i air kian Bafu Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the outhor. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 The molasses in Miami: Delegates wallow in it Prs (enl Me overn THE SLOW-TALKING senator from South Dakota has done it again. George McGovern has deftly cleared the last hurdle on the road to a first-ballot victory. With his over- whelming victory in the California credentials challenge vote, his immediate concern has become writing an ac- ceptance speech. Most old political pros, still blinking at the last few months, will nonetheless tell you that McGovern's chances of beating Richard Nixon in the fall are dismal at best. "The President has a commanding lead in all opinion polls," they will say with all the cynicism of so-called political savvy. "'Right now Nixon is an unbeat- able frontrunner." We can hear it now. RECALL THAT in January Edmund Muskie's frontrun- ner position was touted in the same light of inevit- ability. And that the amazing Mr. McGovern proceeded, against all prophecies from "old pros", won ten pri- maries, six of them in a row. At every major threshold of this campaign, there has been some "old pro" standing around saying, "Nice guy. Lots of ideals. Too bad he can't win." NOW THE "nice guy" is about to become the Democrats' standard-bearer. And of course, the pros have begun their familiar refrain about nice guys. November, un- doubtedly, will be as predictable as all the primaries were. Which certainly is good news for George McGovern. -DAN BIDDLE By PAUL TRAVIS MIAMI BEACH BRILLIANTLY LIT by glaring flood lights, surrounded by vine-covered chain linked fence, hutndreds of Secret Service (S) agents scurrying about checking everying, the Miami Beach Con- vention Hall is the perfect place to watch the political maneuver- ing of the Democr'atic party. waiting to get a security clear- ance for my typewriter, conver- sation was momentarily interupt- ed by the low-flying military heli- copters searching out trouble. "They should have a couple of those inside the hall," commented one SS man, "That's where all the fighting is going to be." And the carillon bells of a near- by church chimed out Glory, Glory, Halleistia. IT IS A convention of contradic- tions. It is a convention that saw Sena- tsr Bubert Humphrey try to use the McGovern reform rules to deny McGovern the California de- legation and the nomination. It is a convention that the news media over-saturated with coverage and still had no idea of what was really happening on the floor. IT IS A convention that is billed as the most open and free con- vention ever. Yet, the restrictions on movement around the floor and the convention hall is unbelievably strict. To gain access to the hall you must have an oblong cardboard pass with your area stamped on it. A pass marked PRESS will not get you on the convention floor. One marked PHOTO will not get you into the press stands. O n e marked DELEGATE will not get you near the guest seats. And the one marked GUESTS will not get you anywhere but your seat. "I'm sorry, but that pass will not get up up here," said the pret- ty ushers hired by the Democratic National Committee. And the two SS men standing behind her per- suaded you not to argue. One pass, however, will get you anywhere. The all-mightly FLOOR PASS. And it is hard to get, Members of the press have to stand in line up to an hour to get one of the rotating floor passes and then are told "have it back in a half an hour or you will -ot be allowed back in the convention to- morrow." On the convention floor for the brief half hour, you find cnaos and confusion. THOUSANDS ARE on the floor, apparently wandering mindlessly around. Hundreds of media peo- ple with ear plugs growing from their ears are running here and there trying to find somebody with a name. Even if you don't know any of the important faces, you just have to count the number of reporters around a person to jdge his or her importance. But if you make it to the floor a second or, if you're lucky. - third time, you begin to notice things about the .massive crowd of dele- gates here to decide the future of the Democratic Party. MOST OF THE delegates spend their time sleeping, reading, try- ing to get interviewed or playing the most popular game on Miami Beach this week - Spot the Cele- brity. The lebritie " could range from Norman Mailer scowling at Gloria Steinam to U.N.C.L.E.'s R o b e r t Vaughn doing a television inter- view with Abbie Hoffman w h o wore a media pass with Popular Mechanics scrawled across the top. The rest of the delegates are A snoozing delegate They are down in Miami Beach first to work, then to play. 'Ite festive air ,seen at past conei- tions is gone, no bands, a few straw hats and giant buttons and almost no balloons. They are at the convention to do a job. The delegates have come to vote, not to listen to speakers or march in the aisles. They came to cast their vote the way they had de- cided to long ago. The main thing to notice on the floor is that no one listens to speakers. The delegates heard all the arguments before, long before they came into the convention hall. And if any confusing procedural questions come up that they might not understand, as in the Cali- fornia. challenge, the delegates just sit back and wait for the aide of the various political camps to come around and advise them how to vote. Today's Staff . . . playing power politics. They are running around shaking hands, patting backs and shooting bull. "Hey, did you hear about the New York delegation, they're slip- ping away." "No, you're wrong, it's the It- linois delegation, it's Illinois that's slipping." "Maybe, but I heard that they're Gaining strength in Tennessee" BUT THE JOB of the delegate is not that easy. The delegates are forced to sit through roll call vote after roll call vote. "I just sit here and pray that it will be decided by a voice vote," said a woman delegate from Iowa. She cringed as Larry O'Brien again said from the podium ,"The chair is in doubt, the cleri will cal the roll." And on it goes. News: Jan Benedetti, Alan Lenhoff, Marilyn Riley Editorial Page: Carla Rapoport Photo Technician: Denny Gainer ., 'Kf" S pETER. POWSTR C[-I!CAK) COU-AW51 A0Q %A~k' soUTN- 6 FACTOR -MIP 10ro VEAROLpt OOHS A-P[OAI4ACC c s , 2- IQ MY MI&p FROM CHR moM ~FACTOR. 0 U ca-(- 7-'