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                    <hi rend="bold">Oral History Interview with Aaron Henry, April 2, 1974.
                        Interview A-0107. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007):</hi>
                    Electronic Edition. </title>
                <title type="descriptive">Race and Politics in Mississippi</title>
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                    <name id="ha" reg="Henry, Aaron" type="interviewee">Henry, Aaron</name>,
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                    <resp>Interview conducted by </resp>
                    <name id="bj" reg="Bass, Jack" type="interviewer">Bass, Jack</name>
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                <funder>Funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services supported the
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                    <name id="mm">Mike Millner</name>
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                <date>2006.</date>
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                        <title type="sound recording">Oral History Interview with Aaron Henry, April
                            2, 1974. Interview A-0107. Southern Oral History Program Collection
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                        <title type="series">Series A. Southern Politics. Southern Oral History
                            Program Collection (A-0107)</title>
                        <author>Jack Bass</author>
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                        <publisher>Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at
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                        <date>2 April 1974</date>
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                        <title type="transcript">Oral History Interview with Aaron Henry, April 2,
                            1974. Interview A-0107. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)</title>
                        <title type="series">Series A. Southern Politics. Southern Oral History
                            Program Collection (A-0107)</title>
                        <author>Aaron Henry</author>
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                    <extent>33 p.</extent>
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                        <publisher>Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at
                            Chapel Hill</publisher>
                        <pubPlace>Chapel Hill, North Carolina</pubPlace>
                        <date>2 April 1974</date>
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                        <note anchored="no">Interview conducted on April 2, 1974, by Jack Bass;
                            recorded in Clarksdale, Mississippi.</note>
                        <note anchored="no"> Transcribed by Linda Killen.</note>
                        <note anchored="no"> Forms part of: Southern Oral History Program Collection
                            (#4007): Series A. Southern Politics, Manuscripts Department, University
                            of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.</note>
                        <note anchored="no">Original transcript on deposit at the Southern
                            Historical Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina
                            at Chapel Hill.</note>
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        <front>
            <div1 type="about_interview">
                <head>Interview with Aaron Henry, April 2, 1974. Interview A-0107.</head>
                <byline>Conducted by Jack Bass</byline>
                <note type="deposit" anchored="no">
                    <p>Transcript on deposit at The Southern Historical Collection, The Louis Round
                        Wilson Library</p>
                </note>
                <note type="citation" anchored="no">
                    <p>Citation of this interview should be as follows: <lb/>“Interview A-0107, in
                        the Southern Oral History Program Collection #4007, <lb/>Southern Historical
                        Collection, The Wilson Library, <lb/>University of North Carolina at Chapel
                        Hill”</p>
                </note>
                <note type="copyright" anchored="no">Copyright © 2000 The University of North
                    Carolina</note>
            </div1>
            <div1 type="abstract">
                <head>Abstract</head>
                <p>Aaron Henry, an officeholder in the National Association for the Advancement of
                    Colored People (NAACP) and the chairman of the Mississippi Democratic Party,
                    shares his thoughts and recollections on the intersection of race and politics
                    in his home state. Despite racially motivated violence, Henry is determined to
                    use his education and political skills to advance the interest of black
                    Mississippians, a group under assault by racist white politicians committed to
                    reversing the gains of the civil rights movement. This interview will be useful
                    for researchers interested in the insidious role of race in 1970s Mississippi
                    politics.</p>
            </div1>
            <div1 type="short_abstract">
                <head>Short Abstract</head>
                <p>Aaron Henry describes the role of race and racism in Mississippi politics.</p>
            </div1>
        </front>
        <body>
            <div1 id="A-0107" type="sohp_interview">
                <head>Interview with Aaron Henry, April 2, 1974. <lb/>Interview A-0107. Southern
                    Oral History Program Collection (#4007)</head>
                <list type="simple">
                    <head>Interview Participants</head>
                    <item>
                        <name id="spk1" key="ah" reg="Henry, Aaron" type="interviewee">AARON
                        HENRY</name>, interviewee</item>
                    <item>
                        <name id="spk2" key="jb" reg="Bass, Jack" type="interviewer">JACK
                        BASS</name>, interviewer</item>
                </list>
                <div2 id="tape1-a" n="1-A" type="tape_side">
                    <pb id="p1" n="1"/>
                    <head>[TAPE 1, SIDE A]</head>
                    <note anchored="yes">
                        <p>[START OF TAPE 1, SIDE A]</p>
                    </note>
                    <milestone n="1261" unit="empty" type="start" timestamp="00:00:00"/>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>—to where some people are, to where perhaps these people are</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>And you think these intimacies between individuals of both races go both
                            ways?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Sure.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You're how old now?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>52. <note type="comment">[interruption]</note> I've been called worse
                            names by better men.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Okay, but in the NAACP you're what?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I served as president of Mississippi state conference of the NAACP.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Since when?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Since 1960. I serve as president of the local branch of the NAACP since
                            1952. Served on the national board of directors of the NAACP. This is my
                            third three-year term, for nine years. And this year I served as
                            chairman of Willy Stone's southeast other fifth region of the NAACP,
                            which includes North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee,
                            Florida and Alabama.</p>
                        <p>
                            <note type="comment">[interruption]</note>
                        </p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>—the Loyalist faction of the Democratic Party in your opinion.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>In the Loyalist faction there are Democrats and there are ex-Democrats.
                                <note type="comment">[Laughter]</note></p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>In the Loyalist faction view. In the Democratic Party of Mississippi that
                            is recognized by the Democratic Party of the United States, your title
                            is what?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <pb id="p2" n="2"/>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I serve as chairman of the party and chairman of the executive committee
                            of the party.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="1261" unit="empty" type="stop" timestamp="00:02:20"/>
                    <milestone n="866" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:02:21"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What is it like in Mississippi now politically compared to what it was
                            like when you got started? Twenty years ago, right?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, when you say you got started . . . I really became a member of
                            NAACP as a senior in high school back in '41. Graduated in June of
                        '42.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You a native of Clarksdale?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I was born in this county. I was born on Flowers brothers' plantation. My
                            parents moved into the town of Clarksdale for better educational
                            opportunities for me and my sister. <note type="comment"
                            >[unclear]</note> from the genesis of time that you remember Mississippi
                            has grown from an era where whites were automatically superior to an era
                            where superiority is not necessarily reflected in whiteness. Of course,
                            being white does give one a head start. But there are several blacks who
                            outrank whites in various areas of relationship. And I think in terms of
                            change from then to now, I think the biggest change is in attitudinal
                            relations. You were over at Charlie Sullivan's before you came here.
                            Charlie picked up the phone and said, "Aaron, this is Charlie. Tell a
                            friend of ours how to get to your house." Well now, Charlie Sullivan is
                            a former lieutenant governor of this state, former district attorney
                            from this area. There was a time, say ten years ago or more, when he
                            would say "Aaron, this is Mr. Charlie." But it's . . . no . . . as I
                            say, the way one responds to the other today as compared to then is
                            grossly different.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>And you told me earlier that there was a time when he prosecuted you—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Oh sure, Charlie put me in jail. Like everybody else. He was district
                            attorney. That was his job. I was <note type="comment">[unclear]</note>
                                violating<pb id="p3" n="3"/> laws that I didn't feel were just laws.
                            And in that context, the discipline of the movement demands that you be
                            willing to pay the cost for violating laws, you know, that you don't
                            feel are just. So I don't believe one without penalty can afford to obey
                            only those laws that he believes in. But if he's willing to pay the
                            penalty for the laws he violates, you know, I think that that
                            compensates for a conscious difference between the two.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What were the type of laws involved in those cases?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, I was <note type="comment">[unclear]</note> advocating to people,
                            particularly black people, not to patronize certain stores in the
                            community because they didn't hire blacks. You were guilty of parading
                            without a permit as they called it at that time. Which meant that you
                            had invoked what is a traditional First Amendment right of carrying a
                            picket sign in front of a business and in front of an individual.
                            Frankly, we picketed Charlie Sullivan himself, as district attorney for
                            this county. Because of the fact that he was instrumental in getting
                            affidavits against us who were involved in the picketing. This was the
                            kind of stuff, largely, that I was involved on the opposite side from
                            Charlie.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How did you feel toward him then?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Oh, well, I just said Charlie was a lawman, you know. That the fracas
                            between blacks and whites at that time was underscored that whites are
                            in the master role, blacks are in the servant role. And consequently the
                            master-servant role prevailed. You know, I've had to deal with Charlie
                            on the question of involvement in the Democratic Party and trying to be
                            sure that rules and regulations that were set up by <note type="comment"
                                >[unclear]</note> in the Democratic Party then would no longer be in
                            vogue. We had a series of deposition sessions where our lawyers were
                            present and his lawyer and him were present and consequently there
                                was<pb id="p4" n="4"/> this kind of <note type="comment"
                            >[unclear]</note>. </p>
                        <p>Really, my attitude about Charlie and many other whites who I feel have
                            turned a corner . . . I don't think that I've changed. I think that
                            they've changed their way of action that accommodates my position.
                            Regardless of how bad they've been, when they convince me or some of the
                            others of us, that they are no longer a part of what they used to be,
                            then I'm for forgiving what their past has been. Because, you see, if
                            blacks continue to hold against whites all of the charges that they are
                            guilty of in terms of their negation of the black community . . . if we
                            continue to hold that as an issue of hatred, an issue of confrontation,
                            then we're never going to get over this situation of racial injustice
                            and racial bigotry. So if ten years ago you had come here, you would
                            have found a couple people outside with shotguns and maybe one man
                            inside. You know, the house had been bombed and all. Knocked the store
                            down a couple times. And of course we responded to the cruels in these
                            areas. But I would say within the last four or five years there has
                            been, in my mind, no real concern about being dealt with physically in a
                            way that would deprive me of life or limb.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How much fear did you feel, say ten years ago?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, you know, I don't really know. I just know this, that it's not
                            whether or not you're afraid, but it's what do you do when you are
                            afraid. Now my activity ten years ago is the same as it is now.
                            Continuing to try to convince as many members of the total community as
                            I could that there was a situation of a one-way structure where all men
                            were men, where nobody was inferior to another. This is pretty much the
                            line that I learned from the NAACP when I first became involved in it,
                            which was further structured by my years of identity, close association
                            with Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, those kind of activity. I've<pb
                                id="p5" n="5"/> never known a time when I didn't feel as I do now.
                            That in the question of violence I was certainly much more concerned
                            about if it affected my family, my children, my wife, myself. Then the
                            guards that we had. As soon as my wife got to the point where she felt
                            comfortable with them not being here, then I was very happy to say, "We
                            don't need you anymore." Because I would just like to not have to have
                            somebody with me everywhere I go. Now I still maintain one bit of
                            caution, I guess you would call it domestic caution. Because my wife
                            insists that I don't travel by myself, you know, around in the car.
                            She'd rather have somebody there tell a story <note type="comment"
                                >[unclear]</note>. So just to be sure her mental attitude is not all
                            stirred up about me driving by myself, I capitulated to that. I don't
                            drive alone. But other than that I don't have any . . .</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="866" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:12:42"/>
                    <milestone n="867" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:12:43"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You said you've always felt the same way you feel now.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How is that? What is that?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, that mankind is placed on this earth by a deity that we all are
                            bound to respect. And that although we find ourselves to be the
                            grandsons of former slaves and the grandsons of former slave owners, but
                            neither of us had, really, anything to do with that period of our
                            nation's history. And it is our responsibility, because those scars
                            still remain, to bind up the wounds of that era. And that's what I think
                            I'm about every day and that's what I'd like to see everybody about
                            everyday, to help erase the years of <note type="comment"
                            >[unclear]</note> dehumanization that has taken place in America for
                            some time. But you see, where some of us get lost in chronology . . .
                            many of us think that segregation has been with us for a long, long
                            time. Well, Mississippi didn't have segregation until 1890. From 1865 to
                            1876 was the freest period which blacks have ever witnessed in America
                            and particularly in<pb id="p6" n="6"/> Mississippi. It was after the
                            Tilden-Hayes compromise, the presidential race of 1876 where Rutherford
                            Hayes told the southerners that, "If you'll make me president, I'll
                            remove the troops from the South and turn the blacks back over into the
                            hands of the white landowners." Now between 1865 and 1876 Mississippi
                            sent two blacks to the Senate of the United States—Bruce and Revels. The
                            fact that the constitutional convention in Mississippi did not meet
                            until 1890 and it was in 1890 that the Jim Crow laws were written into
                            our structure. From 1865 until 1890—<note type="comment"
                            >[unclear]</note>—you had black and white kids going to school together,
                            you had no segregation. Because the Thirteen, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth
                            Amendments had just passed and all of these were about black rights in
                            the black community. And it was really 1890 when we finally got around
                            to making segregation legal. It was really 1896 before the Supreme Court
                            took a position on separate and equal. That was in the <hi rend="i"
                                >Plessy v. Ferguson</hi> case that grew out of Louisiana in regard
                            to a dining room car on a train where a black refused to sit behind a
                            curtain. And this case came before the United States Supreme Court and
                            it there ruled that separate but equal was legal. And from 1896 until
                            1954 we lived with that doctrine in this country.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="867" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:16:16"/>
                    <milestone n="868" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:16:17"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>With that historical perspective, how do you compare the administration
                            of Richard Nixon . . . how do you compare it in contrast to this
                            Tilden-Hayes decision?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, to me it's quite an analogy. I think Mr. Nixon became president by
                            playing to the base, biased prejudice of white America. You see, of the
                            votes that Richard Nixon got for president, sixty-five percent of those
                            votes. . . well, sixty-five percent of the vote in the country went to
                            Richard Nixon. Of the other thirty-five percent that was left,
                            twenty-five percent of that that went to George McGovern was black.
                            George McGovern got less than ten percent of the white vote in this
                            country. So, you see, every time Nixon used the word busing, that was<pb
                                id="p7" n="7"/> nothing but a code word for nigger. Every time he
                            used welfarism, permissiveness. You see, it gave Americans who felt
                            chagrined to say that they were for segregation of the races,
                            segregation forever, and all that bull . . . but when he gave them a
                            convenient umbrella under which to stand and say, "I'm against busing,"
                            well, what they're really saying . . . it ain't the bus, it's who's on
                            the damn bus. It's us. That's, you know, that's the question about
                            busing. And if they were busing nothing but white kids, there'd be no
                            problem. See, busing has been used as a tool for getting children to
                            school as long as the public school system has been a part of America.
                            But as long as they were using busing to maintain segregation, there was
                            nothing wrong with busing. And now that we're using busing to effect
                            integration, then the president and everybody—not everybody—the
                            president and several other people get the impression that busing is so
                            wrong. </p>
                        <p>It's really an issue that is attempting to return America to the days
                            when segregation, when racial segregation had a legal foundation in this
                            country. If we return to the neighborhood school idea with housing as
                            segregated as it is, with many of the larger cities where whites have
                            moved to the suburbs, et cetera . . . if there is not the tool of
                            busing, black children and white children again are going to be
                            separated. You don't learn from books. You don't learn from movies. You
                            don't learn from osmosis that other people are just like you. Except you
                            have the opportunity of dealing man-to-man or person-to-person with them
                            meeting. White boys get the idea that they're better than black boys
                            because they are separated from black boys. And they don't have any way
                            of comparing their ability with black children. And of course black
                            children begin to feel that they are less than white children because
                            they have no positive way of identifying their abilities with white
                            children. </p>
                        <p>And the textbook structure of this nation so ignores the black
                            contributions that it helped make America the kind of country<pb id="p8"
                                n="8"/> that it is today. That the textbooks expose the virtues of
                            the whites and either plays down or absents the activities of blacks. So
                            consequently, without models, without heros, without persons of black
                            stature for black kids to look up to, they are going to be brainwashed
                            by the textbooks of this country that only white men have been involved
                            in building America the way it is. It's subtle. But if you look at the
                            elementary books of your and my time where Dick and Jane was always
                            white, you know. There was no blacks involved in any of the primary
                            books that were around when you were in grammar school or when I was in
                            grammar school. The nearest thing you had to it was little black Sambo.
                            And of course black Sambo was always a buffoon. He was a very unsavory
                            character. And as long as these are the kind of models we are going to
                            give children to emulate, you're bound to get a master-servant
                            philosophy, you're bound to justify Gunnar Myrdal's position in <hi
                                rend="i">American Dilemma</hi> when he says that when you separate
                            children from others because of their race, that you commit an act that
                            is calculated to warp their minds in a manner never likely to be undone.
                            And the warping of the mind suggests to the white child that he's better
                            than the black child, suggests to the black child that he's less than
                            the white child. And consequently this master-servant thing
                        prevails.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="868" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:22:23"/>
                    <milestone n="869" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:22:24"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How do you characterize race relations in Mississippi today?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, I characterize them as being better than they were twenty years
                            ago, but not nearly as good as they got to become.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>If Charlie Sullivan had been elected governor, would the conflict between
                            the two so-called Democratic parties in Mississippi be resolved?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I think so. You see, during the time when Charlie was lieutenant governor
                            when there were meetings of what you consider the Loyalist Democratic
                            party—and I'm damn proud to be called a Loyalist. Of course the
                            newspapers have to label us something to keep us straight, I guess.<pb
                                id="p9" n="9"/> So, you know, we'll forgive you for that. But the
                            fact that Charlie is one of the people that attended both sides'
                            meetings, to try to be sure that he had identification with the
                            leadership of both incidents. And I feel that Charlie had the confidence
                            of many of us who are in leadership roles in the Democratic Party in
                            Mississippi. And certainly, in my personal relationship with Charlie
                            Sullivan I believe that . . . and I found Charlie, now, to be a, you
                            know, reasonable individual and I think we could have worked out the
                            difficulties and gone forward. Now really . . . the big reason why we
                            can't get that done now is really not because of Bill Waller. It's
                            really because of Jim Eastland. You see, it's not to Jim Eastland's
                            benefit to foster racial harmony in the state because Eastland has built
                            his total political empire on discord among the races. And once he no
                            longer has that to carry him forward, then there's no need to continue
                            to rely on a man of Jim Eastland's persuasion. And Charlie Sullivan, or
                            rather Bill Waller, happens to be the captive of the palace guard. James
                            O. Eastland made Bill Waller governor and therefore it becomes not what
                            Bill himself wants to do. I think Bill Waller the man, as I've known
                            him, he too would like to work toward bringing the two groups together.
                            But Bill Waller does not have the permission of his prima donna, the man
                            who made him governor, to do that. Because to do that would work to the
                            disadvantage of Senator Eastland.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Why would it be to Senator Eastland's disadvantage to bring the two
                            groups together?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, you see, it would be to Senator Eastland's disadvantage because he
                            has lived with the "hate the black" as a part of his total philosophical
                            basis. He spoke many times about how he carried civil rights bills
                            around in his back pockets for years. There's no way for Eastland to
                            overcome his past image and become acceptable to blacks.<pb id="p10"
                                n="10"/> Eastland can forget it. And if anybody ran against Eastland
                            of any prominence, they in all probability would pick up a great
                            majority of the black vote. And if he had any strength in the white
                            community, Eastland would no longer be senator. You know, Gil Carmichael
                            damn near got in last time. If Nixon had put his arm around Gil
                            Carmichael once, Eastland would have been gone. But Nixon, the
                            Republican president. Gil Carmichael, a Republican running for the
                            senate in Mississippi. Yet Nixon threw his support to James Eastland.
                            And, you know, in that regard I consider both of them the same kind of
                            racist.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Why couldn't Eastland change the same way that you've said some of these
                            other people have come around the corner, turned the corner?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Why? I don't know. But I just know he hasn't.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>I'm not questioning whether he has. I'm asking whether he could.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I doubt if he can. I think that his age prohibits it. Eastland is 69 or
                            something like that. There ain't no way in the world you're going to
                            change a man that old.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How about Strom Thurmond?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I don't know really whether Strom changed or not. I think Strom began to
                            deal in a political permissive kind of activity. I think Strom was a
                            Republican of convenience and moved, you know, in that direction.
                            Certainly there are a couple of strong civil rights people who now have
                            gravitated toward Strom Thurmond. However I think it was a dishonest
                            move, you know, to begin with. I don't think that Eastland, in the
                            plantation tsar philosophy that he has, could pull a Strom Thurmond and
                            still be held up by his peers in the plantation world that so pervades
                            the Delta in Mississippi. I just think that Eastland's a lost cause.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Do you think Eastland is capable or incapable of sitting down at a table
                            with you and discussing across-the-board political issues that need<pb
                                id="p11" n="11"/> to be resolved?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, if you're speaking about discussing them man-to-man, no. He's
                            incapable of that. Eastland still feels that somehow God endowed him
                            with something that he didn't give black men.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Is that the big problem insofar as his resolving the situation?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I think it is.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="869" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:29:51"/>
                    <milestone n="1263" unit="empty" type="start" timestamp="00:29:52"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>To what extent were you involved in Charles Evers' campaign in '71?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Very much.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You know it could be argued . . . somebody suggested it could be argued .
                            . . you said that Eastland was responsible for Bill Waller being elected
                            governor. Other suggested that Charles Evers is responsible for Waller
                            being elected governor.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, I would say Charles probably helped some. But the financing, the
                            public relations firm, was all a part of Eastland's move. Now I know
                            Charles was expressive to some degree. But I don't think that the moves
                            by Charles was very significant.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, for example in the second primary, you said that you supported
                            Sullivan.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>But Charles Evers, as I understand it, advocated publicly that blacks
                            boycott the second primary. So was there a conflict between the two of
                            you on that decision?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Oh yeah. <note type="comment">[unclear]</note>. We differ on it too.
                            We're the best friends. He's one of the closest friends I have, but
                            certainly we differ.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Looking back at it now after the election is over, what strategy do you
                            think he should have followed insofar as the best interests of blacks in
                            Mississippi is concerned?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>That's, you know, really hard to say. It's hard really for me to say<pb
                                id="p12" n="12"/> definitely that Charlie Sullivan would have done
                            many of the things that I feel he would have done, you know. I know that
                            Charlie and Bill are—Charles Evers and Bill Waller—are much closer <note
                                type="comment">[unclear]</note>. And I would feel that Waller's move
                            is not so much pro-Charles but it is the continued divisiveness of white
                            America to divide the black, really. And if he could get me and Charlie
                            fighting at each other then . . . certainly Charlie has a following. So
                            do I have a following. And there would be a <note type="comment"
                                >[unclear]</note> split <note type="comment">[unclear]</note> black
                            community if Charlie and I were stupid enough to fall for that kind of
                            reasoning.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How about the first primary recognition of Charles Evers that black
                            support swung?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I don't think that got anywhere.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="1263" unit="empty" type="stop" timestamp="00:33:00"/>
                    <milestone n="870" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:33:01"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Do you feel that blacks basically voted in the second primary or that
                            more boycotted in respect to that recommendation. I was looking at some
                            voting statistics, just in the counties that had more than fifty percent
                            black registration, and the majority of them voted less than fifty
                            percent.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Sure, sure, right. As regards to what the white percentage was. You'll
                            find that the voting percentage throughout America is something like
                            thirty-six percent. For everybody who's registered . . .</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>It was a falloff in black, heavy black counties.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I'd say probably so, but I would think it would be because neither
                            man—you know, both men were somewhat moderate in their approach and
                            neither man really turned the black community on or off. And you'll find
                            people generally vote their dislikes, vote the cat out, you know, rather
                            than vote the man in. And since Bill and Charlie, neither one played the
                            race issue hardly at all, you know, in the campaign, there was really no
                            villan for the black community to attack.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="870" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:34:22"/>
                    <milestone n="1264" unit="empty" type="start" timestamp="00:34:23"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Which was a new situation in Mississippi?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah, right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <pb id="p13" n="13"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How do you assess Waller as governor?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I think he's a stumbling, bumbling failure. You know. And I think that
                            because Waller finds himself dictated to by so many people, and
                            particularly Senator Eastland, that prevents him from doing, you know, a
                            lot of things he'd really like to. Now on a man-to-man basis, Bill and I
                            get along all right. I see him when I want to. He calls me; I call him.
                            And we deal with issues that neither one of us feel very strongly about.
                            But I guess it's good for his profile to have a public press image of
                            being very anti-Aaron Henry. I don't have one of being very anti-Bill
                            Waller. I just . . . when Bill gets off on the wrong track I tell him.
                            And I would be just as willing to respond to him when he does something
                            good, but I just haven't found that opportunity yet.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="1264" unit="empty" type="stop" timestamp="00:35:57"/>
                    <milestone n="871" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:35:58"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How do you assess the whole Charles Evers campaign? We get two responses
                            usually. One is that it had the result of really bringing about
                            enthusiasm in the black community, really getting people interested in
                            the campaign and out to vote. The other one is a negative response that
                            it tended to take attention away from local candidates, diverted
                            resources from local candidates, and therefore didn't have a positive
                            effect.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I think it had a positive effect. I don't know of any resources that it
                            usurped from local candidates. Because most of Charlie's money was
                            raised out-of-state. And the local areas were not, you know, assessed or
                            bound to contribute. And I think that in the campaign they ran, it did
                            serve as an adrenaline builder, shall we say, for many of the other
                            campaigns that did exist.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="871" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:37:16"/>
                    <milestone n="872" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:37:17"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Okay, that was the strategy for '71. What sort of strategy for '75 do you
                            see on the part of black politics in Mississippi?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, I don't think times really have changed that much. I think<pb
                                id="p14" n="14"/> that for blacks to get very exercised over the
                            elections, then there's going to have to be somebody that they feel
                            strongly for or strongly against. You know. Blacks are just like whites.
                            The turnout will be . . . They will respond to what they feel their
                            psychic interests or responses are. If it's a ram rootin' tootin'
                            campaign, the candidates charge everybody, you know, get everybody
                            worked up, okay. But if the candidates play low key, the voters are
                            going to play low key.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Do you see, though, a third party effort again on the part of blacks, an
                            independent party effort? Or do you see more of an attempt to move into
                            one of the two major parties?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I see the independent strategy to a certain extent having validity. Very
                            much so. I do feel that most people who run as an independent are
                            actually allied with the Democratic Party in Mississippi.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What's your reaction to the role of blacks in the Republican Party? Those
                            who are active in the Republican Party?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Fine! You know, we need somebody at every door. We need somebody to
                            consult with everybody who can possibly be involved or in charge. See,
                            as long as you and I live on this earth the leadership of the United
                            States is either going to be in the hands of Democrats or Republicans.
                            Every black inside the Republican council chambers is really good. I've
                            got no problem with that.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="872" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:39:56"/>
                    <milestone n="1265" unit="empty" type="start" timestamp="00:39:57"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Do you see any sort of a move toward a black political caucus statewide
                            developing in Mississippi?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I see an organization of black elected officials. <note type="comment"
                                >[unclear]</note>. I see no third-party movement.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>No, I wasn't thinking so much of a third party, but of a caucus of blacks
                            who are politically active, whether Republicans or Democrats,<pb
                                id="p15" n="15"/> who get together—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah, I would say that would prevail within the association of black
                            elected officials in the state. Whether they be Republican or Democrat,
                            as long as they are elected officials. I think there is a tendency
                            toward a cohesion, you're right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Do you see it extending beyond elected officials, though, blacks who are
                            just politically active, such as yourself?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>But also people who are active in the Republican Party but not elected
                            officials.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah. But I would think the elected officials would be the core. The rest
                            of us would be supportive.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You see this as something developing in the future?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, there is a black elected officials' caucus of the state now that
                            Robert Clark chairs. And several of us are always invited to the
                            meetings who are involved in the political structure as persons who are
                            not in an elected office but still very much involved.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>When do you think the conflict between the two Democratic factions—if I
                            may refer to them in that term—will be resolved?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>When a Democrat is elected president.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Why would it be resolved then?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Because at that point—you see, right now the amount of patronage is such
                            that's involved is so small that the Democrats have it to deal with. And
                            of course right now the Democrats are dealing with four groups. The
                            Eastland-Stennis, Dave Bowen, Sonny Montgomery, <note type="comment"
                                >[unclear]</note>. They respond to force as to what you'd like to
                            see us do here or who should be appointed there.<pb id="p16" n="16"/>
                            You get somebody like Ted Kennedy or Senator Mondale in the White House,
                            the tendency, I would guess, is going to be toward not identifying with
                            anybody who is not a part of the Democratic Party that's recognized by
                            the national convention. And of course this also means that the national
                            party will live out its commitment to be true to its own rules and
                            regulations. This is the rule right now. However, without the head of
                            state a Democrat to be sure that this rule is enforced, there's nobody
                            to sanction anybody, you see.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>That's the rule under which the effort was made to strip Eastland of his
                            seniority?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>All right. The vote was what on that?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>We lost by four votes.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Was that in the judiciary committee <note type="comment"
                            >[unclear]</note>?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>No, it was in the Senate.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>That was the Senate Democratic caucus.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>That's right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>All right. Am I correct then you're saying that if a Democrat is elected
                            president, you expect that patronage will be routed through the Loyalist
                            faction?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Unless the issue is resolved?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>And if not, you'd consider it a sellout?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>No. If a Democrat becomes president and does not respond to the rules and
                            regulations of the Democratic Party, then we would carry them to court
                            to force them to abide by the rules of the party.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Do the rules specify patronage?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <pb id="p17" n="17"/>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, the rules specify that nobody who does not support the national
                            Democratic Party or the party's nominee for president and vice president
                            in the last election has the right for participation within the
                            Democratic Party. They can't sit on the Democratic side of the aisle,
                            they cannot organize Congress, you know. These are the rules of the
                            party now.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>But suppose Senator Eastland supports the ticket? What then?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p><note type="comment">[unclear]</note>. Nothing wrong with that. See, when
                            he supports the ticket he signs the loyalty oath, you know, that he's
                            loyal to the party, that he identifies—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Suppose he just endorses it without signing anything?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>He can't do it. The oath is clear.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>This is in the national Democratic Party rules, it says that you've got
                            to sign an oath?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yes sir. Every person who's a Democrat.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>In Congress, will have to sign the oath.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Everybody, if you intend to be involved in activities that relate to the
                            Democratic Party.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Okay, now I believe you told me earlier that if they try to elect
                            delegates in primaries, it won't be valid unless there's a registration
                            system of some sort.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yes. Number one, I'm saying that in the request to elect delegates in an
                            open primary violates the rules and regulations of the national
                            Democratic Party, you know, at this point. And it would also violate the
                            philosophy of the party as we interpret it. Because the rules and
                            regulations that govern the Mississippi Democratic Party are on file
                            with the Democratic National Committee. They have been approved by the
                            national Democratic committee. And only the Democratic National<pb
                                id="p18" n="18"/> Committee can make a change in those rules. Which
                            also means that in order for a rule change to get to the DNC, our group
                            would have to take it there. All four seats that are held on the
                            Democratic National Committee by Mississippians are in our group.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Now those four are who?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Those four are Kathleen Pine, Charlie Evers, Patricia Derian, and Aaron
                            Henry.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <p>
                        <note anchored="yes">
                            <p>[END OF TAPE 1, SIDE A]</p>
                        </note>
                    </p>
                </div2>
                <div2 id="tape1-b" n="1-B" type="tape_side">
                    <head>[TAPE 1, SIDE B]</head>
                    <note anchored="yes">
                        <p>[START OF TAPE 1, SIDE B]</p>
                    </note>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>—primary, to the next national Democratic convention in Mississippi,
                            provided there is a means of party registration.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Would not have to be a legislative act, not necessarily. It could be that
                            you could go to the polls and sign a sheet of paper saying, "I'm a
                            Democrat."</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>No, no. The loyalty petition is spelled out.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Okay, then you'd have to sign a loyalty oath at the polls.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yes.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>But you could do that. I mean, it could be something done at the polls
                            such as signing a loyalty oath.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yes sir.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>And the loyalty oath would say that you support the nominees of the party
                            for president and vice president. Does it say all the other candidates
                            or just that?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>That's going to be that but it says that you support the rules and
                            regulations of the national Democratic Party. And there that some people
                            can't get by is that the rules and regulations of the national
                            Democratic Party now requires an affirmative action committee that has
                            the responsibility of seeing to it that women, youth, and<pb id="p19"
                                n="19"/> minorities are involved in the party processes.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>And if Senator Eastland signed such a note, then you say you'd baptism
                            him and take him in.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah, yeah. I have no desire to keep Eastland out. If he follows the same
                            rules and regulations I do, let him in.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Okay, and if he doesn't come in before the election, and if a Democratic
                            president is elected, am I correct in interpreting what you said that
                            the situation then will be that in order for Senator Eastland to have a
                            hand in any control of the patronage that the conflict between—if I may
                            use again—the two factions has to first be resolved.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>That's right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>And therefore, because of that pressure on Senator Eastland, you think it
                            will be resolved.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>That's right. I think we came pretty close to getting together last time
                            when we missed Eastland by four votes. If we had been able to get a
                            majority vote on that issue, Eastland would not be sitting on the
                            Democratic side of the aisle, would not hold the chairman of the
                            judiciary committee, would not be president pro temp. The senator would
                            be stripped of his powers in the Republican Party. This is why Strom
                            Thurman and Jim Eastland has different situations. See, Strom was
                            stripped within the Republican Party, in the Democratic Party and he
                            went to the Republican—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>No.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>No, he switched before he was stripped.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well . . . okay . . .</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>That's all right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Anyway, he became persona non grata within the Democratic Party<pb
                                id="p20" n="20"/> and he became a martyr as far as the Republicans
                            were concerned because he left the party and came to them. You're
                            talking about Eastland remaining within the Democratic Party.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>With all these factors, though, there's plenty of incentive for Eastland
                            to want to get it resolved now, isn't there?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>You know, I really don't think so. I don't think that Eastland feels that
                            he personally can win or lose anything by the controversy being
                            resolved. I think that—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Where does Ken Dean fit in all this in that congressional race over
                            there?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, it's just another congressional race. I don't put it as a very key
                            factor.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, suppose he were to get elected because he got both Loyalist support
                            and Regular support?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, he would be about like David Bowen. David Bowen got support from
                            both groups. And he ain't sitting over there on a hot spot.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You don't see him then in any position to—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Not any—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>—negotiate—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p><note type="comment">[unclear]</note>. I'd like to see a Democrat kick
                            the Republican out. <note type="comment">[unclear]</note>. Support Ken
                            and on his team and be working with him and all that. Not because I see
                            his election as being any kind of great move toward healing the breach
                            now.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What sort of sentiment . . . I mean, I presume there are terms under
                            which you would now accept an agreement.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah. You see, I believe in negotiation. I certainly just don't happen to
                            believe in unconditional surrender.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>So if he got elected and he were able to get the Regulars to<pb id="p21"
                                n="21"/> accept terms that you would find acceptable, you would
                            stick to those . . . you would find that—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Of course if I was—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Resolvable.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>All I'm saying is that, that. . . .</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>That that ain't going to happen.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, this doesn't give Ken that particular mantle. I think that the
                            strongest man right now to be about to do that is Robert Strauss who
                            serves as chairman of the party. Bob happens to be a damn good personal
                            friend of mine and he tried to make friendship with Waller. But Waller
                            wouldn't even respond to his letters. And right now he's got a bad
                            situation with Waller on the question of Waller ignoring him
                        completely.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>And at this point you don't expect the question to be resolved before the
                            convention in '76. But it might be. Is that it?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I don't expect it to be, but it might be, right.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="1265" unit="empty" type="stop" timestamp="00:54:05"/>
                    <milestone n="873" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:54:06"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Why has Mississippi been able to elect only one black member of the
                            legislature?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, it's largely due to the way the state's apportioned. The state has
                            been carefully apportioned to make almost every district either a white
                            majority district or very closely so. And of course the black population
                            of Mississippi is now something like thirty-seven percent, something
                            like that. Well, you say, 1950, back then, the black population was
                            fifty-five, fifty-four percent. Then the demarcation lines we now have
                            would not have resulted in a general all white situation, you know, if
                            we had been allowed to vote. You see blacks didn't get the right to vote
                            in Mississippi until 1965 upon the passage of the voter registration
                            act, voter right bill, Civil Rights Act. And at that point the white
                            citizen council had been successful to a degree in helping the
                            outmigration from the state to be<pb id="p22" n="22"/> as big as it was.
                            And as I say we've gone from black fifty-five percent down to
                            thirty-seven percent in the last twelve to fifteen years. Blacks leave
                            the state. So that's pretty much why, the way the lines are drawn.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="873" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:55:55"/>
                    <milestone n="874" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:55:56"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>When was your house bombed?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Oh, '67 and '69. They shoot it up, when they get ready. They'll hit
                        mine.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How about the, it's a drugstore, right?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah. The drugstore was bombed in '69.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Have you ever felt like leaving? Lots of folks have left.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>No. I think really the big reason why not is I had so many invitations to
                            leave, shall we say, in the black community. Somebody's told to leave
                            town, and why don't you all run him out of town. And I just made up my
                            mind that I got a right to live where my heart desires and my means can
                            afford. Consequently I live here. Now I've had the opportunity to go
                            into the federal government under Lyndon Johnson or John F. Kennedy.
                            Into a position, you know, that they had an interest in me acquiring,
                            but I just felt that . . . see, maybe my philosophy's all wrong, but
                            many others who grew up as I did . . . see, I'm a son of a tenant
                            farmer. And tenant farming, that's the poorest blocs that have existed
                            in the state. I was, after World War II, able to somehow eke out a
                            college education. And I know many of the people who were born on the
                            plantation I was born on, some of them are still there <note
                                type="comment">[unclear]</note>. Well, I just feel that those of us
                            who had an opportunity of gaining some kind of academic background have
                            the obligation of remaining in the area to try to be of assistance to
                            literally thousands of people who have not had that same advantage. And
                            I know that Clarksdale will probably be a different town if I had not
                            been mayor. It might have been for the better, I don't know. But I do
                            know that many of the activities which<pb id="p23" n="23"/> we've been
                            involved in . . . it has been a personal kind of allegiance, a personal
                            kind of loyalty that so many people have been willing to identify with
                            that. Attack the power structures of various communities throughout this
                            county and throughout the state. Now I guess half the towns in
                            Mississippi we've led picket lines. Been in many jails. But I would
                            imagine somebody else would have done it if I hadn't, at the same time.
                            But sometimes I feel that it might not have gotten done. Particularly in
                            a nonviolent way, which creates far more lasting progress than does the
                            violent confrontation.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="874" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="00:59:40"/>
                    <milestone n="875" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="00:59:41"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Where were you when Martin Luther King was killed?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>In Memphis.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You were in Memphis with him. Were you at the motel?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>No, I'd gone to church.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How'd you feel when you got the news?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, you know, heartbroken, of course. I had the same feeling when John
                            Fitzgerald was killed. Just, you know, heartache, real broken, real . .
                            . wondering where do we go from here, so to speak. How are we going to
                            make it? <note type="comment">[unclear]</note>. I had about the same
                            response when Malcolm X was killed, when Martin was killed, John
                            Fitzgerald. Same kind of thing. See, I've had to live with it. So many
                            people that I've worked closely with being killed. You know, I don't
                            know what bullet got my name on it, you know. But I know one thing, I
                            ain't going to get out of this life alive and I don't worry about that
                            part of it.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="875" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="01:00:47"/>
                    <milestone n="1266" unit="empty" type="start" timestamp="01:00:48"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You got how many children?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Just one.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Are you a pharmicist?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yes.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>I thought that was right, but I wasn't—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>You got it right. I make my living rolling pills. You see the<pb id="p24"
                                n="24"/> ACP got one paid employee in this state, and that ain't me.
                            Split. <note type="comment">[unclear]</note>. I make my living behind
                            the drug counter.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Could John Bell Williams have prevented this split in the Democratic
                            Party? In '68.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>No. I don't think . . . he alone, no. In fact, I don't think John Bell
                            Williams . . . see, neither John Bell nor Bill Waller has the discipline
                            in their faction of the party that I would say twenty-five or thirty of
                            us has—have, rather— in our faction of the party. Now. If the executive
                            committee of the Democratic Party of Mississippi, after having carefully
                            weighed the position, recommends that this is what we do to the state
                            convention, this is what we're going to do. But I'm saying that neither
                            John Bell nor Bill Waller has that kind of respect of the people that
                                <note type="comment">[unclear]</note>.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="1266" unit="empty" type="stop" timestamp="01:02:10"/>
                    <milestone n="876" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="01:02:11"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Several people have told us that one of the reasons there haven't been
                            more blacks elected to the legislature is that too often . . . the
                            problem of candidate selection.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, you know. Have you been to our state legislature? Saw it? Well, you
                            know, the kind of jokers they got down there, black folks couldn't be
                            much worse than they are. You know. Whites would have access to more of
                            whatever is there than a black would have. I think it's more of this
                            kind of a situation where whites have generally always been there. I
                            would feel that the support of blacks by blacks is becoming much more
                            every election. You're going to find that whites are far more prejudiced
                            against blacks than blacks are against whites. You will find blacks who
                            are even willing to pass out candidates' cards to whites. But you won't
                            find a single white in this state who will pass out cards for blacks.
                            And I think it's a reflection really that blacks are freer than whites.
                            Several ways. You know, they're freer to be involved in what their
                            conscience dictates. Now I'm sure that there<pb id="p25" n="25"/> are
                            some whites who would like to. But I think they are engulfed in this
                            thing called peer worship. I think they are engulfed in this thing about
                            what this guy I play golf with will think about me if I ask him to vote
                            for this black man. Whether my wife going to be kicked out of the bridge
                            club. Whether their children are going to be told that daddy's a nigger
                            lover. I think that this kind of intimidation of whites by other whites
                            . . . far more of an issue as to why whites generally are afraid not to
                            support whites where blacks feel very free to support blacks or
                        whites.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Are you saying then that blacks are more apt to judge a candidate on the
                            basis of qualification than color than whites are?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>No. Yeah, if he happens to be black. I don't thing that we've come to a
                            point in Mississippi yet where any sizable group of whites feel free to
                            vote for a black, even if Charles Drew was running for the custodian of
                            the blood plasma bank, whites in Mississippi would not vote for him.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What do you think would have to happen for the Democrats to carry
                            Mississippi again in a presidential election?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, with the majority vote being somewhere near sixty percent white or
                            more in the state, I think you'd have to have a Democrat who would
                            appeal to racial prejudice.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>You think that's the only way it could be done?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I think that's the only way you're going to carry Mississippi, yeah.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What would be the reaction of blacks if George Wallace actively
                            campaigned on behalf of the national Democratic ticket? Wasn't on it,
                            but campaigned for it.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, depending on who was on the ticket. It would depend on<pb id="p26"
                                n="26"/> who was on the ticket. If it was Scoop Jackson, we'd have
                            problems with it. If it were Fritz Mondale, I think people would ignore
                            the fact that Wallace supported it but would still vote for it. I'm
                            talking about blacks, now.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Same would apply to Kennedy?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What would be the problem with Jackson?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, the problem with Scoop would be that Scoop has not been nearly
                            involved in causes as either Kennedy or Mondale. He's voted right pretty
                            much of the time. But there's no identification of Scoop in Selma or
                            Montgomery as there was with Kennedy or Mondale. There was no Scoop
                            Jackson at the Jackson massacre, you know, as there were Kennedy and
                            Mondale. So I'm just saying that the credentials of Kennedy and Mondale
                            in causes that affect minority or poor people is so much better than
                            Scoop's.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>When we first started the interview you talked about you've seen a number
                            of whites turn the corner. Do you think George Wallace has turned the
                            corner?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>No, I really don't. I think George's position is convenience in politics.
                            I think George feels that he was pretty close to death one time and I
                            think that in responding to that situation and also responding to the
                            forward growth of the nation in a way that Wallace could not preach
                            "segregation, segregation, segregation forever" on the street corners of
                            Michigan today. <note type="comment">[unclear]</note>. And carry
                            Michigan as he did four years ago. I think it's political expedience.
                            And I think that Wallace will do or say anything that will gravitate the
                            people towards Wallace. I think that if attending a lynching on Saturday
                            night would get people back in the Wallace column that's where you'd
                            find him.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <pb id="p27" n="27"/>
                    <milestone n="876" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="01:10:00"/>
                    <milestone n="1267" unit="empty" type="start" timestamp="01:10:01"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Does that suggest then that you don't think Wallace is capable of turning
                            that corner?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yes.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Is there anything we haven't covered that you want to comment on?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I'm your guinea pig. I'm just here to answer what you want to ask. I've
                            been studied so damn many times, this is just one more experience in a
                            long series of experiences.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="1267" unit="empty" type="stop" timestamp="01:10:33"/>
                    <milestone n="877" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="01:10:34"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Let me ask you one more question about voter registration, black voter
                            registration in Mississippi. Has it leveled off? In the last couple of
                            years?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I would think so. However, there are a few communities who still are
                            trying to get federal registrars. But with the Nixon administration it's
                            all but impossible to get federal registrars to come into a community
                            where blacks feel they are having trouble, you know, trying to register
                            to vote. I would say that because of the nonavailability of registrars
                            that there would be a feeling that voter registration has leveled
                        off.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="877" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="01:11:26"/>
                    <milestone n="1268" unit="empty" type="start" timestamp="01:11:27"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>I heard some people comment insofar as blacks and political participation
                            in Mississippi that . . . two candidates in an election and neither one
                            particularly turns them on, that staying home is a very respectable
                            strategy.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Yeah. And I think that's, to some degree, what happened in the
                            Waller-Charlie Sullivan race. This is one of the few times that a
                            governor's race has been run without one or the other candidates taking
                            a strong issue on race. I guess the more we get used to that, you know,
                            the more we will respond to it. But it was a pretty lusterless, you
                            know, campaign.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Okay. I'm going to play devil's advocate a little bit. Didn't the
                            opportunity exist, in effect, for blacks to elect a governor, to<pb
                                id="p28" n="28"/> swing the balance?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, I don't really remember what the difference in the vote was. I
                            don't think you really can ever be sure of that phenomenon. You know.
                            Because if a guy wins with eleven votes and the black community ended up
                            supporting him, if he had not got the white votes he still would have
                            lost. You have to always see the total equation rather than just part.
                            When Waller was elected there was no gnashing of teeth or jumping off of
                            buildings or copping out of the system by anybody. To many people Waller
                            could have, you know, been a good man. Nobody really felt . . . not many
                            people really thought that Waller was going to be a tyrant or anything
                            like this.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What was your reaction to his announcing Medgar Evers Day?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, my reaction to it really was . . . I was there, you know, when it
                            was announced. And Waller did not bring the proclamation himself. Waller
                            sent it by a Negro aide to read. And, you know, I would have thought
                            much more of it if he had done it himself. But, to me this was demeaning
                            in a way, in that it appeared that he felt that the only way his office
                            could do that was to send a black that the whites of the community had
                            encouraged him to employ. See, Waller has not employed a single black
                            that the black community has recommended. All of the blacks that he has
                            employed are blacks the whites want. So they're not our blacks, they're
                            his blacks.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Does Cleve McDowell fit into that category, too?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, in Waller's position, yes. You see, what Waller thought he could do
                            with Cleve was to split the black community with Cleve on one side and
                            the rest of us on the other. But it just so happens that us and Cleve
                            have been involved in so many situations of human relations together
                            that neither of us would ever take a negative position against the
                            other.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <pb id="p29" n="29"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>But he is an exception to your statement that—</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, I'm also saying that Cleve was not recommended to Waller by blacks.
                            Cleve was recommended to Waller by the Eastland faction which controls
                            Sunflower Valley in which Eastland's plantation is in it. So, you know,
                            I'm saying Cleve was not a black who was recommended by the black
                            community. Cleve could have been, if Waller had asked, you know, the
                            black community. I'm sure the black community would have supported
                            Cleve. But, you know, as it turned out, Waller used Cleve as his witness
                            against the black community in the Democratic Party struggle. And this
                            is where he and Cleve really fell out, because they'd asked Cleve—I flew
                            into Chicago—he started talking about fifteen ducks floating in the
                            river. The answer had nothing to do with the question. Waller
                            apologized. Trying to make a fool out of me. <note type="comment"
                                >[unclear]</note>. And he's pretty much found a way now to get rid
                            of Cleve. Cleve wasn't the nigger that Waller thought he was.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="1268" unit="empty" type="stop" timestamp="01:16:54"/>
                    <milestone n="878" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="01:16:55"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>What kind of Democratic Party do you see in Mississippi five years from
                            now?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, as I say, it depends upon the national posture. And if, with Bob
                            Strauss's assistance and the Democrats recapture the White House, I can
                            see the Democratic Party that's not foreign from South Carolina, that's
                            really not foreign from Florida. You know, I can see a Democratic Party
                            where there are blacks involved, intimately involved within the
                            political savoir faire of the community, that have a genuine concern,
                            interest and respect and position of importance with each other. And I
                            don't think that race is going to be the strongest factor that compels
                            people together.</p>
                        <p>
                            <note type="comment">[interruption]</note>
                        </p>
                        <p>Politically, white leadership in Mississippi just feels that it has to be
                            the worst thing. You know, Jim Crow laws in this country had its
                                genesis<pb id="p30" n="30"/> in Mississippi and they lasted longer,
                            you know, in this state than anywhere else. It's just something about
                            our state that destines Mississippi to be the last people to get
                        aboard.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="878" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="01:18:41"/>
                    <milestone n="1269" unit="empty" type="start" timestamp="01:18:42"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>When Robert Strauss comes into Mississippi some of the Regulars say, you
                            know, "He really gives us more attention than them," meaning you. Does
                            he ever come into Mississippi without your knowing it, knowing exactly
                            where he's going and this sort of thing?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, you know, I'm privileged to his correspondence within Mississippi
                            and his itinerary, you know <note type="comment">[unclear]</note>. I've
                            got no problem with Bob's actions at all. And of course I had no
                            problems with Larry O'Brien's actions.</p>
                        <p>
                            <note type="comment">[interruption]</note>
                        </p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="1269" unit="empty" type="stop" timestamp="01:19:21"/>
                    <milestone n="879" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="01:19:22"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>Looking back on the whole civil rights struggle from the beginning of
                            your involvement, is there anything you'd do differently?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>I don't think so. I've seen some people do some things differently that
                            perhaps have gotten them faster and further there. You take the violence
                            in Watts. Well, you wouldn't know Watts today if you were looking at it
                            from a yesterday point of view because of the many improvements that
                            Watts, California, has developed since the racial strife. But that's
                            just not, you know, my way or philosophy of trying to erect
                            improvements. I would rather have a situation where the former
                            lieutenant governor of the state calls me and says "Aaron, this is
                            Charlie." And we'd like to talk about a certain situation and see how we
                            can get together on it. That's what I can, you know, call some real
                            progress. And I'm a thorough integrationist. I don't believe blacks are
                            going to make it by themselves. I don't believe whites are going to make
                            it by themselves. I believe it takes us both. It takes both black and
                            white keys on the piano to play the melody. And of course I have some
                            difficulty with some of my friends about my strong,
                                pro-integrationist<pb id="p31" n="31"/> point of view rather than
                            the black separatist point of view. I just simply don't see how you can
                            wage a black separatist militant, violent war, when you don't have a
                            single black in the national guard. I just don't see how you can wage
                            that kind of violence. Around the table, I think that the question of
                            both being vituperative with each other around the issues that you have
                            to concern . . . that's my way of trying to resolve the problem. I
                            realize that my way is not the only way. On everything there's two
                            sides. Some things got three, four, five sides. I'm not so wedded to my
                            method that I condemn all other methods. I just simply are not familiar
                            with them. There are people who can make other methods work.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>How do you characterize the state of school desegregation in Mississippi?
                            We've heard different interpretations of that.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, I think in terms of the public school being legally declared
                            desegregated, I think that most of them have. However, I think that
                            within the schools themselves there remains quite a bit of segregation.
                            I know that within the teaching personnel, the administrative personnel,
                            there is rank-and-file discrimination. And it looks like we've got
                            another whole battle to fight. The damn war just ain't never over. The
                            exodus of black administrators, replacing them with white
                            administrators. And of course what bothers us about that more than
                            really who's employed, or who makes more money in that area, is the role
                            models they aren't getting. Black children don't see blacks in positions
                            of leadership as white children see whites in positions of leadership.
                            Black children are going to end up with a psychic response of
                            inferiority. And that's really what this addition of blacks to positions
                            of leadership really is all about. It's in terms of how do you educate
                            the black child and the white child to be sure that each of them
                            understands that there is no difference between them based upon the
                            color in their<pb id="p32" n="32"/> skin. That sometimes the principal
                            is white, sometimes the principal is black. That both men can do a good
                            job. But if everything you see in the leadership role is white, then
                            whites are going to accept that as a position of superiority for white
                            people and blacks are going to accept it as an indication that blacks
                            are inferior. And this is really what we're trying to undo in a whole
                            three or four hundred years of public school education.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <milestone n="879" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="01:24:48"/>
                    <milestone n="880" unit="excerpt" type="start" timestamp="01:24:49"/>
                    <sp who="spk2">
                        <speaker n="2">JACK BASS:</speaker>
                        <p>I want to ask you one last question. What does the term southern strategy
                            mean to you?</p>
                    </sp>
                    <sp who="spk1">
                        <speaker n="1">AARON HENRY:</speaker>
                        <p>Well, the term southern strategy, to me, as it is personified by Mr.
                            Nixon, really means the reversal of the New Society philosophies that
                            Lyndon Johnson, after John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated, was able
                            to get through. I think that Nixon would like to see us go back as far
                            as we can toward the days when segregation was a rule of thumb rather
                            than where we are now where it is considered a situation of oddity. And
                            the southern strategy merely means that the leadership of the country is
                            going to be more responsive to the white community than it is to the
                            black community. That the assistances that once were available to blacks
                            . . . you see, blacks have lost in the last ten years. We've lost the
                            presidency where at one time we could, you know, call Lyndon or John
                            Fitzgerald's private number any time of night. We had a Justice
                            Department that was run by Bobby Kennedy, Katzenbach, Ramsey Clark, John
                            Dorr, that you could find anywhere. We had the United States Supreme
                            Court that many of us had no problem about going to jail anywhere
                            because there was a Supreme Court in Washington. Well, the Supreme Court
                            in Washington now is no guarantee that justice is going to prevail.
                            There is a guarantee that what Mr. Nixon desires is going to prevail.
                            Not necessarily justice. And with the Congress of the United States,
                            there was a time when we passed the 1957 Civil Rights<pb id="p33" n="33"
                            /> Act; we passed the 1960 Civil Rights Act; we passed the 1964 Public
                            Accommodations Act, the 1965 Voter Rights Act; we passed the public
                            housing bill; we passed OEO; we passed Medicaid; we passed Medicare; we
                            passed federal aid to education; we passed the minimum wage. But now the
                            federal government has in a way told us, "What you got is what you're
                            going to get." That we're not about to pass any more additional
                            legislation to make life for the minorities and for the poor people
                            easier in this country. And this is really where I feel that the
                            southern strategy as espoused by Mr. Nixon really takes root and this is
                            really what it means.</p>
                    </sp>
                    <p>
                        <note anchored="yes">
                            <p>END OF INTERVIEW</p>
                        </note>
                    </p>
                    <milestone n="880" unit="excerpt" type="stop" timestamp="01:28:07"/>
                </div2>
            </div1>
        </body>
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</TEI.2>
