'armonious convention snuihin 'io sneeze at The Democrats' convention was the sort of event that Jim told Muck Finn "you wouldn't want to miss for three dollars." Four maybe, but not three, It might have been a $7.50 convention, a humdin ger, had Gary Hart pounced after Geraldine Fcrra ro's first interview with Valter Mondale, whose staff reported that she had done poorly. Had Hart got her to join a Gary-and-Gerry ticket, he might have knocked enough delegates off Mondale's pile to pull Mondale below the winning total. Hart then would, I believe, have been nominated in a rush. Democrats certainly do have a powerful liking for Myth Continued from Page 5 As for conservative ! 01 im sift,1 yy ANY REGULARLY PRICED ALBUM OR TAPE WITH STUDENT I. D. fc. ?1 jflKh fW fc jpflfc-pmi) iOL'Mi oS 4 Southern women, Rich ards wryly asks about the origins of the leading anti feminist from Illinois: "Hey, tell me, where does Phylli3 Schlafly come from?" In the next days, a lot of the rhetoric about Gerry Ferraro will be about doors opening, about old ideas and old stereotypes breaking down. It would be intrig uing and quite delicious if this lady and this cam paign crumbled another myth, one with a distinct ly Southern accent. 1C34, Tha Boston Glcbt Newspaper Company Washington Post Writers Group We personalize by painting on each item the name and design of your choice. Our luggage is machine-monogrammed. ' OC9CDMA 1 71T) CIFTS 70th & Viiw 467-1332 iv i X f t f Lincoln, TJ J Justin? ir Streat pm in bacV. Barber Styling Salon 124 North 12 th Gem. RxiThi CltiTake Hqv.hTh2 Ore. Walk in or, for appointments: 1 A M C C Hi s ' HV'.'. MAIS CINtlR being stampeded. The premier stampeder, Jesse Jackson, probably helped his party, and Ronald Reagan's. Jackson gave Democrats in the hall, and some traditional Democratic constituencies, a chance to do what self interest and liberal doctrine make them want to do: feel warmly about him. So the unpre cedented turning over a night of the convention to someone who finished a distant third ir. the nom ination contest was practical politics, as well as emotional therapy for the man who has been seek ing respect while others were seeking the presidency. George Will On the other hand, the congregation in the con vention hall, experiencing a political Pentecost, was not, to put it mildly, a representative slice of that which matters: the electorate. Many people at home watching Jackson's hot performance on the cool medium must have thought, "Surely I am not part of the huddled masses summoned to come unto him. That party makes me uncomfortable." Now as Walter Mondale charges forth, hi3 lance at the level, to slay the dragon of Reaganism, the ques tion is, "Where is the best of him?" He left here under the shadow of a doubt that hovered over him in January. The doubt is whether he has, as his oppo nent so conspicuously does, a talent for embodying a cause. One discouraged Democrat says Mondale's stra tegy has become his message. Another says Mon dale's method mirrors his mind, in this sense: Mon dale does not think in terms of individuals. Rather, he thinks that everyone is a member of a group, and every group has their organization, and every organ ization has a leader with whom you make arrange ments. For example, a person from the South is a member of The South," which has a regional politi cal organization, at the head of which is . . . Bert Lance. One splendid if unintended result of this conven tion is that a dreary subject may have been elimi- nntpd from this vcar's campaign. Lance left Washing ton under a cloud of charges that were as Insub stantial as, well, a cloud or as the charges against Ed Meese. Perhaps the parties can negotiate a mut ual and verifiable freeze on sanctimony. "We won't talk about Lance's checkbook if you wont talk about Meese's cuff links." The convention made the campaign themes as clear as consomme: Reagan is unfair at home and unsafe abroad. When Jim asked Tom Sawyer what a Moslem is Tom said a Moslem is someone who is not a Presby terian. With similar precision Democrats say that "fairness" i3 not what Reagan delivers. Among the many things we will learn in the next 100 days is whether the "fairness" of the federal social agenda is a salient issue during an economic boom. The country is more conservative than it was four elections ago, and the Mondale-Ferraro ticket is even more ideologically uniform and pronouncedly liberal than the second-most-liberal ticket of the postwar era, Humphrey-Muskie in 1963. Today only one-third of all Democrats describe themselves as liberals. The current House of Representatives is the first in which a majority of seats are not from the states that won the Civil War. Republican successes in the rising regions the South and West have temp ted, or forced, Democrats to concentrate" on the Northeast and industrial Midwest. This regionalism partially explains today's unusually divergent views of the two parties concerning the country's condi tion and the government's agenda. Only 10 elections sir.ee 1789 have been close, meaning won by a margin of approximately 3 per cent or less. But close elections seem to come in clusters. Five were consecutive (1876-1892) and three were recent (1960, 1968, 1976). More than one-fourth of those who voted for Carter in 1976 did not in 1980. Democrats can reasonably hope that their rea sonably harmonious convention (only the second such since 1964) will revise the allegiance of those Democrats who were dispirited four years ago. So this was indeed a $3 convention, and in Huck's day three dollars warn't, as he said, nuthin' to sneeze at. ci 34, W&$fclng?3ti Post Writer Group zy-o vHl'-o VII7 'Tni zszzr sn,r -Zjzzzz ill . f V If I! U f W 0 'if 4 is . If JIIL Minnesota mi z .iUfy : J F ' Black journalists Ccstinaed Sroci Pa;3 4 To find the solution, people can look at the way the news is gathered and presented in America. For example, many anchormen editorialize for an entire hour in the name of news. Anchormen are not the only editorializing culprits; they also invite other political commentatorsanalysts and reporters on their shows to do the same. Reporters put editorial comments and speculation in their stories, passing these comments off as fact. Examples cf this abound in an election year when winners arex declared before the vote is taken. More subtle' instances include the choice of descriptive words used in any report How can the news be objective when what journal ists choose to report or even highlight for that matter is based on subjective criteria? How can the result be objective when the process is highly subjective? It's a proces s that begins with people determining, according to their own criteria, what is newsworthy, what is worth covering. The next step is reporters deciding what questions to ask the focus and direction of their interviews. Then the reporters decide what to leave out of the story, paring down the already selective material that has been gather ed. Someone else may edit the story further, then Da:!y Ncbrazkan decides, again using personal criteria, where to place the story, either what page in the newspaper or magazine, or when during tha newscast. Every step requires the judgment (a synonym fcr opinion) and is at the discretion of some person who hss distinct perceptions, principles, and opinions. It m an evaluative process, which by its very nature is value-laden. This b thectandard. So the question that follows is: Should black journalists be expected to deviate from the standard, end perform at a higher level than that of their non-black collegues? Should blacks be objective about Jesse Jackson, about racism, about Issues important to them when white journalists are not doing so? It's not a matter of being "objective" across the board; it's a matter of where your perspective is oh the board. We need to get away from the belief that if you have a mainstream perspective you can be objective, but no one else can. Perhsp3, in striving for the unattainable ideal of objectivity, the main stream perspective is less objective than others. Those outside the mainstream are forced to deal with these perceptions because they're encountered and must be taken into account in all aspects of life. Mainstreamers rarely know what other perspectives are, if they even ackno'wkdga that they exist Tuesday, July 24 19B4 Pcgo6