. , tI Siri:gau Daity Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications 1968: i 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily exp ress the individuol opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Election year that wasA t I WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: STEPHEN WILDSTROM 1 Chaos in Cobo Hall: A fever over Wallace By ANDREW SACKS Photo Editor N EUBACHER HAD TOLD ME that Wal- lace would put on a much better show than Nixon. It was a good thing we stayedI in Detroit. After a half a year of watching political3 campaigning, one show seems just like an- other. The exceptions (Kennedy in Indiana, and Daley in Chicago) stand out in myI mind.' But watching Humphrey in Detroit is the same as watching Nixon in Lansing,1 or McCarthy in Milwaukee. -There is a lot of running around. maneuvering for good shots, and hassling iti out with the secret service dudes. In the end you get a sprained knee, tired feet, and aI little better idea of what makes the world run. So we got up early last Tuesday \and jumped on the the "Nixon's The One Spe- cial" bus caravan at 9 a.m. in front of De- troit's Sheraton Cadillac. We made about eight stops and nothing special happened. They bought us Miller High Life beer, and kept it in a big garbage can filled with ice in the back of the bus. (I guess Nixon has1 a lot of money.) We spent about seven hours in this caravan, and ended up back at the Sheraton. After dinner, we went down to CoboHall. for the next show. I HAD AN INKLING that the Wallace staff. people might be a little more callous, and somewhat less "genteel" than the average political hacks who deal ott press' creden-, tials, and mimeographed schedules. But I had never imagined what I was about to see, Take your average Andy of Maybury type, and Gomer Pyles mix in a little Chester from Dodge City, and then for a little primevil motivation fill them up with racist hate, fear of long haired hippies, and the classic white southern male complex. Then you have the Wallace staff. What a bunch. It took the staff 90 minutes to explain the arrangements for press credentials., Only after viscious insistence did we, secure the proper little badges. We called them sir. Before the action started we made friends with some radical types from Wayne State and told them to ask for tickets one at a time, so all of them would get in. They got in, and we rendezvoused later in the balcony.j They were giving the Wallace loyalists who were seated on the floor the finger., FOR A GROUP of about 40 kids they made a lot of noise. They riled up the Wal- lacites enough to get them parading around the arena floor with a confederate flag. Most of the crowd cheered for the flag, and all raised their voices when the Detroit Police entered. Things went smoothly for - a while-the country band came out and did some tunes; the master of ceremonies introduced a crippled fat teen-ager who had walked all around Cleveland campaigning{ for Wallace, and the evening rolled on. Then a larger group of anti-Wallace peo- ple appeared in the second balcony and begun drowning out the preparatory rites on the stage. The people were stamping and shouting. Every ten minutes or so, the police would escort an over zealous Wallacite or a radical type out of the arena. Things were picking up. Each time the police did some- thing the official ceremonies tappered off so people could watch the other action and boo or applaud as their loyalties demanded. IN THE AIR, you could feel the hate. The people who were cheering on the cops, were more than passionate. They were moti- vated by that fever we are all susceptible to: If we ever have been on the short end ofj stick in life, and have had the feeling that the cards have been stacked against us, we jump on a band wagon that will make us feel secure. These people in the arena had jumped on this band wagon with their teeth bared, and their wounds aching. They were poor, or had a crummy job (and couldn't' get a better one), had lost a son in the war, or just didn't understand what had hap-I uened to the America they .learned about in seventh grade civics. . They didn't know why people grew long, hair; they couldn't understand the shout- ing and the stamping of the black kids in the balconies; they thought they had been denied a better life when they couldn't at- tend college; and they hated the kids who were in college now. who were repudiating everything "American." The anti-Wallace people just by the presence, instantly re- opened these wounds, and poured in the salt. BOTH GROUPS were becoming more ag- gressive and more desperate. The kids in the balconies were ready to lay their lives on the line, and the Wallace people were ready o kill them. There were only two doors that opened on to the floor of the arena, and they were too small to facilitate any panicky mass, exit. I felt trapped. I knew that if any trouble started, it would be real trouble. A guy in the national press corps reassured me very little when he said it is like that everywhere Wallace goes. I still had the feeling that arena was going to explode. BY THE TIME WALLACE CAME on, the place was packed. All the noise from hecklers, and loyalists made me anxious and nervous. I went up into the balcony with the biggest group of counter-demonstrators and shot some pictures of them when the Alabama governor was introduced. (If I were to perish, I would at least be among comrades.) After 15 minutes upstairs I went back to the floor, and shot pictures of Wallace. I had watched one major fight from the balcony, but things had seemed, to level off. Still in the arena there were 12,000 people filled with hate. Towards the end of the speech, a fight broke out on one side of the hall. Then andther started across the way. The second fight grew quickly, and police started jumping over chairs to get to the action. Chairs were knocked down and thrown around the fighting. By this time I had jumped over a lot of fallen chairs and was standing in front of a bloody black guy who had been cut over the eye. He was taken off by the police. Another kid who had been attacked while taking pictures was being led off when a bunch of people jumped him. All I saw were fists going up and down where the kid had been knocked down. Wallace was crooning "Let the police handle it, let the police handle it." Democrac y's "facade of..lesser-evilism 'By JIM HECK . WHEN THE ELECTIONS come to the outlying areas in Arkansas, most of the farmers vote Democratic because their fathers and their grandfathers and their great-grandfathers voted Democratic. I discovered this when I walked into a small restaurant in 1964 in Cash, Ark., passing out leaflets announcing the grand opening of the, regional Republican headquarters. The proprietor: reached below his cash register, pulled, out a double-barrel shotgun, explained most suc- cintly: "Boy! I'm a Democrat now git!" and fired two smokey blasts through the ceiling of his restaurant. At that time I was convinced the Republicans in 1964 would truly cleanse the soul of the land. I felt communists were hiding under the cracked wooden bridges over Gum Slough Ditch No. 2 and lurking in the rice paddles with the blacks, masquerading as peasants in order to plan, organize and activateviolent revolution. But regardless of my inclindations, I felt that I should have been given an opportunity to expound them. The irrational rhetoric of the farmers completely denied me that opportunity. I BECAME EVEN MORE BAFFLED one day when the Jonesboro Republican headquarters instructed me to pass out Democratic litera- ture. The pamphlet included a picture of Lyndon Johnson shaking hands with several blacks. It had been sucessfully kept out of the South until then. It would bring Democrats into the Republican camp. I detested the act, because I felt it was unethical. It was no more a legitimate reason to vote for a candidate than family tradition. But I was just a worker-"you don't understand the dynamics of democracy"-so I peddled the junk in the streets. We went door-to-door passing out'the literature which reeked with the picturesque odor of the black. And it worked. More than once I opened wide the eyes of some. pot-bellied segregationist who couldn't believe his President could do such things as shake hands with a black man-even if he were wearing a tie. THOSE LAST FEW DAYS seemed very twisted up. Everyone was passing out their opponent's literature in order to show the closed- minded Southerner why he should vote against his candidate. No one, it seemed, ever showed anybody why he should vote for his candidate. Those were interesting times: sort of a speciation of truth, good truth and bad truth. Arkansas is a peculiar place-or so I've been told. Wait until you move North. I moved North. Things aren't much different now. My ideas have radically changed, but my basic repugnance of "twisted up"" campaigning still exists. As a result, this year I've intentionally disregarded the dynamics of democracy. We are not to, vote for Humphrey because we like him-we don't. But we don't like Nixon any more. Don't listen to what Humphrey says, listen to what Nixon says. Then, the Humphrey, camp muses, you'll have but a single alternative. I DON'T THINK people act this way because they are stupid. I think rather it is because the system is degenerating. Our democratic system no longer. can perpetuate a faith for itself. It think this is because we have finally reached that juncture in our facade of dem- ocracy when we realize it is actually a facade. And our faith was in true democracy. Now we have learned it is not truly democracy. Our faith is for democracy, not for its facade. But in an attempt to' fool ourselves-to make ourselves believe the facade is not a facade at all, we force ourselves into a philosophical motif of lesser evilism in order to stimulate true democracy's motif of Dick and Hubert: Two deciding stories By DAN OKRENT Feature Editor IN MARCH of this year, I set out, with the grace of the Managing Editor and the financial assistance of the Business Manager, to cover this year's presidential campaign for The Daily. I gave up on the Republicans in April and the Democrats in August. Not because I had necessarily fallen out of favor with my superiors at the newspaper; rather, because I had myself given up on my so-called superiors on the campaign trail. Sunday, March 31, 1968, is now remembered by most as the day The Ogre stepped down. Sitting downstairs in the Student Publcation Bldg. after returning from Wisconsin, I listened as the most political man in the 20th century talked of how he was compelled to step above politics . But, earlier in the day, after trailingnEugene McCarthy around the north side of Milwaukee on Saturday and strolling through the Wis- consin campaign headquarters for LBJ (the place was eripty, both physically and spiritually) on Friday night, I stopped for a few hours at a reception for the Nixon family. THE THIRD FLOOR of the Sheraton-Schroeder Hotel had been used as the press headquarters for the McCarthy forces in the Wiscon- sin campaign. Their ranks freshly swelled from an influx of student volunteers come in for the last weekend of campaigning, McCarthy legions swarmed all over the building. But Richard Nixon, Richard- Nixon-laughed-at-on-TV-in-'52, Richard Nixon-stoned-in-Venezuela -in-'58, Richard Nixon-kicked-around-in-'60-and-'62, Richard Nixon with family had put a tight clamp on the hotel's facilities that Sunday. The affair was Nixon Meeting The Public. Scheduled to start at 2 p.m., the affair actually began at 10 in the morning as Milwaukee, straight, solid, very-American, returned from church and stopped at the Sheraton-Schroeder. Rows and rows of 2x4's had been carpentered into a giant maze in the third floor ballroom; by noon, perhaps 2500 people had filled the maze, and another 2000 queued down the stairs, into the lobby, and on into the street. The show of strength was grati- fying to the Nixon advance men, I'm sure; but they were running in Wisconsin only against Harold Stassen. Few of them realized that seven months later their man would be running to defeat himself. THE AUDIENCE either seemed not to come from Milwaukee, or I had ascribed to that town more of a "Big City" image than it deserved. The families crowded into the maze seemed leftovers from Sinclair Lewis novels; Main Street ran down their spines and Babbitt lit their faces. Forty-ish women in neatly coordinated suits, frosted hair planted neatly beneath Sunday hats fastened down with bobby pins. Their husbands, grinning, in brown suits and blue shirts, styled by Sears or Robert Hall, white handkerchiefs stuffed into. pockets (or, more often, fake white handkerchief tops sewn on to cardboard pocket fillers). The children were all dressed up, their mothers had probably each spent an hour that morning combing their hair and cleaning the insides of their ears. The kids waited restlessly, the parents eagerly. The man arrived. With him were Pat, and Julie, and Tricia, and for the first time in the campaign David. We all know David now. Then very few did. When Daddy-in-law-to-be introduced him, the crowd was apopleptic. I feared for his life, and realized he was my age, that he probably used to sit around in his room at Amherst and tell dirty jokes and snigger at big breasts in Playboy. Soon, he would be a Nixon. I WAS AMAZED by Mr. Nixon. All that had been said about the New Nixon was true. He was a dervish on the stage. He was not merely candidate; more, he was emcee. He did the introducing himself, he dominated the stage, he needed no band or fanfare, he came on strong, strong, strong, resonantly booming Here's someone you all know well, my wife Patricia; Frenzied cheers for her; for each of the others when their turns came. It was David Eisenhower's birthday. There must have been 30 birthday cakes in the crowd, the possessor of each hopefully waiting to hand it to David. The boy's birthday had been announced in the Mil- waukee papers the night before. Nixon handled it all so well. The crowd was so orderly. There were no hecklers. The McCarthy kids from the other side of the third flooi' were nowhere in sight. Why? I wondered, I tried to find out. I stepped into the hall. I approached a Pinkerton guard who eyed my sideburns first, my press badge second. I asked what procedure they were using to admit the crowd. "It's at our discretion." He told me there were over 150 Pinkertons assigned to the event. THE CROWDS WERE KEPT in line in the maze as they slowly found their way to the stage, where they walked across to shake hands with the Family. As each youngster approached, Nixon pulled a little card, the size of a calling card, out of his suit pocket. On each was a prepared copy of his autograph. On his lips was a prepared copy of a smile and a friendly greeting. I looked again at David Eisenhower, and noticed how more than anyone on stage, this guy with a baggy gray suit and dumbo ears had captured the attention of the crowd. I imagined Tricky Dick talking to Julie when she was 13. "What do you mean, you don't like David?" Pat is tugging at her husband's shoulders, trying to calm him. Tricia is crying in her bed- room, because she too is afraid of the nasty man with the hairy face. Julie is sobbing, trying to duck his wrath. "WHAT DO YOU MEAN, YOU DON'T LIKE DAVID? WHAT DO .YOU MEAN, YOU DON'T LIKE DAVID? WHAT DO YOU MEAN? WHAT ARE YOU TRYING TO SAY?!?" Julie, wiping the sniffles from her face, tugs at her cotton ankle socks and tells Daddy that she'll go to the party that night after all, that she'll be nice to David. When Daddy took, Julie to the party, he was very nice to young David too, and probably told him that a White House wedding would be nice, son, wouldn't it? Fourteen-year-old David looked up at the man with a question in his sad eyes. "Wedding?" he thought. "I'm only 14." But politics is stronger than 14-year-olds. * * 4 t - -~. - - - ~ -~i~ , ~i n. - __________________________________________