. r. .n' -U 0 0 B00K EXCERPT Paul Welistone: The Life of a Passionate Progressive By Bill Lofy Courtesy of The University of Michigan Press, Copyright 2005 Paul Wellstone was a U.S. Senator from Minnesota from 1990 until the time of his death in a plane crash in 2002. A hero to many on the left and a favorite target of the right, Wellstone was an unapologetic liberal in an increasingly conservative era. Wellstone entered politics after a two-decade career as a teacher and organizer. A professor at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota for 21 years, Wellstone was an unconventional scholar and accomplished grassroots organizer. It was during his immersion in protest politics at Carleton that Wellstone developed the techniques and leadership skills that would eventually help him become a U.S. senator. - Bill Lofy I'd say I'm completely neutral toward the tradition, as long as the tradition isn't wak- ing me up in the morning. n the fall of 1969, Wellstone arrived in Minnesota, entering a political environment notably different from the conservatism of North Carolina, where he received his undergraduate degree and PhD from the University of North Carolina. These were the glory days of Minnesota liberalism. The Democratic Farmer-Labor Party (DFL), the product of a 1943 merger between Minnesota Democrats and the influential Farmer- Labor movement, held a vice grip on power in the state. Hubert Humphrey was returning to the United States Sen- ate, where he had served since 1949, after four years as vice president under Lyndon Johnson. Eugene McCarthy was completing his second and final term in the Senate, and Walter Mondale was fin- ishing his first term as senator. At Carleton College, Wellstone immersed himself in campus activism - organizing protests, criticizing the school's administration for its ties to corporate interests, and speaking out on every issue, minor and major, affecting the community. "It was clear," said Sy Schuster, one of Wellstone's Carleton friends and colleagues, "that he was less concerned about academic political sci- ence than about political science directly Courtesy of Bill Lofy Sen. Paul Welistone (D-Minn.) fought an ambitious political agenda in the 1990s. Bill Lofy, the author of a biography of Wellstone, will read portions of his book on Oct. 6 at 7 p.m. in Hutchins Hall. I servicing people's needs." Wellstone fre- quently included community service and organizing projects as part of his class- room curriculum. As a teacher, Wellstone is remem- bered for his passion and uncommon ability to relate to his students. When he arrived at Carleton at the age of 25, his students were not much younger than he was, and they viewed Wellstone, who looked, acted, and talked like them, as a contemporary. One of his students recol- lected being a freshman in Wellstone's first class as a professor: "Like me, he wore t-shirts and jeans to class and seemed to pay scant atten- tion to the reading list he'd assigned, except that he had an amazing com- mand of facts that he used to support his lectures, which actually were more like speeches. His brilliance was mani- fest. He was a first year teacher, so he couldn't have memorized his lectures, but he spoke without notes for an hour. He wasn't constrained by a podium, but he was predictable. Every lecture he'd start with his fingers jammed into his jeans with the thumbs hooked over the edge of the pocket, as if he were trying to restrain himselffrom what he must have known was coming--the inevitable rising volume, quickening cadence, and karate chopping of knowledge into our small freshman brains." Despite his strongly held views, Well- stone was also known for welcoming debate in his classes. Another student recalled,"Whether students were liberal or conservative didn't matter. He pushed us to think about what we could do to make change in the world." As a scholar, Wellstone pursued an unconventional path. He ignored conven- tional "publish-or-perish" wisdom, which says that an untenured professor without a substantial body of published scholarly work has little hope of receiving tenure. During his two years at Carleton, he wrote only one article for a scholarly jour- nal. Instead of producing scholarship, he concentrated on organizing. "I was deter- mined not to be an outside observer but to use my skills as a political scientist to empower people and to step forward with people in justice struggles," he said later. By the end of his third year in Min- nesota, Wellstone could point to an impressive list of accomplishments as an organizer. He helped raise awareness of rural poverty in Rice County, led protests against local government leaders, and trained an impressive number of students in the essentials of organizing. Above all, he enabled a cadre of poor and dis- enfranchised individuals to become their own leaders. Yet for all his successes as an organizer, Wellstone was putting his career at risk, because Carleton hired him to teach and to be a scholar, not to organize. In 1973, the administration admon- ished Wellstone to forego his organiz- ing activities and pursue more rigorous academic research. They warned him if he didn't make changes, his contract would be terminated the following year. But Wellstone refused to change. Over the course of the next year, he continued his organizing work. Instead of publish- ing academic articles, he chronicled his experience with OBRC in a book. Car- leton was unimpressed, and made good on its threat in January of 1974. In a unanimous decision by the political sci- ence department, dean, president, and board of trustees, Wellstone's contract was terminated. He was given a year to find another job. Led by a group of seniors, the Carleton student body rallied to Wellstone's sup- port. Within weeks of the announcement that his contract would not be renewed, a group of students formed the Commit- tee to Reinstate Paul Wellstone, which led protests on Wellstone's behalf, gath- ered 790 signatures (out of a student body of 1,600) demanding the decision be reversed, and led a student boycott of courses in the political science depart- ment. After months of pressure, the dean of the college, Bruce Morgan, agreed to take "the procedurally extraordinary step" of bringing two tenured members of faculty at other universities to evalu- ate Wellstone's work. The evaluators, Frances Fox Piven and Bruce Bacharach - both professors of poverty and race studies - wrote overwhelmingly posi- tive assessments. Wellstone's future was secured when Dean Morgan, who had originally sup- ported the administration's decision, changed his mind and threatened to resign if Wellstone were not reinstated and offered immediate tenure. The board, nearly a year after refusing to renew Wellstone's contract, reversed its decision and awarded the 28-year-old tenure. He had gone from being denied reappointment for his perceived lack of scholarly credentials to being the young- est faculty member in Carleton's history to receive tenure. Book Reading Where: Hutchins Hall, Room 150 When: Oct. 6, 7 p.m. Presented by University of Michi- gan Press. money and a waste of space for actual fans for me to be there when I really don't care," said LSA senior Lauren Sogor, who spends her Saturdays studying and work- ing out in the gym, where the exercise machines are readily available. The near-emptiness of campus isn't the only clear indication of a Football Satur- day. Last year, Jacobson was constantly awakened by a rumbling in his apartment on State Street. His walls were shaking because of the noise coming from the house parties down the street and the vibrations of thousands of feet hitting the pavement on their way to the stadium. "When everyone is going down to the game, it's insane. Everybody matches, it's weird," Ibrahim said. The students who don't go to the games still hear the results of the contest. At a school where a nine-win season is considered a bad year and a loss to Ohio State is inexcusable, word gets around. One of Jacobson's friends usually men- tions the outcome of the game to him, while Ibrahim usually hears the result in passing conversations. The names of quarterback Chad Henne and coach Lloyd Carr ring a bell (although Ibrahim answered "Who?" when I asked who Chad Henne was), but to these students, they're no more important than any other person in Ann Arbor and certainly not the near-celebrities that other students perceive them as. The long tradition is acknowledged, but not necessarily fully comprehended. "I don't think I understood how impor- tant football was when I first came to (the University), but I like the school for many other reasons," Ibrahim said. "I'd say I'm completely neutral to the tradition, as long as the tradition isn't waking me up in the morning," Jacobson added. The City Prepares The city of Ann Arbor is a little more than 28 square miles in size, with a population of about 114,000. It has plenty of local shops, a huge art fair every summer, 153 parks and a median income of about $54,000. On Football Saturdays, the city transforms from a college town to a party host, accommodating more than 50,000 additional people, a conservative estimate of the city's guests, according to Mary Kerr, the president of the Ann Arbor Area Convention and Visitor's Bureau, an organization that helps organize the mas- sive crowd with information, directions and maps. With all things considered, Kerr guess- es that the city brings in roughly $1.5 mil- lion per game. There are more than 4,000 hotel rooms in Washtenaw County and on football weekends, most are occupied (Kerr said that vacancies for Ohio State weekend were already filling up fast). Also, the local businesses have a boom that one would expect when a city's popu- lation goes up by nearly 50 percent. The city benefits from the small stands set up all around the stadium, getting a couple - Alexander Jacobson LSA junior hundred dollars for even a small merchan- dise stand. Restaurants are swamped, store's beer supplies run out, and Michi- gan merchandise flies off the shelves. At Great Lakes Team Apparel on State Street, owner Robert Duerksen said that on Football Saturday, all of his employ- ees work and his store does four times the business than on a regular fall Saturday. Right around the corner, at Moe's Sport Shop, manager Mike Walton has his store stocked with twice as much merchandise than in the summer months, preparing for at least a 50 percent increase in traffic and generally, three or four times the amount of normal business. "It's a dramatic difference," Wal- ton said. Keeping some semblance of order among the huge crowd is no easy feat. Since Michigan Stadium falls on the Uni- versity campus, the Department of Public Safety - a fully certified and trained police department - is in charge of orga- nizing law enforcement officers around the stadium. Far from being alone, city police, the county sheriff and the fire department all lend a hand - with the cost of all this security, according to DPS spokesperson Diane Brown, coming out of the Athletic Department's pocket. Brown describes the task of organiz- ing everybody "a science," and in many ways, it is. The job of DPS on game days is to serve more as a watchdog than the strong arm of the law. When it comes to arresting perpetrators, Brown said that it varies completely from game to game. Factors such as the time of the game, the weather and the opponent all are considered. Ticket scalping is also an obvious issue for both the Ath- letic Department and the police. The Athletic Department checks websites and keeps a list of people who report stolen tickets, while DPS stays on the lookout for scalpers, although Brown admits that "it's not the primary focus for game days." Inside the stadium, DPS has the official authority, but an officer is usually paired with a sheriff trooper of a state trooper, creating the ability to enforce both university ordinanc- es and state laws. The men wearing yellow "Event Staff" clothing who stand at the entrances both inside and outside of the stadium are actually employees of the Athletic Depart- ment and they handle the list of pro- hibited items, which has evolved over the years. DPS is stationed at the gates as well, handling the criminal element of whatever situation arises, an evolution of the policy in 2000, where officers roamed the stadium. The alcohol policy changes as well. Even though the majority of tickets hand- ed out are for alcohol possession in the stadium, parking lots on the athletic cam- pus are granted exceptions for alcohol on Football Saturdays. "It's perfectly legal for of-age individu- als to be standing there with an open can of beer in their hand," Brown said. Game Over Police officers finish up their rounds, Werth and his family pack up the camper and head home, Ibrahim finishes practice and band members conclude the post-game show. Another Football Saturday has ended in Ann Arbor. Life is returning to normal, but for one morning and afternoon, a city was turned upside down. Families came together, students broke from their normal routines and everybody left with a lasting impression of just how different everything is on a Football Saturday. The 24-member drumline of the mar( Hall 90 minutes before kickoff each Students Fly Cheaper Big Thinking It sets us ai School of Information master's sti look at all angles. 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