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<text id=93HT1092>
<title>
68 Election: Chicago:Dementia in the Second City
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1968 Election
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
September 6, 1968
THE NATION
Dementia in the Second City
</hdr>
<body>
<p> The assault from the left was furious, flunky and bizarre.
Yet the Chicago police department responded in a way that could
only be characterized as sanctioned mayhem. With billy clubs,
tear gas and Mace, the blue-shirted, blue-helmeted cops violated
the civil rights of countless innocent citizens and contravened
every accepted code of professional police discipline.
</p>
<p> No one could accuse the Chicago cops of discrimination.
They savagely attacked hippies, yippies, New Leftists,
revolutionaries, dissident Democrats, newsmen, photographers,
passers-by, clergymen and at least one cripple. Winston
Churchill's journalist grandson got roughed up. Playboy's Hugh
Hefner took a whack on the backside. The police even victimized
a member of the British Parliament, Mrs. Anne Kerr, a
vacationing Laborite who was Maced outside the Conrad Hilton and
hustled off to the lockup.
</p>
<p> Creative Warlord. "The force used was the force that was
necessary," insisted Police Superintendent James Conlisk Jr. He
could point to the fortunate fact that no one was killed. He
also pointed out--almost with pride--that the casualties
included 152 cops. Yet the cops' excesses during the Democratic
Convention were not basically Conlisk's doing. Chicago is Mayor
Richard J. Daley's satrapy.
</p>
<p> Daley takes a fierce, eccentric pride in Chicago. For 13
years, he has ruled his province like a Chinese warlord. The
last of America's big-city bosses, the jowly, irascible mayor
has on the whole been a creative autocrat, lacing his
megalopolis with freeways, pulling in millions of federal
spending.
</p>
<p> Daley is also something of an original. In a city with as
robust a tradition of political corruption as Boston or New
York, he has maintained a pristine record of personal honesty.
Yet, like any other expert monarch, he has always known where
and how to tolerate corruption within his realm. The son of a
sheet-metal worker, Daley grew up in the gritty district of
Bridgeport, where he continues to live in a modest bungalow.
After starting out as a secretary to the city council at 25,
Daley scrambled upward through the party ranks. Hence his
understanding of Chicago's muscles and nerves is deeply
intuitive. But it is growing archaic, as the mayor's lines to
the Negro community atrophy and he continues to rule in the
personalistic style of a benevolent Irish despot of the wards.
</p>
<p> Daley nonetheless retains formidable influence within the
Democratic Party. Thanks to his control of the state government
and delegation, King Richard is one of the most assiduously
courted Democratic politicians in the country. As Robert Kennedy
said last spring: "Dick Daley means the ball game."
</p>
<p> It was through such clout that he secured the Democratic
convention for Chicago. However, Lyndon Johnson and other party
leaders are equally to blame. They wanted the convention in
Chicago this year in large part because they felt that it was
the one city where the authorities could deal successfully with
the planned disruptions. Daley thought so as well.
</p>
<p> Bristling Camp. Some Democratic officials sensed disaster.
First an electrical workers' strike ruined prospects for
adequate television coverage of the streets, which Daley might
not have wanted anyway. The strike, called 14 weeks before the
convention, also prevented the installation of telephones and
seriously impeded the candidates' operations. Then, nine days
before the convention opened, drivers for the city's two major
cab companies struck. Racial violence, which mercifully never
erupted, was a real prospect. So were angry demonstrations by
the young.
</p>
<p> But the mayor had his way with the party. "Law and order
will be maintained," he repeated ritualistically. He put his
11,900-man police force on twelve hour shifts, called up more
than 5,000 Illinois National Guard troops. In addition, some
6,500 federal troops were flown in. Daley turned Chicago into
a bristling army camp, with a posse of more than 23,000 at the
ready. The convention hall was protected by barbed wire and
packed with cops and security agents. WELCOME TO PRAGUE said
demonstrators' signs.
</p>
<p> No Amenities. Daley refused the protesters permission to
sleep on the grass of Chicago's Lincoln Park, a 1,185-acre
expanse on the North Side. Critics of the cops pointed out that
the site was ideal for the dissidents; it would also have been
ideal for the police, who could have left the kids alone and
stood guard on the fringes of the park until the soldiers of
dissent got bored and left or until the convention was over. It
might not have worked out that way, since many of the
protesters were fiercely determined to find trouble, but at
least the notion offered a better chance of avoiding violence.
Had Daley been gifted with either humane imagination or a sense
of humor, he would have arranged to welcome the demonstrators,
cosset them with amenities like portable toilets, as the
Government did during the Washington civil rights march of 1963.
Instead, Daley virtually invited violence.
</p>
<p> The police were not unhappy. Daley had prepared them last
April, in the wake of the riots following Martin Luther King's
assassination, when he ordered the cops to "shoot to kill"
arsonists and to "shoot to maim or cripple" looters. Chicago
police theoretically receive regular in-service riot training,
but in fact the training consists largely of reading general
departmental orders rather than intensive drilling.
</p>
<p> Bloodletting. Fortunately, there was no shooting. The
demonstrators constantly taunted the police and in some cases
deliberately disobeyed reasonable orders. Most of the
provocations were verbal--screams of "Pig!" and fouler
epithets. Many cops seemed unruffled by the insults. Policeman
John Gruber joked: "We kind of like the word pig. Some of us
answer our officers `Oink, oink, sir,' just to show it doesn't
bother us." The police reacted more angrily when the
demonstrators sang God Bless America or recited "I pledge
allegiance to the flag."
</p>
<p> In some of the wilder fighting, the demonstrators hurled
bricks, bottles and nail-studded golf balls at the police lines.
During the first three days, the cops generally reacted only
with tear gas and occasional beatings. But on Wednesday night,
as the convention gathered to nominate Hubert Humphrey, the
police had a cathartic bloodletting. Outraged when the
protesters lowered a U.S. flag during a rally in Grant Park
beside Lake Michigan, the cops hurled tear gas into the crowd.
</p>
<p> The demonstrators, bent upon parading to the convention
hall (Daley had refused a permit), regrouped in front of the
Hilton, where they were surrounded by phalanxes of cops. Police
warned the demonstrators to clear the streets, waited for five
minutes for several busloads of reinforcements to arrive. And
then the order was given.
</p>
<p> Violent Orgy. Chicago cops are built like beer trucks.
They flailed blindly into the crowd of some 3,000, then ranged
onto the sidewalks to attack onlookers. In a pincer movement,
they trapped some 150 people against the wall of the hotel. A
window of the Hilton's Haymarket lounge gave way, and about ten
of the targets spilled into the lounge after the shards of
glass. A squad of police pursued them inside and beat them. Two
bunny-clad waitresses took one look and capsized in a dead
faint. By now the breakdown of police discipline was complete.
Bloodied men and women tried to make their way into the hotel
lobby. Upstairs on the 15th floor, aides in the McCarthy
headquarters set up a makeshift hospital.
</p>
<p> The onslaught ended half an hour later, with about 200
arrested and hundreds injured. Elsewhere, the confrontation
continued through the night. Then at 5 a.m. on Friday, with the
convention ended, eleven policemen swarmed up to the McCarthy
headquarters. They claimed that the volunteers had tossed smoked
fish, ashtrays and beer cans at the helmeted cops below. With
neither evidence nor search warrant, they clubbed McCarthy
campaign workers. One cop actually broke his billy club on a
volunteer's skull. Daley stood by his angry defense of his cops'
conduct against the "terrorists," who, he snarled, "use the
foulest of language that you wouldn't hear in a brothel house."
</p>
<p> The demonstrators had chanted the night before: "The whole
world is watching!" And it was. Newspapers and television
commentators from Moscow to Tokyo reacted with revulsion to the
orgy of violence in America's Second City. Thanks to Mayor
Daley, not only Chicago but the rest of the U.S. as well was
pictured as a police state. That impression may be unfair to a
handsome and hospitable city, but it will linger long after
Dick Daley's reign.
</p>
<p>WHO WERE THE PROTESTERS?
</p>
<p> They left Chicago more as victors than as victims. Long
before the Democratic Convention assembled, the protest leaders
who organized last week's marches and melees realized that they
stood no chance of influencing the political outcome or
reforming "the system." Thus their strategy became one of
calculated provocation. The aim was to irritate the police and
the party bosses so intensely that their reactions would look
like those of mindless brutes and skull-busters. After all the
blood, sweat and tear gas, the dissidents had pretty well
succeeded in doing just that.
</p>
<p> Tatterdemalion Innocents. The strategy had been six months
in formulation. Three disparate detachments of the young made up
last week's Army of the Night, There were self-styled "American
revolutionaries"--among them anarchists and Maoists, hard-core
members of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War
in Vietnam, and Students for a Democratic Society--many of
them veterans of the October March on the Pentagon. There was
the Youth International Party (yippies), minions of the absurd
whose leaders failed last fall to levitate the Pentagon but
whose antics at least leavened the grim seriousness of the New
Leftists with much-needed humor. And then there were the young
McCarthy workers, the "Clean for Gene" contingent who had shaved
bears, lengthened miniskirts and turned on to political action
in the mainstream, only to see the dreams of New Hampshire
shattered in the stockyards of Chicago.
</p>
<p> In all, about 10,000 demonstrators showed up, a fraction of
the horde that had been predicted by their leaders. According to
Chicago police records, 49% of the 650 arrested came from
outside Illinois (most from New York and Michigan); the
majority were in their teens and 20s and only 91 prisoners were
30 or above.
</p>
<p> In the main, they were tatterdemalion innocents with long
hair, granny glasses, and a sense of bewildered outrage at the
war and the nation's political processes. Not so innocently,
many were equipped with motorcycle crash helmets, gas masks
(purchasable at $4.98 in North Side army-navy surplus stores),
bail money and anti-Mace unguents. A handful of hard-liners in
the "violence bag" also carried golf balls studded with spikes,
javelins made of snow-fence slats, aerosol cans full of caustic
oven-cleaning fluids, ice picks, bricks, bottles, and clay tiles
sharpened to points that would have satisfied a Cro-Magnon bear
hunter.
</p>
<p> Ironic Fate. Most of the protest leaders stayed in the
background. Mobilization Chairman David Tyre Dellinger, 53, the
shy editor-publisher of Liberation, who led last fall's
Pentagon March, studiously avoided the main confrontation before
the Hilton. His chief aide, Tom Hayden, 28, a New Left author
who visited Hanoi three years ago, was so closely tailed by
plainclothesmen that he finally donned a yippie-style wig to
escape their attentions. Nonetheless, he was arrested. Rennie
Davis, 28, the clean-cut son of a Truman Administration
economic adviser, took a more active part as one of the Chicago
organizers: his aim, he said, was "to force the police state to
become more and more visible, yet somehow survive in it." At
Grant Park on Wednesday afternoon, he both succeeded and
failed. The police action against the demonstrators triggered
the Hilton march, but Rennie--despite his short hair,
scholarly spectacles and button-down collar--was literally
busted, and later took nine stitches in his split scalp. Yippie
Guru Abbie Hoffman, 32, cadged dinner from his four police
tails, yipped up a storm in Lincoln Park (where he passed out
phone numbers of cops and city officials for telephonic
harassment), and was ultimately arrested for wearing a four-
letter word on his forehead.
</p>
<p> The most ironic fate of all befell Brillo-bearded Jerry
Rubin, 30, a former Berkeley free-speecher and now a yippie
leader. To protect himself from police strong-arm tactics, Rubin
hired a husky, sledge-fisted Chicagoan known as "Big Bob Lavin,"
whose beard and bellicosity were matched by his ability at
bottle-throwing in confrontations with the cops. Big Bob was
gassed by the police, fought them valiantly, but was finally
clubbed into submission--carrying with him into jail Rubin's
tactical diary. Only then was it revealed that Big Bob was
really an undercover cop, Robert Pierson, 35. Chicago police
pointed ominously to such entries in Rubin's diary as a
hand-drawn map of the Hilton Hotel area and a reflection that
"we really should attend McCarthy rallies and recruit
pro-McCarthys for our marches. This lends us the respectability
of a pro-establishment group." Big Bob's duplicity did not faze
Rubin, who said, when released on $2,500 bail: "Well, at least
he was a good bodyguard."
</p>
<p> Wider Division? Chicago was not the end of the road for
the militants. Scott Lash, 22, a psychology dropout from the
University of Michigan and a McCarthy worker, observed that the
Chicago scene left most of the marchers more frustrated and
embittered. Scuffing his hiking boots and twiddling his granny
glasses, Lash lamented at week's end: "There's going to be a
wider division in the country than ever. There's going to be
more violence, both by whites and blacks, and I'm willing to be
part of it. I wouldn't have thought this before the convention."
</p>
<p> Mayor Daley asserted that he had evidence of a Communist
conspiracy to disrupt the convention. Actually, the
"terrorists," as he called them, made no bones about conspiring
to make trouble. But their visible leaders, at least, were
disaffected young Americans who professed as much scorn for
Communism as for capitalism. Foolhardy and arrogant as their
tactics often were, the main goal of the protesters was to
express their rejection of both the war and party bossism, and
they undeniably made it register in the minds of Democratic
leaders. Ironically--and perhaps significantly--the
demonstrators' most effective allies were the police, without
whose brutal aid the protest would not have been so striking.
</p>
<p>THE GOVERNMENT IN EXILE
</p>
<p> From his bedroom window on the 23rd floor of the Conrad
Hilton, Eugene McCarthy viewed the carnage on Michigan Avenue,
turning now and again to the TV screen to watch the dissolution
of his own hopes at the convention hall. Only once, when
California's Jesse Unruh, a holdout supporter of Teddy Kennedy,
appeared on the screen, did he show anger. And even that was
relatively subdued. "That doublecrossing son of a bitch," he
growled.
</p>
<p> His main concern was with the young people below. "Oh,
Dad," pleaded his daughter Mary, "help them!" That evening he
went down to his staff headquarters on the 15th floor, where
his doctor, William Davidson, had opened a makeshift hospital. McCarthy
comforted the bruised and bleeding. A girl who had been injured
wept hysterically, and photographers crowded around her. Only
then did McCarthy show the emotion reporters had looked for
during nine long months of arduous campaigning. "Get out of the
way, fellows. You don't have to see anything. Get the hell out
of the way!"
</p>
<p> Keeping Cool. Shaken, he returned to his suite. In one
final gesture, which even he probably knew would be useless, he
sought to end the violence, telephoning his campaign manager at
the International Amphitheatre to tell him to withdraw the name
Eugene McCarthy from the balloting. "It looked," he remarked
later, "like the convention might break up in chaos. I thought
this might stabilize it." By then it was too late. The balloting
in the convention hall had already started, and the count--and
the violence below--went on.
</p>
<p> Next day, a few hours before Humphrey's acceptance speech,
McCarthy crossed the street--still lined with troops and cops--to
speak to a rally of the disaffected in Grant Park. "I am
happy," he said, "to be here to address the government in
exile." When he said farewell to a group of cheering campaign
workers, he added: "I may be visibly moved. I have been very
careful not to be visibly moved throughout my campaign. If you
people keep on this way, I may, as we say, lose my cool."
Already, some of his followers were wearing black arm bands and a
new campaign button. It was blank.
</p>
<p> In the end, as at the beginning, the Senator from Minnesota
was a mystery--a nearly unfathomable blend of intellect,
humor, humility and arrogance. Always he was his own man. When
he was asked whether he would make a good President, he
answered: "I am willing to be President. I think I would be an
adequate resident. I really don't want to let you believe that
I'm carrying the whole burden for the country. I'm kind of an
accidental instrument, really."
</p>
<p> Pride and Persuasion. Yet sometimes this understatement
became a form of intellectual pride. Persuasion was somehow
beneath him. Talking to delegates uncertain about his position
on Vietnam, he would say: "I've written three books on my
positions" or "I put out a position paper on that last week."
Though he needed Negro support, he refused to make any special
pleas, noting airily that "when the negroes know my record,
they'll come along." They never did. He yearned for the support
of Cesar Chavez, a Bobby Kennedy supporter and leader of
California migrant workers who has become a virtual messiah to
thousands of Mexican Americans. The Senator did in fact have
long talks with Chavez. But he could not bring himself to ask
for the labor leader's help. He only observed mildly that "we
hope you will be with us." Chavez sat on the sidelines.
</p>
<p> At times, McCarthy could be petty and vindictive. Robert
Kennedy could never understand the apparent hatred McCarthy felt
for him--an emotion that seemed to have deeper origins than
Bobby's political sin of joining the race after New Hampshire.
The better-educated, McCarthy told an audience in Oregon,
preferred him to Kennedy. "Kennedy plays softball." His flair
for the malicious aside showed again when he talked about
Speechwriter Richard Goodwin, an early supporter who left him
for Bobby, then returned after the assassination, staying on
until the last ballot. "Dick Goodwin," said McCarthy, "has been a
good and faithful servant--on and off." McCarthy was
nevertheless deeply disturbed by the murder in Los Angeles. As
for its political repercussions, he noted last week: "If
Senator Kennedy had not died, we would have this party under
control on Vietnam."
</p>
<p> Whatever McCarthy's feelings may have been about Robert
Kennedy as a rival, he was willing to give up nine months of
effort for Ted last week. Sounded out by Stephen Smith,
Kennedy's brother-in-law, at the height of the Teddy boomlet,
McCarthy offered to throw all his weight to the last surviving
brother. "Smith said Teddy wouldn't go for it if he had to
fight with me," McCarthy recounted. "I told him he wouldn't have
to fight with me. I told him I was willing to give all the
strength I had to Kennedy on the first ballot--or any
ballot." McCarthy's gesture was unexpected, and tears came to
Steve Smith's eyes.
</p>
<p> Looking to 1972. In defeat, McCarthy stuck to his guns.
The traditional show of party unity was beyond him--particularly
after what he had seen on Michigan Avenue--and
he refused to appear on the convention platform with the winner.
He would not, he said, endorse either Humphrey or Nixon. "We've
forgotten the convention," he told his supporters. "We've
forgotten the Vice President. We've forgotten the platform." For
the next two months, he said, he would work for senatorial
candidates who supported his view on the war. In the future, he
would work to remold the party.
</p>
<p> Indeed, the idea of remaking the party seemed to excite him
more than the chance of gaining the presidency. "We have tested
the process and found its weaknesses," he said. "We'll make this
party in 1972--perhaps 1970--quite different from what we
found it in Chicago!" McCarthy was not boasting idly, and his
insurgents were already planning for 1972, many of them hoping
for a Nixon victory this fall to "purify" the Democratic Party
by defeat. Even while they were losing in Chicago, the
McCarthyites won concessions, such as abolition of the unit rule,
that will make future conventions more democratic. The party,
in any event, cannot ignore the talented young people who have
stormed its fortress. "People know we have power now," said Tom
Saltonshall, one of the Senator's downy-faced staffers from
Massachusetts. "And we're going to keep using it. We'd be
negating everything we've done for the past nine months if we
drop out now."
</p>
<p> The New Party. Not everyone, however, believes the
Democratic party can be either reformed or purified.
Anticipating Humphrey's convention victory, organizers of an
entirely new party--called, unsurprisingly "the New Party"--have
already put their organization on the ballot in five
states: Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, North Dakota and Oregon.
They claim enough signatures to win places in New York and
Tennessee, and are trying as well to go before the voters in 18
more, including such electoral prizes as California, Ohio and
Illinois. (The filing date has already passed in most other
states.)
</p>
<p> All that is lacking is a candidate. McCarthy would be the
perfect choice, and New Party leaders, mostly disillusioned
Democrats, still have faint hopes of persuading him to bolt the
Democrats entirely. He has given them little encouragement. In
any event, his candidacy would be only symbolic. Even if it won
all of its fights and court suits, the New Party would still be
on the ballot in only 25 states with a combined total of 290
electoral votes (270 are needed for election).
</p>
<p> Yet even without McCarthy, the New Party might hurt
Humphrey. In a tight election, it might pull enough liberal
Democrats and peace votes away from the Democratic candidate to
give the election to Nixon. Even a few thousand votes could be
decisive in California and New York, the centers of the peace
movement. No Democrat in modern times has won election without
one of the two most populous states. Actually, however, the New
Party men are looking to future elections, when they hope to
displace the Democratic party. "I think the Democratic Party is
lost," says Marcus Raskin, a former disarmament aide to
President Kennedy who is one of the New Party's chief
proponents and organizers. "What happened here this week shows
that it now represents only the party bosses, the police and the
military."
</p>
<p> Losers' Gains. Though they never came close to Humphrey in
the delegate count, neither McCarthy nor South Dakota's George
McGovern, the third candidate, could in fact be called a loser
at Chicago. By standing in the national spotlight, Senator
McGovern, who entered the race only 18 days before the
nomination, has probably improved his chances for re-election to
a second term this fall. Not only will his restrained
performance as a presidential candidate enhance his reputation
in the upper house (assuming that he is reelected), it will
probably also gain him consideration for a spot on some future
national ticket.
</p>
<p> For his part, McCarthy has forced the retirement of the
President, precipitated the de-escalation of the war, and
brought about a re-examination of the American political
structure. That may eventually prove more important than
anything he could have done during four years as President. As
leader of the government in exile, he will remain the
conscience for millions of Americans and a formidable figure
that the President, whoever he is, cannot ignore. Who knows? In
1972, Eugene McCarthy may even begin again his lonely, quixotic
quest for the White House. "I am prepared to stay with the
issues," he said, "so long as I have a constituency--and I
still have a constituency." Neither Hubert Humphrey nor Richard
Nixon is likely to dispute him.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>