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Faubus in Fierce Fight

(Special to the CRIMSON)

LITTLE ROCK, Ark Aug. 7-With slightly more than two weeks remaining before the primary elections here, former Governor Orval E. Faubus is the clear favorite for the Democratic nomination to oppose Republican Governor Winthrop Rockefeller in the general election this fall.

Faubus, who before the advent of George Wallace and Sen. Strom Thurmond was the premier symbol of Southern racial segregation, retired in 1966 to manage Dogpatch, U. S. A., and to divorce his wife for a woman 30 years his junior.

Now, after four years of Republican rule under Rockefeller, "the old country school teacher" is attempting to regain the position he held for a record 12 years, from 1954 to 1966.

When he stepped down, his popularity was acknowledged to be as high as ever. He had defeated Rockefeller handily two years before and swamped all challengers within his party.

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But his announcement this year stirred many to speculate that his strength had been damaged by revelations of illegal gambling, corruption, and a barbaric prison system.

Stigma

The strongly religious country people who had been the bulwark of his support, they said, would be offended by his divorce and remarriage, and the younger voters, tired of the stigma Arkansas acquired for the Little Rock school crisis of 1957, would reject his old brand of polities.

Perhaps sensing the multitude of unknown factors, eight other Democrats, ranging from one end of the political spectrum to the other, announced their candidacies as well and began their summer campaigns aimed at the August 25 primary.

Even with his divorce, his vulnerable record, and his eight opponents-all of whom have made Faubus an issue in one way or another-the 63-year-old former governor has emerged over the last two months as the unmistalkable front runner.

The latest poll released by his principal challenger, state Rep. Hayes MeClerkin, shows Faubus with 40 per cent of the vote, McClerkin with 14 per cent, state Attorney General Joe Purcell with 11 per cent, and the rest with under five per cent. Almost 20 per cent were undecided, however.

Much more indicative of his strength is the increased barrage of attacks on Faubus by his opponents who in the last two weeks have virtually ignored Rockefeller who should be very vulnerable in this overwhelmingly Democratic state.

None of them hanp unduly on Faubus's handling of the Little Rock school incident of 1957. If they do, they take care to stress the unwanted notoriety he gained for the state and Little Rock. They know that his popularity was never stronger than in the years following the crisis and they know that Rockefeller has a prior claim on the black vote.

Through all of this Rockefeller has been conducting a subdued primary campaign against three very unformidable opponents. He virtually is the Republican party in Arkansas, having personally financed it for years and built his own tenuous alliance of blacks, stalwart Republicans, white moderates, and liberal Democrats.

Of his three opponents, two are over 60 and one is black. The former-a Baptist radio preacher known as "Uncle Mac" and a perennial candidate distinguished by the fact that he is on Social Security-are both former Democrats, believed hy many to have been planted by Democrats.

The black candidate, 34-year-old college president Rev. R. J. Hampton, is backed by Faubus's chief financial supporter and has ties with the conservative wing of the state Republican party usually at odds with Rockefeller.

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