To shake a Republican's hand By JIM TOBIN A" WHAT CONSERVATIVES we are at the Daily. Reactionaries we are. There is no or- ganized group on campus with a more formal code of conser-ing the old, of cursing the new. But sve get confused. We call the new the old and main- tain that we, the old, are the new. Our ancestors started the whole program ten years ago, and they really were the new. They were angry about civil rights and American inter- vention in other continents - things that we are still angry aboot. By 1968 they hated Richard Nixon and the Reouhlican party as all groups in an in- tense political struggle hate their opponents. Lyn- don Johnson and most of the Democratic Party. were hated too, but they had lost power. The hate pissed from one class to another, from one group of Daily editors to the next. There was reason for it, of course; Johnson and Nixon and the rest did abominable things in Vietnam and back here. At a y rate, every conservative around was tied to the hated, and were hated in kind. No one marches in the streets now; would-be activists wince as they come to realize that there are few followers now. But among activists and edi- tors the enmity for "conservatives" lasts, and even though the protests have moistly gone away, there is a certain legacy that taints the attitudes of us, the heirs of the Great Anti-Conservative Tradition. Deane BHker is a Regent of the University, and a lot of people around here don't like him much. tHe ran for the Senate as a Republican, and last week he lost. His chief opponent was Marvin Esch, Ann Arbor's congressman, and some people around campus don't like him much either, but they like him better than Baker because he is more liberal than Baker. IF TIIEY KNEW the other Republican candidates -Robert Iluber and Thomas Brennan-they would like them even less than Baker. Both, par- ticularly Buber, are extremely conservative on the ssues upon woich such things are judged, by the sta-dards of those who do the judging. And so a reporter going about the business of telling something abost these evil people goes into the frav like a Crusader on the heels of the infidel; The Great Anti-Conservative Tradition is like the Jesuit missionary's Bible. The Truth rests with activist heirs, and the Republican Party-the forces of darkness-cowers in the glare. Which is what makes it so difficult when the Crusader finds that the infidel is human. It hap- pened to me in the past month while I covered the Republicans in the race for the Senate. These God- awful betrayers of the people were not so horrible. I didn't agree with them very often, but they didn't breathe fire. A reporter is supposed to be cynical, to be be- yond the emotions that sway the public he or she writes about. The rule above all others is that every politician is a crook, an opportunist seeking fame, power and money by the easiest method at hand; to be Republican is the kiss of death, of course, be- cause the Democratic opportunists at least have the right ideas in their corruption. But one wants to believe so much. That is. why newspapers report politics at all, I suppose - be- catse the people want inspiration, they want to be led. And so to my radical forbears I apologize. A couple of those guys said what they thought, and I believed they meant it. If I did not agree with them, I respected them. They were not the ogres we all supposed. TWO WEEKS AGO I sat on a bench in Kennedy Square in Detroit and Thomas Brennan talked about his, campaign. He was chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, and after those years on the bench he felt he wanted a shot at Congress. He ran for the House twenty years ago, and so it is clear that the run for the Senate was just anoth- er past of an old ambition to hold office. His goals seemed no more noble than those of any others. I had no reason to believe his rhetoric other than the fact that I simply did believe him; it was the act of faith anyone makes when the eyes meet and the listener says, "He means it." He was criticizing Esch for being a fence-strad- djcr, for getting both liberals and conservatives to say they supported him. "Whether or not everyone is fifty-one per cent with me on all the issues, I don't know, and candidly, I don't care," he said. Brennan spoke quickly, his voice pitched high with the frustration of being behind and trying to ex- plain why. "I really don't care. I'm makin' more money than a U. S. Senator. I'm not trying to get a job. I'm a lawyer, I do that very successfully, very well. I think of political life as an interupM- tion. It's like military service; you go in for awhile, you do the best you can and you get out, hopefully with your shirt, and. with some honor. You've made a sacrifice." Many people actively fear Robert Huber for his rightist views, for saying the Equal'Rights Amend- ment is "degrading to womanhood," for defend- ing Richard xNixon until August of 1974, for won- dering if people still have the "moral courage" to fight socialism. _ But the man is not the devil. He is sort of chub- by, wears rumpled, long-sleeved shirts in ninety- degree weather; he looks like the guy who owns the hardware store. And he has to be admired for the courage it takes to say the things he believes; it kills him politically, because the state party leadership watches him like the Russians watched Ghenghis Khan. As Deane Baker said, "You know, Bob is a good guy. He's an honest guy, He'll tell you like it is." And with a thoughtful raise of the eyebrows, he adds, "Of course, it isn't always a useful political characteristic." AND THE CAMPAIGNING they do - one has to respect them for it. This is not Jimmy Carter approaching a love-struck Democratic convention. It is' grinding self-presentation to people who don't know you and don't really care to know you. "You have the handshaking and interrupting peo- ple while they're eating their lunch," said Bren- nan. "There is a hurt to one's ego when a person refuses to shake your hand or refuses to meet your gaze. One gal in that restaurant just a moment ago-I stuck out my hand-and you just leave it there until you're sure that they've seen it-I'm standing with my hand out waiting for her to take it and she said 'You a Republican?' I said 'Yes' and she says 'I thought so.' I said, 'Oh, you don't shake hands with Republicans?' 'Nope."' Abbie Hoffman snd Angela Davis would im- dottbtedly dislike Tom Brennan - for what he believes. "What a fascist," we at the Daily say about the politician who holds his sort of views. But the legacy of the activists wears thin after awhile. We are like the woman who wouldn't shake Bren- nan's hand. We blind ourselves by doing so. Jim Tobin is co-diricfor of the Daily's s mtier The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, August 10, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 On presidential debates SIXTEEN YEARS AGO, John Kennedy and Richard Nixon took to opposite tables and engaged in a far- ranging televised debate on the issues't facing the 1960 presidential election. As it turned out, the youthful and calm Kennedy prevailed in the debate and went on to a hairline victory over Nixon later that year. Presidential elections since then, have not featured debates between the candidates, and for more than a decade voters have been unable to reap the benefits of listening to the contenders espouse on the issues. This year, however, we may see Jimmy Carter and the Republican nominiee take to the airwaves and wrestle on this issues. President Ford announced over the week- end that he "had not ruled out" the possibility of de- bating Carter, who has already indicated a desire to participate in one. Ronald Reagan, accustomed to speak- ing before a camera. has also voiced a desire to flaunt his smooth rhetorical style befote millions of Americans. We hope Carter and the Republican nominee plan to collaborate in a televised debate later this year. There is no better. forum than a televised encounter to help crystallize the issues the voters must ponder when choosing candidates. Carter and Reagan seem willing to debate. We hope Ford feels the same way if and when he wins the nomination AFTER COMPILING A LIST OFl AK5LA1 ON:'O U1 VICE PRESIDENTIAL PROSPECTS ' PRINCIPLE WHOSE BASIC BELIEFS WERE WAW11NOMNAIlQU-j COMPATIBLE WITH MY OWN .. I HAVE SELECTED SENATOR /7 SCHWEIKER. MY POSITION ON BUSING IS / A1ArIQIWEYB80V QUITE COMPATIBLE WITH, 7 SWANTf V 0 CM THAT OF MR. CARTER.,, ' Q 11AIdq I HAVEN'T EXCLUDED ANYONE . A;tLA1Ifl'OAK FROM CONSIDERATION FOR THE u'ApTILLA E IN IfIf VICE PRESIDENTIAL, NOMINATION. 149LPMA% Or I WON'T LIE TO YOU )AYU OR MISLEAD YOU! N VE CAT( L. AlIT!11" TLE MILWAUKEE jotuNAl. rjw xrrrM~rp, gpdtx W u