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Reagan and Me
I
grew up in Eureka, Illinois, a town of about four and a half thousand.
Eureka was once called Walnut Grove, but had to change names for
reasons which remain mysterious to me. Someone once told me that
the discovery of a second town in Illinois, also named Walnut
Grove, necessitated the change. Recently, I tried to verify this
story, but a glance through the atlas revealed no other towns
with that name. Perhaps this second Walnut Grove has also had
a re-christening. In any case, today you will find few walnut
trees in Eureka; a blight in 1910 killed nearly all. Eureka was
also once the Pumpkin Capital of the World, but somehow this title,
too, has been lost. Today, our rivals in Morton, Illinois reign
as pumpkin kings, and all that is left of Eureka's cannery is
a crumbling brick ruin.
In fact, by the time I came along Eureka had only one feature
that distinguished it from other midwestern third-generation German
farming towns: its college. And the college was famous because
of Reagan. A tiny, private, church-affiliated school, Eureka College
graduated future president Ronald Reagan in 1932. I was twelve
when Reagan gave the oath of office, and the town was bursting
with pride. A large sign appeared in front of the court house
which read "Visit Eureka College, alma mater of President
Ronald Reagan. Go four blocks, then two blocks south." It
was left to the pilgrim to decide in which direction the initial four
blocks lay. A year or so later someone noticed the mistake and
added a tiny carat and the scrawled word "west" on the
sign.
The college quickly scrambled to capitalize on Reagan's fame.
A portrait featured prominently on the prospectus and other recruiting
materials. Eventually, a Reagan Scholarship was established--somewhat
ironically, as Reagan himself claimed that his grade average in
college was "closer to the C level required for [sports]
eligibility than it was to straight A's." Perhaps the only
one unhappy about the college's love-in with the President was
my father, at that time Dean of the College. My dad was (and remains)
an old-school Stevenson liberal, as well as something of an academic
conservative; apart from the obvious political differences he
had with the Reagan Administration, the lauding of an such an
undistinguished scholar by a place of higher learning rankled
him.
During his
two terms in office, Reagan made several trips to Eureka for photo-ops
and the occasional speech. A week before each arrival the secret
service would arrive in town, black-suited and comlinked. No one
knew exactly where they sojourned--Eureka has no hotels. One day
they simply appeared, pacing intently up and down Main Street
past the five and dime, lurking amongst the greeting cards in
the Hallmark store. For the most part they stuck to the Eureka
College campus, where they endlessly cased the dozen or so dormitories
and classroom buildings, whispering into their sleeves to one
another.
On one visit, shortly before the 1980 elections, Reagan came to
light a bonfire at Eureka College. The cheering students arrived
early and the pom-pon squad did routines dressed in skirts in
spite of the autumn cold. The high school pep band, which included
my brother on trombone, played the Eureka High School Fight
Song ("On, Eureka, win this game, fight to put our foes
to shame") and the Star-Spangled Banner. They played
those thirty-two bars again and again, for hours. The cheerleaders
huddled together for warmth. Suddenly, Reagan's limo arrived and
the Secret service pushed back the teenagers to either side as
the band played Hail to the Chief. Reagan emerged, smiling,
from his car; an agent handed him an already burning torch, which
the President threw onto the pyre. A few waves to the cameras
and he was gone again, whisked off to an indoors speech.
A more substantial visit by Reagan came when he spoke at Eureka
College's 1982 commencement. As with most of Reagan's Eureka speeches,
this one took place in Eureka College's Reagan Athletic Center,
and drew a large audience from the national press as well as from
the town. Observers filled the basketball court; along one foul
shot line sat a row of boom microphones and videocameras huddled
together. To one side of the gymnasium, the hundred or so matriculating
seniors of Eureka College sat, humble observers of their own graduation.
As Dean of the College, my father was to appear on the dais sitting
next to Reagan. For this he needed security clearance in the form
of a color-coded lapel pin; I was warned not to
follow him beyond the marked areas (that is, into the men's locker
room). This was less than a year after John Hinkley Jr.'s attempt
on Reagan's life, and my youthful mind raced with images of agents
swarming over me and beating me to the linoleum after one misstep.
As a self-pitying teen with something of a persecution complex,
the thought of such a fate appealed to me, but I stayed in my
place anyway. Two weeks after the graduation, my grandmother called
my father to congratulate him: a photograph of him sitting next to
the President had been printed in People Magazine. "I
never thought I'd see my son there!" she proudly exclaimed.
The town's biggest Reagan moment by far came two years later,
when he spoke at Eureka College on its Founder's Day. In a speech sponsored
by Time Magazine, Reagan was to detail his proposed Strategic
Arms Reduction Talks (and, at the same time, putt the final nail
into SALT II's coffin). Again he gave his speech in Reagan Athletic
Center, and again the national press descended on Eureka, but in greater numbers that ever bofore or since. This
time I was in the pep band, playing my brother's discarded trombone.
We played an enthusiastic, but error-laden, version of Eureka
College's song, 'Neath the Elms, while listening for the
sound of the Air Force One helicopter overhead. The gymnasium
was filled with an army reporters, photographers, and cameramen
from every major network, newspaper, and magazine in the country.
My father had in the intervening years resigned as Dean, and he
and a couple dozen other faculty members decided to wear armbands
to protest both Reagan's anti-Sandanista policy and his belligerence
towards the Soviet Union. The college's administration had been forewarned, however,
and seated the faculty far in the back, out of sight of the cameras.
So with that potential embarrassment diffused, the speech went
off without a hitch. After the President spoke and the applause
ended, Reagan flew off to spend the night in the Sands Hotel in
Las Vegas. Behind him, the hundreds of reporters sent their copy
off by wire. For one day at least, the byline of "Eureka, Illinois"
would appear in papers around the world.
In 1986 I left Eureka to attend college. Like most teens from
small, midwestern towns, I couldn't get away from home fast enough.
That I was leaving one backwater town behind to attend school
in another backwater town didn't matter. Soon the day-to-day concerns
of books, papers, and my sex life pushed aside political concerns.
By the time Iran-Contra broke in 1987, it seemed more like a nightly
sitcom to me than an national outrage. In 1988, the Reagan Administration
was dead--long live the Bush Administration.
There was to be an epilogue to my dealings with Mr. Reagan. Starting
in the final year of his presidency, Eureka College lobbied hard
to receive his Presidential Library. For months, the college's administration
held its breath, but to no avail: Simi Valley, California got
the papers. In Eureka the rumor was that Nancy Reagan, never a
fan of her husband's humble origins, had decided that a West Coast
home for the library was more respectable. But the Reagans did
throw a bone to Eureka in the form of the "Reagan Memorabilia."
If Simi Valley was to get the major documents of the Presidency,
Eureka was to get the clutter from the Reagan's attic: t-shirts,
paperbacks, presentation gifts, and assorted bric-a-brac. Some items held marginal interest--several keys to several
cities, for example--but on the whole the Memorabilia was the sort of detritus
one finds at garage sales. The task of sorting out the few wheat
berries from the plentiful chaff fell, coincidentally, upon my
mother, newly-appointed librarian for Eureka College. Dutifully, she dusted
off those items she could and placed them in glass cases on the
first floor of Melick Library. But she still had several boxes
of--well, of junk--left. What to do with those?
That Christmas, under the tree, all the children had special gifts,
courtesy of the Reagans. My future wife, Marina, gratefully received
Nancy's copy of Jane Seymore's Guide to Romantic Living,
and I tore the wrapper off Ronald's first edition of Tom Clancy's
The Hunt for Red October--a novel Reagan reportedly called
"un-put-downable." I've since given the book away unread,
although I've seen and enjoyed the movie. But in this respect,
at least, I resemble the former president--to judge by the wear
on the pages, he only made it a third of the way through before
setting the novel aside.
Copyright (c) 1997 John McCoy all rights reserved
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