Hustings on Hudson: McGovern in N.Y. NEW YORK By MERYL GORDON GRACIE MANSION! Here I am at Gracie Mansion, waiting out front with a cur- ious crowd for Sen. George Mc- Govern (D-S.D.). I've flown here from Ann Arbor to watch McGovern campaign in the pri- mary... And with the roar of a police siren McGovern's car pulls up along with two press buses and several police cars. McGovern is swept through the gate as the press bus unloads all these people with cameras, notebooks and tape recorders. Secret Ser- vice must check us all in. Do I look like a reporter?-The Sec- ret Serviceman seems to think so and I rush through the gate with the others onto the grounds of Lindsay's home. But there's nothing to rush for. By the time we're allowed in, McGovern has gone inside for a private talk with Lindsay. Ms. Lindsay and her daughters begin serving soft drinks to the 100 media people roaming about the lawn. People are socializing, talking casually and all of a sudden they begin to run across the lawn, leaping over chairs and tables running in a collision course nearly mobbing Lindsay and McGovern as they emerge from, the house. The press shove microphones in their faces and climb on top of each other to yell out ques- tions and record the answers. I am almost transfixed, see- ing McGovern in the flesh. He isn't on radio or TV or news- print but here, right in front of me, talking softly but clearly, telling us that Lindsay has not given him official support but that the situation is friendly. I don't have too long to watch McGovern though. People start rushing for the press buses I rush on the bus with the others and realize hey, I'm on the bus! But not for long-the bus pulls off onto a noisy street in Harlem and we're at a rally for McGovern. We descend into the black and Puerto Rican crowd and the cameramen be- gin to position themselves for the kill. There's a Latin band playing. People carry "Jorge, si: Nixon, no" signs. Babies, dogs, and people lean out of windows, it's a colorful carnival scene and here he is folks! McGovern is mobbed with handshakers and well-wishers as he leaves his car and walks to the podium for a short speech. He tells the people about his minimum income plan and they love it, they cheer noisily . . . and with a smile and a wave McGovern is off again back to his hotel, the Biltmore. Up in the press room on the 14th floor, there's an open bar and loads of telephones and typewriters. I don't have to file a story yet, so I wander around trying to become familiar with a few selected faces before it's time to leave again. At last everyone is on the bus. Cameramen wiggling down the aisles, the bus jolts and streaks off down the street honking its horn and zooming through traf- fic to take us to a synagogue- McGovern is going to give a major policy speech on Israel. The press storms to the syna- gogue and takes over. Flash bulbs pop. The audience is a little doubtful, but as McGovern expresses his support for the state of Israel they begin ap- plauding and cheering him on. Later, back in the press room, the journalists begin to live up to their reputations--a poker game is organized, drinking be- gins in earnest. The next morning I awake to a screeching alarm and the sound of a rainstorm. It's pour- ing outside. I dash over to the subway then to the hotel and up to the pressroom. The faces are less intimidating this morning- so what if he works for The Times, today t am wearning blue jeans and a t-shirt. The first stop is at a Harlem church. As we walk in, we're handed cardboard fans with photographs of Martin Luther King and a family at church. I sit down next to T. H. White (of "Making of the President" fame)'s son, David. He is doing legwork for his daddy's next book. We discuss that for a few minutes, then McGovern arrives and the choir starts in. It's Sunday morning religion time . . . and I am falling back to sleep as the preacher talks about the new religion and the old religion and the importance of believing in Jesus. I'd really like to listen but my eyes are closing. Suddenly the noise be- gins, cameras flash and I awake to see McGovern ascending to the podium. McGovern gives a speech similar to the one he gave at the rally, talking about his plan to help poor people. He re- sponded to the criticism of this plan by a Nixon aide, which was on the morning paper's front page. McGovern quotes are be- coming vaguely familiar. He has a fine presence in a church. A politician at all times, he men- tions Father's Day and says he wishes he could be with his own children. As the speech ends I head to- ward the back of the church, but am intercepted. "McGovern is having coffee and doughtnuts with the church members," someone whispers. I make an abrupt about face (hmmm. coffee) and enter a tiny room where McGovern is being mob- bed. The press takes up the entire room, there's no room for the congregation. The reporters are eating all the doughnuts and coffee and punch. They stick stick close to McGovern, shov- ing microphones from all direc- tions. Well, I'm no dummy re- porter, so I stand there and I listen to the same questions ask- ed over and over and over again . . . but McGovern is smiling, always smiling. Gradually the press lets him alone, and he talks with people briefly. The next morning's event has been canceled because of the rain so we head back to the press room ... I'm dreaming of reading the Sunday Times and getting some more coffee. No sooner am I comfortably established on the floor of the press room, than the call comes out, "Buses! McGovern is leav- ing to go on some visits to the Jewish community." So, down- stairs we go again. This time we have an all- time maniac bus driver who goes through red lights, stop signs, anything . . , suddenly the bus swerves to a halt on the street of a residential neighbor- hood and we're off. People run up to the door of a rabbi's house-we're in a different world, young boys with payot- long curls down' their cheeke- and black suits and round brimmed hats, old men with white beards and yarmulkas. . Most journalists rush into the house. I try to enter and am barred, first by a man who tells me that no women are allowed although two other female journalists have already enter- ed) and then by a woman. I argue with her in the hall way. "You're wearing pants," she said. "I think it's horrible that there are other women in there." In a while, we headed back to the bus, then another stop in the rain at another rabbi's home, this time Sen. Abe Ribi- coff (D-Conn.) introduces Mc- Govern, telling the rabbi "Mc- Govern is a mensch." Here it is-pure ethnic hype. Back on the bus, Secret Ser- vice announces "We're expect- ing some trouble at the next atop, The opposition is going to be there." The press mobilizes for flight. Reporters are fight- ing their way to the front of the bus to be able to jump out be- fore the bus comes to a halt. There's a large crowd and I can hear screams of "We want Jackson," "We want McGovern," "Down with McGovern," "Jets for Israel" and "Never again" the cry attributed to the Jewish Defense League. People begin pushing and shoving and there are cries of "Hit him, hit him." I am worried. Suddenly, a police- man pushes the crowd in front of me. McGovern is safely back in his car. I see a club raised, but not descending and I rush for the press bus as it begins to take off. There's pandemonium outside but the police cars clear the way and we take off. Safe at the press room I talk with a photographer about the increasing security precautions. He points out, "If anyone wants to shoot McGovern, today and tomorrow are their last chances. Once he's nominated, they'll have no chance to get close to him. The pressure's on now and I'm glad the Secret Service men are around." I'm glad also-for the first time, the police are friend and not enemy. I'm off the bus for the night now, I can write my story and relax, but McGovern can't stop yet; he'll be on that campaign trail today, making that final push. 4L t£c4t4an tU1! Edited and managed by students at the ' University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opnions of the author. This must be noted in al reprints. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 Summer Staff BOB ANDREWS :..... . .... . ..................... Associate Sports Editor ROBERT BARKIN , . . ...................................... Night Editor JAN BENEDETTI .. .. . ......... .... Night Editor ROSE SUE BERSTEIN . ........................ .............. Co-Editor DANIEL BORUS .................................. Sports Night Editor ROBERT CONROW ..... . . . ................................. Books Editor LINDA DREEBEN .. . ...............................,..... Night Editor DENNY GAINER . -..... ....................... . Photography Editor ANDY GOLDING ..... ....... ........................ Business Manager MERYL GORDON ... . ............................... Assistant Night Editor HARRY HIRSCH ... ........... ... . ................... Display Manager SHERRY KASTLE . ................................. Circulation Manager KAREN LAAKKO ............................ Classified Manager ELLIOT LEGOW .......... ,...................... ......... Sports Editor ARTHUR LERNER ............................................. Co-Editor DIANE LEVICK ................ ............ Assistant Night Editor DAVID MARGOLICK..... . ..... . . .Photographer SHEILA MARTIN .......... ....... General Business Assistant JIM O'BRIEN . ................................. Science Editor CHRIS PARKS .... . . ...................................... Night Editor NANCY ROSENBAUM ........,............... Assistant Night Editor PAUL RUSKIN .. ........................ Assistant Night Editor ROLFE TESSEM . ................. . ..................... Photographer PAUL TRAVIS .. .................. . ... . ....... . ............ Night Editor GARY VILLANI . . ........ . .......................... . Photographer JIM WALLACE ........................................... Photographer DEBORAH WHITING .................................. Circulation Assistant CAROL WIECK . .................... General Business Assist ant NIGHT EDITOR: CHRIS PARKS NIGHT EDITOR: PAUL TRAVIS ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITOR: DIANE LEVICK EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR: ROSE SUE BERSTEIN PHOTO TECHNICIAN: DENNY GAINER The Bar of Justice Letters to The Daily Day care voting their own sexist life styles threat- care far outweighs such consid- ened by a child care center for erations. We urge those concerned To The Daily: non-working class women. with traffic flow to join usin THE HUMAN Rights Party sup- HRP supports the right of all the fight for a complete system ports the appeal to the Ann Arbor women and men, whether they of public transportation, which Zoning Hoard of Appeals by the work or not, to child care for their would cut down on traffic all aver Community Day Care and Pre- children. All human beings - over Ann Arbor. As for property values, School Center, Inc., which seeks half of whom are women - have they are skyrocketing all over the to establish a child care center the right to develop themselves city, and a child care center won't in the neighborhood bounded by outside or inside the home, as change that. The last time we Stadium, State, and Packard. This they choose. All women and men, heard the old argument a b o u t organization of parents has satis- including those on welfare, have property values was when it was fied every technical requirement the right to stay home with their used to try to .block blacks from needed to obtain the Board's ap- children if they wish. And if they moving into white neighborhoods. proval. A large majority of the choose to participate in activities Those who argue against t h e neighbors within the specified 300 away from home, child care must Community Day Care center feet of the proposed center have be available for them, would have society stagnate in the signed a petition in favor of it. interests of a few. HRP rges Yet the Zoning Board appears rather that we move forward on ready to reject their proposal. E BOARD'S HESITATION al- the basis of our systematic plat- Why? so suggests that some of its mem- form, to serve all the people. hers may be against another as- A number of neighbors who op- pect of the proposed center. The pose the center have informed the Community Day Care group wants LASTLY, WE WANT to remind Community Day Care group that to serve its neighborhood, b u t the Board that we are watching they feel women who can afford also feels a responsibility toward carefully the steps they take on not to work should stay home with low income areas. Therefore, it this appeal. They have allowed the their children. The hesitation of has set a quota, for both children group two public hearings to en- the Board members suggests that and staff, of 50 per cent from the able the evidence to be presenced. they may suffer from the same neighborhood and 50 per cent low HRP strongly suggests that tSe bias. We suspect that some Board income from outside the neigh- Board open to the public the meet- members are favorable to propos- borhood. Given the fact that the ing in which they actually decade als for child care centers among Community Day Care group h a s this - and all other issues. The poor and black people, because satisfied all technical requirements decision-making process, as well such facilities supposedly k e e p for approval, a rejection by fise as hearings, should be open to re- black mothers off ADC by enab- Board would certainly suggest that view by the public, which t h e ling them to work. We suspect that the latter is in favor of continued Board supposedly repcesenta. If some Board members grudgingly segregation of high and low in- they wish to refute the charges acknowedge the need for child come, black and white children. made above, they mast let us care in families where the wife The other arguments against the see who votes for and against the must work out of financial neces- The oter are agit the seeh, and agans sity. Finally, we suspect, t h at proposed center are that it would center, and let us hear the reasons much of the hostility to 'the Com- increase traffic flow in the area for their votes. munity Day Care proposal arises and decrease property values. HRP -The human Pithts Party because some Board members feel believes that the need for cI'Pd June 19