Note: This
is the sixth installment in my series of memory posts about the Democratic
Convention in Chicago in 1968 and my small role in the streets action
surrounding it. In today’s episode I
attend LBJ’s Birthday Party at the Coliseum, visit Grant Park for the first time, am plied with Malort by old radicals, and walk into the fog of Lincoln Park.
I woke up sore as hell
on Tuesday morning in the Church basement. Even when you are 19, days of fitful
sleep on a cold, hard floor will get to you. Not that anyone slept a lot.
Coffee by the gallon
in big white enamel pots boiling on the stove was the order of the day. Sugar
was in short supply. So was milk that wasn’t powdered. Kids who had never had a
cuppa joe black hung on to heavy mugs with both hands.
The big event of the
day was LBJ’s Birthday Party. This was an Abbie Hoffman extravaganza to be held
that afternoon at the old Chicago Coliseum. Big name musicians and speakers
were advertised. And since the event was held in a rented and paid for hall,
even the most jaded of us expected that it would come off.
The kids scattered
either to head for the Coliseum or Lincoln Park. After cleanup, I headed out,
too. I jumped on the EL at the Diversey Station right across the street from
the Church. The trains were still running despite the wildcat CTA strike. I had
no sense then that I was scabbing on the strike by hopping on board.
By the time I got to
the Coliseum on Wabash south of the Loop and only a block west and a couple
south of Police Headquarters at 11th and State, it was already pretty full.
The castle-like stone
exterior of the Coliseum had been the facade of the infamous Libby Prison in Virginia
where thousands of Northern prisoners of war perished in harsh conditions.
After the Civil War, the victorious Yankees had dismantled it stone by stone
and re-assembled it after the Chicago Fire on burnt out ground south of the
Loop. Inside the walls promoters built a sports arena, which also doubled, ironically
enough as a convention hall. Democrats had assembled there in 1896 to hear William
Jennings Bryan declaim his famous Cross of Gold speech.
But by this time the
Coliseum was pretty rundown and only a couple of years away from demolition. It
was still used for occasional wrestling matches and as a rock concert venue and
rented out on the cheap to outfits who could not afford better digs for their
events. Which, of course, fit the Yippies to a tee.
In Hoffman’s view it
also had the advantage of putting a large crowd closer to the Convention site
at the International Amphitheater at 43rd and Halstead than any permitted
demonstration was able to get. That is except for a bunch of old time pacifists
led by the Quakers who did get a permit and staged the only picketing near the
Convention Hall all week with nearly 1000 participants on that very day.
Neither the Yippies nor the media paid the slightest attention to those
pacifists and their demonstration has vanished from memory.
I had last been in the
building in April of ’67 where it was the site of a rally following one of the
biggest of Chicago’s anti-war marches. I had seen Dr. King that day giving one
of his early anti-war speeches.
The place was pretty
much as I remembered it. Except because it was a cloudy day the sun shining
through holes in the roof did not dapple the crowd.
Country Joe McDonald was nearly as ubiquitous that week as Phil Ochs. He led us in the Fish Cheer at Abbie Hoffman's LBJ Unbirthday Party. |
My main memory of the program was Country Joe McDonald and the Fish Cheer:
For it’s one, two,
three
What are we fighting
for?
Don’t ask me I don’t
give a Damn!
Next stop is Vietnam
And it’s 5, 6, 7, open
up the pearly gates
Well there ain’t no
time to wonder why
Yippie!
we’re all gonna die.
Phil Ochs was there,
of course, and the literati, supposedly journalists for Esquire—Allen Ginsberg, Jean
Genet, William Burroughs, and Terry Southern. How they were going to justify
their press credentials after this was anyone’s guess. Hoffman, and Dave
Dellinger and Rennie Davis of the Mobe provided the oratory. At the end
comedian Dick Gregory took the stage and invited everyone over to his house on
the South Side, which would take them by or near the Amphitheater.
With typical Yippie cheek, a mock Convention was part of LBJ's Unbirthday Party at the Coliseum . |
We surged out of the Coliseum and headed south. The vanguard of the 2000 people or so got no more than a couple of blocks before it was turned back by police. Reversing course the cry was now “Grant Park! Grant Park.!”
We made it to the park
and took up the space across from the Convention Headquarters Hotel the Conrad
Hilton on Michigan Ave. The Hilton also
housed the offices of Gene McCarthy’s campaign.
We mingled and chanted on the expanse of lawn in front of the General
Logan equestrian statue. For the first
time, some climbed the statue, the site of a later bloody melee. There were more speeches. Because TV cameras were set up in the upper
windows of the Hilton, for the first time national viewers got a good look at
the protests, most of which had been held virtually out of sight of the bulky
cameras.
We gathered in Grant Park across from the Conrad Hilton. Convention Delegates and McCarthy staffers drifted over from the hotel and mingled with the growing crowd. |
Curious or supportive
McCarthy staffers and volunteers and even some Convention delegates crossed the
street to mingle with us. Other than
some tussles at the edges, there was no major confrontation between police and demonstrators. In fact the police allowed some demonstrators
to remain in Grant Park all night unmolested.
As evening approached,
I decided it was time to get back to the Movement Center.
I cut over to State
Street and began walking north from there. Pretty soon I was alone. Across the
river somewhere I moved over to Clark St. It is a very long hike from the south
end of Downtown to the North side. By the time I got to Division I was tired
and thirsty. I ducked into the bar of the old Mark Twain Hotel for a beer.
Unknown to me, it was a hangout for the remnant of the old Bug House Square
radicals, several of whom had gathered from the cheap rooming houses nearby to
watch coverage of the convention on the saloon TV. When they saw me, it was not
hard to for them to tell I was a demonstrator.
The Mark Twain Hotel and its bar had seen better days when I stumbled on a nest of old Bug House Square radicals who plied me with Malort. |
Three or four of them,
yammering in various European accents, surrounded and peppered me with eager
questions. They were also glad to stand me for a round or three or four. Beer,
brandy, even Malort, once described as “incredibly bitter, with notes of
earwax, fire, poison, and decaying flesh” offered to me out of respect for my
supposedly manly willingness to face “the damn bulls.” I gagged down the Malort,
although I think I would rather have been tear gassed. After an hour or so I
stumbled out of the saloon and resumed my journey,
I passed through
Lincoln Park that night, although my memory of it is hazy—damn that Malort.
That was the evening the Black Panther Bobby Seals showed up just long enough
to give a little speech about “resisting the pigs by any means necessary.” That
little episode, the only thing he did all week in conjunction with the
convention, was enough to get him indicted and eventually tied and gagged in Julius
Hoffman’s courtroom.
It was also the
evening that 200 clergymen raised a giant cross and prayed, for which the
police were more than happy to crack their skulls. Some witnesses called the attack on the
clergy the most brutal of the whole week.
Tomorrow—The
tale of Ginsberg et.al. and more about the Battle in the Fog Tuesday night in
Lincoln Park.
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