. Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 12, 1972 Sundry, November 12, 1972 THE M I CH IGAN DA I LY h4 1S " , c~^s - c'So ac m at -. -- ...- . ' 1 a I' 0 1 o 0 0 o 10. 50-~ ie. (Continued from Page 1) mass meetings; at the same time emphasizing the open na- ture of the party's structure. But the issue got nowhere with the voters, who found it hard to visualize Steve Burg- hardt, HRP's candidate for state representative, doing much in Lansing that his Democratic op- ponent wouldn't. They realized that, he would have to use his individual judgment to decide how to interpret his party's plat- form, when it came to voting on the House floor. This, in fact, was why HRP could not run just "anybody" for public of- fice. In addition, some voters pon- dered that ,whether out of apathy or disagreement, they didn't have much to do with HRP or its mass A 1 H0UH PVO T(O&) L.AS T7H6 SER lN I. ___, 211S3Sae-An 4ro Ic reGe "She shakes as many hands as possible." (continued from page 5) many people as possible. They know that everyone gets a rush from a celebrity, and every, body in this district has heard of Bella Abzug. Bella weaves her way down the street remind- ing everybody who she is, just in case they have forgotten. If perchance she is cornered into spending too much time with one person, she handles the situation eloquently, as in t h e following d isc o ur se with a teenage Puerto Rican boy. Boy: Ay Bella what are you gonna do about the cops? Bella: Well I have been a leading proponent . . . Boy: (he cuts her off) No, no . . . see me and my friends are walking on Broadway last night and this cop comes up to us .. . Bella: (she cuts him off) just listen for a second. Here is my card. Call my office and tell them your problem. Boy: Just like the rest, pass- ing the buck. Bella: (indignantly) I do not pass the buck. She moves quickly into a crowd waiting patiently to shake her hand. Bella handles her staff just as efficiently as she handles her- self. She is the one who decides who goes where and when. "Listen, I'm going into t h a t Foodarama for awhile, it looks crowded," she says. "But Bella, we are behind schedule," an aide insists. "I am going in, could you do me a favor and find me a ton- gue sandwich with Russian dres- sing on white toast?" That puts an end to discussion and she is off into the crowded supermar- ket. Most of her staff admits that Bella is a hard taskmaster, but as one aide puts it, "Bella will drive you to an ulcer but then, make damn sure you have enough milk to treat it with." Foodarama on 159th street and Broadway is a large super- market that specializes in a large selection of low quality meats and caters to a mostly Spanish-speaking clientele. The moment Bella enters the store all eyes shift from t h e specials of the week to this big lady who is making, her way down the aisles, shaking hands, throwing out spanish phrases, patting children on the head, and pinning buttons on all the check out girls. In all but a few min- utes she has made her name and face as well known to the shoppers as a can of Campbell's soup. A small woman in her sixties is following Bella around t h e store remarking repeatedly, "she is much prettier than on T.V. Huh?" When this be- comes unbearable Bella is forc- ed to joke, "Listen I am a poli- tician, not a movie star . . . at my age a sex symbol?" She leaves the store as quick- ly as she entered. With the agility of a half- back, she dodges shopping carts and shakes hands all the way out the door. Everyone seems to be in a stupor, not knowing exactly what happened in the last few minutes. No one is sure how to react except for B e n Knoff, store manager, who is yelling from his office door, "Hey Bella, new image huh?" Abzug was in the store earlier in the campaign and, according to Knoff, was completely differ- ent. "Then she seemed more pushy, I was waiting for her to stand on the check out counter and give a speech." Bella herself is aware of this mellower style and explains that "I thought that it was only proper that in the light of Bill's death that I keep the re- mainder of the campaign as sub- dued as possible." Yet Jerry Kretchmer, a one time Ryan supporter now cam- paigning for Bella, is sure that "she can still get as excited as ever." One aide added that, "she knows that her loud manner often alienates people, and she is not in any position where she can alienate people right now. * * * Although Bella seems to tire as the day wears on, she still maintains her sense of humor. When confronted by a N i x o n supporter festooned with every imaginable Nixon button s h e comments, "if you are going v- to vote for him you are going to need me more than ever." She has one last stop before an address at a McGovern ral- ly downtown. Bella and her aides head towards West Har- lem. * * * Amsterdam Avenue is bustling with activity. Spanish music is blaring out onto the street. Street hawkers sell genuine imi- tation leather belts for a dol- lar. Pizza sells for 15 cents a slice, the cheapest anywhere in the city. Bella and company stand out like a sore thumb in this black, lower class section, but m o s t people are more concerned with the double feature at the Olym- pia theater, or the fight down the block, than in someone call- ed Bella Abzug. She is having trouble getting attention even though the block is crowded. Ollie's Tavern is a small dim- ly lit bar on Amsterdam Avenue. The only lights inside are a neon "Schlitz" sign and a pink and blue lighted juke box blar- ingsome song by IsaacHayes. Most of the patrons are quite high when Bella comes in and announces, "Hi, my name is Bella Abzug and I am running for Congress." Someone ap- plauds from the back. She shak- es a few hands, gives the bar- tender a button and heads out the door. Immediately after her depar- ture an inebriated discussion be- gins between two black men seated at a table cluttered with shot glasses and an empty Seag- rams bottle. "Who the hell was she?" "Some politician, I don't know."- "I never saw a woman poli- tician before." "She looked pretty tough - probably could kick a lot of those mother fuckers in the ass." "Yeah, maybe I don't know" Out )n the street, Bella con- tinues down the block shaking hands, her aides diligently hand out "Bella" buttons and tape posters on store windows as a loud speaker droans, "meet Bel- la Abzug, your Congresswoman." IRU 4THE W7J k meetings. And some Democrats pressed arguments that HRP was a clique of frustrated, student- oriented, middle class whites, in- terested only in spiting their parents and the Democrats. HRP's "collective decision-mak- ing" issue was neutralized. All the electoral battle-talk collapsed in a heap in the vot- ing booths around the very thrust of HRP's existence - that it is a radical alternative, a third party. Faced with "good Democrats," many voters sim- ply couldn't find any reason to go with HRP. In the spring City Council elec- tions, many young voters identi- fied with HRP's student-ish can- didates and saw definite areas of self-interest in potential city leg- islation - for example, concern- ing drugs. Last Tuesday, however, many voters could identify equally well with youthful, campus - grown g{T IT FAIEP. \l ~J 6 OA5B U NANWER candidates on the Democratic tic- ket. Moreover, they knew little about county issues; some HRP members blame themselves for not running a better educational campaign in the county commis- sioner races. THE underlying breakdown of HRP's efforts to carry the bulk of the liberal-radical vote last week is tied to the voters' refusal, or inability, to adopt the third party approach to the na- tion's, and this region's, diffi- culties. "Why the hell don't you just take over the Ann Arbor Demo- cratic Party," the torn voter queried. "Elect radical, trust- worthy candidates in the pri- maries, run massive educational campaigns, open wide the party doors and draft a platform to take to the state convention." HRP responded that drives for real change from within the Democratic Party are hopeless because it is so wound up with the present balance of poier within the country. Moreover, its members argue, only a radical, independent alternative party can push for change and serve as a forum for a socialist, equalitar- ian and humane society at the same time. It didn't take, and this is the problem that has faced every third party movement in Ameri- can history-especially those that did not begin with a convention of "bigtime" politicos who split off from the major parties. (Both the Progressive Party and the Republican Party started out with senators and congressmen, who brought along large chunks of their constituencies.) Combined with some liberals' disagreement with HRP's politi- cal philosophy, this two party system bias was enough to scut- tle HRP in this fall's election. (And there are a lot of students who simply don't like the Hu- man Rights Party. Campus con- sciousness "is not what she used to be," and leaflets and speeches alone are not going to change that. Many voters, student and non-student, desire no more radi- cal changes than those proposed by George McGovern and Lyn- don Johnson.) HRP is candid about its ob- jectives, even if they are neces- sarily vague. "The electoral sys- tem is a useful forum to reach a wide number of people, pre- senting crucial issues and radi- cal analysis, while at the same time achieving some legislative reforms." Many HRP members acknowledge that the party can never become "successful" with- in the existing electoral system because of the very structure of American society. But some people are not in- terested in radical analysis, or in electing candidates to provide publicity for progressive ideas. They want results and they see a Democratic vote as supplying the maximum return. As con- sumers, they just don't buy HRP. And until they are educat- ed, until they buy HRP's radical analysis of American social prob- lems, and its approach, they won't buy its candidates. ~Uf yr T F .for wnter no eCar a pool 416 win I 5- tt r TroCgr 1 J I Vt VA LA P-SEAM E CHA MANY DIFFERE SEAM GUARAN $32. DUNHAM "iverst t- tow t t s i 6 t }i 1 r >> I I Z.- !! I NMI 12-2 ~ HotI « YS RE 314 EAST LIBERTY-761-2231 For . LATE NIGHT TEA 1 Featuring: SPECIAL STUDENT LIVE ENTERTAINM OPEN AS OF WED., SEPT. 20 NEW HOURS: p.m.-T p.m.-midnight daily Town's First Gourmet EGETARIAN ESTAU RANT You Natural Folk EDEN '4DS NATURAL FOODS COLD LUMCNIS 11 A LARGE SE of Men's and W .Boots *Waffle!S -leather-suet * SAI ON STRIPED Regular I NOW ! Downiowi 310 E. Wa HOURS: Mon.-F Sat. Sol i RAY &m A. m* MOUSE PRICES TENT WENS MOVED to 330 MAYNARD (boehnd Nickels Arcade) MuT sours Room to SIT A EAT A TALK y PLUS ALL OUR REGULAR STAPLES MANY MUNCHIESI! I- L comE VISIT men - sat. 10- 6 II - - . mtd~ - - J . . - TnU