Home Security together to bring about an end to injustice and discrim- ination. They marched arm- in-arm together, demon- strated together, protested together. The Civil Rights movement was not monochromatic." Gov. Wilder is a deliberate, contemplative speaker, often pausing —hands clasped in thought — to ensure that his rhetoric is as meticulously tailored as his gray herringbone suit. Some Jews and blacks say they consider the governor a "calming influence in black- Jewish relations." He is a welcome contrast, they say, to yesterday's Stokely Car- michaels or today's Louis Farrahkans or Al Sharptons. A Wilder presidency "would be good for the Jew- ish community," according to Ann F. Lewis, former po- litical director of the Dem- ocratic National Committee and a lay leader of the American Jewish Congress. But for voters in general, would a Wilder presidency be good for the country at large? And political insiders are asking themselves a parallel question: Would a Wilder candidacy be good for the Democratic Party, a party whose chances of unseating -President Bush have all but been dismissed before the first primary? D ouglas Wilder is very much the product of two communities. Born in Richmond in 1931, he was named for black poet Can Wilder Win? As Labor Day —Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder's self-imposed deadline for announcing his candidacy — neared, pundits debated the merits of the man who may try to unseat George Bush. The governor claims his greatest assets are his fiscal management and administrative skills. These, he said, are "obviously missing in Washington., And not just missing in the Bush ad- ministration. Missing, period." He blasts senators for raising their salary dur- ing a recession, boasting that, at the same time, Virginia held its taxes steady, avoided "massive layoff's" and accumulated a budget surplus. Mr. Wilder was elected governor largely on the abortion issue, and be- lieves that government has no right to interfere with an individual's right to an abortion. The stand will likely win him the support of national pro- choice groups, and could also be a chink in the ar- mor of a pro-life President Bush. President Bush will likely reap the spoils of the Gulf War in the '92 election. While the governor lacks experience in for- eign policy, he claims that the next president should emphasize domestic issues over an interna- tional agenda. Wary of Mr. Wilder's penchant for political in- fighting, the Democratic national leadership "won't be enthusiastic about him — he would have to prove himself," said Anne Lewis, a former political director of the Democratic National Committee. And politically, Gov. Wilder's private life — as a divorced bachelor who is pro-choice — "will be terrible for him," one observer commented. However, Mr. Wilder's relationship with his three children appears excellent, putting him ahead of at least one re- cent Republican presi- dent.0 _Jay Lechtman Paul Lawrence Dunbar and Frederick Douglass, the freed-slave abolitionist leader. He attended segregated schools and graduated from Virginia Union University and Howard University's School of Law. But he did not participate in the civil rights battles of the 1960s. "I'm not an activist," he said. Instead, he became a suc- cessful criminal defense lawyer, a politician, and a self-made millionaire. He was elected to the State Senate in 1969. During his four terms, he helped estab- lish Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday as a state holiday, fought to remove "Carry Me Back To Old Virginny" as the state song because it nostalgically re- ferred to slaves, and strengthened the state's criminal and educational code. He was elected lieutenant governor in 1985. Four years later, he became governor. His ties to Richmond's Jewish community are rooted in his desire, as a young black lawyer, to suc- ceed in a white, southern society. Helping him meet that goal were Jewish attorneys and political activists — all professionally successful, reform-minded, and, like him, outsiders. His circle of Jewish friends and advisers includes: • Irving Joul — one of the world's largest hat manufac- turers and a close friend of the late Malcolm Forbes. *Stuart Siegel — chief ex- ecutive officer of S & K Famous Brands, a discount clothing chain. • Tommy Baer, the inter- national senior vice presi- dent of B'nai B'rith. •H. Louis Salomonsky -- an architect and real estate developer said to have been the governor's personal in- vestments adviser. • Irving M. Blank — chairman of the community relations committee of Richmond's Jewish Com- munity Federation, a former member of AIPAC's national council and current ex- ecutive committee member of the National Jewish Community Relations Ad- visory Council. 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