The story that still nags at me.THE STORY THAT STILL NAGS NAGS, n See neutral apophyseal glides. AT ME The snow was cascading down thatSaturday morning in Manchester, New Hampshire This article is about the city in New Hampshire. For other uses, see Manchester (disambiguation). Manchester is the largest city in the U.S. state of New Hampshire and the largest city of northern New England, an area composed of Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. , when Senator Edmund S. Muskie mus·kie or mus·ky n. pl. mus·kies The muskellunge. headed toward the offices of the Manchester Union Leader for his first scheduled event of the day. Like much in modern campaigning, this "event' was designed more for the press and cameras than for the citizenry cit·i·zen·ry n. pl. cit·i·zen·ries Citizens considered as a group. citizenry Noun citizens collectively Noun 1. . Fewer than a hundred hardy campaign workers and casual passersby, stamping their feet in the snow, joined the newspaper's employees watching from windows. Ed Muskie was the front-runner in the 1972New Hampshire New Hampshire, one of the New England states of the NE United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts (S), Vermont, with the Connecticut R. forming the boundary (W), the Canadian province of Quebec (NW), and Maine and a short strip of the Atlantic Ocean (E). presidential primary, so when his press aides alerted reporters staying at the Sheraton-Wayfarer in nearby Bedford that Muskie would go to the Union Leader to reply to attacks by publisher William Loeb William Loeb III (December 26, 1905 - September 14, 1981) was publisher of the Manchester Union Leader newspaper (later The New Hampshire Union Leader) in Manchester, New Hampshire from 1946 until his death in 1981. , they were guaranteed that this was one "media event' that would draw heavy coverage. Hands jammed into his overcoat pockets andhis head bent against the snow, Muskie looked as if he might be having second thoughts. But for us reporters trailing him, the setting and timing were perfect. It was early in the day; we would have plenty of time to file for the early Sunday deadlines. The event would be a natural lead-in to our Sunday wrap-up pieces that would summarize the New Hampshire situation nine days before the primary. Loeb had been giving Muskie the same brutal front-page editorial "treatment' he had given other moderates and liberals in both parties who appeared to threaten the publisher's favored right-wing candidates. In confronting him, the senator from Maine was symbolically confronting the frustrations that had turned New Hampshire from an expected easy triumph into an exhausting, embittering struggle. The human factor is always the least predictableelement in covering politics. That is why the beat is so fascinating. Under the pressure of campaigns for high office, people react in ways that are always revealing and often unexpected. In this case, Muskie's strategists wanted him to show indignation and righteous wrath to regain the offensive in what they saw as an eroding effort to hold off the challenge of his major rival, Senator George McGovern George Stanley McGovern, (born July 19, 1922) is a former United States Representative, Senator, and Democratic presidential nominee. McGovern lost the 1972 presidential election in a landslide to incumbent Richard Nixon. . They focused on the impact of two Union Leader editorials: one concerned an alleged derogatory de·rog·a·to·ry adj. 1. Disparaging; belittling: a derogatory comment. 2. Tending to detract or diminish. comment by Muskie about the important French-Canadian voting bloc A voting bloc is a group of voters that are so motivated by a specific concern or group of concerns that it helps determine how they vote in elections. The divisions between voting blocs are known as cleavage. , the other impugned the behavior and character of the candidate's wife. I described Muskie's dramatic reaction: With tears streaming down his face andhis voice choked with emotion, Senator Edmund S. Muskie (D-Maine) stood in the snow outside the Manchester Union Leader this morning and accused its publisher of making vicious attacks on him and his wife, Jane. The Democratic presidential candidatecalled publisher William Loeb "a gutless coward' for involving Mrs. Muskie in the campaign and said four times that Loeb had lied in charging that Muskie had condoned a slur on Americans of French-Canadian descent. In defending his wife, Muskie brokedown three times in as many minutes-- uttering a few words and then standing silent in the near blizzard, rubbing at his face, his shoulders heaving, while he attempted to regaim his composure sufficiently to speak. The story--accompanied by a photo--ranunder a four-column headline as the off-lead of the Sunday Washington Post and continued for 23 paragraphs inside. David Nyhan's story, which described Muskie as "weeping silently,' was played even more prominently on the front page of the Boston Globe. The New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times ran a photograph on page one but relegated the story to page 54, perhaps because reporter James M. Naughton cast his story around Muskie's denunciation DENUNCIATION, crim. law. This term is used by the civilians to signify the act by which au individual informs a public officer, whose duty it is to prosecute offenders, that a crime has been committed. It differs from a complaint. (q.v.) Vide 1 Bro. C. L. 447; 2 Id. 389; Ayl. Parer. of Loeb and mentioned the tears and broken speech only once, in the sixth paragraph. The Washington Star The Washington Star, previously known as the Washington Star-News and the Washington Evening Star, was a daily afternoon newspaper published in Washington, D.C. between 1852 and 1981. used a UPI UPI abbr. United Press International story on page two that noted in the eighth paragraph that Muskie was "visibly shaken,' but offered no further details. Saturday night Saturday Night may refer to: Music
Current television shows
adj. 1. Twisted or strained out of shape. 2. Botany Twisted, bent, or partially rolled upon itself; convolute. con·tort . Watching it on a weekend visit home inWashington, political reporter Jack Germond Jack W. Germond is an American journalist, author, and pundit. Germond is a veteran newspaperman of 50 years' standing, having written for the now-defunct Washington Star and for The Baltimore Sun. , then with Gannett's Washington bureau, instantly decided to fly back to New Hampshire because, he said, "I knew something was happening.' Indeed it was. Within 24 hours, Muskie's weepingbecame the focus of political talk, not just in New Hampshire, but everywhere the pattern of the developing presidential race was discussed. His tears were generally described as one of the contributing causes of his disappointing showing in the March 7 primary. Muskie beat McGovern by a margin of 46 to 37 percent, but his managers had publicized pub·li·cize tr.v. pub·li·cized, pub·li·ciz·ing, pub·li·ciz·es To give publicity to. Adj. 1. publicized - made known; especially made widely known publicised their goal of winning at least 50 percent of the New Hampshire Democratic vote. Underdog McGovern claimed that the results showed Muskie's weakness and his own growing strength. Muskie never recovered from that Saturday in the snow. In retrospect, though, there were a few problemswith the Muskie story. First, it is unclear whether Muskie did cry. He insists he never shed the tears we thought we saw. Melting snow from his hatless head filled his eyes, he said, and made him wipe his face. While admitting that exhaustion and emotion got the better of him that morning, the senator believes that he was damaged more by the press and television coverage of the event than by his own actions. Second, it is now clear that the incident shouldhave been placed in a different context: Muskie was victimized by the classic dirty trick Noun 1. dirty trick - an unkind or aggressive trick antic, prank, put-on, joke, trick, caper - a ludicrous or grotesque act done for fun and amusement dirty trick n → mala jugada, that had been engineered by agents of the distent and detached President Nixon. The Loeb editorial that had brought Muskie out in the snowstorm had been based on a letter forged by a White House staff member intent on destroying Muskie's credibility. But we didn't know that and we didn't work hard enough to find out. Mt. Muskie To understand how such slip-ups happen, oneshould understand the work habits and psychology of reporters. It is not an accident that we refer to "news stories' as the basic ingredient of the news. Reporters are essentially storytellers in the narrative tradition. Whether we acknowledge it or not, we constantly devise the scripts we think appropriate for the events we cover. Explicitly in my mind and, I think, implicitlyin the Post story I wrote from Manchester, there was a specific context into which the Muskie performance fit: the unraveling of a presidential front-runner's campaign. The fourth paragraph of my story saidMuskie's appearance at the Union Leader "was designed to counter a threat to his support in the March 7 presidential primary from the voters who had read the Union Leader's charge Thursday that Muskie was unsympathetic to Franco-Americans.' But that was only part of the threat. For weeks,the Post's coverage had emphasized that the senator, who was running even with President Nixon in the polls and well ahead of any opponent for the nomination, had chosen a high-risk, early-knockout strategy. He would run in all the early primaries in an effort to "collapse the opposition' and nail down the nomination by April 25, when Massachusetts and Pennsylvania completed the run of the first six contests. Another theme was clearer in the conversationsof the journalists on the scene than in the copy we were filing. That was the possibility that Muskie might crack under the strain of his schedule and the tension of the most important election in his career. Deep down in a February 14 story, I alluded to this: "If sensitivity is the measure of insecurity, there is plenty of evidence that the Muskie camp feels some pressure from McGovern's campaign. . . . Several times this week, Muskie reacted with anger to questions from high school students he charged were "planted' by the McGovern camp.' The scenes were uglier than that blandparagraph suggested. At one school, a teenager who asked an uncomfortable question was interrogated by the senator as if he were a prosecutor trying to shake the alibi of an accused wife-killer. Lou Cannon Louis Cannon (born 1933) is an American non-fiction author and biographer. He is the most prolific biographer of President Ronald Reagan, having written five books on him. Bibliography
adj. 1. Relating to or caused by temperament: our temperamental differences. 2. Excessively sensitive or irritable; moody. 3. to be president of the United States The head of the Executive Branch, one of the three branches of the federal government. The U.S. Constitution sets relatively strict requirements about who may serve as president and for how long. .' Cannon asked the right question: What does a political reporter do withthis kind of insight? As in this instance, it is rarely written as a hard news story the first time the thought arises. Most reporters have a healthy reluctance to play amateur psychiatrist. Often, the incidents are trivial in themselves. Sometimes, as with the poker game, they occur in semiprivate sem·i·pri·vate adj. Shared with usually one to three other hospital patients: a semiprivate room. Adj. 1. settings, which many reporters--myself included-- feel uncomfortable in exploiting directly for journalistic purposes. What we tend to do is to store such incidentsin our minds and then use them to interpret major incidents when they occur. Such was the case with Muskie's emotionaldisplay in Manchester. One reason Jack Germond reacted as swiftly and surely as he did to the television pictures of the scene was that he had been present--as I was--at an off-the-record session almost a year before, where a group of political reporters had dinner and a long evening of discussion with Muskie. What all of us remember about the evening was that much of the time Muskie was in a bellowing bellowing see bellow. bellowing continuously in bovine rabies, continues until pharyngeal paralysis supervenes. bellowing soundlessly rage, brought on by persistent efforts to draw him forth on the Vietnam war Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. . We all suspected that under the calm, placid,reflective face that Muskie liked to show the world, there was a volcano waiting to erupt. So we treated Manchester as a political Mt. St. Helen's explosion, an event that would permanently alter the shape of "Mt. Muskie.' It was not an accident that in the fifthparagraph of my story, I wrote: "The 60 to 70 newsmen and supporters huddled hud·dle n. 1. A densely packed group or crowd, as of people or animals. 2. Football A brief gathering of a team's players behind the line of scrimmage to receive instructions for the next play. 3. in the snowstorm to hear the senator's speech watched with surprise as the normally disciplined Muskie let his anger and his frustration show.' Nor was it unplanned that after clearly identifyingLoeb as a harsh critic of the senator and the chief supporter of his rival, Sam Yorty, I still gave front-page prominence to the publisher's response: "I think Senator Muskie's excited and near-hysterical performance this morning again indicates he's not the man that many of us want to have his finger on the nuclear button.' It was the temper-tantrum theme that Muskie'spolitical foes such as Senator Robert Dole, then the Republican national chairman, used in their second-day comments that built the momentum for the story and kept it bubbling in the press. A bad scene With the advantage of hindsight, I think I wascorrect to treat the Manchester incident as a major event and to put it in the context of a highrisk, go-for-broke campaign strategy by an exhausted, emotional candidate who was unable to sustain the pace. Muskie himself said as much after the campaign in an interview with Theodore H. White for The Making of the President 1972: That previous week, I'd been down toFlorida, then I flew to Idaho, then I flew to California, then I flew back to Washington to vote in the Senate, and I flew back to California, and then I flew into Manchester and I was hit with this "Canuck' story. I'm tough physically, but no one could do that--it was a bitch of a day. The staff thought I should go down to the Union Leader to reply to that story. If I was going to do it again, I'd look for a campaign manager, a genius, a schedule-maker who has veto power over a candidate's own decisions. You got to have a czar. For Christ's sake, you got to pace yourself. I was just goddamned god·damned or god·damn adj. Damned. god damned mad
and choked up over my anger.
The key was the "Canuck letter' Muskie mentionedin the interview with White. It was a curious document, which had appeared two days earlier along with a front-page editorial, signed by Loeb and headlined, "Senator Muskie Insults Franco-Americans.' With the bold-faced type and capital letters Loeb used to hammer home his message, the editorial concluded: "We have always known that Senator Muskie was a hypocrite. But we never expected to have it so clearly revealed as in this letter sent to us from Florida.' Along with the editorial was a photocopy ofa hand-printed letter with many misspellings, in an almost childlike child·like adj. Like or befitting a child, as in innocence, trustfulness, or candor. childlike Adjective like a child, for example in being innocent or trustful Adj. 1. hand, sent to Loeb by a Paul Morrison Paul Morrison is the name of:
prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the letter. Muskie, it said, laughed at the remark and invited the questioner to ""come to New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt. and see.'' Loeb's editorial comment was that if Morrison"hadn't taken the trouble to write about his experience . . . no one in New Hampshire would know of the derogatory remarks emanating from the Muskie camp about the Franco-Americans in New Hampshire and Maine--remarks which the senator found amusing.' Since French Canadians are a major Democraticvoting bloc in New Hampshire, particularly in Manchester, and since "Canuck' (as it is usually spelled) is an offensive epithet ep·i·thet n. 1. a. A term used to characterize a person or thing, such as rosy-fingered in rosy-fingered dawn or the Great in Catherine the Great. b. , it was not surprising that Muskie's phone canvassers quickly found a negative reaction to the senator and pressed him strongly to denounce de·nounce tr.v. de·nounced, de·nounc·ing, de·nounc·es 1. To condemn openly as being evil or reprehensible. See Synonyms at criticize. 2. To accuse formally. 3. the Union Leader editorial as a lie. Muskie did not need much urging. Like manyother Democrats, he regarded the Union Leader and its publisher as one of the most flagrantly fla·grant adj. 1. Conspicuously bad, offensive, or reprehensible: a flagrant miscarriage of justice; flagrant cases of wrongdoing at the highest levels of government. See Usage Note at blatant. 2. slanted opinion-mongers in the business. Among other things, Loeb and his paper had labeled the senior senator from Maine and 1968 Democratic vice presidential candidate "Moscow Muskie,' "Flip-Flop Muskie,' and "a phony.' Far worse, in Muskie's eyes, was Loeb's decisionto reprint, as another front-page editorial, a bitchy bitch·y adj. bitch·i·er, bitch·i·est Slang 1. Malicious, spiteful, or overbearing. 2. In a bad mood; irritable or cranky. portrayal of his wife, Jane, that had originally appeared in Women's Wear Daily Women's Wear Daily (WWD) is a fashion-industry trade journal sometimes called "the bible of fashion."[1][2] It is the flagship journal of Fairchild Publications, Inc.[3] WWD's publisher is Ralph Erardy, Sr. and was picked up in edited form by Newsweek. The article depicted her smoking, drinking, cussing, and generally behaving in a was conservative New Hampshire voters might not think becoming in a prospective First Lady. Muskie decided to hit back at Loeb. At that point, some of the internal dynamicsof the press took over the operation. One of the central paradoxes in any journalist's life is that we crave novelty, but live in a world where routine is vital. Freshness and surprise are built into the definition of news; the unusual, the unexpected and, best of all, the unprecedented are what we seek. But we know the world is full of repetition, because the daily routine of our own organizations is rigid and unvarying: deadlines must be met so that presses may roll and papers be delivered on time. Hence, the requirement for those who are seeking to "make news' is itself paradoxical: They must, ideally, do something unusual, unexpected, or unprecedented. But they must do it in a time, place, and manner that fit the unvarying routine of the news organizations. The Muskie appearance at the Union Leadermet both needs. It is unusual for a candidate to denounce the publisher of the leading newspaper in a state where he is campaigning. The normal rule in political campaigns is to ignore such attacks, or deal with their instigators at arm's length arm's length adj. the description of an agreement made by two parties freely and independently of each other, and without some special relationship, such as being a relative, having another deal on the side or one party having complete control of the other. , through a letter to the editor or a rebuttal rebuttal n. evidence introduced to counter, disprove or contradict the opposition's evidence or a presumption, or responsive legal argument. from the press secretary; "you don't get into a fight with anyone who buys ink by the barrel,' as the saying goes. Muskie's denunciation came at a time when Loeb had more than a week before the primary to reply. And the picture of a major presidential candidate delivering his denunciation on the doorstep of the newspaper--rather than from a distance--was also unusual enough to guarantee attention. Still, the question is: Did we see what wethought we saw? Years later Muskie told me: I arrived in Manchester tired, nearly exhausted.The staff said that I had an opportunity to make a point about Loeb, who was personally unpopular with Democrats in the state. So I yielded. I did not cry. I know it is not easy todistinguish between anger on the verge On the Verge (or The Geography of Yearning) is a play written by Eric Overmyer. It makes extensive use of esoteric language and pop culture references from the late nineteenth century to 1955. of tears and crying, but there was no flow of tears . . .. There was melting snow. But I choked up in my anger, and it was a bad scene, whatever it was. Interestingly, the first reaction I heard that day was positive, that I had confronted Loeb and told him what I thought. Only later did I hear the reaction that it was a sign of weakness on my part, that it was disturbing people. Eventually, the reaction was devastating dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. . Jim Naughton, who covered the story for theTimes, told me that he was standing at Muskie's feet, "looking up directly into his face . . . and I swear to this moment I'm not sure if he was in tears.' Neither then nor later did I have much doubtabout what I wrote. I was standing there and had recorded the statement. But did I check with Muskie to ask if he had wept? I did not. I did follow him to a nearby hotel, where he filmed a brief interview with a Boston television station. Standing in the improvised im·pro·vise v. im·pro·vised, im·pro·vis·ing, im·pro·vis·es v.tr. 1. To invent, compose, or perform with little or no preparation. 2. hotel room studio, watching the interview, I remember thinking that I had never seen Muskie so ravaged rav·age v. rav·aged, rav·ag·ing, rav·ages v.tr. 1. To bring heavy destruction on; devastate: A tornado ravaged the town. 2. and worn. I certainly had the opportunity there to ask him. But whether from sympathy or timidity, I did not walk over to him and say, "Well, senator, what the hell happened up there? Have you flipped out--or what?' Instead, I included in my story the next day a comment Muskie made in his interview: Muskie told an interviewer after his speechthat he felt that in reprinting the item [from Women's Wear Daily and Newsweek] Loeb was "just deliberately slurring . . . a good woman . . . deliberately cutting down her character just to get to me. I guess the full realization of what he'd done just hit me this morning, suddenly, and I couldn't go on.' But as far as I can recall, there was no internalquestioning of the accuracy of the story then, or later, at the Post. Still, it nags at me as few other stories I have written. Systematic sabotage What Muskie did not know, and what I certainlydid not know at the time, was that there was another set of facts that would have put the incident into a very different context. Those facts related to a series of actions, ordered and coordinated by the Nixon White House and designed to harass harass (either harris or huh-rass) v. systematic and/or continual unwanted and annoying pestering, which often includes threats and demands. This can include lewd or offensive remarks, sexual advances, threatening telephone calls from collection agencies, hassling by , to vex, and to embarrass the frontrunning Democrat who was judged a serious threat to Nixon's re-election. The "Canuck letter' was part of that plot. Had those facts been known, I might havedescribed Muskie in different terms: not as a victim of his over-ambitious campaign strategy and his too-human temperament, but as the victim of a fraud, managed by operatives of a frightenened and unscrupulous president. That story surely would have had a different impact. Given Loeb's history, there was ample reasonfor skepticism about the origins of the "Canuck letter.' Indeed, in my story about the Manchester incident, I devoted seven paragraphs to that subject, noting that "the Deerfield Beach Deerfield Beach, town (1990 pop. 46,325), Broward co., SE Fla., on the Atlantic coast; inc. 1925. The development of high-technology industry and commerce expanded the town and more than doubled its population between 1970 and 1990. telephone company does not list a Paul Morrison among the 15 Morrisons in its directory,' and noting that Loeb, while promising "a very interesting followup' on the letter, had not yet produced the author. The story also quoted at length the denials ofthe senator and others who were with him in Florida that any such thing happened. But regrettably, none of us reporting the story pursued the mystery of authorship. We were in New Hampshire, tracking the candidates through the final week of the primary campaign. Paul Morrison, if he existed, was one thousand miles to the south. And the story, in our eyes, was not the provocation but the reaction. It was not until seven months later, when Nixonwas sailing toward a landslide victory In politics, a landslide victory (or just a landslide) is the victory of a candidate or political party by an overwhelming majority in an election. Landslides can occur when one candidate or party is perceived as far superior to its opponents, through unfair over McGovern and Muskie was back tending to his Senate business, that the mystery began to unravel. Marilyn Berger, then a colleague at the Post, told me that Ken W. Clawson, a former Post reporter who had gone to work at the White House as deputy director of information, had told her that he was the author of "the Canuck letter.' I urged Berger to tell her story to Carl Bernsteinand Bob Woodward Noun 1. Bob Woodward - United States chemist honored for synthesizing complex organic compounds (1917-1979) Robert Burns Woodward, Robert Woodward, Woodward , and on October 10 they described "the Canuck letter' as part of a "massive campaign of political spying and sabotage conducted on behalf' of the reelection re·e·lect also re-e·lect tr.v. re·e·lect·ed, re·e·lect·ing, re·e·lects To elect again. re effort by White House and Nixon campaign officials. As Woodward and Bernstein spelled it out in their stories and book, All the President's Men, there was a trail of incidents going back to mid-1971 suggesting, in Muskie's words, that "somebody was out to ambush us.' Letters attacking other Democrats were sent out on facsimiles of Muskie's Senate stationery. Sensitive polling data disappeared from his headquarters. Phony campaign flyers were distributed in his name. Harassing phone calls were made to voters by people purporting to be Muskie campaign workers. On and on the list went, making it clear that Muskie was the victim of systematic sabotage. Had Muskie made such charges the previouswinter without proof, he would likely have been judged paranoid or a cry-baby by most reporters. Had he been able at the time to provide the proof, the political history of the year would undoubtedly have been very different. The coverage of the incident shows that whena reporter's information is incomplete, there is a great risk of misleading the reader. I put the Manchester speech into the context--accurately, I believe--of a campaign and a personality that were accessible to jurnalistic view. I did not put it into the context of campaign sabotage. Unwittingly, I did my part in the work of the Nixon operatives in helping destroy the credibility of the Muskie candidacy. |
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