Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1993 | Volume 44, Issue 2
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1993 | Volume 44, Issue 2
I met Ronald Reagan in late October 1980, just a few days before the election that would put him in the White House. In fact, our encounter occurred under circumstances that might have caused me considerable embarrassment or more.
I was in Washington, D.C., on business and had scheduled lunch with a good friend before heading home to Texas. We had worked together in Washington several years earlier, before I moved to Houston, where I tried to ignore politics and politicians. My friend had stayed active in politics and was then working in the Reagan campaign. We had agreed to meet at the campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.
After lunch I noticed four buses filled with passengers waiting in front of the headquarters building. My friend told me these would take the campaign staff to Dulles Airport to bid farewell to the candidate. Mr. Reagan was flying to Cleveland for a debate with President Carter and then directly to Houston and California, so this would be the last opportunity before the election for the staff to see him and for him to thank them.
That reminded me: I had to call a cab to take me to Dulles also. “Why not hitch a ride on one of these buses?” my friend asked. “At least it will save you cab fare.”
Reluctantly I got on the last of the four buses and sat in one of the few remaining seats. It faced sideways. To my left was a well-dressed middle-aged man with an oversize Reagan button on his lapel. Across from me was a young mother with her son, whom I took to be about five. This, I thought, was to be his introduction to history.
I felt uneasy as the buses pulled out. My uneasiness developed into a subdued panic as we drove toward Dulles Airport. What if they find out that I am not on the Reagan campaign staff? That I have not even worked in the campaign in Houston? What if they were to suspect me of being a plant by the Democrats? Worse, what if the Secret Service were to suspect me of baser motives? What had my friend gotten me into?
And then the real questions began. Observing my luggage, the young mother across from me asked whether I was flying to Cleveland with Mr. Reagan.
“No,” I responded, trying to say as little as possible.
“Where are you going?”
“Houston.”
“Oh,” she said, “you’re going to Houston in advance of Mr. Reagan.”
“You might say that.”
The gentleman to my left took up the inquisition: “What are you doing in Houston?”
“I live there.”
“No, no. I mean, what are you doing in the campaign there?”
I was trapped. Now what? Did I confess that 1 wasn’t doing anything in the campaign, merely bumming a ride to the airport? That, in effect, I was