n OQlIU friday, november 3, 1 972 lincoln, nebraska vol. 96, no. 36 v. Anderson contrasts presidential candidates by Bart Becker Jack Anderson Thursday told a standing room only audience that choice in next Tuesday's election is between "a v who bleeds and sweats for the people" and 'a inun who is completely pragmatic." The nationally syndicated columnist described George McGovern as "a decent man, a compassionate man. "Before he got involved in presidential politics, any senator would have named George McGovern one of the most decent men in the Senate," Anderson said. "He is a man of such basic decency and integrity that politics becomes awkward for him." Anderson said the Eagleton fiasco was one instance in which McGovern's compassionate nature caused him to stub a political toe. By the time the "political" George McGovern got into it, the damage was done, according to Anderson. Anderson said President Nixon has more clearly defined private and political personalities. "A friend of mine who stayed with the Nixons for three weeks says the President is basically a warm human being and an introvert," Anderson commented. "But the political Nixon is characterized by a singlemindedness, an overpowering ambition and rugged self-discipline in his drive for the presidency." However, Anderson said, Nixon himself doesn't separate his two identities. "When you hit hard you get hit back" the Washington columnist said. "It was the political Richard Nixon who did the hitting. The private Nixon got hit back. "It left permanent psychological injury. It instilled a hostility toward the press and the Democrats. He is the most partisan President ever." Anderson who was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1972, went on to describe Nixon as a "highly competent" President. He said Nixon requires his subordinates to present him with every possible solution to problems. Nixon then pores over the paperwork before making a decision. Anderson called him the master of paperwork, but stressed that Nixon dislikes human confrontation. The columnist said at a news conference that the current presidential campaign is plagued by more dirty pool than ever before. In the past, Anderson said, campaign pranks were the order of the day but "it is quite a more sordid thing today." He accused Nixon of responsibility in the Watergate incident. "The Committee to Re-elect the President is responsible," Anderson said. "The President, I understand, is Richard Nixon. "If he takes the credit for the good things his administration does-and they have done some good things-he has to take the blame for the blunders. Anderson indicated he thought Nixon would emerge with a larger number of votes in next Tuesday's election. But he said Nixon's large statistical support is misleading because it disregards the human, emotional factor. "People will be voting with a lump in their throat," the investigative columnist said. "Richard Nixon isn't going to win the election so much as George McGovern is going to lose it." " Wish we had a better choise," Anderson said. "I believe the President should inspire us. Richard Nixon doesn't. Lyndon Johnson didn't. John Kennedy-I think so." Anderson, delivering In an almost evangelistic style, recounted anecdotes of his years in Washington. He paid particular tribute to John F. Kennedy as the presidential epitome. Anderson further opined that the power of the presidency corrupts. "There is something about that high office that changes men," he said. "We elect the president to be our servant. But after a few weeks, he no longer feels like a servant." Anderson noted the press is the watchdog of the government and used anecdotes from his own experience to point out how difficult the watchdog position can be. He said official policy is made in secret a"nd compared White House decision making to that of the Soviet Kremlin. "The difference is that here we have the right to dig out the secrets," Anderson said. He urged the audience to vote in the coming election. "The citizen, collectively, has the most important function in this democracy. It's awfully important to me, I hope it's important to you. Get out and vote." Earlier Anderson had commented about disparaging remarks he had made about Nebraska's U. S. Senators in a recent Playboy magazine interview. He had called Carl Curtis and Roman Hruska the nation's two worst senators. "I can't understand how one state can produce such lousy senators," Anderson said Thursday. "They don't represent Nebraska. They represent big business in the East." He said Curtis is held in "the lowest esteem by all but the most partisan Republicans." Even the straight Republicans hold a dim view of Curtis privately, but endorse him for political purposes, according to the Washington writer. "The majority of the members of the U.S. Senate are good, honest men," Anderson said. "There a few rascals and a few dolts. Nebraska has supplied us with two of the dolts." Anderson told of an instance in which he had queried a senator on a trivial matter which was on the Senate floor. The senator had replied that another senator "has a bowel pain that he thinks is an idea. When he stands up it will go away." "That's the story I always remember when Roman Hruska stands up to speak," Anderson said. JT ".'..'.ay . v l v. ,4 : J W Echoes of honesty, decency Daily Nebraskan staff writer Sara Schwieder spent Thursday with Washington columnist Jack Anderson and presents some of her observations here. by Sara Schwieder He sits beneath the sweltering lights in the midst of a crowd, pressured by the crowd's continuously moving arms and legs, pushing the limits of his time and energy, quietly bearing the weight of numerous and heavy matters. But Jack Anderson always preaches the same line: Honesty is the best policy. Anderson's ultimate judgment of his fellow beings blooms delicately from what he calls "decency." But Anderson's "decency" is, in reality, a number of qualities that make truly moral men . . . wisdom, integrity, honesty and sensitivity. One also senses that, above anything else, Anderson calls upon himself to be a truly moral man. He has probed inside himself for his version of one who lives his life well. That he demands much from himself is well and good, for he could not castigate those that need it if he did not set an example of good conduct Photoi by Dan Litdoly His speech, in private, is witty and poetic. He's got five laugh lines and a mild demeanor that at once endears him to a crowd. He doesn't talk like he writes. His speech flows and moves and borders on a metaphorical garden: he bleeds and sweats for you, he places you in big black leather chairs, he puts you in the evening dust in front of French windows. Anderson is a poet sometimes, but one that deflowers his speech to fit it into terse news columns -for deeply felt political purposes. Anderson says he believes wholeheartedly in liberty and truth, and spends his life fighting for those precious rights through the news columns with the ardor of the preacher-man. There was a strange resemblance to the preacher-man as Anderson stood before an overflow crowd in the Centennial Room Thursday. His slightly wrinkled red shirt and definitely wrinkled pants grew damp and weary as he exhorted the crowd: "Thoma's Jefferson understood about power. He knew the government needed a watchdog. The press must do it or our freedoms will erode away."