Page 4-Sunday, November 5, 1978-The Michigan Daily Garry Wills: The Michigan Daily- ournalist, scholar, historian Sunday, Nc 'He has put some perspective on his work' __LIDES OF PAINTINGS and sculpture flicker against the screen in the dark classroom. The lecturer pauses to squint at his notes, which are barely discernable under the faint light of the podium. He mumbles yet another interlocutory "uh," then regains his place and herds his sentence to a clumsy conclusion. It is a splendidly academic lecture. The speaker begins with a thesis new to his audience: that during the early part of our history, Americans were uncertain how to memorialize public officials, and so they grappled with inappropriate allusions to biblical and majestic figures, before finding an art that was suitable to the then-unique needs of a political democracy. He documents his argument with examples of early American art and contrasts it with European art of the same period. The pace is plodding; only at the end of the talk does he begin to draw synthetic conclusions from the mass of data he has presented. During this dull lecture more than one head Stephen Selbst, a former senior editor of The Daily, is now a second-year law student. Daily nhoto by Maureen O'Mallev. has dropped off quietly to sleep, perhaps not surprisingly in view of the material presented. But this is not a class full of uninterested undergraduates merely seeking to satisfy distribution requirements with an art history class -rumored not to be academically challenging. Fewer than lglf the members of the audience are students; many of the faculty present are highly distinguished. Department heads and mighty scholars abound, The speaker is Garry Wills, and the occasion is the 24th annual W. W. Cook Lecture series, one of the University's most prestigious annual presentations. Given that Wills is not a scintillating lecturer, the question becomes: who is he, and why was he invited? Any number of boring pedants could have been counted on to drive the audience off to numb sleep. But the Cook lectures are supposed to be important: Cabinet members and their ilk have been the invited guests'in years past. Wills was invited more than one year ago to deliver the Cook lectures. "I was given wide latitude on the topic," he explains. "When I was approached I said I wasn't prepared to talk about the law, and they said (the members of the selection committee) said I could talk about By Stephen Selbst anything, as long as it was related to government."_ The topic Wills chose was "Heroism in Early American Art and Politics." It grew out of his most recent book, Inventing Amnerica, which is an investigation of the Declaration of Independence. During the course of his study on Thomas Jefferson, Wills "was intrigued by Washington. His contemporaries thought he and Franklin were the luminaries of the period, and that's different from the current view we have." The lectures Wills delivered illustrated his theme capably, although they were tediously academic. Wills led his audience to the idea that Americans began by viewing their leaders, and primarily George Washington, as akin to royalty. or gods, and ended up borrowing from Roman art, and its celebration of civic ideals to find a more , democratic tone for the art of the new nation. Garry Wills is a paradox, or more properly, a collection of paradoxes. A fascinating conversationalist, he is a dull public lecturer. He is a dynamic journalist, but one whose classical training means he looks more penetratingly at current events than other reporters, who are content to- merely tell today's story. An academic, he teaches but one course per term, and spends four days per week crisscrossing the country in airplanes, a routine more often adopted by businessmen than scholars. "'The weekends are reserved for my wife and family in Baltimore," he explains. -He is a short man with a slight paunch. His hair is shaggy, and he peers out at the world from behind a pair of black eyeglass frames. In his subdued pinstripe suit, he looks more the professional journalist than the academic. Academics .wear more casual clothing, and pinstriped suits are a badge of authority. He doesn't fit the stereotype of a journalist, however. His clothing isn't chic enough to pass him off as a glamour journalist, and it's too elegant for the seedy, rumpled look of wire service reporters. In either area, he would pass, but there would be something about his appearance that wouldn't ring exactly true. He travels through both worlds, but is a full-time member of neither. S HE ALL-TOO-DISMAYINGLY demonstrated during the Cook series, Garry Wills is a first-rate scholar, capable of reproducing with scrupulous accuracy the scholar's cautious manner: nothing bold shall be said until all the academic spadework has been done. But scholars live sequestered in libraries, whose thick walls insulate them from the rough buffeting of life on the streets. Garry Wills is also a journalist, a man whose profession exposes him to all that is brutal, and much that is cynical. any reporter will tell you that what is taught in political science classes doesn't jive with what happens at conventions. Garry Wills was born in Atlanta, Georgia in 1934. His family moved to the small community of Albion, Mich. when he was one year old, then to nearby Adrian, where he went to grade school and high school. He left the state to attend St. Louis University for a first degree, and later did graduate work at Xavier and Yale, in the field of classical studies. At the start of his lecture, Wills pays obligatory homage to the University of which he was a guest. Telling the audience he had grown up in Adrian, he mentions visiting the campus for football games while in-high school. It could have been merely lip service, but he repeats the message, convincingly, in an interview after his talk. "I used to come on Saturday pilgrimages to see such players as Bump Elliott -and Bob Chappius play such players as Doc Blanchard. This place has always held a special glory for me. I think I made it to every home game in '46 and '48, but I think '47 was the only time my father would bring us over for every game," he says. After taking his PhD: at Yale in 1961, he became director of the Center for Hellenic Studies there, then moved on to Johns Hopkins, University in Baltimore, 'where he is still a member of the faculty, teaching ahcourse each semester in American history. All that sounds like a conventional academic career. It only tells the story of half of Garry Wills' professional life. Garry Wills is also a journalist, perhaps one of the most capable in the field today. He writes a syndicated newspaper column; (carried locally by The Detroit Free Press), he was formerly a' contributing editor of Esquire magazine; he has written two books whi : ne esenti*1' Innn Ruby; and he has authored numerous free-lance articles. An established academic by the time he took up journalism, Wills got started because, "I always wanted to write. I wanted to do dramatic criticism, and I never got very far with that. I did book reviews for a group of small Catholic newspapers, and I got a start with an assignment Harold Hayes gave me to do a story about Jack Ruby for Esquire in 1967." The Ruby article eventually blossomed into a book on Oswald's killer, but in the meantime, Wills became a contributing editor of Esquire for four years. "I left to do work for other publications, because in those days there were other publications to do work for, Life, The Saturday Evening Post, Look, and if you were a contributing editor, one of the conditions was that you couldn't write for competing publications." Wills' writing is exceptionally strong; it's rhythmic, vivid and bold, containing none of the qualities displayed by Wills the academic lecturer. But there are any number of slick journeymen political writers operating today. Wills distinguishes himself from them because he retains the scholar's instinct to place the men and events on which he reports in a wider perspective. He is better than most at the technical part of the reporter's job. Reporters face the difficult task of trying to recreate an event, a place, an image for an audience that usually has notseen what the-reporter has seen. So the reporter looks and looks, trying to soak it all in, particularly looking for the details that will impart concreteness to what is reported. But the reporter can't describe everything. There are space limitations, and if he waits too long to tell his story, he'll lose his audience. So the reporter selects his details, choosing the details that are most illuminating' to set the location, and occasionally using metaphor as a device. Practiced well it is an art, and among artists of his caliber, Wills stands as a Michelangelo, as this excerpt from Nixon Agonistes illustrates. Wills is describing George Wallace's entrance to. an adoring rally in Baltimore in 1968: 'Then Wallace came, wafted out fast, all energy and strut as if held off-the floor by will power. The crowd is ripe. He radiates a gritty nimbus of piety, violence, sex. Picked-on and self-righteous, yet aggressive and darkly venturous, he has the dingy attractive air of a B- movie idol, the kind who plays a handsome garage attendant. But he is getting past his prime, pouty about the lips and eyes, on his way to character roles, parts rejected by Edward G. Robinson. He comes rubbing his hands on invisible garage rag (most of the pit grease out of his nails), smiling and-winking, Anything--can- do-for-you-pretty-girl? His hair is still wet from careful work with comb and water in the gas station's cracked mirror (main panel in the men's room triptych, rubber machine on one side, comb-and-Kleenex dispenser on the other). He gives little-boy salutes, snapped off at the end, Wash-your-windshield? Keeps on the move, back and forth, drinking the cheers, with quick turns and darts toward camera, jocular, pointing -out newsmen he knows, best attendant in the station, can't do enough for you, Fill-your-tank- ma 'am?' OaaR A RELATIVELY SHORT descripe tion, the paragraph is a gem. It is typical Wills, mixing actual description (ever the careful documentor of facts) with images that soar on a controlled rein, but which are not pure whimsy. They evoke'" the scene in a way pure description cannot. He has put some perspettive on hs work. Nixon Agonistes is full of that kind of beautiful {.,+:::" ., ti'Si vi:Y':ii -}:4' {:' .:}. . .*iy.} s i ..v"i {.r"v:" excellent reportage, however, is not enough to satisfy Wills. Using the election as a point of departure, he took a look at what was happening all over the country. What Wills saw, with a prescience unmatched by fellow journalists, was an impending lurch to the right. Long before Time and Newsweek had "discovered" the new conservatism, Wills had explained it all in Nixon Agonistes. For that reason, the book is important far beyond what, it says about the Nixon campaign. The stylistic device Wills used in Nixon. Agonistes is a familiar one for him. He starts with meticulous reporting of current events, then looks to the origins of the setting, and does a little history. Having looked at both history and the present, he then concludes by placing the current event, the one he started with, in perspective along with other historical events in the relevant milieu. Not too many other reporters do that. Not many can; it obviously requires more time than reporters for a .daily newspaper, or even a newsweekly, can devote to a single assignment.. But even if they had the time, few reporters probably would do that kind of thorough job anyway. Reporters can be hard-working and diligent; it takes a lot of stamina to cover a plane crash or a convention. But as Gay Talese observed when he wrote The Kingdom and the Power, the story of the New York Times, most reporters are restless, consumed by desire to be at the center of what they perceive to be the excitement, and measuring their own status by they'd be ulcerating might be missing the they could quiet the d to most to investigate careers they have ir what happens now, an is important. Will writes mostly major project is to c year convention in N When he gets started arena, the academic Academics are to be c active reporting on tb detached. Wills says herwon't d Agonistes because one "After a while you ge fresh," he says, but from making keen current political seen jockeying for 1980. "The popular impre ropes is overstated," h perspective he not American-'president, in popularity-~ during although he admits Ca than most. "Just before the president always star some more, and the C president, so the presid rise. Even without Can to rise in popularitv. of d