to write his paper on the economy. When Buchwald asked him a few days later about his grade, the boy shrugged that he hadn't received one. "Why not?" Buchwald asked. "My teacher was fired because the school ran out of jelly beans." And in a sly-take-off on the classic Abbot and Costello routine, "Who's On First," Buchwald came up with this im- aginary colloquy: "Who's on first?" "No, Watt's on first." "Who is Watt?" "Watt is the secretary of the interior. He wants to sell all mineral rights on federal lands." "What for?" "I don't know." "I thought, 'I don't know' was on sec- ond." "Watt's on second, too. He's also on third. "No one is at shortstop because it's being strip-mined for coal. "So who's catching?" That's right, Watt again. "What's he catching?" "Hell from the environmental- ists . . ." "What for?" "Because he won't play ball with them . ." "He sounds like a foul ball." "He's a hit with the people who hate conservationists . . ." As a funnyman, Buchwald doesn't have any problems with Reagan. But as a private citizen, Buchwald likes little of what goes on just a block away from his Pennsylvania Avenue office. "This par- ticular White House," he said in our interview, "could be called 'Doyle, Dane, Bernbach and Reagan.' It's a media White House. They look for picture op- portunities all the time. They go to Korea and they take a picture of the President eyeballing North Korea. They come back with two little kids who need heart surgery. "Everything they do is for the cameras. Their use of the media and their manipulation of it is far more sophisti- cated than any Administration that's ever been there. "And they also have a product: Rea- gan. He fits the TV image of a president. And therefore, we could be in a lot of danger. You mould have the greatest guy in the world and if he doesn't have a TV image, he's not going. to get near the White House. "But," he added, "I do look at the Democratic hopefuls and I wonder, 'Is there anything there for me?' You know that when they become president. Then they start giving you material. They're sure not giving me any now." On the shelves in Buchwald's office is a photo of Russell Baker, his counterpart at the New York Times. The inscription reads, "To Art Buchwald, who with Lyn- don Johnson and Richard Nixon made 10 long years in Washington worthwhile." In Baker's office in New York is a photo of Buchwald lying on a couch in a toga. The inscription reads, "To Russell Baker, who taught me everything I know about sex." Baker doesn't take any credit for the compliment. "By the time I met Art" he told me, "he was beyond sex." Buchwald and Baker's friendship dates back to about 1962, when Buchwald moved to Washington from Paris, where he was a columnist for the Herald Tribune, and Baker started writing his column for the Times. Buchwald had been writing his column for about 13 years at that point. "I admired his column a great deal," Baker said, "but I didn't think I could do anything like it. It's better to be honest to yourself. Copying someone else's style would be like being forced to go barefoot through the Okefenokee Swamp. "Art is very facile. He knows what he'll write before he even sits down at the typewriter, so it all flows very quickly. I don't know what I'll write until I sit down. I work it out at the typewriter. "Art's column has considerable strengths. It looks easy, but it's hard to do. He uses basic English. His structure is simple. The whole thing really .has a marvelous simplicity. It's a short column, about 650 words. It's shorter than mine, but he compacts a lot into it. It's like doing a ballet inside a telephone booth." Baker confessed that behind the jocular facade that he and Buchwald have both cultivated there are two very, very serious men. "We don't see each other too much now," said the Times' columnist, who moved to New York a few years ago. "When we do get together, we're very glum. We sit across from each other in a restaurant and just about weep. It's al- most like the walrus and the carpenter." There is much to weep about in Buchwald's background, especially his childhood. He occasionally uses his col- umn and his humor, he said, to divert his anger, which he didn't realize he had until he began psychoanalysis on return- ing from Paris. "I found that I was really an angry man. I hadn't been dealing with a lot of my problems because I found it was so acceptable for me not to face up to life through my humor. I used it as a defense when I was a kid. I found out I could get attention and that when people laughed at me they wouldn't get mad at me. I was the best defense I had. It be- came a part of my life and I've been doing it ever since." Buchwald's mother died not long after he was born on October 20, 1925 in Mount Vernon, New York. He was the youngest of four children. His father, Joseph Buchwald, an Austrian- American curtain maker who was having hard financial times, could not keep the family together. He farmed the children out to a series of foster homes. For a