I THE M!CHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May 7, 1968 to 11cCarthy encourages the faithful in South Bendc L.A. Rams' tackle Roosevelt Grier (L, with glasses) protedts his candidate Bobby and Gene in Indiana: Last-minute blitz As McCarthy (L) gave his major speech of the weekend, loyal supporters listened with full devotion (Continued from Page 1) every city in the state. Kenne- )dy brought his campaign to a fever pitch on Saturday in a 12-stop tour of Indianapolis. In a swing through ghetto areas in this city of 450,000, the boy- ish candidate proved himself sturdier than he appears. At each stop he was mobbed by crowds of youths and house- wives, craning their necks forr a look and extending their arms for a touch. That the crowds were so big and so exuberant, however, is' ,as much a tribute to Kennedy's staff as to the candidate him- self. Hours before each street- corner appearance, advance men would sweep the area, drumming up crowds and tag- ging them with blue-and-white "Kennedy" buttons. By the time the candidate arrived, the number of corraled curious equalled the wildly enthusiastic. Compare McCarthy's cam-, paign. Where Kennedy has the pros, McCarthy has the kids. Over 3500 collegians walked door-td-door for RFK in In- dianapolis this weekend, but McCarthy's legions, swelled to" almost..,000, covered the whole state. With their y o u t h f u l n e s s comes the fabled idealism that has made them practically the number one copy item for im- pressed journalists. Watching a young folk-singer introduce McCarthy with "Blowin' inthe" Wind" and "Universal Soldier" in South Bend, columnist Mary Mcgfory - recognized as. one of the nation's keenest political analysts - had misty tears in her eyes. Gov. Branigin's candidacy is being promoted by some local supporters as a stepping stone to the vice-presidencyshould Humphrey get the presidential nomination in August. Most commentators, confident that this prize has already been of- fered to retiring Gov. John Connally of Texas, regard this as exceedingly dubious, and prefer to view Branigin's cam- paign as an attempt by admin- istration forces to embarrass Kennedy particularly, and, backhandedly, McCarthy as well. So 4ranigin has aimed his campaign at a denunciation of the "outsiders" who, he says, are trying to read too much into Indiana's importance as a swing state. While this interpretation galls the confident Kennedy forces, it suits McCarthy fine. Repeatedly, he has *said that Indiana "is just another state," and has instead described pri- maries in Oregon (May 28) and California (June 4) as "cru- cial." In those states, Kennedy and McCarthy are the only candidates on the ballot. As McCarthy and Branigin play Indiana down, Kennedy hani, i t - tin (anitaliinao n a court), Kennedy expects hand- some results in this dreary Mid- western state. But McCarthy's collegiate supporters remain undeterred. Their enthusiasm equals their numbers "No, I'd never work for Kell- nedy," a co-ed from Barnard said, "even if McCarthy lost. But, of course, he's not going to lose." This view is generally repre- sentative of .the whole McCar- thy operation. Expressing bit- ter disapproval of ,RFK, whom they see as an opportunistic late-comer, McCarthy's sup- porters are determined to prove the pollsters wrong, as they did in Wisconsin and New Hamp- shire. Even the few profession- al politicians who man positions at the top of the McCarthy s.tructure show child-like de- light in their candidate's pro- pensity to buck the odds. For every ounce of MeCar- thyite confidence, there is an equal amount of surety in the Kennedy camp. Pierre Saliltger, serving as general supervisor of the Indiana campaign, struts around the Indianapolis head- quarters amid a staff certain of victory. The press attaches assigned to supervise the road operations assure the newsmen that their candidate isn't wor- ried in the least bit about the McCarthy challenge. What is bothering Kennedy, though, is the treatment he has been getting in the Indianapolis newspapers, the Star and the News - both owned and pub- lished by Eugene Pulliam. In a front page editorial Sunday, the Star said that "A rousing vic- tory for Roger D. Branigin in the Democratic presidential preference primary will settle for now and for the future whether the voters of this or any other state can be bought by a rich man." Clearly aiming its attack at Kennedy, and McCarthy on'y to a lesser extent, the Star his assumed responsibility for car- ' rying forward the Branilin philosophy that is plastered on billboards acifoss the , state: "Vote Indiana - Vote Br ni- gin." Hoping to undercut the Kennedy impact on the state's voters, Branigin's home-style campaign has been predicated on a fierce (although logically exceptionable) state patriotism. Yesterday, Salinger attacke'd the*Star for fighting Branigin's battles in what the Kennedy forces see as a smear cam- Daign. To this charge, Pulliam responded simply. "Bobby Ken- nedy is like all spoiled chil- dren. When he doesn't get what he wants, he bellyaches." But, despite the Branigin threat, Bobby Kennedy will probably get what he wants in Indiana. Most impartial guesses place it somewhere between 40 and 50 per cent for Kennedy and anut 25 ner cent for Mc- ~~4 Photographed by ANDY* SACKS ' ^: , ;b5'kk >', a .: :. ? >.: . ,,, .:,.. i:. -: °_ .. 7 <. ' ..,... ; N,. .: .sue ?5; . ..,.'. Is