Page Ter. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 1, 1968 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday1 September 1, 968 Chicago confrontation: What happened (Continued from Page 1) Just over a small ridge, more than 300 police waited in double battle lines as their officers shout- ed over electric bull horns: "This is a final warning. Move out now . . . you are in violation of the law." "Hell no, we won't go!" came back the chant, and as seven demonstrators carried the cross forward to kneel and pray, a few advanced to toss rocks and bottle. In the background, the crowd started the first verse of "America the Beautiful." It could have been a scene from a Greek tragedy: The outdoor theater, the background chorus. sp'eakers with faces lost in the shadows. The scene abruptly changed as police, after three "final" warn- ings, lobbed tear gas into the geated crowd. Those who had been singing were suddenly ~swearing at the tops of their voices as they choked \back tears. Taunts increased. The volume of obscenities expanded as laggards were roughly prodd- ed, but not beaten, with riot sticks. Patrolmen who raised their clubs high or drew pistols, as a few did, were confronted by groups of three and four who screamed, "Hit me, pig! Shoot me, pig-" The demonstrators fled the park - and rambled toward downtown Chicago. They passed the river and continued south on Michigan Avenue as they had been told by marshals until they reached the Conrad Hilton Hotel, headquarers for the Democratic convention. They massed in Grant Park across from the Hilton. Police standing side by side on both sides of the avenue kept a vigil until the dawn, letting the dem- onstrators defy the curfew. The youths lit bonfires and let derid- ing insult fly but the police took it unflinchingly rather than risk srpeading tear gas and violence to the Hilton. Demonstrators found that, al- though the police allowed them through their lines in small groups, guardsmen blocked most exits from the lakefront park. The troops used tear gas to turn back the crowds, giving Hilton resi- dents their first taste of the gas. Exits farther north, however, remained open. The crowds surged through and, with a cheer, rush- ed onto Michigan Avenue and headed, south-back toward the Hilton. "The streets belong to the peo- ple," they cried as hundreds- perhaps a thousand-marched, They overtodk the three mule- drawn wagons of the Poor Peo- ple's Campaign which were mov- ing slowly down Michigan Avenue with a police escort. The mixed procession was halt- ed just short of the Hilton by a double row pf police blocking the entire eight-lane avenue. The swelling crowd taunted po- lice, a few missiles were thrown and some persons sat down in the street. A small group made a push against the police lines and was driven back by flailing clubs. That did it. Suddenly two flying wedges of police charged east -up Balbo Avenue, and drove into the crowd on Michigan Avenue, swinging clubs. The entire intersection was ablaze with lights from the hotels and the television cameras, which captured for millions of viewers the swirling violence, the screams and curses, the dull thud of night sticks. Television sets in the amphi- theater showed the delegates what was happening. Police charged again and again, clubbing demon- strators, dragging them to police vans and pushing or throwing them in. The street scene grew more wild as police charged scattered dem- onstrators. Violence spilled onto the sidewalks and even into the lobbies of the hotels. Targets of continuous barrages of verbal abuse and some missiles, the helmeted police chased dem- onstrators, newsmen, spectators or unsuspecting passersby who blundered into the violence. All the while the television cameras ground on. . . On the convention floor, Daley copyrighted story, quoted police undercover agent Robert Pierson,l who infiltrated the Yippies, as, saying Yippies sought to con- stantly provoke attacks by police. Wednesday night's confronta- tion at the Hilton, the paper quot- ed Pierson as saying, was plan- ned well in advance. Rubin was charged with solicitation to com- mit mob action. The organizers of this week of p r o t e st - Dellinger, satirical writer Paul Krassner, SDS ve- teran Tom Hayden, Rubin and others, are holding a weekend meeting to analyze what happened and plan what to do next. There is no question that they chose to stand defiantly in the streets of Chicago? They camefrom almost every- where. complaining of distrust for the older generation, dislike for some elements of the American system, discontent with political leaders and the results of both conventions, and disgust with the Vietnam war. "It's always the old call to' war, and always the young who fall," sang folk musician Phil Ochs in a ballad that - always brought rally audiences to their feet. Its title: "I Ain't-a-Marchin Any More." They were brought together in belong to the people." Their symbol was the two-fin- ger "V." - not the victory sym- bol of another generation's war but the solidarity sign of their movement. They filled the air with chants, "Hell, no we won't go!" aimed at the draft, "Dump the Hump," aimed at the vice president, "No more war," "Peace now," and "Oink, Oink," aimed at police. Jean was a marcher. She is 23, and loved beads, bare feet and carefree dress before it was identified as hippie garb. ica is inevitable. She is disen- chanted. In four years as a com- munity organizer in the Black neighborhood of a northeastern city she fought slumlords. T h e y called her an agitator and she is bitter about it. But she is not bitter about last week in Chicago. "We made them show the country what they really art. They're finally acting like they really think," she said. "In other cities it would have been handled, much cooler, much smarter," she said. "They would have let us march. It would have taken the wind out. SWTI -Daily-Jay L. Cassidy Chicago police fill a van with tear-gassed demonstrators was jeered by delegates sympa- I ithetic to the demonstrators and police tactics were criticized from I the rostrum. Thursday night some 2,000 demonstrators marched south- ward out of Grant Park. They were led by presidential write-in candidate Dick Gregory, and a number of convention delegates. They were stopped at Michigan Avenue and 18th Street by a mass of guardsmen with barbed wire shrouded jeeps, backed up by rows of police. Gregory and some of the dele- gates submitted to arrest. Then, taunted by a man with an electric bullhorn, the crowd surged against the line of troops. The response was first pushing' back with rifles, then rifle butts, then came the order, "Gas!" Clouds of biting, choking riot gas flooded over the crowd, send- ing it fleeing back north. Gas was used several more times when the crowd made a motion to turn and confront the following line of police and guard. Finally the coughing, crying crowd straggled back into' the park where it was fenced in by, ,lines of guardsmen. There were a few incidents Fri- day, the most notable a dawn raid by police on Hilton rooms occu- pied by McCarthy workers whom the police accused of dropping ob- jects on guardsmen from their 15th floor windows. But as the, delegates went home, so did the demonstrators. The violence had ended. About 600 persons had been ar- rested. Most were released on bond. No one had an accurate count of how many were injured. Was it deliberately provoked? The Chicago Tribune, in a were preparing for the kind of confrontation that m i11i o n s watched in horror on television. They had medical teams of vol- unteer doctors, emergency field ambulances, attorneys, instruc- tions on how to deal with police clubs and tear gas, and even plans to evacuate their protesters in! case violence leaped completely out of hand. They argue, however, t h a t' they prepared because they ex- . pected police to be unnecessarily' brutal. "This confrontation was n o t inevitable," said Rennie Davis, 25, one of the youngest leaders. "Where we had the police doing its duty of monitoring a nonvi- olent march such as the three, hotels we picketed Sunday, we had no such confrontation. They're not inevitable." Who were these youths w h o Chicago by the National Mobili- zation Committee to End the War in Vietnam, a loose coalition of 135 antiwar groups that organiz- ed demonstrations but has no au- thority to enforce discipline. The "mob," as it is known, es- timated that they came from 38 states, with most from Chicago,! New York, Boston, Detroit, Cleve- land and California. The protestors were mostly. white and mostly just out of their teens. Spme came because John F. Kennedy and his brother had been killed, because Martin Lu-' ther King Jr. had been killed. Many wore McCarthy buttons: and wherever they grouped they raised flags; red for revolution, black for anarchy, green and Ted for the National Liberation Front. They carried signs: "Welcome to Prague," "We've had it, Mayor Daley," "Veteran of Lincoln Park, Aug. 28, 1968," and "The streets Saturday and Sunday Sunset BoulevardI Dir.Billy Wilder, 1950 "A tribute to Hollywood, its vanished glory, glamour, grandeur and psychoses." ERICH VONSTROH EM GLORIA SWANSON WILLIAM HOLDEN HEDDA HOPPER JACK WEBB 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE AUD. 1, + Use Daly. Classifieds + . ._. _._v__ ___ .m. __ _ _ __ BIG, CORVETTE Yellow 327, '65 Convertible Many Extras Shaven't you heard?? 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