“I don’t have the answer to that question.
“Do you?
“Is this the kind of campus we’re fighting for?
“Is this the kind of education we claim we want?
“To these last two questions I have a personal answer. It isn’t. It’s not what I want. It’s not what I’ve been fighting for. There are some on this campus whose purposes recent events suit exactly. I’m not one of them. I don’t believe that the Establishment is so bad it has to be leveled to the foundation — and below — before it can be rebuilt to the specifications of this generation.” He turned squarely to Governor Holland. “Our tactics may sometimes seem violent, Governor, but our strategy is to work out a peace at the conference table. We have been fighting because no one would sit down with us and listen to our complaints. Would you be here tonight, on this platform, under less hairy circumstances?”
Governor Holland was coming forward.
“If I may say a few words?” he said, stooping to the microphone.
Damon Wilde raised it to the governor’s level. “As many as you like, governor,” he said, and stepped aside.
“I want certain things understood,” Governor Holland said. “I am not here tonight to undercut the authority of the administrative officers of this college or the other duly constituted authorities of the state regents system. On the other hand, it’s obvious to me that there has been an almost total rupture of communications here, and if the governor of the state, at whose ultimate pleasure these authorities serve, can’t tender his good offices in a situation like this, he ought to resign the governorship.”
The audience laughed.
“I’m very happy to have heard Mr. Wilde’s opening statement. I think his ultimate aims and mine are identical. If that’s the case, we should have no trouble, as reasonable people, listening to each other’s grievances and statements of principle and arriving at an accommodation.
“One thing more before I sit down and start listening with both hairy ears. I would like to point out in self-confession that we, who have been entrusted by the people with the task of regulating a just, orderly, and prosperous society, have certainly failed to keep pace with the times in our institutions of higher learning.” President Wade was seen to go very pale indeed, and his lips became so highly compressed that they all but disappeared. “There are certain colleges where the problems being battled over here today were anticipated and solutions sought years ago, before our campuses erupted. Antioch College in Ohio, for instance, instituted a highly progressive program of curriculum, campus living, and student participation in administrative decisions when all was traditional sleepiness elsewhere, and it is significant that, while there are beefs at Antioch still, there have been no serious disorders on that campus, no riots, no seizures and destruction of property. My aim is to achieve such an adult meeting of student and administrative and faculty minds here at ’Squanto and other state colleges. But I tell you people now: I will not tolerate, and I will not permit the people authorized to administer this institution to tolerate, hoodlumism, vandalism, destruction of property, and all the other illegal and antisocial activities that have turned this campus into a shambles. If you people genuinely want a dialogue, my people and I are going to be here to engage in it with you. If you want bargaining, we’ll bargain. Reason will be met with reason, just as force will be met with force. The choice is yours, not mine. Now I’ll shut up and sit down while you tell me what’s on your minds.”
In the uproar that shook McNiel Hall, McCall slipped out of the auditorium with Kathryn.
“They’ll be eating out of old Sam’s hand before the night’s over.”
“But it seems so simple,” Kathryn protested as they hit the fresh spring night air. “Why couldn’t Wolfe Wade and Floyd Gunther achieve the same result? All they’d have had to do was use the same tactics.”
“You weren’t paying attention, Katie,” McCall said. “Tactics derive from strategy. Strategy comes from the whole man — his background, his experience, his social outlook, his philosophy of life. The Wades and Gunthers are traditionalists. They’re slaves to the past, business as usual, do-it-my-way-because-it’s-always-been-done-that-way. Sam Holland is a modern man. He sees things with an unclouded eye, and he doesn’t allow what built-in prejudices he has to befog his judgment or, or least, his willingness to listen. That’s why he’s a successful politician, and that’s why Wolfe Wade is going to find himself retired on a pension. End of speech. What are we going to do now, Katie?”
“How about going over to my place and I’ll fix us a dinner? I’ll even feed you by candlelight.”
He left her at her car, and he hurried for his rented Ford to follow her home.
He liked the promise of peace rising from the smell of growing new things on the campus, and from what he had just heard in McNiel Hall.
But that was peace — possibly — for Tisquanto State.
There would be no peace for him, Katie Cohan notwithstanding. Tomorrow he would fly back to the capital and sooner or later Sam Holland would have something new for him to step into.
Something urgent.
Something troublesome.
For trouble was his thing.
McCall grinned and shot away from the curb.