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Faubus and sought
Faubus was known as a particularly effective one-on-one campaigner and was said to have never turned away anyone who sought to shake his hand, no matter how much time it took.
In 1962, Rockefeller supported Willis Ricketts, another in a long line of failed Republican candidates who sought to topple Faubus.

Faubus and again
In 1956, he did not run again for the legislature because he challenged Governor Orval Eugene Faubus in the Democratic Party primary.

Faubus and 1970
In the 1970 race, two other Democratic candidates in the running, Joe Purcell and Hayes McClerkin, failed to make the runoff, and Bumpers barely edged Purcell for the chance to face Faubus directly.
In the 1970 campaign, Rockefeller expected to face Orval Faubus, who led the old-guard Democrats, but the previously unknown Dale Bumpers of Charleston in Franklin County rose to the top of the Democratic heap by promising reforms.

Faubus and 1986
In his last race, 1986, Faubus polled 174, 402 votes ( 33. 5 percent ) to Clinton's 315, 397 ( 60. 6 percent ).
In 1986, Faubus unsuccessfully challenged Clinton for Democratic renomination.

Faubus and was
Faubus was not a proclaimed segregationist.
Faubus ' order received the attention of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who was determined to enforce the orders of the Federal courts.
* Orval E. Faubus ( 1910 – 1994 ), governor of Arkansas during the desegregation days, was from the Combs community near Huntsville.
Conway was long the home of the late Arkansas Supreme Court Associate Justice James D. Johnson ( d. 2010 ), who ran unsuccessful races for governor in 1956 against then fellow Democrat Orval Eugene Faubus and in 1966 against the Republican Winthrop Rockefeller.
Jan Hines Faubus, former wife of controversial Arkansas governor Orval Faubus, was raised and educated in Beebe.
Orval Eugene Faubus ( January 7, 1910 – December 14, 1994 ) was the 36th Governor of Arkansas, serving from 1955 to 1967.
Faubus was born to Sam Faubus ( 1887 – 1966 ), and the former Addie Joslen in the Combs Community near Huntsville, the seat of Madison County in northwestern Arkansas.
Faubus ' first political race was in 1936 when he contested a seat in the Arkansas House of Representatives, a race in which he finished second.
In the 1954 campaign, Faubus was compelled to defend his attendance at the defunct northwest Arkansas Commonwealth College in Mena, as well as his early political upbringing.
Relations were cool between the two men for years, but when Cherry died in 1965, Faubus put politics aside and was magnanimous in praising his predecessor.
Critics have long charged that Faubus ' fight in Little Rock against the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision by the U. S. Supreme Court that separate schools were inherently unequal was politically motivated.
Ashmore said that Faubus used the Guard to keep blacks out of Central High School because he was frustrated by the success his political opponents were having in using segregationist rhetoric to arouse white voters.
Though Faubus later lost general popularity as a result of his stand against desegregation, at the time he was included among the " Ten Men in the World Most Admired by Americans ", according to Gallup's most admired man and woman poll for 1958.
This dichotomy was later summed up as follows: Faubus was both the " best loved " and " most hated " of Arkansas politicians of the second half of the twentieth century.
Faubus was elected governor to six two-year terms and hence served for twelve years.
While he was still an outcast from black leaders, Faubus nevertheless won a large percent of the black vote.
In 1968, Faubus was among five people considered for the vice-presidential slot of third-party presidential candidate George Wallace.
During the 1969 season, Faubus was hired by new owner Jess Odom to be general manager of his Li ' l Abner theme park in the Ozark Mountains, Dogpatch USA.
According to newspaper articles, Faubus was said to have commented that managing the park was similar to running state government because some of the same tricks applied to both.

Faubus and defeated
Faubus hence narrowly defeated Cherry to win the Democratic gubernatorial nomination.
Faubus defeated Remmel by a 63 % to 37 % percent margin.
In 1960, Faubus defeated Attorney General Bruce Bennett in the Democratic gubernatorial primary for and then crushed the Republican choice, Henry M. Britt, an attorney from Hot Springs, to secure reelection.
In 1964, when he defeated the Republican Winthrop Rockefeller by a 57 % to 43 % margin, Faubus secured 81 % of the black vote.
Bumpers barely edged out Purcell for the runoff berth but then easily defeated Faubus.
He and former Governor Orval Faubus were defeated in the Democratic primary by former U. S. Representative David Pryor of Camden.
When Cherry ran for a second term, he was defeated in a runoff primary by Orval Eugene Faubus of Madison County.
Faubus then defeated the Republican Pratt C. Remmel, the mayor of Little Rock, to win the first of his six terms as governor.
In his scrapbook memoirs Down From the Hills, Faubus tells a story of having checked into a motel in El Reno, Oklahoma, in 1954, while he was en route on a family trip to Colorado, after having defeated Cherry in the runoff.
Faubus then defeated the Republican Roy Mitchell to win a second consecutive two-year term as governor.

Faubus and Democratic
The Arkansas Democratic Party, which then controlled politics in the state, put significant pressure on Faubus after he had indicated he would investigate bringing Arkansas into compliance with the Brown decision.
When Faubus returned from the war, he cultivated ties with leaders of Arkansas ' Democratic Party, particularly with progressive reform Governor Sid McMath, leader of the post-war " GI Revolt " against corruption, under whom he served as director of the state's highway commission.
Thus, a new generation of popular Democratic candidates easily contrasted themselves favorably in voters ' minds with Faubus ' old-style politics and a more conservative Republican Party which followed Rockefeller's tenure in the state.
But Arkansans had tired of Faubus after six terms as governor and as head of the Democratic " machine.
The industrial panel was originally created by Democratic Governor Orval Eugene Faubus and first directed by Winthrop Rockefeller, who in 1966 used his experience in the AIDC to get elected as Arkansas ' first Republican governor in modern times.
Despite his lack of name recognition, his oratorical skills, personal charm, and outsider image put him in a runoff election for the Democratic nomination with former Governor Orval Faubus.

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