Mugging at the Convention IyJ EFFREV SELIST NEW YO1K-uge klieg li'hts suddenly flashed on, and caught in the glare, we blinked. Cam- eras rolled around on all sides, and people with yellow tags around their necks issued crisp orders in every direction. Flunk- ies were everywhere. This was the lobby of the Statler Ililton Hotel, in New York City, on Tuesday, July 13, 1976, and the Democratic Na- tional Convention was in full swing. Delegates, newspeople, and operations personnel made Madison Square Garden and the Statler Hilton their headquar- ters. Two friends and I had made the decision to go to New York about 1i a.m. on the 13th, lured by the promise of press cre- dentials being given away wan- tonly, and the excitement, and the glamor. We drove twelve and a half hours straight, from 4:30 a.m. until S p.m., and there met friends in the lobby of the hotel. And there it was. One of the most important news events of the year, possibly the decade, and we were in on it. It was- in a word-overwhelming. The Statler liltton swas a bee- hive, Possessed of an elegant lobby and a gigantic mezzanine floor, the hotel n-as taken over by delegations from various states, and by the press. The entire mezzanine floor, as a matter of fact, had been con- verted into makeshift press of- fices, via curtains and rods. Rumor has it that the floor space was going at $15 per square foot. Every major news- paper and wire service in the country was represented - De- troit by the Scripps-IHoward (Detroit News) office and the Knight-Ridder (Detroit Free Press) office. IN TH LOBBY there was a bar, converted for the con- vention, known as the Donkey Den. As there were several of us in the group, and we all spent the night running back and forth from the hotel to vari- ous places in the city to Madi- son Square Garden, we chose to meet at various intervals at the Den. The first major desire was to have dinner, thence to be- come credentialed for the con- vention. We had one to pass around, that belonging to a The Michigan Daily, Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Friday, July 16, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Mondal: A good choice SENATOR WALTER MONDALE is our first choice for vice-president. We are glad he is Jimmy Carter's as well. Our first choice, that is, out of Carter's main con- tenders; we certainly would have been pleased with a nomination of Texas Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, a woman more inspiring than any other Democrat who stepped to the convention podium this week. It is difficult, of course, to be sure of the motivations for Carter's final choice. Besides being a liberal, a Nor- therner, and a member of Congress, Mondale is an at- tractive candidate in the JFK mold. Photogenic, smooth, he will present a pleasant new face to match Carter's own. Even if this is why Carter picked him, we are lucky to benefit from the strength of his progressive record. Mondale has long been involved with urban affairs as well as budget legislation, and has handled both areas competently. His decision to drop out of the presidential race last year has been cited by some as a fault, as an indication that he is not tough enough for the long cam- paign. But if there is anything frightening about Carter, (as well as several recent presidents), it is that he wanted the job too much, that his desire might be untempered by scruples. That Mondale was less voracious, that he weighed the alternatives and took the less exciting, is refreshing. Duity phstographer. I took his yellow press pass and waltzed through the police lines and on into the plaza. But first a note. There were identical passes for everyone except that they came in dif- ferent colors. Red passes were for delegates, bright green for "honored guests," green for mere "guests," light blue for alternates, blue for U.S. Sen- ators and Representatives, and yellow and pink for the press. That was the problem. The yellow press passes were easier to come by, but didn't allow the newsperson onto the floor. The process was complicated. The yellow pass, once inside the "perimeter" (yellow was marked "News - Perimeter"), would be swapped for the pink pass which contained a perfor- ated tag to be ripped off upon entering the floor. In a half- hour (the allotted time for use of the floor pass), the pink pass wearer had to redeem his yellow; if he failed to do so, he might have trouble redeem- ing it at all. So the real fight was to get hold of a pink pass. But! One also needed a hand stamp! ("All right, put the pink pass in your pocket, wear the yellow. Now, go out, getting your hand stamp- ed for reentry. Then, wear both the yellow and pink back in.") There are ways of circumvent- ing security. HEN ONE HAD to get hold of a floor pass. Enough already, I thought. I watched Humphrey's speech from the perimeter area, and went back to the Statler. But not before bumping into one of the most incredible peo- ple I met on the trip - Repre- sentative Barbara Jordan from Texas, hanging about the back of the ABC booth, on her way nut fromn the floor. I was.- floor- ed (no pun intended). We had a brief if inconsequential chat about the proceedings. They were, she agreed, somewhat predictable, though not unin- spiring. Jordan herself had come un- der some heavy speculation from the news media, follow- ing her impressive keynote speech, that she might be con- sidered for the vice-presidential spot. Even as unlikely as such a choice would be, she acknowl- edged that such attention could hardly harm her career. I went downstairs to the Rail- road Lounge, a press lair for credentialed reporters, where beer, pop, and sandwiches were being served free of charge. I flashed my little Lounge pass at the guard, who waved me in. There I saw three tele- vision sets, one of which was carrying Humphrey's speech, and two of which (and I might add, the ones the reporters were all watching) carried the All-Star Game. Well,.I didn't know whether to be insulted or amused. I went back to the hotel, where a couple of us went to the Penn Bar, I think it was called, and proceeded to down seve r a l overpriced drinks. There was a familiar voice be- hind us, and we turned - none other than University Regent Sarah Power, a convention Al- ternate delegate, was sitting behind us, having a drink with a friend. By now, it was positively Old Home Week. I had run into a photographer I knew at the Garden, and we were later to run into an ex-Daily staffer in the Hilton lobby, where he had just arrived from Washington and was looking for a taxi to take him to Greenwich Village! vania? Well Milt told me the absolute inside scoop that hi, delegates are going to go for Carter. But don't let Newsweek hear! Or AP! It'll be all over the country in ten minites and we have to break it to The Daily!") The commotion was unbeliev- able. Other members of our party took the credentials that we were passing around, and hopped on to the convention floor, while I decided to look up a friend who lived in a dorm at NYU in the Village. He wasn't in, of course, but I had a chance to watch everyone in the lobby of his dorm, huddled SECONDS WERE ticking away madly. Here it was, ten p.m., and we were leaving for Ann Arbor in just a few hours. I went upstairs to the press floor again, and there ran into another notable, and one just perfect for the budding young journalistic groupie like myself. Sally Quinn of the Washington Post (and briefly of the CBS Morning News) was standing about, bewildered. Mistaking me for an operations staffer, she asked me directions to one of the newspaper rooms. I had remerbered seeing it, and we walked over to their impressive suite, chatting all the whiles I was bowled over, to put it mild- ly. One of the others I'd come with was busily cornering poli- ticians on the Garden floor, and gave us a haughty report later. ("God, that Dick Daley is a laff riot - and you know Gov- ernor Milton Shapp of Pennsyl- around the TV sets, observing excitedly the most minute de- tails of the convention. ("Isn't that Coretta King" I toss off to my companion. "Yes," she replies, surely loud enough for everyone to hear. "Poor dear. I hope she's overcome her at- tack of nerves. You know how she gets." A few heads swivel around. "Oh my GOD!" I say in alarm, looking intently at ay watch. "We've got to get back - they'll be preparing the re- leases and we've got to talk to Beame!" "Beame?!" return- ed my companion. "Hubert told me to be up in his suite in an hour!" Everyone is staring at us now. 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