Word: corley
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Married. George Corley Wallace Jr., 23, second son of Alabama's Governor and his late first wife Lurleen, a sometime country-and-western singer now studying political science at Huntingdon College in Montgomery; and his high school sweetheart, Janice Culbertson, 23, now an ad-agency art director; both for the first time; in Montgomery. George Sr. was best...
...wins from Tim Levy, Dave Chase and Jeff Golan. Levy, who dropped his first set to Steve Hoff, 6-1, bounced back to grab two straight, 6-2 and 6-3. Chase put away Fred Furgerstrom, 6-1, 4-6 and 6-3. Golan had little difficulty with Andy Corley in straight sets...
Wallace's official mission was to open the legislative session. His speech was routine-against higher taxes, against a reapportionment plan ordered by a federal court, in favor of restoring capital punishment. His real message was that George Corley Wallace, exactly 50 weeks after a madman's bullets almost killed him, was ready for action physically and politically...
Except that this time the victim survived. There would be no lying in state, no funeral train, no mournful services for the nation to attend by television. Like Tom Sawyer at his own funeral, Alabama's George Corley Wallace could savor both obsequies and survival. The morning after the shooting last week in a Maryland shopping center, Wallace, half-paralyzed, could lie in his hospital bed and feistily ask an aide: "Whatja got me scheduled for today?" The next day he would read the news of his primary triumphs in Maryland and Michigan...
...George Corley Wallace's double-knit-clad workers do not talk about alienation. Their current word for the mood of the voters is "disenchantment." Another term at the Alabama Governor's Montgomery headquarters is "protracted politics"-not a bad description of Wallace's dogged, divisive presidential candidacy, now making its third appearance in eight years. Whatever it is, it is working: Hubert Humphrey edged him by a scant 5% margin in Indiana; George McGovern has carefully ducked him in Florida and Michigan, where busing is a hot issue; Scoop Jackson could never catch fire once Wallace...