!nuOry 15, 1978-The Michigan Daily 4 r i an atu hty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 . 87 News Phone: 764-0552 d nd managed by students at the University of Michigan HHH fought for life A doer r }PHREY got a little 4 : collar one day early Stold a reporter that I. -I better not take him fle, Humphrey, was a s history in the, last s not a politician to FCarter was feeling his stration's first big ngress, and Humphrey rged in a great many i utes that were good little deflating to the lon. *And Humphrey. and for Carter's con- vas dying, but he still) odo. ht as bitterly as any irne. He slanted the primary to point up fatholicism. Kennedy helped tear his party i its presidential nom- h ifeated once, he tried again in 1972, when everyone was hop-I ing he would shut up and stay home.j And he made dreadful mistakes: he re- fused to reject Lyndon Johnson's tragic Vietnam policy in 1968, and his cam- paign that year was sloppy, hindered by a candidate who wanted to be every- where at once and all things to every-, one. Many American liberals, including; many in this town, grew to despise him' for his compromises. Adulation has come his way in decline and death, not because he was' always right, not because he was above political chicanery and shoving. He should be remembered as a statesman who weathered the crisis of liberalism with a hard-nosed belief that you had tol have the power to help people, that ideological purity without political skill helped nothing but one's own intellec- tual ego. He showed that politics is a fine tool when infused with his sort of spirit. He had things to do and he did them. By LEE BYETT WASHINGTON-(AP)-Not one to wallow in pity, Hubert Humphrey in his final days never gave up hope. Almost to his death, aides told reporters that the senator from Minnesota hoped to return to Washington, although no travel plans were discussed. THE PAIN and reality of ter- minal cancer would not dissuade this man from saying last Oc- tober, "I'm not about to have somebody cover me up. I'm not about to get lost." Humphrey's last days at his home in Waverly, Minn., were filled with nostalgia but little business. He chatted by telephone with President Carter as well as former Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford and also called old friends, in- cluding one of his former school teachers in his old hometown of Doland, S.D. One or two staff assistants, traveled each day the 40 miles from Minneapolis to Waverly to conduct routine office business. But otherwise, Humphrey saw few visitiors because Qf the danger of respiratory infections. ON CHRISTMAS Day, his four children and ten grandchildren sat down to a turkey dinner, wat- ched home movies, and sang carols for visiting news photographers. Humphrey's last trip to Washington was on a cold Sunday last October when virtually none of his close friends expected him to return to the nation's capital. He was gaunt, frail, and in pain: But Congress was struggling, Jimmy Carter needed him, and Hubert Humphrey was back on the job. He arrived in Washington aboard Air Force One, as Car- ter's guest, and declared his determination "to raise as much hell as I can." BESIDES, he quipped, how could he refuse the ride? "I've been trying to get on that air- plane for at least 20 years." Humphrey admitted that the worst day of his life was when he was first told he had cancer. But as any student of Humphrey knows, there was nothing, in- cluding news like that, in which he could not find hope. "You have to believe you can win this fight," he said. "You have to gear yourself to the con- tinuity of the struggle, knowing that there will be days when you don't feel so good." THERE WERE many such days in the last months. The chemical treatments he received, some of them experimental, were unusually strong and painful. But he consented to all the doctors could throw at him, partly in the belief that his experience could prove valuable to future cancer patients. Meanwhile, the inexorable but lingering nature of the disease gave the nation the opportunity to express its feelings while Hum- phrey could still return the salutes-and they came by the thousands. The Senate and the House had special Hubert Humphrey days; a new Health, Education and Welfare building was named af- ter him, millions of dollars poured into a fund for a Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Af- fairs at the University of Min- nesota, a project that threw him repeatedly into tears of joy. He was hailed as "the most loved and most respected man in America" by Vice President Walter Mondale, who flew Hum- phrey home to Minnesota for the last time in December. PRESIDENT CARTER told the world he had been comforted often by Humphrey's private ad- vice, and said, "I'm proud to be the president of a nation that loves a man like Hubert Hum- phrey and is loved so deeply by him." The House of Representatives shattered precedent in November by convening in special session to honor Humphrey, and Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill told the assembled that Humphrey was the "little man's greatest friend." Governors in 32 states proclaimed Dec. 2 "Hubert Humphrey Day." Hundreds of communities, civic organizations and business and labor groups declared him their man of the year and bestowed similar honors. WELL-WISHES poured in from throughout the world, including some communist nations. In Poland, party chief Edward Gierek took the occasion of President Carter's visit to Poland to extend his "respect and sym- pathy" to Humphrey. Television performers, like Redd Fox, took time out of their programs to salute Humphrey via the airwaves. Tributes were flashed on the scoreboards of football stadiums during nationally telecast games. Gerald Ford came back to town on Dec. 19 to present an award for Humphrey's efforts to stop famine in the world, saying, "I can't think of a nicer reason to be in Washington than to see you." mama - - amanem m --Daily Archives The many faces of HHH Humbert Humphrey has been in the public eye for over 30 years. In the; picture above, he is shown campaigning in Detroit during the 1968 elections. At left, he gave University students a look at his famous, speechmaking style, also while campaigning for the Presidency in- 1968. And below, he is holding one of his grandchildren's hands on Christmas Day, just three weeks ago. n' CA!NVT TAKE IT WITH I'M AA Y " e-no, don't smoke! - Daily Archives THE WEEK IN RE jLLY people these politic- How can you trust a _h, with one face, tells sp smoking, and at the tanother face, uses fed- "sidize the growing of cation and Welfare y Joseph Califano last r.e plans for a federal duce the number of uihs country. HEW's r new antismoking ad-. igns on TV and radio, in federal buildings, m smoking education, xes on cigarettes. Califano proposes a $5 - e in spending on an- - to his chagrin, per- hD rtment of Agriculture o nding $80 million in 3. price supports to the , ongoing since the Surgeon General made his fateful report on cigarettes in 1964. But when faced with the discrep- ency this week, in the new light of in- creased antismoking spending, federal .officials hemmed and hawed and dan- ced around the issue. Before any money is sunk into a new HEW campaign to stop smoking, the government should eliminate tobacco subsidies. If politicians and other of- ficials can't face that prospect, then they should drop their plans for an anti- smoking campaign. Otherwise they're just doing the old tax dollar shuffle. negative action? WITH CONSTANT talk of budget cutbacks and pleas for increased state funding, it seemed pretty clear that the last thing University officials needed on their hands last week was a complete withdrawal of federal funding. were it not for a quickly negotiated concilation agreement with the U.S. Office of Civil Rights (OCR), however, that's exactly what would have hap- pened last week. Because of the University's non-compliance with certain federal affirmative action regu- lations, which was determined during a visit by an OCR resear- ch team to the University last. December, an officer from the civil rights office warned Univer- sity President Robben Fleming on Dec. 30 that if agreements could not be worked out by Jan. 16 to correct the deficient areas, the school would face the danger of losing its federal funds. Fleming reacted by sending University representatives to meet with OCR officials in Chi- cago last Monday to work out solutions to violations which in- cluded the Tniversitv's lek of an non-discrimination W ITH PRIORITY for the protection of human rights being set in the White House this year; and with the much discussed Bakke Case taking up a good deal of time re- cently on the national agenda, it seems somehow predictable that the subjects of rights and dis- crimination would be loudly brought to the table locally. And, predictably, when the sub- jects were raised, it seemed no one could agree on what to do. Presently before the City Coun- cil is a comprehensive anti-dis- crimination ordinance proposal that protects people against everything from discrimination on the basis of the traditional race, color and creed to discrim- ination because of pregnancy, personal association or source of income. The ordinance, as it stands now, is more comprehen- sive that that of some larger cities including Detroit. And that, say some councilmembers, will cause problems. Councilman Roger Bertoia (R- Third Ward), who called the or- dinance's supply of protected. agreed on the first reading of the ordinance last Monday to delete "personal appearance" and "political affiliation" from the list because those categories were too vague, warned after the meeting that he would veto the ordinance if it was weakened any more. "I intend to see that this ordi- nance stays the same as it- passed," hizzoner said. "If I have to, I'll veto it." And as we've witnessed in the past, Wheeler probably means it. crooked copycats F OR THOSE who miss the joy of curling up with a solid tome instead of the flimsy course packets now in vogue for various courses on campus, a new copy- right law may bring back the book. The new law, S.22, raises the question of "fair use" of copy- righted material and threatens the lucrative packet business at local copy shops. John Forbes, manager of store operations at Albert's copying, said that he's not worrying too much about the AP Photo V[IEWs distribution EARS PRICKED up all over campus when it was heard that one of those LSA committees- was thinking very, very seriously of toughening up the college's distribution requirements. Committee members were looking hard at distribution plans B and C. (B is the one that re- quires you to take courses that pursuei"analytic, moral, and: aesthetic" modes of learning. It's; only been around for a couple of: years. C requires two courses irr humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences.) "I oppose plan B completely,? declared history prof Milts Thornton, a member of the com- mittee. "It is genuinely nefariots and ought to be eliminated. It'sI not a distribution plan." Thoar nton said students can get by witb, plan B and not be exposed to the- areas of study that are "essentil- to a liberally educated person." Several members also: suggested that three courses in stead of two be required in each? plan C area. If you want flex!- bility, opined assistant LSA Dean Eugene Nissen, be a BGS. What it all comes down to, said Thornton, EDITORIAL STAFF ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Editors-in-Chief JIM TOBIN 0 P said nothing about the s in his announcement tismoking campaign , al antismoking group the Secretary for fail- gh with the proposals. pus, have a right to be ent must organize and LOIS JOSIMOVICH...................... Managing Editor GEORGE LOBSENZ...................Managing Editor STU McCONNELL............................Managing Editor JENNIFER MILLER.....................Managing Editor PATRICIA MONTEMURRI................. Magaging Editor KEN PARSIGIAN....................... Managing Editor. BOB ROSENBAUM..........................Managing Editor. AMARGARET YAO....................Managing Editor SUSAN ADES JAY LEVIN Sunday Magazine Editors ELAINE FLECTCHER TOM O'CONNELL Associate Magazine Editors STAFF WRITERS: Susan Barry, Richard Berke, Brian Blan- chard, Michael Beckman, Lori Carruthers, Ken Chotiner, Eileen Daley, Lisa Fisher, Denise.Fox, Steve Gold, David Goodman, Elisa Isaacson, Michael Jones, Lani Jordan, Janet Klein, Garth Kriewall, Gregg Krupa, Paula Lashinsky, Marty Levine, Dobilas Matunonis, Carolyn Morgan, Dan Oberdorfer, Mark Parrent,