Pubdate: Wed, 16 Aug 2000 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2000 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/ Forum: http://www.freep.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Dawson Bell, staff writer Bookmark: MAP's link to shadow convention items: http://www.mapinc.org/shadow.htm Note: Shadow Convention websites: http://www.drugpolicy.org/ http://www.shadowconventions.com/ DEMOCRATS AREN'T ONLY CONVENTION IN TOWN LOS ANGELES -- This city is too big and too busy -- not to mention too weird -- for a single convention. So it's probably a good thing it's having more than one. In case you missed it -- which is highly likely given the scant national coverage -- Los Angeles this week is home to several ancillary events. We have the Homeless Convention, located, oddly, at a housing development for the homeless called Dome City. And the Shadow Convention, a gathering of unaligned malcontents led by Republican defector and celebrity pundit Arianna Huffington. And hordes of mostly young people participating in D2KLA, a sort of anti-convention near the Staples Center. On Monday evening, the street outside a civic building called Patriotic Hall, about five blocks south of the Staples Center, was blocked off to traffic. But a growing cluster of shadowy conventioneers spilled over into the street. A few, carrying clipboards and walkie-talkies, scurried in and out. What's going on? Bomb scare was the report from a well-mannered young man named Donald, who was passing out literature for Los Angeles mayoral candidate Francis DellaVechhia ("No political parties. No lobbyists. No polling"). Panic and precaution were not the watchwords for this bomb scare, however. It was phoned in two hours earlier; the police were inside rooting around. But it was only now that the building was being cleared. On a screeching makeshift sound system mounted aboard their media truck, the Shadow conventioneers attempted to carry on outside. "They're not going to shut us down!" the audience was told, It was not clear who the "they" were. Huffington took the microphone to announce that the program will continue "as if nothing has happened," a perhaps unintentionally precise description of how the Shadow Convention is faring. Paradoxically, this might have been the one moment so far in which something actually was happening. As novelist Gore Vidal is introduced, and conventioneers press further into the street, about 100 police officers in riot gear materialized 50 feet away. They wanted the street cleared. Vidal glanced over his shoulder and proclaimed: "It reminds me of Chicago in 1968. That was a merry time." His audience, however, became less merry as the police deployed into riot stick-ready formation. Heated negotiations ensued. A stream of officers, in similar gear, spilled out of Patriotic Hall. Later, the Shadow Convention was once again inside addressing its signature issues of campaign finance and corporate greed. Sadly, from the point of view of its publicist, the briefly tense standoff was overshadowed, so to speak, by something approximating real civil disobedience at the Staples Center. Police and local news organizations report that force was required to break up a demonstration outside the Democratic National Convention. An element of the D2KLA crowd loosely described as the anarchists had been flinging bottles and concrete over the barrier around the center. A few tried to climb the fence. The spirit of the crowd is fueled by an influx of attendees from a nearby outdoor concert given by Rage Against the Machine. Using pepper spray, rubber bullets and horses, police cleared the area. An hour later, departing rioters mingled with conventioneers. About one in three from both sides was talking on a cell phone. One young caller in dreadlocks described the action: "You oughta smell that gas. It's just like Raid," the bug spray. The Democrats seem secure, as they should be. The departing president who addressed them promised early in his first term to put 100,000 new cops on the street; about half of them appear to be providing security. Both groups are triumphal, and entirely disconnected. Later, local news reports on the convention featured 30-second clips of the Clinton speech, 3 minutes on the riot and breathless updates at every break on the progress of the night's main event party at Paramount Studios, at which Clinton was expected. Not a word on the Shadow Convention. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart