then came the election of '58, and wallace was against james patterson, john patterson. patterson was a staunch segregationist. he became governor, and wallace swore that he would never let the race issue keep him out of office again. so patterson was not about to desegregate the university of alabama. so frank rose, in his first four years here from 58-'62, spent that time building buildings, building infrastructure, building the alumni association. he put an alumni association in every county in this state and established 15 new ones across the nation. he upped giving from $1.3 million in '58 to $16 billion by '65. then he got us move anything that direction, and then george wallace became the governor of the state. wallace had promised segregation now, tomorrow and forever. that quote is taken from the ku klux klan oath, the ku klux klan yesterday, the ku klux klan today, the ku klux klan forever. but wallace was using the race issue to his own ends. he knew the university was going to be desegregated, it was just a matter of time. frank rose, the president, made it ha