-Caveat Lector-

>Just Our Bill
>by Dennis Roddy, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,
>Saturday, December 02, 2000
>
>Lito Pena is sure of his memory. Thirty-six years ago he, then a
>Democratic Party poll watcher, got into a shoving match with a Republican
>who had spent the opening hours of the 1964 election doing his damnedest to
>keep people from voting in south Phoenix.
>
>"He was holding up minority voters because he knew they were going to
>vote Democratic," said Pena.
>
>The guy called himself Bill. He knew the law and applied it with the
>precision of a swordsman. He sat at the table at the Bethune School, a
>polling place brimming with black citizens, and quizzed voters ad nauseam
>about where they were from, how long they'd lived there -- every question in
>the book. A passage of the Constitution was read and people who spoke broken
>English were ordered to interpret it to prove they had the language skills
>to vote.
>
>By the time Pena arrived at Bethune, he said, the line to vote was four
>abreast and a block long. People were giving up and going home.
>
>Pena told the guy to leave. They got into an argument. Shoving followed.
>Arizona politics can be raw.
>
>Finally, Pena said, the guy raised a fist as if he was fixing to throw a
>punch.
>
>"I said 'If that's what you want, I'll get someone to take you out of
>here'."
>
>Party leaders told him not to get physical, but this was the second straight
>election in which Republicans had sent out people to intellectually rough up
>the voters. The project even had a name: Operation Eagle Eye.
>
>Pena had a group of 20 iron workers holed up in a motel nearby. He
>dispatched one who grabbed Bill and hustled him out of the school.
>
>"He was pushing him across a yard and backed him into the school building,"
>Pena remembered.
>
>Others in Phoenix remember Operation Eagle Eye, too.
>
>Charlie Stevens, then the head of the local Young Republicans, said he got
>a phone call from the same lawyer Pena remembered throwing out of
>Bethune School. The guy wanted to know why Charlie hadn't joined Operation
>Eagle Eye.
>
>"I think they called them flying squads," Stevens said. "It was perfectly
>legal. The law at the time was that you had to be able to read English
>and interpret what you read."
>
>But he didn't like the idea and he told Bill this.
>
>"My parents were immigrants," Stevens said. They'd settled in Cleveland,
>Ohio, a pair of Greeks driven out of Turkey who arrived in the United States
>with broken English and a desire to be American. After their son went to law
>school and settled in Phoenix, he even Americanized the name.  Charlie
>Tsoukalas became Charlie Stevens.
>
>"I didn't think it was proper to challenge my dad or my mother to interpret
>the Constitution," Stevens said. "Even people who are born here have trouble
>interpreting the Constitution. Lawyers have trouble interpreting it."
>
>The guy told Stevens that if he felt that way about it, then he could take a
>pass.
>
>There was nothing illegal going on there, Stevens said.
>
>"It just violated my principles. I had a poor family. I grew up in the
>projects in Cleveland, Ohio."
>
>Operation Eagle Eye had a two-year run. Eventually, Arizona changed the laws
>that had allowed the kind of challenges that had devolved into bullying.
>
>Pena went on to serve 30 years in the Arizona State Legislature. Stevens
>became a prosperous and well-regarded lawyer in Phoenix and helped Sandra
>Day O'Connor get her start in law.
>
>The guy Pena remembers tossing out of Bethune School prospered, too.  Bill
>Rehnquist, now better known as William H. Rehnquist, chief justice of the
>Supreme Court of the United States, presided yesterday over a case that
>centers on whether every vote for president was properly recorded in the
>state of Florida.
>
>In his confirmation hearings for the court in 1971, Rehnquist denied
>personally intimidating voters and gave the explanation that he might
>have been called to polling places on Election Day to arbitrate disputes
>over
>voter qualifications. Fifteen years later, three more witnesses, including
>a deputy U.S. attorney, told of being called to polling places and having
>angry voters point to Rehnquist as their tormentor. His defenders suggested
>it was a case of mistaken identity.
>
>Now, with the presidency in the balance, Rehnquist has been asked to read
>passages of the Constitution and interpret them. Once again, a reading and
>interpretation will determine whose vote gets to count.

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