Reagan contacts still vivid
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JOSEPH N. BELL
Reagan memorabilia time. My contacts with him were brief, but still
vivid. They comprised bookends -- one at the beginning of his
political life, the other at the end.
I covered his first run for governor of California for the
Christian Science Monitor and watched him grow day-by-day in
confidence and skill in this new role, for which he had been
carefully prepped by the campaign management team of Stuart Spencer
and Bill Roberts. But this time he was playing for keeps in a hit
that was going to run for 16 years.
My two most lasting pictures of that first campaign were, first,
the cards he carried like a security blanket and from which he spoke,
shuffling them to meet the concerns of the audience he was
addressing. And, second, his connection with his audience, which was
total from the beginning. Unlike Arnold Schwarzenegger, Reagan’s
acting career was on the wane when he entered politics. So the
rapport between Reagan and his audience was always much deeper than
stargazing.
Shortly after Reagan left office, I met up with him again, when he
spoke to the members of the Orange County Business Council in Newport
Beach. I scanned an advance copy of his speech and found it full of
cliches and banalities. On top of that, he read it, word for word,
from the podium. Not a single ad lib. And yet, I was totally engaged
-- if not by the political essence of his message -- by the clear
sincerity of his delivery. Reagan was one public figure whose
nickname -- the Great Communicator -- actually fit.
He had two consistent personal qualities that both carried him
through some rocky places in his presidency and made him almost a
reverential figure after leaving office. He clearly and absolutely
believed what he said and didn’t check it out with polls first. And
he was a decent, unpretentious human being, who was easy to like.
Current and future candidates for the offices Reagan held might well
ponder those qualities.
*
One of the wistful perks of my eight years of writing this column
for the Pilot is watching young journalists come and go. The Pilot is
a way station for talented young people, and their departures for
greener pastures after several years is a high compliment to the
Pilot editors who hired them. It says that they chose well.
I’m always torn -- as I was when I saw my best students graduate
from UC Irvine -- between regret to see them leave and pleasure to
watch them grow. But I’m afraid, at the moment, the balance is tipped
toward regret over the two most recent defections from the Pilot
staff.
June Casagrande is a sound, highly professional reporter who did
her homework and covered her beat with fairness, clarity and
efficiency. When I needed research help or information, she was
always there. June will continue her weekly Pilot grammar lessons in
her new life as a free-lance writer, a risky decision that can be
wonderfully satisfying. I raised a family on a free-lance income, so
I know what those risks are. But I also learned early on that the
freedom is worth the gamble, and I wish her well.
As for Lolita Harper, I was as shocked as editor Tony Dodero when
I heard about her resignation letter. Young reporters don’t often get
an opportunity to write a column on a daily newspaper; it is usually
payback to old pros like me. So Lolita’s emergence as a columnist --
she hit the ground running and never slowed down -- was both
surprising and delightful. She had guts and perseverance and a total
lack of fear to go along with her writing skills -- qualities that
showed up in her reporting as well as her columns for the Pilot, as
I’m sure they will in her new post.
But the quality in Lolita I most admired and greatly envied was
her boundless energy. I like to think I once had that same level of
energy in the pursuit of a story, so I admit tapping into it
vicariously in Lolita. Since I won’t be able to do that any more, I
clearly have selfish reasons for wanting her to stay. But Lolita has
places to go, and while we send her off with great expectations, I
can’t help feeling a small tinge of sympathy for the bad guys she
goes after in her new job.
*
Much has been written about the ongoing trial of the three young
men accused of gang-raping a 16-year-old girl in a Corona del Mar
home -- too much, according to some Pilot letter writers. But several
points are distressing enough to me to risk repeating.
First is the advantage available only to the rich to employ the
finest legal talent, with resources to pursue every loophole and
possible avenue of diversion or dubious relevance on behalf of their
clients. There must be thousands of inner city black kids now in
prison on lesser charges and flimsier evidence whose court-appointed
attorneys were incompetent or dozed through their trials. Equal
justice in this country is a concept that carries a price tag.
The argument being made by defense attorneys that the outrages
perpetrated on the young victim were consensual and therefore not
illegal is deeply disturbing to me. If she actually consented to
these violations of her body -- which strikes me as incredible --
does that exonerate the behavior of the defendants, who abused her
and photographed the sport for the amusement of their friends?
I know it is pure wishful thinking that somehow the sociopathic
arrogance of these defendants -- especially Greg Haidl -- might
somehow be introduced in evidence. Haidl’s jousts with the law when
he was free on bail and awaiting trial speak to a high degree of
contempt for the society in which he lives and the law enforcement
work of his father. If the defense prevails in this trial, there is
no reason to expect that these qualities in the defendants will ever
be dealt with in the families that have allowed them to take root and
flourish.
The case, finally, will be decided on whether or not the defense
attorneys -- despite the graphic evidence of the videotape -- are
able to create a reasonable doubt of guilt in any of the jurors.
That’s the way it has to be in a society governed by law. We can only
continue to strive to see that the laws are applied equally.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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