- m. - a,. qw, IL I -W OF im Uw 4- .11 S W- T W- ,3p" and, from the South: I A Apologist for Jim Crow The smooth cool of George Wallace, the fluidity of his personality, his easy way of throwing out what sounds like a legitimate idea, all are the camouflages of just a 'good ole country boy' from deep Dixie "Now off the recard," said George Wallace's legal advisor Hugh Mad- dox "I think that Senator Edward Brooke (R.-Mass.) is a lot better than some of those other Northern senators. But I'd rather you didn't quote me on that." I had been sitting in Governor Lurleen Wallace's posh office in the State Capitol building here (where the Confederate and Alabama flags grace the dome and the American flag flies in the backyard) when cherubic press secretary Ed Ewing brought in Maddox to minimize po- litely thefact that I had been wait- ing to see Wallace for over an hour. The Governor's office is one of those rare combinations of function and glitter. In the center of the, room there is an immense chande- lier. But cleverly obscured in the ceiling over the governor's desk is a fluorescent light bank. Pink orch- ids grace the room and the book shelves are crammed with picture books, an Atlas, and Raymond Mo- ley's "The American Legion Story." On Governor Wallace's desks are telegrams from Billy J. Hargis (head of the conservative Christian cru- side) and Governor James Rhodes of Ohio. I was winding up a five week vis- it to Alabama when I decided that my trip was incomplete without a visit to the state's star attraction, George Wallace. Press Secretary Ewing obligingly scheduled me in for a hot Monday afternoon in early June. And when I arrived I discov- ered that Northern visitors are more than welcome. Wallace's pragmatic staff is anxious to ferret out intel- ligence. Ewing began my visit by cross-ex- amining me on the- Detroit situa- tion: "Didn't all the grocers have to band together and get guns so they could break themselves from rob- bers up there? And don't the cab drivers have wire cages to guard against theft? That would be a good issue to use up there wouldn't it?" Then I was ushered into Mrs. Wal- lace's xoffice (she was off speech- making that day) which is one of four that Wallace darts between when he has a lot of visitors. Once he burst into the room only to head straight for the bathroom. When he By ROGER RAPOPORT emerged he strode out of the room apologizing "Sorry to make you wait but that's part of the game." Maddox made his exit, Wallace reappeared and fell back into the Governor's chair. The 5 ft. 7 in., 155 pound former Golden Gloves champion of Alabama in 1936-37 is an edgy man who comes across in private like he does in public. The only new discoveries are that he is hard of hearing (due to an almost fatal bout with spinal meningitis in 1942) and that he likes to spit in the wastebasket. between mono- logues. Wallace frequently cups his hand to his left ear to pick up a question. His answers are instantaneous. And during the next year the country will hear all the George Wallace they want. That's because Wallace says he is running for President on an inde- pendent "Stand Up For America" ticket. Barring a sudden change in thinking he says that he will an- nounce his candidacy "in December or possibly January." More impor- tantly Wallace says "We will win the election." Here's the way Wallace's mathe- matics works: "With three parties running I only need 34 per cent of the vote to win. I'm sure I could take enough votes to win." As evidence he points out' that he pulled in 45 per cent of the vote in the Mary- land primary and in Iridiana he took 31 per cent of the Democratic vote. "And I only made a few speeches in each place." Moreover Wallace is exuberant about the potential peace candidacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., who used to be pastor of the Dex- ter Ave. Baptist Church which sits across the street from the capitol building. "I hope he runs, I hope we have six candidates. That'll split up more of the votes and better my chances." The "Wallace Campaign' at the 10 High Building a few blocks away from the capitol is mapping strate- gy. It can't handle all of Wallace's speaking invitations. Moreover Wal- lace talks excitedly about his fan mail from Cleveland cab drivers, Gary steelworkers, and Cadillac, Mich., businessmen." In Montgomery, Wallace is king. "Wallace for President" signs are everywhere and motel marquees proudly boast "This is Wallace Country." (The slogan serves a dual function. It is a not too subtle means of discouraging Negro clientele.) Although the political pundits smirk at talk of a Wallace victory (he's currently cast as a spoiler) the raven haired Governor is con- fident. "The average man on the street is getting tired of some guy on a college campus or in a news- paper office (the Alabama press is not terribly sympathetic to Wallace and that includes the Montgomery papers) telling him what to do. They tell him he isn't smart enough to determine what is best. He's not go- ing to sit around and take that any- more. The man who fights life every day can discern things the pipe- smoking intellectual can't." For example Wallace says "We knew Fidel Castro was a Communist before the intellectuals knew. We could tell just by looking at him, and his beard. I was talking to- those cops who guarded me at Princeton (this spring) and they told me they could tell Castro was a Communist too. It was just instinct." As for the rest of the Wallace plat- form he thinks the police should get tougher with criminals ("not be hamstrung by the Supreme Court"), that we should get tougher in Viet- nam by hitting Hanoi and Haiphong harder, and jail all draft card burn- ers and other left-wing students and professors who don't back the war effort. Wallace is so confident about his chances that he's even willing to get specific about his tenure in the White House: "I don't think that J would keep Rusk and McNamara although I guess they probably wouldn't want to stay under me." He. says that as commander in chief of the armed forces he would "lean heavily on the joint chiefs of staff for military policy." Wallace is frank to admit that he hasn't given much consideration to how he'll handle a number of issues when he becomes President. For example he "doesn't know what" he'll do on the 27 per cent oil deple- tion allowance. He wants to grad- ually reduce taxes and cut back foreign aid but he isn't exactly sure how hell do it. While Wallace is confident he can win, some of the men who know him best figure he doesn't have a chance. Richmond Flowers, Wallace's former Attorney General who was soundly trounced by Mrs. Wallace in the 1966 gubernatorial election says of the prospect of Wallace becoming Presi- dent: "God would never visit a sin like that on the country." Flowers has his law offices up five floors from the Wallace Cam- paign in the 10 High Building. "George should know from Gold- water's eperience that there's not enough votes to, get him in." Of course Wallace is willing to discuss the possibility that he may be defeated. -If he loses then he plans to go back to "a private law practice." He has "no intention of running for Governor again. By 1970 my wife and I will have had eight years in office and we will have started most of the programs we wanted to get going" But as he chomps away like Ed- ward G. Robinson on a big cigar you find it hard to believe such talk. Like Richard Nixon, 48-year-old Wallace is addicted to politics, and dreams of glory. While Wallace has many defects, stupidity is not one of them. He has become the segregationist spearhead because he plays the game best. He knows that the best way to defend the obscenities of the Southern way of life is to point up north. If you ask him about Mrs. Viola Liuzzo, the Detroit housewife who was gunned down during the 1965 Selma march his answer is, "Did you know she wasn't even on the voting roles in Detroit." If you inquire about segregated The Governor of Alabama's desk and husbt schools he says, "None of our schools have to have any policemen inside like they do in Detroit." Wallace naturally has "never ad- vocated violence." He deplores the brutal civil-rights killings. And he would have you believe that he is doing his best to preserve law and order in the South. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The reason why Wallace is champ in Alabama is that he knows how to intellectualize the sound of the Klan. When he gets up and proclaims that "we don't want any outside agitators telling us how to run our lives," when. he declares that "the federal government should stop in- terfering here," when he says that 'we take care of our Negroes and they love us" there isn't a function- ally illiterate redneck in the state who doesn't know what he means. What Wallace is really doing is preserving the right of the white Southerner to harass the Negro into submission. For years Wallace had been denouncing moderate Federal Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr. as an "integrating carpet-bagging, scala- wagging, race-mixing, bald-faced liar." Judge Johnson's crime had been a consistent series of decisions rec- ognizing Negro civil rights. Taking their cue from Wallace, rednecks bombed the Montgomery home of Judge Johnson's 69-year-old mother in May. Governor Wallace and his wife were quick to denounce the bomb- ing and to offer a reward for cap- ture of the culprit. But who can doubt that it was Wallace's tough talk that helped prompt the bomb- ing? When the hour-long Wallace show is over the Governor politely ushers you out into the waiting room where half a dozen of his aides are joking and reading magazines. In a big booming voice he tells his men "I'd like you to meet a visitor from the University of Michigan." And en masse the men jumped up. My first reaction was to duck. For here are his 220-pound bodyguards, his redneck lieutenants and under- lings who have that roughhewn country look. Several of them ob- viously weren't lucky enough to have orthodontia. And somehow they all seem like they would fit right in to a Klan rally. As I shook hands with them one by one I began to understand what a Montgomery friend had told me earlier, 'It's not Wallace that scares me so much. It's his henchmen." Wallace hadn't bothered me much, either. He was well dressed, articu- late, and relatively easy to take. Even when he said something dis- agreeable he had a way of making it palatable. And I kind of half- admired him for his political finess. But as I talked to his aides I be- came jum] George Wa At heart he these bigot real differ managed t sophisticat: Wallace c his racist p tellectual s But for understood a shield foi tier-the d ceeded in h has manag life the a country bo on exploita the Negro. well. As I was Governor c ingly, "Nov this story s you out wh ROGER RAPOPORT, editor of The Daily, was in the South this summer working for The Southern Courier. A journal- ism major, he has worked for The Wall Street Journal and has had articles published in numerous periodicals. OCTOBER '67 THE DAILY MAGAZINE OCTOBER '67 THE DAILY MAGAZINE